INDEX.
- Abbot (Charles, 1st Baron Colchester)—his conferences, “after church,” with Mr. Perceval, ii. [49], [110].
- Abercrombie (Rev. James), of Philadelphia, i. 194.
- Adam (William)—C.’s counsel on first Government prosecution, i. 307.
- Adams (John), President of U. S.—C. supports his administration, i. 187.
- Addington (Henry, 1st Viscount Sidmouth) becomes Premier, i. 271;
- C.’s letters to him on the peace, 279;
- his incapacity as a statesman, 302;
- bestows a sinecure upon his son, 327;
- other references, ii. [170], [178].
- Adet (Pierre A.), French envoy to America, i. 181.
- Agricultural interest—its troubles, ii. [153], [154], [259].
- America—The War of Independence, i. 16;
- Raynal and other writers invoke interest in Europe concerning the country, 96;
- current political condition in the United States, 121;
- rise of the two great parties, 122;
- treaty with England, 127, 138;
- flogging abolished in the States, ii. [133];
- the war of 1812 and its effects, [198];
- C.’s writings again attract notice in America, [200].
- André (Major)—exhumation of his remains, ii. [218].
- Andrews’s “British Journalism” quoted, ii. [117].
- Anti-Cobbett literature, i. 136, 172, 174, 177, 189, 303; ii. [43], [46], [47], [48], [55], [56], [110], [123], [171], [217], [226], [243], [260].
- Anti-Gallicanism in London, i. 287.
- Anti-Jacobinism, i. 131, 241, 252, 263.
- Astley (Sir J.), ii. [65].
- Attwood (Thomas), M.P. for Birmingham, ii. [286].
- Bache (Benjamin F.)—his Philadelphia newspaper, i. 139, &c.;
- notice of his family, 151;
- his editorial virulence, 204.
- Bagshaw (Richard), newsman, ii. [59], [76], [114], [126].
- Baker (Rev. Richard), the “Botley parson,” ii. [74], [150], [151].
- Bamford (Samuel)—his “Recollections” quoted, ii. [156].
- Beevor (Sir Thomas) supports C.’s candidature for parliament, ii. [252].
- Beloe (Rev. Wm.), i. 237, 251, 289.
- Benbow (Wm.) a sufferer under the Press Laws, ii. [206].
- Bentham (Jeremy) quoted, i. 197, 306;
- contributes to the London Porcupine, 276.
- Berkeley (Admiral Sir George), i. 23.
- Bibliography, ii. [305].
- Birkbeck (Morris)—his emigration scheme, ii. [205].
- Blagdon (F. W.)—his Weekly Political Register, ii. [47].
- Blount (Wm.), Governor of Tennessee, i. 207.
- Booksellers and Authors, i. 117, 150; ii. [77].
- Bosville (Colonel), parliamentary reformer, ii. [11], [146].
- Botley, Hants—C. visits there, i. 316;
- settles there, ii. [1];
- its situation, [2];
- rural sports, &c., [5], [20].
- Bouverie (William Pleydell, 3rd Earl of Radnor)—his close friendship with C., ii. [23];
- notice of him, [ib.];
- Commons motion for inquiry into Corruption, [49];
- his plantings at Coleshill, [231];
- attends on behalf of C. at his trial, [264];
- his letter in support of C.’s candidature at Manchester, [277];
- other references, [97], [112].
- Bowles (John), Anti-Jacobin writer, i. 241, 263.
- Bradford (Thomas), bookseller and printer, of Philadelphia—notice of family, i. 101;
- his business relations with C., 116, 139, 146, 175.
- Brand (Rev. John), i. 263.
- Brissot de Warville (Jean Pierre)—his American Travels quoted, i. 97, 98.
- British Critic, introduces C.’s American writings to the English public, i. 233;
- recants, 291.
- Brougham (Henry, 1st Lord), ii. [48], [132], [223], [267].
- Budd (John) succeeds to C.’s book-shop in Pall Mall, i. 308;
- is prosecuted with C., ii. [114], [126].
- Buonaparte (Napoleon)—alternations of public feeling concerning him, i. 290.
- Burdett (Sir Francis), i. 312;
- C. begins to support him, 320;
- elected M.P. for Westminster, ii. [29];
- his popularity, [64];
- is sent to the Tower, [110], [111];
- his endeavours against military flogging, [130];
- advances money to C., [146], [218];
- his half-heartedness in the Reform cause, [179], [256].
- Callender (James Thomson)—notice of him, i. 131.
- Canning (George)—his anti-Jacobin services, i. 240, 241, 252;
- his opposition to parliamentary reform, ii. [256].
- Carey (Matthew)—notice of him, i. 116, 189.
- Carleton (Guy, 1st Baron Dorchester), i. 52, 76.
- Caroline, Queen of George IV.—the first delicate investigation, ii. [18];
- C.’s advocacy of her cause, ii. [224].
- Cartwright (Major John)—his advocacy of parliamentary reform; notice of him, ii. [11];
- other references, [77], [78], [207].
- Catholic Emancipation, ii. [224].
- Chatham, co. Kent—C.’s life there as a recruit, i. 35.
- Cintra, convention of—outcry against it in England, ii. [70].
- Clarke (Mary Ann), the Duke of York’s mistress, ii. [58], [60].
- Cleary (Thomas), ii. [221].
- Clergy of the English Church—their antipathy to reform, ii. [152], [239], [263].
- Cliffton (William), American poet, i. 189.
- Cobbett (Ann, born Reid), i. 54, 57; ii. [119], [122].
- Cobbett (Anne), ii. [72], [78], [79], [122].
- Cobbett (William)—his birthplace, i. 1;
- parents, 5;
- early years, 7-21;
- his employment in London, 26;
- enlists, 28;
- his life as a recruit, 35, 41;
- his studies, 43;
- discharge, 54;
- his sweetheart, 55;
- marriage, 58;
- his first attacks on “corruption,” 60, 62;
- the Soldiers’ Friend, 79, 88;
- goes to France, 85;
- to Philadelphia, 100;
- teaches English and compiles “Le Tuteur Anglais,” 102;
- translates for the booksellers, 103;
- opposes himself to attacks on England, 109;
- “Observations on Dr. Priestley’s Emigration,” 113;
- his anti-Jacobinism, 131;
- his political pamphlets, 133, 134;
- sudden notoriety, 135;
- “A little plain English,” 139;
- his popularity as a partisan-writer, 145, 184;
- quarrel with his publisher, 147, 150;
- “Political Censor,” 148;
- becomes a bookseller, 161;
- publishes his “Life and Adventures,” 165;
- anti-Cobbett literature, 177;
- starts Porcupine’s Gazette, 185;
- is prosecuted for “libel,” 202;
- lampoons Dr. Rush, 211;
- is sued by him, 215;
- removes to New York, 218;
- returns to England, 229;
- what they had said of him in England, 232, et seq.;
- Government offers, 245;
- voyage home, 247;
- influential visitors, 250;
- dines with the ministers of state, 253;
- his subsequent reflections, 256, 258;
- more Government offers, 260;
- resolves on “independence,” 261;
- will support Mr. Pitt, 267;
- starts the Porcupine newspaper, 268;
- close of its career, 278;
- his book-shop, 279;
- heads the new opposition under Mr. Windham, 280;
- the Political Register, 283;
- his fixed principles, 286;
- anti-Gallicanism, 288, 289;
- excites envy, 292;
- deserves a “statue of gold,” 293;
- his anti-Gallican appeal to the nation, 295;
- begins to study finance, 301;
- first Government prosecution, 304;
- success of the Register, 308;
- relinquishes the book-shop, ib.;
- miscellaneous publications, 309;
- “Parliamentary Debates,” 310;
- must live in the country, 311;
- visits Botley, 316;
- his determined war upon corruption in Church and State, 322, 327;
- his reasons for deserting Mr. Pitt, 324;
- altered attitude of people toward him in consequence, 328.
- At Botley, ii. [1];
- his pursuits and tastes, [4], [5];
- determines to settle at Botley, [6];
- “Parliamentary History,” and other projects, [8];
- his advocacy of parliamentary reform, [10];
- enemies thus raised up, [12];
- at Honiton election, [13];
- address to electors of Westminster, [14];
- bitter hostility of the Morning Post, [19];
- his home, &c., described by Miss Mitford, [22];
- new friends, [21], [23];
- is asked to contest Westminster, [25];
- quarrel with Sheridan, [27];
- he cannot live in London, [31];
- threats of further prosecution, [35];
- his devotion to the interests of the Labouring Poor, [39];
- his high qualities as an employer, [42];
- calumnies, [43];
- increasing animosity toward him, [45];
- anti-Cobbett literature of the period, [46], [48];
- leads the Reformists, [50];
- his usual pursuits, sports, &c., [51];
- pecuniary pinches, [52];
- supports inquiry into the affairs of the Duke of York, [58];
- his plantings, &c., [63], [65], [68];
- disinclination to enter parliament, [67];
- his sphere as a comment maker, [ib.];
- “State Trials,” [70];
- his children, [72];
- speaks in public, [74];
- independence of Party, [75];
- defiance, [81], [82];
- answers the court-martial story, [85];
- his attachment to soldiers, [89];
- reminiscences of flogging, [92];
- the flogging “libel,” [93];
- the Messrs. Swann, [98];
- prosecution, [114];
- verdict of the jury, [118];
- sentence, [126];
- in Newgate, [127];
- renewed protests against flogging, [131];
- life in prison, [135];
- “Paper against Gold,” [136];
- growing acrimony, [140];
- pecuniary difficulties, [142];
- his quarrel with Mr. Wright, [143];
- release from Newgate, [147];
- growing antipathy of the clergy, [149];
- opposes the proposed Corn Law, [153];
- hostility of the landed interest, [ib.];
- renewed urging of Reform, [155];
- the first cheap Register, [158];
- his abhorrence of violent measures, [176];
- is again threatened, [181];
- will go to America, [183];
- his farewell, [185];
- admirers in the United States, [199];
- his settlement near New York, [202];
- new works projected, [206];
- “English Grammar,” and “Year’s Residence,” [207];
- proposes to return, [209];
- exhumes the bones of T. Paine, [212];
- his arrival in England, [215];
- quarrel with Burdett, [219];
- actions brought against him by Cleary and Wright, [223];
- his advocacy of Queen Caroline’s cause, [224];
- is “in disgrace” over Paine and Burdett and Wright, [225];
- Cobbett’s Evening Post, [229];
- bankruptcy, [230];
- his seed-farm at Kensington, [231];
- books on rural and domestic affairs, [233];
- is awarded the Society of Arts’ silver medal, [234];
- aversion to the potato, [235];
- “History of the Protestant Reformation,” [239];
- other publications, [244];
- “Rural Rides,” [246];
- resolves upon entering parliament, [249];
- contests Coventry, [251], and Preston, [255];
- is prosecuted for “sedition,” [259];
- his triumph, [266];
- address to the Manchester electors, [275];
- his reception in Lancashire, [279], and in Scotland, [281];
- election for Oldham, [ib.];
- in parliament, [283];
- his work is done, [291];
- death, [304];
- v. also Anti-Cobbett.
- Cobbett (William, junior) at school, i. 312;
- his early promise, ii. [32], [52], [72];
- publisher of the Register, [178];
- return from America with his father, [214].
- Cochrane (Thomas, 10th Earl of Dundonald)—his candidature at the Honiton election, ii. [13], [18];
- visits C. at Botley, [20];
- M.P. for Westminster, [30];
- a zealous Reformer, [156], [157];
- other references, [78], [148], [179].
- Colchester (Baron)—v. Abbot.
- Commons (House of)—its corrupt state, ii. [36], [68];
- its conservative habits, [284].
- Corruption in Church and State—its prevalence, i. 57, 61, 321, 326, 327; ii. [36].
- Coventry election of 1821, ii. [251].
- Cox and Baylis (Messrs.), printers of the Register, ii. [101].
- Currency, C.’s writings, ii. [137].
- Currie (William), M.D., of Philadelphia, i. 210.
- Curtis (Sir Wm.), M.P., ii. [128].
- Dallas (Alex. J.), American politician, i. 129, 139.
- Davies (Benjamin), bookseller, of Philadelphia, i. 148.
- Day (Rev. Charles)—his attack upon C., ii. [263].
- Debbieg (Colonel), i. 36.
- Democracy—its progress, ii. [296].
- De Morgan (Augustus) quoted, ii. [116].
- Denman (Thomas, 1st Lord), counsel to Queen Caroline, ii. [224];
- prosecutes C. for “sedition,” [264].
- Dennie (J.), American man of letters, i. 122.
- Drakard (—), Lincolnshire editor, sent to jail in the cause of humanity, ii. [129].
- Droxford, co. Hants, ii. [8].
- Duane (William), democratic writer, i. 189, 217.
- Duncombe (Thos. Slingsby)—his memoirs quoted, ii. [255].
- Dundas (Henry, Lord Melville), i. 78, 319, 325, 327.
- Dundonald (Earl of)—v. Cochrane.
- D’Yrujo (Chevalier), Spanish envoy to the American Republic, i. 201.
- Eaton (Daniel), bookseller, stands in the pillory, ii. [150].
- Edinburgh Review—its attack upon C., ii. [56].
- Ellenborough (Lord)—v. Law.
- Elliot (Gilbert, 1st Earl of Minto) testifies to C.’s loyalty, i. 306.
- Elliott (William), M.P., ii. [29], [33].
- Ellis (George), i. 241, 253.
- Emigration to America, ii. [205].
- Everley, co. Wilts, a famous place for coursing, ii. [51].
- Ewing (William), barrister, of Philadelphia—anecdote of him, i. 192.
- Examiner newspaper is persecuted, ii. [108], [130];
- persecutes C., [110], [123], [148].
- Farnham, co. Surrey—its situation and its people 100 years ago, i. 1.
- Fauchet (J. A. J.), French envoy to America, i. 141.
- Fearon (Henry B.), surgeon—his visit to America, ii. [205].
- Fenno (John), newspaper editor, i. 166, 171.
- Fenno (J. W.), son of the above, i. 189, 212, 223.
- Fielden (John), M.P. for Oldham, ii. [278].
- Finnerty (Peter)—notice of him, ii. [72];
- other references, [16], [36], [59], [76], [108], [121].
- Fitzgerald (Lord Edward), i. 54.
- Flogging in the army—animadversions of the press, ii. [90];
- case of, at Ely, and C.’s comments thereon, [91], [93];
- gets into discredit, [129], [134].
- Flogging of the poor—measure suggested in Parliament, ii. [130].
- Flower (Benjamin)—his political review, ii. [47];
- visits the United States, [205].
- Folkestone (Viscount)—v. Bouverie.
- Fox (Charles James), i. 82, 323; ii. [24].
- French refugees in America, i. 104, 105.
- French Republic—its relations with that of America, i. 181, 183.
- Freneau (Philip)—his democratic poems, i. 189.
- Frere (John Hookham), i. 241, 252.
- Garlike (Benjamin), diplomatist, an early friend of C., i. 33.
- Genest (Edmond Charles), French diplomatist—notice of him, i. 125.
- Gibbs (Sir Vicary), Attorney-General in the Perceval administration, ii. [90], [102], [114];
- his antipathy to the press, [115], [117].
- Gifford (John), anti-Jacobin writer, republishes C.’s American pamphlets, i. 236;
- notice of him, 240;
- other references, 263, 264, 278; ii. [35].
- Gifford (William), i. 181, 248, 263, 265.
- Gilfillan (Rev. George)—his recollections of C., ii. [282].
- Glasse (Rev. G. H.), i. 251.
- Goodman (Thomas), agricultural labourer, convicted of incendiarism, ii. [262].
- Gould (Sir Charles), Judge-Advocate-General in 1792, i. 62.
- Grenville—v. Wyndham.
- Grey (Charles, 2nd Earl Grey), ii. [34].
- Grose (Sir N.) passes sentence upon C., ii. [124].
- Hague (Thomas)—his pamphlet against the Duke of York, ii. [76].
- Hamilton (Alexander), i. 122.
- Hamlin (—)—his case of attempting to corrupt Mr. Addington, i. 327.
- Hammond (George), Under-Secretary of State, i. 252, 260.
- Hansard (T. C.) becomes the printer of the Register, ii. [101];
- is prosecuted along with C., [114], [126];
- takes over the “Parliamentary Debates,” i. 310; ii. [143].
- Harding (J.) succeeds to Cobbett and Morgan’s book-shop, i. 308.
- Hardwicke (Earl of)—v. Yorke.
- Hawkesbury (Lord)—v. Jenkinson.
- Hazlitt (William), ii. [195].
- Heriot (John)—notice of him, i. 242;
- quarrel with C., 294.
- Hewlings (Abraham), a Westminster politician, ii. [25].
- Hogan (Major D.)—his exposure of the Duke of York’s mistress, ii. [58].
- Hone (William), ii. [116], [195].
- Honiton, co Devon, election, ii. [13].
- Howell (Thomas B.), editor of C.’s “State Trials,” ii. [70], [77], [78].
- Howick (Lord)—v. Grey.
- Huish (Robert)—his “memoirs of Cobbett” quoted, ii. [117].
- Hunt (Henry), ii. [65], [177], [221].
- Hunt (J. H. Leigh), ii. [123], [148].
- Ireland (William), Dean of Westminster, i. 251, 263.
- Irish affairs in 1804, i. 304.
- Irishmen (The United)—political association, i. 136.
- Jay (John), American statesman—his mission to England, i. 128;
- notice of him, 129;
- democratic feeling against him, 138.
- Jefferson (Thomas), American statesman—his “Writings” quoted, i. 123.
- Jeffery (Francis) attacks C. in the Edinburgh Review, ii. [56].
- Jenkinson (Robt. B., 2nd Lord Liverpool), i. 278; ii. [170].
- Johnson (Robert), Irish judge—his animadversions on the Irish administration, i. 304.
- Johnstone (Col. Cochrane), ii. [20].
- Juverna, pseudonym of Judge Johnson, i. 304.
- Kent (H.R.H. Edward, Duke of) meets C. at Halifax, i. 52, 76.
- Kew, co. Surrey—C.’s employment there as a boy, i. 15.
- Laurence (Dr. French), i. 252, 283.
- Lauriston (Jacques A.), French envoy to England, i. 276.
- Law (Edward, 1st Baron Ellenborough) presides at C.’s trials for “libel,” i. 306; ii. [114];
- his antipathy to a free press, [115], [117].
- Lawless (John) reprints C.’s Register in Ireland, ii. [195].
- Libel: What is it? i. 197;
- prosecutions of C. for, i. 201, 213, 306; ii. [114]—v. also Bagshaw, Finnerty, Law, Drakard, Examiner, &c.
- Liston (Robert), English diplomatist—his attentions to C. in America, i. 191, 245;
- testifies to C.’s loyalty, 306.
- Liverpool (Earl of)—v. Jenkinson.
- London—“sedition” in 1792, i. 58, 59, 84.
- Mackay (Charles)—his “Recollections” quoted, concerning flogging in the navy, ii. [92].
- M’Kean (Thomas), Pennsylvanian politician, i. 199, 201, 214.
- Madison (James), American statesman, i. 122.
- Madocks (W. A.), M.P.—his motion against corruption in the State, ii. [85].
- Malone (Edmond), i. 252.
- Marsh (Herbert), Bishop of Peterborough, i. 263.
- Marvel (Andrew)—anecdote of him as M.P., ii. [112].
- Maseres (Francis, Cursitor Baron), visits C. on his arrival in London, i. 250, and in Newgate, ii. [135];
- notice of him, [ib.]
- Mathias (Thomas J.) corresponds with C., i. 244;
- “Pursuits of Literature” quoted, 249.
- Melville (Viscount)—v. Dundas.
- Mifflin (George), Governor of Pennsylvania, i. 204.
- Minto (Earl of)—v. Elliot.
- Mitford (John, 1st Baron Redesdale), i. 76, 305; ii. [128].
- Mitford (Dr.), ii. [21], [22], [51], [74], [119].
- Mitford (Mary Russell) visits C. at Botley, ii. [22].
- Moreau de St. Méry (M. E.), French émigré at Philadelphia—notice of him, i. 103.
- Morgan (John), i. 220, 224, 279, 308.
- Morrice (Captain Thomas), i. 81.
- Nares (Archdeacon), i. 237.
- Newspaper Press of London—its hostility to C., ii. passim;
- its great advance in character, [292];
- forgives C. when he is gone for ever, [297].
- Nova Scotia—C.’s life there as a soldier, i. 42.
- Oldden (John), of Philadelphia, i. 164.
- Paine (Thomas)—influence of his political writings, i. 99;
- on the currency, 302;
- notice of him, ii. [209];
- C. recommends his writings on the currency, [211];
- his remains exhumed and brought to England, [214], [217].
- Parliamentary Reform—impulse given to the cause by support of C.’s Register, ii. [10];
- and again in 1817, [197];
- its progress not served by Party, [227];
- how it came, at last, [257], [280].
- Parr (Samuel, D.D.)—his support of Queen Caroline, ii. [224].
- Paull (James)—his candidature for Westminster, ii. [15];
- C.’s account of him, [25];
- other references, [29], [33].
- Peace of Amiens, i. 277.
- Peel (Sir Robert)—C.’s motion concerning him, ii. [287].
- Penn (John), i. 251.
- Perceval (Spencer) prosecutes C. for “libel,” i. 306;
- his antipathy to C., ii. [49];
- inquiry into his alleged corruption is stifled, [85];
- his gratification at C.’s conviction, [128].
- Perry (James), editor of the Morning Chronicle, ii. [107], [109].
- Philadelphia, U. S., described, i. 94;
- strong party spirit there, 107, 131, 176;
- anti-British feeling, 180;
- yellow fever, 208;
- the newspapers, 217.
- Pitt (William)—his pamphleteers, i. 237, 241, 242;
- C. dines with him, 253;
- C.’s reasons for ceasing to support him, 324;
- other references, i. 124, 130, 314, 317.
- Place (Francis) quoted, ii. [59];
- anecdote, [116];
- his electoral purity, [221].
- Planting, ii. [65], [69], [233].
- Plunkett (William C., 1st Baron)—suit against C., i. 307.
- Political Partisanship—its penalties, &c., i. 206.
- Poor, Labouring, of England—their prosperous condition in the middle of the 18th century, i. 5;
- their increasing poverty, 17;
- growth of pauperism, ii. [37], [38];
- proposals to flog them, [130];
- their miserable condition after the peace, ii. [237], &c.
- Potato—C.’s aversion to the, ii. [236].
- Press, Liberty of the, i. 197;
- its position at the close of the 18th century, 231;
- prosecutions, 304, ii. [107], [115], &c.;
- cessation of political prosecutions, ii. [274].
- Preston election of 1826, ii. [254].
- Priestley (Joseph, LL.D.)—his emigration to the U.S., i. 108;
- notice of him, 110;
- in retirement, 217.
- “Pursuits of Literature”—v. Mathias.
- Quakers in Pennsylvania, i. 95, 97;
- their troubles at the period of Independence, 200.
- Radnor (Earl of)—v. Bouverie.
- Randolph (Edmund), American politician, i. 142.
- Raynal (G. T., Abbé)—influence of his writings, i. 85, 96.
- Redesdale (Lord)—v. Mitford.
- Reeves (John), i. 263, 265, 295, 306, 319; ii. [96], [120].
- Reviews, as organs of public opinion, i. 231.
- Ridgway (James), bookseller, i. 80, 81, 133.
- Robson (R. B.) associated with C. concerning barrack abuses, ii. [12], [16], [17].
- Rogers (George), of Southampton, ii. [230].
- Romilly (Sir Samuel), ii. [85], [130], [178].
- Rose (Rt. Hon. George), i. 249; ii. [74], [83], [84].
- Rowley (Wm., M.D.) quoted, i. 209.
- Rowson (Mrs.), actress and novelist, i. 136.
- Rush (Benjamin, M. D.)—his celebrity, i. 209;
- his phlebotomy, 210;
- his politics, ib.;
- suffers from C.’s lash, 211;
- obtains a verdict with damages against him, 217.
- Scarlett (James, 1st Lord Abinger)—his antipathy to C. and the Reformers, ii. [224].
- Scipion (L. H. Comte du Roure) edits C.’s “Maître d’Anglais,” i. 102.
- Shadgett’s Weekly Review, ii. [195].
- Sheridan (R. B.) succeeds Fox as M.P. for Westminster, ii. [24], [27];
- other references, i. 292; ii. [28].
- Sidmouth (Viscount)—v. Addington.
- Six Acts—their purport, ii. [214].
- Soldiers—anecdotes, i. 38, and v. Flogging.
- Somerville (Alexander) quoted, ii. [44].
- Spies employed by Government, ii. [196].
- Sports—fishing, ii. [3];
- single-stick, [4];
- coursing, [21], [51];
- dogs, [99].
- Stuart (Lord Henry) with the English embassy at Philadelphia, i. 191;
- testifies to C.’s loyalty, 306;
- interchange of visits, 312; ii. [17].
- Swann (James), celebrated paper-maker, an attached friend of C.’s, ii. [98];
- correspondence, [99] et seq.
- Symonds (H. D.), bookseller, in Newgate, i. 133.
- Tait’s Magazine quoted on C.’s reception in Scotland, ii. [281].
- Talleyrand—his exile in America, i. 104;
- introduces himself to C., 158.
- Taylor (Miss)—case of, ii. [81].
- Thelwall (John)—his “memoirs” quoted, i. 58, 85.
- Thornton (William)—his proposed American language, i. 160.
- Tilghman (Edward), lawyer of Philadelphia, C.’s counsel in Rush v. Cobbett, i. 215, 224.
- Tooke (J. Horne) quoted, ii. [29], [181].
- Toryism—its narrow-minded fears, ii. [170], [196].
- Twyford, co. Hants—celebrated school there, i. 312, 316.
- Upcott (W.), i. 241.
- Vansittart (Nicholas, 1st Lord Bexley), i. 263.
- Walker (Peter), ii. [136].
- Wardle (Colonel G. L.)—his exposure of the Duke of York, ii. [59], [60].
- Washington (George), American President, i. 122, 126, 183, 203;
- his death, 218.
- Watson (Richard), surgeon, violent Reformist, ii. [175].
- Webster (Noah)—his proposed improvement in orthography, i. 160.
- Weld (Isaac)-his account of Philadelphia, i. 97.
- Westminster politics, ii. [15], [24], [26], [59], [64].
- Whiggism—its fine profession, ii. [256], [258], [271].
- Whitbread (Samuel)—notice of him, ii. [39];
- calumniated, [110].
- White (Henry), Whig writer, ii. [227].
- White (Holt), C.’s solicitor, ii. [77], [95], [113].
- Wilberforce (William)—his horror of “disaffection,” ii. [38], and of C.’s advocacy of Reform, [171].
- Windham (Right Hon. William) notices C. on his return to England, i. 251, 253;
- his strong anti-Gallicanism, 255;
- his new opposition party, 281;
- gets up a subscription to start C.’s Register, 283;
- defends C. in the House of Commons, 292;
- testifies to his loyalty, 306;
- his taste for pugilism, ii. [4];
- coolness between him and C., [13];
- attacks the parliamentary reporters, [109].
- Wolcott (Oliver), American politician, i. 154, 182, 200, 201.
- Wooler (T. J.), ii. [195], [251].
- Wright (John), bookseller in Piccadilly, i. 226, 229, 241;
- becomes C.’s man of business, 310;
- correspondence with C., 314 et seq.;
- rupture of their friendship, ii. [143], [144];
- his suit against C., [223].
- Wyndham (William, Baron Grenville) i. 276, ii. [34].
- Yellow-fever in Philadelphia, i. 209.
- Yonge (Sir George), Secretary-at-War, i. 68.
- York (H.R.H. Frederick, Duke of)—his troubles over Mrs. Clarke, ii. [57], [60].
- Yorke (Philip, 3rd Earl of Hardwicke), i. 305.
- Yorke (Right Hon. Charles) testifies to C.’s loyalty, i. 306.
- Yorke (Henry Redhead)—notice of him, ii. [47];
- his opposition to C., [47], [123].
THE END.
LONDON: GILBERT AND RIVINGTON, PRINTERS, ST. JOHN’S SQUARE.