Dublin, Archbishop of, his work on Logic,477Dumont,51, his Recollections of Mirabeau reviewed,3774; his general characteristics,3741; his view's upon the French Revolution,41434440; his services in it,47; his personal character,74; his style,7374; his opinion that Burke's work on the French Revolution had saved Europe,44204; as the interpreter of Ilentham,3840153Dunourier,453402481Dundas, Sir., his character, and hostility to Hastings,108120; eulogizes Pitt,234; becomes his most useful assistant in the House of Commons,247; patronizes Burns,231"Duodecim Seriptre," a Roman game,4; note.Dupleix, governor of Pondicherry, his gigantic schemes for establishing French influence in India,202209212220222228; his death,228294Duroc,522E.East India Companv, its absolute authority in India,240; its condition when Clive lirst went to India,198200; its war with the French East India Companv,202; increase of its power,220; its factories in Bengal,230; fortunes made by its servants in Bengal,205200; its servants transferred into diplomatists and generals,8; nature of its government and power,1017; rights of the Nabob of Oude over Benares ceded to it75; its financial embarrassments,80Fox's proposed alteration in its charter,244247Ecclesiastical commission (the),100Ecclesiastics, fondness of the old dramatists for the character of,29Eden, pictures of, in old Bibles,343; painting of, by a gifted master,343Edinburgh, comparison of with Florence,340Education in England in the18th century,354; duty of the government in promoting it,182183; principles of should be progressive,343344; characteristics of in the Universities,344345355300; classical, its advantages and defects discussed,340; to:354Education in Italy in the14th century,277Egerton, his charge of corruption against Bacon,413Bacon's decision against him after receiving his present,430Egotism, why so unpopular in conversation, and so popular in writing,8182305Eldon, Lord,422420Elephants, use of, in war in India,218Eleusinian mysteries,4954Alcibiades suspected of having assisted at a mock celebration of,49; note; crier and torch-bearer important functionaries at celebration of,53; note."Eleven" (the), police of Athens,34; note.Eliot, Sir John,440-448; his treatise oil Government,449; died a martyr to liberty,451Elizabeth (Queen), fallacy entertained respecting the persecutions under her,439441; her penal laws,441; arguments in favor of, on the head of persecution, apply with more force to Mary,450; to:452; condition of the working classes in her reign,175437; her rapid advance of Cecil,8; character of her government,10182232; a persecutor though herself indifferent,3132; her early notice of Lord Bacon,353; her favor towards Essex,301; factions at the close of her reign,302363382; her pride and temper,370397; and death,383; progress ill knowledge since her days,302; her Protestantism,32829Ellenborough, Lord, one of the counsel for Hastings on his trial,127; his proclamations,472Ellis, W.,235Elphinstone, Lord,298Elwood, Milton's Quaker friend, allusion to,205Emigration of Puritans to America,459Emigration from England to Ireland under Cromwell,20Empires, extensive, often more flourishing alter a little pruning,83England, her progress in civilization due to the people,190; her physical and moral condition in the15th century,434435; never so rich and powerful as since the loss of her American colonies,83; conduct of, in reference to the Spanish succession,103104; successive steps of her progress,279281; influence of her revolution on the human race,281321; her situation at the Restoration compared with France at the restoration of Louis XVIII.,282284; her early situation,290293301; character of her public men at the latter part of the17th century,11; difference in her situation under Charles II., and under the Protectorate,32; her fertility in heroes and statesmen,170; how her history should be written by a perfect historian,428432; characteristics of her liberty,399; her strength contrasted with that of France,24; condition of her middle classes,423424English (the), in the10th century a free people,1819; their character,292300English language,308English literature of that age,341342; effect of foreign influences upon,349350English plays of the ago of Elizabeth,344340339"Englishman," Steele's,403Enlightenment, its increase in the world not necessarily unfavorable to Catholicism,301Enthusiasts, dealings of the Church of Rome and the Church of England with them,331330Epicureans, their peculiar doctrines,443Epicurus, the lines on his pedestal,444Epistles, Petrarch's, i. 08,99; addressed to the dead and the unborn,99Epitaphs, Latin,417Epithets, use of by Homer,354; by the old ballad-writers,354Ereilla, Alonzo de, a soldier as well as a poet,81Essay on Government, by Sir William Temple,50; by James Mills,551Essays, Bacon's, value of them,3117388433481491Essex, Earl of,30; his character, popularity and favor with Elizabeth,301304373; his political conduct,304; his friendship for Bacon,305300373397; his conversation with Robert Cecil,305; pleads for Bacon's marriage with Lady Hatton,308400; his expedition to Spain,307; his faults,308309397; decline of his fortunes,308; his administration in Ireland,309Bacon's faithlessness to him,309371; his trial and execution,371373; ingratitude of Bacon towards him,309380398; feeling of King James towards him,384; his resemblance to Buckingham,397Essex, Earl of, (Ch. I.,)489491Etherege. Sir George,353Eugene of Savoy,143Euripides, his mother an herb-woman,45; note; his lost plays,45; quotation from,5051; attacked for the immorality of one of his verses,51; note; his mythology,75Quintilian's admiration of him,141Milton's,217; emendation of a passage of,381; note; his characteristics,352Europe, state of, at the peace of Utrecht,135; want of union in, to arrest the designs of Lewis XIX.,35; the distractions of, suspended for a short time by the treaty of Nimeguen,60; its progress during the last seven centuries,307Evelina, Madame D'Arblay's, specimen of her style from,315310Evelyn,3148Evils, natural and national,158Exchequer, fraud of the Cabal ministry in closing it,53Exclusiveness of the Greeks,411412; of the Romans,413410F.Fable (a), of Pilpay,188Fairfax, reserved for him and Cromwell to terminate the civil war,491Falkland, Lord, his conduct in respect to the bill of attainder against Strafford,400; his character as a politician,483; at the head of the constitutional Royalists,474Family Compact (the), between France and Spain,13829Fanaticism, not altogether evil,64Faust,303Favorites, royal, always odious,38Female Quixote (the),319Fenelon, the nature of and standard of morality in his Telemachus,359Ferdinand II., his devotion to Catholicism,329Ferdinand VII., resemblance between him and Charles I. of England,488Fictions, literary,267Fidelity, touching instance of, in the Sepoys towards Clive,210Fielding, his contempt for Richardson,201; case from his "Amelia," analogous to Addison's treatment of Steele,370; quotation from, illustrative of the effect of Garrick's acting,332Filieaja Vincenzio,300Finance, Southev's theory of,150-155Finch, Chief Justice to Charles I.,450; tied to Holland,409Fine Arts (the), encouragement of, in Italy, in the14th century,277; causes of their decline in England after the civil war,157; government should promote them,184Fletcher, the dramatist,350308352Fletcher, of Saltona,388389Fleury,170172Florence,6364; difference between a soldier of, and one belonging to a standing army,61; state of, in the14th century,276-277; its History, by Maehiavelli,317; compared with Edinburgh,340Fluxions,324Foote, Charles, his stage character of an Anglo-Indian grandee,282; his mimicry,305; his inferiority to Garrick,306Forde, Colonel,256259Forms of government,412413Fox, the family of,414415Fox, Henry, sketch of his political character,224229415; directed to form an administration in concert with Chatham,235; applied to by Bute to manage the House of Commons,4344; his private and public qualities,45; became leader of the House of Commons,46; obtains his promised peerage,54; his unpopularity,417Fox, Charles James, comparison of his History of James II. with Mackintosh's History of the Revolution,252; his style,254; characteristic of his oratory,25G; contrasted with that of Pitt,25G; his bodily and mental constitution,415417232; his championship of arbitrary measures, and defiance of public opinion,418; his change after the death of his father,418; clamor raised against his India Bill, and his defence of it,107244246; his alliance with Burke, and call for peace with the American republic,110; his powerful party,114; his conflicts with Pitt,115; his motion on the charge against Hastings respecting his treatment of Cheyte Sing,117; his appearance on the trial of Hastings,127128; his rupture with Burke,136; introduces Pitt, when a youth, in the House of Lords, and is struck with his precocity,229; his admiration of Pitt's maiden speech,233; puts up his name at Brookes's,233; becomes Secretary of State,235; resigns,237; forms a coalition with North,238241Secretary of State, but in reality Prime Minister,241; loses popularity,243; resigns,246; leads the opposition,247; maintains the constitutional doctrine in regard to impeachments, 269,270; fails to lead his party to favor the French Revolution,273; his retirement from political life,278284; opposes Pitt in regard to declaring war against France,288; combines with him against Addington,290; the king refuses to take him as a minister,291; his generous feeling towards Pitt,296; opposes the motion for a public funeral to Pitt,297Fragments of a Roman 'Pale,119France, her history from the time of Louis XIV. to the Revolution,6368; from the dissolution of the National Assembly to the meeting of the Convention,446449; from the meeting of the Convention to the Reign of Terror,449475; during the Reign of Terror,475500; from the Revolution of the ninth of Thermidor to the Consulate,500-513; under Napoleon,513528; illustration from her history since the revolution,514; her condition in1712 and183134; her state at the restoration of Louis XVIII.,283; enters into a compact with Spain against England,29; recognizes the independence of the United States,105; her strength contrasted with that of England,24; her history during the hundred days,529530; after the Restoration,429Francis, Sir Philip, councillor under the Regulating Act for India,35; his character and talents,3536; probability of his being the author of the Letters of Junius,36; to:39; his opposition to Hastings,4056; his patriotic feeling, and reconciliation with Hastings,62; his opposition to the arrangement with Sir Elijah Impey,69; renewal of his quarrel with Hastings,69; duel with Hastings,70; his return to England,74; his entrance into the House of Commons and character there,109117; his speech on Mr. Fox's motion relating to Cheyte Sing,118; his exclusion from the committee on the impeachment of Hastings,123124Francis, the Emperor,14Franklin, Benjamin, Dr., his admiration for Miss Burney,211Franks, rapid fall after the death of Charlemagne,205200Frederic I.,150Frederic II., iv. 011.Frederic the Great, review of his Life and Times, by Thomas Campbell,148248; notice of the House of Brandenburgh,140; birth of Frederic,152; his lather's conduct to him,153; his taste for music,153; his desertion from his regiment.155; his imprisonment,155; his release,155; his favorite abode,150; his amusements,150; his education,157; his exclusive admiration for French writers,158; his veneration for the genius of Voltaire,100; his correspondence with Voltaire,101; his accession to the throne,102; his character little understood,103; his true character,103104; he determines to invade Silesia,100; prepares for war,108; commences hostilities,108105; his perfidy,109; occupies Silesia,171; his first battle,171; his change of policy,174; gains the battle of Chotusitz,174Silesia ceded to him,175; his whimsical conferences with Voltaire,170; recommences hostilities,177; his retreat from Bohemia,177; his victory at Hohenlfiedberg,178; his part in the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle,179; public opinion respecting his political character,179; his application to business,179; his bodily exertions,180181; general principles of his government,182; his economy,183; his character as an administrator,184; his labors to secure to his people cheap and speedy justice,185; religious persecution unknown under his government,180; vices of his administration,180; his commercial policy,187; his passion for directing and regulating,187; his contempt for the German language,188; his associates at Potsdam,189190; his talent for sarcasm,192; invites Voltaire to Berlin,190; their singular friendship,197; seq.; union of France, Vustna and Saxony, against him,212; he anticipates his ruin,213; extent of his peril,217; he occupies Saxony,217; defeats Marshal Bruwn at Lowositz,218; gains the battle of Prague,219; loses the battle of Kolin,220; his victory,229; its effects,231; his subsequent victories,232248Frederic William I.,150; his character,150; his ill-regululated mind,151; his ambition to form a brigade of giants,151; his feeling about his troops,152; his hard and savage temper,152; his conduct to his son Frederic,153155; his illness and death,102Free inquiry, right of, in religious matters,102103French Academy (the),23; seq.French Republic, Burke's character of,402French Revolution (the). See Revolution, the French.Funds, national. See National Debt.
Dublin, Archbishop of, his work on Logic,477
Dumont,51, his Recollections of Mirabeau reviewed,3774; his general characteristics,3741; his view's upon the French Revolution,41434440; his services in it,47; his personal character,74; his style,7374; his opinion that Burke's work on the French Revolution had saved Europe,44204; as the interpreter of Ilentham,3840153
Dunourier,453402481
Dundas, Sir., his character, and hostility to Hastings,108120; eulogizes Pitt,234; becomes his most useful assistant in the House of Commons,247; patronizes Burns,231
"Duodecim Seriptre," a Roman game,4; note.
Dupleix, governor of Pondicherry, his gigantic schemes for establishing French influence in India,202209212220222228; his death,228294
Duroc,522
East India Companv, its absolute authority in India,240; its condition when Clive lirst went to India,198200; its war with the French East India Companv,202; increase of its power,220; its factories in Bengal,230; fortunes made by its servants in Bengal,205200; its servants transferred into diplomatists and generals,8; nature of its government and power,1017; rights of the Nabob of Oude over Benares ceded to it75; its financial embarrassments,80Fox's proposed alteration in its charter,244247
Ecclesiastical commission (the),100
Ecclesiastics, fondness of the old dramatists for the character of,29
Eden, pictures of, in old Bibles,343; painting of, by a gifted master,343
Edinburgh, comparison of with Florence,340
Education in England in the18th century,354; duty of the government in promoting it,182183; principles of should be progressive,343344; characteristics of in the Universities,344345355300; classical, its advantages and defects discussed,340; to:354
Education in Italy in the14th century,277
Egerton, his charge of corruption against Bacon,413Bacon's decision against him after receiving his present,430
Egotism, why so unpopular in conversation, and so popular in writing,8182305
Eldon, Lord,422420
Elephants, use of, in war in India,218
Eleusinian mysteries,4954Alcibiades suspected of having assisted at a mock celebration of,49; note; crier and torch-bearer important functionaries at celebration of,53; note.
"Eleven" (the), police of Athens,34; note.
Eliot, Sir John,440-448; his treatise oil Government,449; died a martyr to liberty,451
Elizabeth (Queen), fallacy entertained respecting the persecutions under her,439441; her penal laws,441; arguments in favor of, on the head of persecution, apply with more force to Mary,450; to:452; condition of the working classes in her reign,175437; her rapid advance of Cecil,8; character of her government,10182232; a persecutor though herself indifferent,3132; her early notice of Lord Bacon,353; her favor towards Essex,301; factions at the close of her reign,302363382; her pride and temper,370397; and death,383; progress ill knowledge since her days,302; her Protestantism,32829
Ellenborough, Lord, one of the counsel for Hastings on his trial,127; his proclamations,472
Ellis, W.,235
Elphinstone, Lord,298
Elwood, Milton's Quaker friend, allusion to,205
Emigration of Puritans to America,459
Emigration from England to Ireland under Cromwell,20
Empires, extensive, often more flourishing alter a little pruning,83
England, her progress in civilization due to the people,190; her physical and moral condition in the15th century,434435; never so rich and powerful as since the loss of her American colonies,83; conduct of, in reference to the Spanish succession,103104; successive steps of her progress,279281; influence of her revolution on the human race,281321; her situation at the Restoration compared with France at the restoration of Louis XVIII.,282284; her early situation,290293301; character of her public men at the latter part of the17th century,11; difference in her situation under Charles II., and under the Protectorate,32; her fertility in heroes and statesmen,170; how her history should be written by a perfect historian,428432; characteristics of her liberty,399; her strength contrasted with that of France,24; condition of her middle classes,423424
English (the), in the10th century a free people,1819; their character,292300
English language,308
English literature of that age,341342; effect of foreign influences upon,349350
English plays of the ago of Elizabeth,344340339"Englishman," Steele's,403
Enlightenment, its increase in the world not necessarily unfavorable to Catholicism,301
Enthusiasts, dealings of the Church of Rome and the Church of England with them,331330
Epicureans, their peculiar doctrines,443
Epicurus, the lines on his pedestal,444
Epistles, Petrarch's, i. 08,99; addressed to the dead and the unborn,99
Epitaphs, Latin,417
Epithets, use of by Homer,354; by the old ballad-writers,354
Ereilla, Alonzo de, a soldier as well as a poet,81
Essay on Government, by Sir William Temple,50; by James Mills,551
Essays, Bacon's, value of them,3117388433481491
Essex, Earl of,30; his character, popularity and favor with Elizabeth,301304373; his political conduct,304; his friendship for Bacon,305300373397; his conversation with Robert Cecil,305; pleads for Bacon's marriage with Lady Hatton,308400; his expedition to Spain,307; his faults,308309397; decline of his fortunes,308; his administration in Ireland,309Bacon's faithlessness to him,309371; his trial and execution,371373; ingratitude of Bacon towards him,309380398; feeling of King James towards him,384; his resemblance to Buckingham,397
Essex, Earl of, (Ch. I.,)489491
Etherege. Sir George,353
Eugene of Savoy,143
Euripides, his mother an herb-woman,45; note; his lost plays,45; quotation from,5051; attacked for the immorality of one of his verses,51; note; his mythology,75Quintilian's admiration of him,141Milton's,217; emendation of a passage of,381; note; his characteristics,352
Europe, state of, at the peace of Utrecht,135; want of union in, to arrest the designs of Lewis XIX.,35; the distractions of, suspended for a short time by the treaty of Nimeguen,60; its progress during the last seven centuries,307
Evelina, Madame D'Arblay's, specimen of her style from,315310
Evelyn,3148
Evils, natural and national,158
Exchequer, fraud of the Cabal ministry in closing it,53
Exclusiveness of the Greeks,411412; of the Romans,413410
Fable (a), of Pilpay,188
Fairfax, reserved for him and Cromwell to terminate the civil war,491
Falkland, Lord, his conduct in respect to the bill of attainder against Strafford,400; his character as a politician,483; at the head of the constitutional Royalists,474
Family Compact (the), between France and Spain,13829
Fanaticism, not altogether evil,64
Faust,303
Favorites, royal, always odious,38
Female Quixote (the),319
Fenelon, the nature of and standard of morality in his Telemachus,359
Ferdinand II., his devotion to Catholicism,329
Ferdinand VII., resemblance between him and Charles I. of England,488
Fictions, literary,267
Fidelity, touching instance of, in the Sepoys towards Clive,210
Fielding, his contempt for Richardson,201; case from his "Amelia," analogous to Addison's treatment of Steele,370; quotation from, illustrative of the effect of Garrick's acting,332
Filieaja Vincenzio,300
Finance, Southev's theory of,150-155
Finch, Chief Justice to Charles I.,450; tied to Holland,409
Fine Arts (the), encouragement of, in Italy, in the14th century,277; causes of their decline in England after the civil war,157; government should promote them,184
Fletcher, the dramatist,350308352
Fletcher, of Saltona,388389
Fleury,170172
Florence,6364; difference between a soldier of, and one belonging to a standing army,61; state of, in the14th century,276-277; its History, by Maehiavelli,317; compared with Edinburgh,340
Fluxions,324
Foote, Charles, his stage character of an Anglo-Indian grandee,282; his mimicry,305; his inferiority to Garrick,306
Forde, Colonel,256259
Forms of government,412413
Fox, the family of,414415
Fox, Henry, sketch of his political character,224229415; directed to form an administration in concert with Chatham,235; applied to by Bute to manage the House of Commons,4344; his private and public qualities,45; became leader of the House of Commons,46; obtains his promised peerage,54; his unpopularity,417
Fox, Charles James, comparison of his History of James II. with Mackintosh's History of the Revolution,252; his style,254; characteristic of his oratory,25G; contrasted with that of Pitt,25G; his bodily and mental constitution,415417232; his championship of arbitrary measures, and defiance of public opinion,418; his change after the death of his father,418; clamor raised against his India Bill, and his defence of it,107244246; his alliance with Burke, and call for peace with the American republic,110; his powerful party,114; his conflicts with Pitt,115; his motion on the charge against Hastings respecting his treatment of Cheyte Sing,117; his appearance on the trial of Hastings,127128; his rupture with Burke,136; introduces Pitt, when a youth, in the House of Lords, and is struck with his precocity,229; his admiration of Pitt's maiden speech,233; puts up his name at Brookes's,233; becomes Secretary of State,235; resigns,237; forms a coalition with North,238241Secretary of State, but in reality Prime Minister,241; loses popularity,243; resigns,246; leads the opposition,247; maintains the constitutional doctrine in regard to impeachments, 269,270; fails to lead his party to favor the French Revolution,273; his retirement from political life,278284; opposes Pitt in regard to declaring war against France,288; combines with him against Addington,290; the king refuses to take him as a minister,291; his generous feeling towards Pitt,296; opposes the motion for a public funeral to Pitt,297
Fragments of a Roman 'Pale,119
France, her history from the time of Louis XIV. to the Revolution,6368; from the dissolution of the National Assembly to the meeting of the Convention,446449; from the meeting of the Convention to the Reign of Terror,449475; during the Reign of Terror,475500; from the Revolution of the ninth of Thermidor to the Consulate,500-513; under Napoleon,513528; illustration from her history since the revolution,514; her condition in1712 and183134; her state at the restoration of Louis XVIII.,283; enters into a compact with Spain against England,29; recognizes the independence of the United States,105; her strength contrasted with that of England,24; her history during the hundred days,529530; after the Restoration,429
Francis, Sir Philip, councillor under the Regulating Act for India,35; his character and talents,3536; probability of his being the author of the Letters of Junius,36; to:39; his opposition to Hastings,4056; his patriotic feeling, and reconciliation with Hastings,62; his opposition to the arrangement with Sir Elijah Impey,69; renewal of his quarrel with Hastings,69; duel with Hastings,70; his return to England,74; his entrance into the House of Commons and character there,109117; his speech on Mr. Fox's motion relating to Cheyte Sing,118; his exclusion from the committee on the impeachment of Hastings,123124
Francis, the Emperor,14
Franklin, Benjamin, Dr., his admiration for Miss Burney,211
Franks, rapid fall after the death of Charlemagne,205200
Frederic I.,150
Frederic II., iv. 011.
Frederic the Great, review of his Life and Times, by Thomas Campbell,148248; notice of the House of Brandenburgh,140; birth of Frederic,152; his lather's conduct to him,153; his taste for music,153; his desertion from his regiment.155; his imprisonment,155; his release,155; his favorite abode,150; his amusements,150; his education,157; his exclusive admiration for French writers,158; his veneration for the genius of Voltaire,100; his correspondence with Voltaire,101; his accession to the throne,102; his character little understood,103; his true character,103104; he determines to invade Silesia,100; prepares for war,108; commences hostilities,108105; his perfidy,109; occupies Silesia,171; his first battle,171; his change of policy,174; gains the battle of Chotusitz,174Silesia ceded to him,175; his whimsical conferences with Voltaire,170; recommences hostilities,177; his retreat from Bohemia,177; his victory at Hohenlfiedberg,178; his part in the treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle,179; public opinion respecting his political character,179; his application to business,179; his bodily exertions,180181; general principles of his government,182; his economy,183; his character as an administrator,184; his labors to secure to his people cheap and speedy justice,185; religious persecution unknown under his government,180; vices of his administration,180; his commercial policy,187; his passion for directing and regulating,187; his contempt for the German language,188; his associates at Potsdam,189190; his talent for sarcasm,192; invites Voltaire to Berlin,190; their singular friendship,197; seq.; union of France, Vustna and Saxony, against him,212; he anticipates his ruin,213; extent of his peril,217; he occupies Saxony,217; defeats Marshal Bruwn at Lowositz,218; gains the battle of Prague,219; loses the battle of Kolin,220; his victory,229; its effects,231; his subsequent victories,232248
Frederic William I.,150; his character,150; his ill-regululated mind,151; his ambition to form a brigade of giants,151; his feeling about his troops,152; his hard and savage temper,152; his conduct to his son Frederic,153155; his illness and death,102
Free inquiry, right of, in religious matters,102103
French Academy (the),23; seq.
French Republic, Burke's character of,402
French Revolution (the). See Revolution, the French.
Funds, national. See National Debt.