Salt, price of, in Charleston: effect of the blockade, i. [270]

San Domingo, Seward's overture to Great Britain for a convention to guarantee independence of, i. [126] note[1]

San Francisco, Russian vessels in harbour of, ii. [129] and note[1]

San Jacinto, the, i. [204], [205], [216]

Saturday Review, The: views of, on Lincoln's election, i. [39]; judgment of Seward, [39]; views at outbreak of war, [41], [46]; on Southern right of secession, [42]; on Proclamation of Neutrality, [100]-[1]; on reported American adhesion to Declaration of Paris, [146] note[1]; on slavery as an issue: attack on Mrs. H.B. Stowe, [180]-[1]; on blockade and recognition, [183]; on duration of war and cotton supply, [246] note[3]; on servile insurrection, ii. [80]; and the relation between the American struggle and British institutions, [276], [277]-[8], [280]; on the promiscuous democracy of the North, [277]; on the Republic and the British Monarchy, [277]-[8]; cited, [111], [231] note

Savannah, Ga., i. [253] note[1]; captured by Sherman, ii. [245], [249], [300]-[1]

Scherer, Cotton as a World Power, cited, ii. [6]

Schilling, C., ii. [301] note[3]

Schleiden, Rudolph, Minister of Republic of Bremen, i. [115], [116] note, [130]; views of, on Seward and Lincoln, [115]-[6]; offers services as mediator: plan of an armistice, [121], [122]; visit of, to Richmond, [121]-[3]; failure of his mediation, [122]-[3]; report of Russian attitude to privateers, [171] note[1]; on Trent affair, [231] note[2], [242]; on Lincoln and Seward's attitude to release of envoys, [231] note[2]; on attitude of Seward and Sumner to Southern Ports Bill, [248] note[3]; quoted, on slavery, ii. [111] and note[2]

Schleswig-Holstein question, i. [79]; ii. [203]-[4]