Fock, General, [192]
Fortnightly Review, [61], [163]
Froude, Henry, [39], [66], [80], [82], [194]
Germany, [22], [33], [50], [51], [95], [109], [203], [271], [277], [287], [291], [293], [297]
Ghiray, Hadji, [31]
Gibraltar, [49]
Girardin, Emile de, [70]
Gladstone, Mr. W. E., makes acquaintance of Madame Novikoff, [23]; what he called her, [24]; solitary championship of Russia, [25]; publishes his pamphlet, The Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East, [26]; his anxiety about the future of England and Russia, [27]; speaks at St. James's Hall, [43]; a misunderstood incident, [44]; his fearless denunciation of Turkey, [45]; his friendship with Madame Novikoff criticised, [48]; his dying utterance, [53]; his character, [54]; he reviews Madame Novikoff's Russia and England, [55]; Cardinal Manning's opinion of him, [56]; his interest in the Old Catholics, [57]; a letter to Madame Novikoff, [58]; another letter, [62-64]; his interest in Shakespeare, [65]; a talk with Hayward, [67]; his love of books, [68]; an incident at Munich, [69]; at a dinner in Paris, [70]; his knowledge of French, [71]; a comment by the Pall Mall Gazette, [102]; on the Berlin Treaty, [147]; urges the coercion of the Sultan, [152]; a letter on Lord Salisbury's position, [153]; on the Sultan of Turkey, [154]; condemns the policy of Prince Lobanoff, [156]; on the Cyprus Treaty, [161]; on the history of nations, [219]