Catholic, Roman, countries, support from, [84].

Catholics, Roman, indulgences granted, [232]; Jesuits excepted, [232]; the Marquis of Worcester derived no assistance from, [327], [328].

Catholics, Roman, Irish, inquiry respecting, [122]; Charles Ist repudiates the concessions made to, [130]; his letter to Ormond, [131]; negotiations with, repudiated by Secretary Nicholas, [132]; the whole party astounded at these abortive results, [161]; diminished hopes, Charles I. in custody at Newcastle, [175].

Catholics, Roman, laws against, [27].

Caus, De Salomon, his works, [29].

Cavaliers, Act providing for poor, [247]; fund for, [317].

Century of Inventions, a Catalogue raisonné, [17]; written, [214]; MS. copy in the British Museum, [221]; first publication, [258]; Poetical notice of, [258], [259].

Charles the First, his birth, [5]; first year of his reign, [12]; witnesses the wheel experiment at the Tower, [25]; character of his reign, [25]; 15th year, [31]; the Long Parliament, [31]; return from Scotland, [32]; retreat to Hampton Court, [32]; at Royston, [33]; at Hull, [34]; flatters the Earl of Worcester, [35]; his movements in 1641, [35]; Civil War declared, [37]; makes a convenience of the Marquis of Worcester for his wealth, [38]; his perfidious nature, [38]; members of Parliament summoned to attend at the Banqueting House, 1640, [38]; borrows money from the Marquis of Worcester, [41]; journey to Leicester, [42]; £5,000 sent for him to Newstead, [42]; “hopes he shall not die in the Marquis’s debt,” [42]; report from the King at Nottingham of his message by Lord Herbert to his father, [44], [45], [46]; Charles I. and Lord Herbert pourtrayed, [46], [47]; his tortuous policy, [55]; certain early loans from the Marquis of Worcester, [58], [59]; at York, [59]; commission of Array, [59]; attended by the Marquis of Hertford at Oxford, [67]; inconsistencies in his conduct, [69]; liberal in promises, [69]; battle of Edge-hill, [69]; sends the Earl of Glamorgan the Blue Ribbon, and a warrant for the title of Duke of Somerset, [74]; assures Glamorgan “you labour for a dear friend,” [75]; wonders he has not gone to Ireland, [75]; artful letter to Ormond, [78]; his deceptive style, [79]; profuse in professions of attachment, [81]; why selected for this negociation, [81]; reassures Glamorgan of his confidence in him, [82]; at Hereford, [83]; visits Raglan Castle, [104]; the fickle monarch a false friend, [105]; reception, [105]; returns to the Castle, [106]; his third visit, [106]; in all 27 days, [106]; discourse with the Marquis, [106]; presented with a dessert from Troy, [108]; deprives the Marquis of £6,000 deposited with his son, [109], [110]; his engagement of Glamorgan characterized, [116]; disasters in war, [117]; looks to Ireland for assistance, [117]; his urgent necessities, [117]; his plan for realizing his hopes in Ireland, [118]; repudiates Glamorgan’s proceedings in Ireland, [122]; Hume’s notice, [122], [123]; Carte’s charge, [123]; the King’s duplicity, [123]; 6,000 men ready to leave Ireland, [126]; his message to Parliament, [130]; writes to the Queen about “Glamorgan’s business,” [134]; his letter to “Glamorgan,” [134]; his consummate duplicity, [135]; charged by the Marquis of Worcester with being “wavering and fickle,” [145], [148]; his character, [157]; creates the Earl of Glamorgan, “Duke of Somerset and Beaufort,” [162]; the patent, [162], [163]; his confidence in Glamorgan not misplaced, [167]; his perfect acquaintance with the Marquis and his son, [167]; writes from Newcastle, [174]; not strictly guarded, [174]; offers to pawn his kingdoms, [174]; a copy sent to the Pope, [174]; Glamorgan devises a plan for his escape to Ireland, [175]; the King’s treatment of the noble family of Somerset, [184]; delivered up by the Scots, 1647, [189]; his execution, [189]; the Marquis of Worcester explains his conduct and powers in Ireland, to Lord Clarendon, [227]; an immense army was to have been raised, [228]; and the Pope and Catholic Princes were to supply £30,000 per month for its maintenance, [228]; hence the “amplitude of Glamorgan’s commission,” [228]; the signing and sealing, [229]; to Huntingdon, [330]; to Nottingham, to York, [330]; the Tower, [330]; his note of hand, [331]; money at Oxford, [332].

Charles the First’s correspondence; his letter, August, 1641, [32]; December, 1641, [33]; “lying pamphlets,” [33]; March, 1641–2, [33]; May, 1642, [34]; January, 1642, [39]; June, 1643, [64]; his patent granted to the Earl of Glamorgan, [70]; his instructions to him, [72]; letter, February, 1644, [74]; March, 1644, [75]; December, 1644, [78]; Commission to Glamorgan, March, 1644, [79], [80]; February, 1645, [82]; June, 1645, [82], [83]; August, 1644, [102]; August, 1644, [104]; January, 1645–6; March, 1645–6, [133]; Feb. 1645, [134]; July, 1646, [174].

Charles the Second, court at Paris, [189]; its changes, [189]; its poverty at St. Germains, [189]; at Jersey, [207]; in Scotland, [207]; in France, [207]; Louis XIV. of France, favourable to, [209]; supposed to have sent the Marquis of Worcester from France to London, [210]; the Marquis of Worcester had presented him with an ingeniously contrived box, [223]; proclaimed, [225]; his return and rejoicings, [226]; Marquis of Worcester’s petition to have his case investigated by Parliament, [231]; the King and Queen’s progress, [231], [232]; a christening at Worcester House, [232]; his coronation, [232]; homage of the nobles, [232]; sketch of his character, and that of the Marquis, [234]; attends the House of Lords, [243]; personally prorogues it, [243]; ceremony, [244]; one-tenth of the Water-commanding engine granted to him, [257]; remitted on the Marquis surrendering a warrant granting land to the value of £40,000, [257]; the Marquis’s petition to, [269]; another, [271]; draft of a letter to, [277]; coolness towards the Marquis, [295]; characteristic traits of his majesty, [307], [308]; his apathy retards the development of the steam engine, [308].