Ozanne Rev. T.D., The South as it is, etc., quoted, ii. [195] note[1]

Page, Captain, instructions to, on the use of the Laird Rams, ii. [122] note[1]

Pakenham, British Minister to Mexico, i. [13]-[14]

Palmer, Roundell, Solicitor-General, i. [268], [271]

Palmerston, Lord: Coalition Government of, in 1859 ... i. [76], [77], [78]; on Seward's attitude, [130]; on reinforcement of Canada, [130]-[1]; statement of reasons for participation in Declaration of Paris, [139]; suggests method of approach in Declaration of Paris negotiations, [156] note[1]; on the object of the belligerents, [178]; on British policy and the cotton shortage, [199]-[200]; on possible interception of Mason and Slidell, [207]-[8], [209]; action of, in Trent affair, [226] note[2], [229], [241]; statement of, on British neutrality, [241]; interview with Spence, [266]; refusal to interview Lindsay, [295]-[6]; letters to Adams on General Butler's order, [302]-[5]; reply to Hopwood on mediation, ii. [18]; definition of British policy in debate on Lindsay's motion, [22]-[3]; sneers at the silent cotton manufacturers, [26]; views of, on mediation, [31]; participates in Russell's mediation plan, [34], [36], [40]-[44], [46], [51], [54], [56], [73]; traditional connection with Lewis' Hereford speech, [50] and note[1]; [51] note[2]; on the folly of appealing to the belligerents, [56], [59], [73]; opinion of Napoleon, [59]; views on French proposals for armistice, [60]-[1]; on British position in regard to slavery, [61], [78]-[9]; approves Russell's speech on Confederate shipbuilding, [131]; defends Government procedure in Alabama case, [134]-[5]; accusation of, against Forster and Bright, [135]; attitude to seizure of Laird Rams, [145]; on the use of Napoleon's name in Roebuck's motion, [174]-[5], [177]; the crisis over Danish policy of, [203]-[4], [210], [214], [216]; interviews with Lindsay, [206]-[8], [209], [210], [213]; consents to interview Mason, [207]; opinion of, on the ultimate result of the Civil War, [209], [215]; attitude to resolution of Southern Societies, [211]; interview with Mason, [214]-[5]; reply to joint deputation of Southern Societies, [216]; reply to Mason's offer on abolition, [250]; assurances on relations with America after Hampton Roads Conference, [255]; attitude to expansion of the franchise, [276] and note[1]; death of, [302] Characteristics of, as politician, ii. [134] Cobden quoted on, i. [226] note[2] Delane, close relations with, i. [229] note[2] Index: criticism of, in the, ii. [216] Press organ of, i, [229] Otherwise mentioned, i. [96], [168], [194], [262]; ii. [19], [68], [90], [112], [168], [170], [173], [185], [188], [190], [249], [263], [285], [293]

Papineau, Canadian rebellion, 1837 ... i. [4]

Papov, Rear-Admiral, ii. [129] note[1]

Paris, Congress of (1856), i. [139]

Peabody, George, quoted, i. [227]

Peacocke, G.M.W. ii. [187], [193] note