ignorance of the doctors,165,166;Byron’s last illness and death,170,171,252;his statement,192et seq.;accompanies Byron’s body to England,202;Dr. Bruno’s reply to the statement,403et seq.;Dr. Millingen’s account of Byron’s last illness,405et seq.Florida, the brig, brings the loan to Greece, and conveys back Byron’s body,199et seq.Freiber, Dr., German physician, attends Byron,169Gamba, Count Pietro:on Byron’s religious opinions,16,17;fracas at Pisa,20;goes to Albaro,32;travels with Byron to Greece,47,48;on Byron’s perseverance and discernment,65;on Byron’s favourite reading,79;Byron’s practical sympathy,80;accompanies Byron to Missolonghi,83;taken prisoner by the Turks,84;release and arrival at Missolonghi,85;the General Assembly at Missolonghi,88;Byron’s interview with the two privateer sailors,91;becomes editor of theGreek Telegraph,114;Byron’s illness,121,143,148,163et seq.;arrest of English officers,157;Byron’s funeral,184;conveys Byron’s body to Zante,198Gamba, Count Ruggiero, Byron’s neighbour at Pisa,3;leaves Pisa and goes to Montenero,21;ordered to leave Montenero,22;goes to Albaro,32;and Byron,212Gamba, Teresa. SeeGuiccioli, CountessGell, Sir William, his writings,100,101n.George IV. makes ‘equivocation’ the fashion,17,18;and Sir Walter Scott,53Giaour, The, what the poem reveals,240,256,257,265Gifford, William, Byron’s opinion of,51,60Greece:Byron sails for,47;state of the country and army,64,87et seq.,118,180;Byron advances £4,000,67;Byron’s appeal to the nation,69,70;preparations against Lepanto,91;honours offered to Byron,151,152;Congress at Salona,153;Greek loan raised in London,156;effect of Byron’s death on,175et seq.Greece, History of, by G. Finlay,70;by Mitford,100Greek Chronicle:Byron’s support,108;suppression of,112,113Greek Telegraph,103,113Guiccioli, Countess, daughter of Count Ruggiero Gamba:Byron’s neighbour at Pisa,3,4,20;describes Byron,7et seq.;on the characters of Shelley and Byron,14,15;on Byron’s conduct towards Allegra,23;on Byron’s religion,74,78;anecdote about Mary Chaworth’s ring,224;Lady of the Land,298,301,370;and Mrs. Leigh,379Hancock, Charles, Byron’s banker,82Hanson, John, Byron’s solicitor,241,345,346Harmodia,274,275Hatajè, Byron’s kindness to,133et seq.Hay, Captain, fracas at Pisa,20,21Hebrew Melodies,277Hercules, the, an English brig:Byron and his suite sail to Greece in it,47;Byron lives on board,64,65Herod’s Lament for Mariamne,278Hesketh, Mr.,158,159Heywood, Sergeant, consulted by Lady Byron,338Hobhouse, John Cam (afterwards Lord Broughton):and Byron,35;persuades Byron to burn his journal,102;destroys one of Byron’s poems,208;Byron’s funeral,215,216;and Lady Byron,216,320;life-long friend of Mrs. Leigh,319.See alsoBroughton, LordHodgson, captain of theFlorida,203Hodgson, Rev. Francis:consulted by Mrs. Leigh,344et seq.;appeals to Lady Byron,346et seq.Hodgson, Rev. F., Memoir of,73n.Holmes, Mr. James, his portrait of Byron,9Hours of Idleness, what the poem reveals,220Hucknall-Torkard, Byron’s burial place,44Humphreys, Captain, on state of Greece,180Hunt, Sir Aubrey de Vere,102Hunt, Leigh:the story of his literary and money relations with Byron,26et seq.;Byron’s opinion of,31Ireland, Dr., Dean of Westminster, refuses burial of Byron in Westminster Abbey,203Jersey, Countess of, her party in honour of Byron,352Kean, Edmund, actor, Byron’s opinion of,61Kemble, John, actor, Byron’s opinion of,61Kennedy, Dr., Scottish medical man:tries to ‘convert’ Byron,72et seq.;and Hatajè,136;Lady Byron on,77King, Lady. SeeByron, Hon. Augusta AdaKinnaird, the Hon. Douglas, Byron’s opinion of,208Knox, Captain,51Knox, Mrs.,50,54Lamb, Hon. Mrs. George, and Byron,235Lamb, Lady Caroline, spreads the Byron scandal,270,317,340,390Lambro, a Suliote chief,156,164Lara, what the poem reveals,268,271,273Leigh, Hon. Mrs. Augusta, half-sister of Lord Byron:influence over her brother,42,73,245,261;and his poetry,103;wishes him to go abroad,242;first introduction to, and close intimacy with, Mary Chaworth,250;loyalty to her brother and Mary Chaworth,255,287,317,321;letters from her brother about Mary Chaworth,258,267,268;simulated confinement and convalescence,269;her brother’s conduct gives colour to the scandal,270,279,285;letters to Hodgson on the secret,272,344et seq.;spends a month at Newstead with her brother,279;the difficulties of keeping the secret,285,317,362et seq.;lines inChilde Haroldreferring to,287;the so-called confession,289,322,324,325,341,357,361et seq.;Stanzas to Augusta,290,364;Lord Lovelace’s opinion of her character,294,295;the accusation dealt with in detail,318et seq.;Lord Stanhope and Frances, Lady Shelley on,318;the story of her life,319;Hobhouse’s advice to,320;difficult position with Lady Byron,321,341,362,367;her predicament owing to the adoption of Medora,322;Epistle to Augusta,324;letters to Hodgson on her brother’s marriage,332et seq.;a long visit to her brother and Lady Byron,336;Lady Byron’s feelings towards her,336,337,342,343,360;Lady Byron’s confinement,337;Mrs. Clermont’s treachery,341;Lady Jersey’s party,352;parts for ever from her brother,352;Lady Byron’s written statement,353et seq.;letters to Hodgson on her brother,362;her line of conduct to Lady Byron,362et seq.;Moore on Byron’s feelings towards her,366;pretends that her brother’s letter to Mary Chaworth was written to herself,368et seq.;a genuine letter,372;reply to Lady Byron’s advice,375et seq.;her children’s prospects discussed with Lady Byron,380,385;Lady Byron’s request,380;Lord Lovelace on,389et seq.Lepanto, preparations against,91Liberal, The, its unsuccessful career,31,32Lion, Byron’s favourite dog,145,146Londos, General Andrea, and Byron,155Lovelace, Earl of,Astarte:Byron’sThyrza,234n.;accusations against Mrs. Leigh,249,269et seq.,287,288,318,321,322,338,341,362,366et seq.,368et seq.,385et seq.,390;describes Mrs. Leigh’s character,294;Manfred, the key of the mystery,326et seq.,364;Byron’s mutability,339;Lady Byron’s written statement,353et seq.;important letters from Byron,368et seq.,385,386;and Lady Byron,387Lushington, Dr.:advises Lady Byron,338,351,352,357,358,383,387;his opinion on Byron’s letters abstracted by Mrs. Clermont,341;signs Lady Byron’s statement,353et seq.Magdalen, a fragment,269Maitland, Sir Thomas, High Commissioner of the Ionian Islands,52,61;character and death,115,116Manfred, the supposed key to the mystery,291et seq.,328,364Marino Faliero,100Marshall, Mrs. Julian,Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley,178,180Masi, Sergeant-Major, fracas at Pisa,20,21Matthews, Charles Skinner, one of Byron’s best friends, his death,227Mavrocordato, Prince, Governor-General of Western Greece:and Byron,66,68,70,202;brings the Greek fleet to Missolonghi,81;Byron’s arrival at Missolonghi,85;Byron’s interview with two privateer sailors,91;his jealousy,105,106;infraction of neutrality in Ithaca,115;Byron’s opinion of,116;opposition by Colonel Stanhope,119,153;and Odysseus,153et seq.;Byron’s last illness and death,164et seq.;effect of Byron’s death on,177,202;Trelawny’s opinion of,179,180;his efforts for Greece,181;issues a proclamation on Byron’s death,183,184Medora, birth of,254,268;Childe Harold,288;adoption by Mrs. Leigh,322Medwin, Captain Thomas:his description of Byron,4,6,11;on Byron’s life at Pisa,20;The Angler in Wales,33n.Melbourne, Lady, persuades Byron not to go abroad,242Metaxata, Byron’s residence at,65,79Meyer, Jean Jacques, editor of theGreek Chronicle,112Milbanke, Miss. SeeByron, LadyMilbanke, Sir Ralph, his property,10Millingen, Dr.:on Byron’s character,95;on Parry,96;Byron a favourite in Greece,105,177;on the Greek press,113;Byron’s illness,124;Byron’s kind treatment of Hatajè,133et seq.;on Cariascachi’s treachery,161;on Byron’s unhappiness and anxieties,162;attends Byron in his last illness and death,167et seq.,190,193et seq.,403et seq.;on Mavrocordato,181Missolonghi:blockade of,66,96;Turks retire from,70;Greek squadron at,81;description of,87;Byron’s arrival and life at,88,99;release of Turkish prisoners,133;Turkish brig-of-war runs ashore off,139;effect of Byron’s death,175,183et seq.Mitford, William,History of Greece,100Monthly Literary Recreations,101n.Monthly Review, Byron’s reviews in,100,101n.Moore, Thomas:letters from Shelley and Byron,13,14,266;and Byron,36;on theThyrzapoems,229;Byron’s love for Mary Chaworth,238,246,266,279;criticism on hisLife of Byron,365Moore, Sir John, ode on the death of,58Muir, Dr., principal medical officer at Cephalonia,82Muir, General Skey,82Murray, John, Byron’s publisher:Byron’s letters to,30,31;Childe Harold,50;asks for Byron to be buried in Westminster Abbey,203;and Mrs. Leigh,269;Byron’s copyrights,281;Epistle to Augusta,324Musters, John, husband of Mary Chaworth:the ring incident and engagement,224,225;separation from his wife,245;behaviour to his wife,246;reconciliation,251;cuts down thepeculiar diadem of trees,289Napier, Colonel, British Resident Governor of Argostoli,48,80Newstead Abbey: sale of,99;Byron’s visits,226,227Noel, Lady, Byron’s mother-in-law:Byron inherits the Noel property on her death,10;her bequest of Byron’s portrait,43n.;advice as to her daughter’s separation from Byron,338;and Mrs. Leigh,362Noel, Sir Ralph, writes to Byron requiring a separation,339O’Doherty, Ensign, Byron’s opinion of his poetry,100Odysseus, Greek insurgent leader:his opposition to Mavrocordato,153;and Trelawny,179,180Osborne, Lord Sidney, and Sir Thomas Maitland,115;goes to Missolonghi,198;eulogy of Byron’s conduct in Greece,201Parry, Major:his arrival at Missolonghi,91,92;his peculiarities,92et seq.;practical joke on,95;on Byron’s intentions in Greece,97,98;on the relationship between Mavrocordato and Byron,116;on Byron’s mode of reproof,117;account of Byron’s illness,121;anecdote ofJerry Bentham’s Cruise,126;Turkish brig-of-war ashore,139;artillery at Missolonghi,144;on Byron’s mode of life,145;on Byron’s power in Greece,151,152;Byron’s last illness and death,164et seq.,196;his opinion of Byron,175Phillips, Thomas, his portrait of Byron,9Pigot, Elizabeth, Byron’s letters to,222,223Pisa: Shelley’s description of,3;Byron’s life at,20Po, Stanzas to the, what they reveal,298et seq.,370Pope, Alexander, Homer,51Prothero, Rowland E.:Letters and Journals of Lord Byron,70n.,125,256n.,260n.,383Quarterly Review, the,50,100Recollections of a Long Life.SeeBroughton, LordRoberts, Captain, describes the wreck ofThe Bolivar,33Robertson, Rev. Frederick, Lady Byron’s spiritual adviser,324Robinson, Crabb,77Romilly, Sir Samuel, consulted by Lady Byron,338Salona, Congress at,152,153Sanders, Mr. George, painter, his portrait of Byron,9Sardanapalus, a tragedy,101Sass, Lieutenant, death of,141Schilitzy, a Greek, accompanies Byron to Greece,47Scott, Captain, commands theHercules, in which Byron travels to Greece,47Scott, Dr., surgeon, and Byron,54,58Scott, Sir Walter:Byron’s opinion of,35,51,55,79;his denial of the authorship of theWaverley Novels,53Segati, Marianna, Byron’s liaison with,371Shakespeare, William, Byron’s opinion of,101Shelley, Percy Bysshe:describes Pisa,3;and Byron,11et seq.;fracas at Pisa,20,21;and Allegra,22;leaves Pisa for Lerici,26;and Leigh Hunt,26et seq.;his death,30;Byron’s opinion of,30,35;