Prim, Spanish General, commanding expedition to Mexico, i. [259]
Prince Consort, The, i. [76], [213], [224]-[5]; influence of, on Palmerston's foreign policy, [224]; policy of conciliation to United States, [228]; Adams, C.F., quoted on, [225], [228]
Privateering, i. [83] et seq., [153] et seq. passim Russian convention with U.S. on, i. [171] note[1] Southern Privateering, i. [86], [89], [153], [156], [164], [165], [167], [171] note[1], [186]. Proclamation on, see under Davis. British attitude to, i. [86], [89]-[92], [95], [158], [160], [161], [163], [166]; Parliamentary discussion on, [94], [95], [157]; closing of British ports to, [170] and note[2] French attitude to, i. [157], [158], [159], [161], [162], [165] Northern attitude to, i. [83], [89], [90], [92], [111], [163]; Seward's motive against in Declaration of Paris negotiation, [162], [164], [169]; Northern accusations against Britain on, [91] United States policy on, i. [141], [156]. See Privateering Bill, infra See also under Declaration of Paris negotiation
Privateering Bill, The, ii. [122] et seq.; purpose of, [122]-[3], [125], [137]; discussion in Senate on, [123]-[4]; passed as an administrative measure, [124], [137]; influence of, on Russell's policy, [137]; British view of American intentions, [137]-[8]; historical view, [141]; Seward's use of, [121] note[2]
Prussia and Schleswig-Holstein, ii. [203]-[4]
Punch, cartoons of, cited: on Trent affair, i. [217]-[8], [237]; on Stone Boat Blockade, [255]; suggesting intervention by France, ii. [75] note[1]; on Roebuck, [170] note[1]; on Lincoln's re-election, [239] and note[1] Poem in, on the death of Lincoln, ii. [259]
Putnam, G.H., Memories of My Youth, cited, i. [178] note[3]
Putnam, G.P., Memoirs, cited, ii. [163] note[2]
Quarterly Review, The, i. [47]; views on the Southern secession, [47]; on the lesson from the failure of Democracy in America, [47]; ii. [279], [286], [301]; attitude in the conflict, [199], [301]; on British sympathy for the South, [301]
Reader, The, cited, ii. [222], and note[2]