| Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber: |
|---|
| opiniated, cold, and prejudiced=> opinionated, cold, and prejudiced {[pg 58]} |
| Children of Thomas Adderly=> Children of Thomas Adderley {[pg 82]} |
| Stacpole, Pembrokeshire.=> Stackpole, Pembrokeshire. {[pg 109]} |
| Mme. de Stael once said=> Mme. de Staël once said {[pg 393]} |
| Sue, Eugene, 388=> Sue, Eugène, 388 {[index]} |
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Life and Letters of the Fourth Earl of Clarendon. by Sir Herbert Maxwell, Bart.
[2] William and his seven brothers and three sisters, were brought up by their mother, his father having died when he was only eleven years of age. (Lady Eden was the daughter of W. Davison of Beamish Park, Durham.)
[3] Sir Gilbert Elliot (1751-1814). In 1806 he was appointed Governor-General of India, and created Earl of Minto in 1813.
[4] Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Bart. (1806-1863), of Harpton Court, Radnorshire. On his father’s death in 1855 he succeeded to the baronetcy; he became Chancellor of the Exchequer the same year, Home Secretary in 1859, and Secretary for War in 1861.
[5] A full account of this time is given in Life and Death of Lord Edward FitzGerald, by Thomas Moore, also in Edward and Pamela FitzGerald, by Gerald Campbell.
[6] Hon. Eleanor Eden, married in 1799 Lord Hobart (Earl of Buckinghamshire). He died in 1816; she was generally known as Lady Bucks.
[7] Anne Isabella, daughter of Sir R. Milbanke Noel, married Lord Byron, January 2, 1815. He had proposed to her and been refused in 1812.
[8] Miss Eden’s sister, who married Charles Drummond the banker in 1819.