Laird, speech of, in reply to Bright's attack on the Government, ii. [134]
Laird Rams, the, ii. [121]-[2], [123], [124], [137], [140] et seq., [196]; description and purpose of, [122] and note[1]; British Government position, [133], [134]; rumours regarding, [142]-[3]; seizure of, [145]-[50], [179]-[80], [182]; suit for damages, [151] note[1]; British Government purchase of, [151] note[1]; U.S. Navy plan to purchase, [130] note[2]; usual historical treatment of the incident, [141], [147] and note[1]
Lamar, Confederate representative: account of Roebuck and Bright, ii. [172] note[2]
Lancashire: Cotton trade, distress in, ii. [6], [11] et seq., [21], [26], [29], [31], [240]; attitude in, to Government policy, [10], [11], [13]-[15]; attitude of the "Cotton Lords" to, [10], [16]; Farnall report on, [12], [20]; Northern sympathies of cotton operatives, [13], [285] note[1] Cotton factories, statistics, ii. [6] Cotton manufacturers, attack on in Commons, ii. [163]-[4]
Lane, Franklin K., Letters of, cited ii. [129] note[1]
Layard, reply of, on Roebuck's motion, ii. [171], [173]; on destruction of British property in America, [265]
Le Siècle, cited, ii. [174] note[3], [236] note[2]
Lee, General, turns back McClellan's advance on Richmond, ii. [1]; defeated at Antietam, [43], [85]; retreat of, through Shenandoah valley, [43]; advance in Pennsylvania, [163] note[1], [164], [176]; defeats Hooker at Chancellorsville, [164]; retreat from Gettysburg, [163] note[1], [178], [179], [297]; defence of Richmond, [185], [217], [247], [248]; surrender, [248], [255], [256]-[7], [265], [301], [303] Times, quoted or cited, on his campaign, ii. [227], [256], [296]
Lees, Mr., ii, [220]