Foreign Enlistment Act: idea of amending, ii. [124]; offer to United States on, [124]-[5]; reply to Adams' pressure for alteration of, [149]

Gregory's motion, i. [108]

Irishmen: recruiting of, ii. [201]-[2]

Laird Rams: conversations with Adams on, ii. [144]; orders detention of, [144]-[5], [146], [150], [151]; correspondence with the Lairds, [146]; drafts protest to Mason, [147], [148] and note[1]; reply to attack on Government policy on, [149]-[50]

Lindsay: approval of Cowley's statement to, i. [293], [294]; reply to request of, for an interview, [294]-[5]; interview with, on motion for mediation and recognition, ii. [212]-[13]

Mediation: advice to Palmerston on reported French offer, i. [305]; reply to Seward's protest, ii. [19], [25]-[6], [27]; project of, with Palmerston, ii. [31]-[2], [34], [36] et seq., [91], [271]; instructs Cowley to sound Thouvenel, [38]; letters to Gladstone on, [40], [41]; points of, [46]; responsibility for, [46] note[4]; Russia approached, [45]; memorandum on America, [49] and note[3]; proposal of an armistice, [31]-[2], [49], [53]-[5], [56]-[7]; comments on Napoleon's Armistice suggestion, [61]-[2], [64]; wish for acceptance, [62], [64]; declaration of no change in British policy, [71]; end of the project, [72], [155]; motive in, [73]; viewed as a crisis, [73]; comments of, to Brunow on joint mediation offer [73] note[1]

Mercier's Richmond visit, i. [287], [288]

Privateering, i. [89], [91], [159]-[63] passim; possible interference of, with neutrals, ii. [127], [138]-[150]; opinion of, on intended use of privateers, [138] Proclamation of Neutrality. British position in, i. [166] note[2]; ii. [265]-[6]

Recognition of the Confederacy: attitude to, i. [67], [74], [86], [87], [101], [108], [242], [243]; ii. [54], [59], [77]-[8]; influence of Trent affair on, i. [243]; reply to Mason's requests for, ii. [25], [27]; opinion of Roebuck's motion on, [166], [177]; denies receipt of proposal from France on [168]-[9], [172]

Servile War, ii. [80], [97], [98]