Mrs. Horneck, i. 207;Sujah Dowlah, i. 209;war with Spain, i. 212, 344;Boodle's masquerade at Pantheon, i. 215;Godfrey Clarke's illness, i. 223, 227, 239;Lord Sheffield and Sussex, i. 225, 232;Romanzow and Pouschkin, i. 227;offer of a seat, i. 229;Sheffield's withdrawal, i. 233;Gibbon M.P. for Liskeard, i. 234;Clive's death, i. 238;debate on Address, i. 240;troubles with America (seeAmerica);de Luna's book, i. 243;Decline and Fall, i. 263, 264, 277, 285, 361; ii. 151, 187;Spain and Barbary, i. 265;proposed hire of Russian mercenaries, i. 270;Sayer's arrest, i. 272;Hon. John Damer, i. 287;Howe's proclamation, i. 291;La Fayette in Paris, i. 305;Lord Pigot, i. 308, 362;Madame du Deffand, i. 312;Paris and the Parisians, i. 313, 317;Duke of Richmond, i. 317;Princesse de Beauvau, i. 319;Gibbon's gout, i. 321, 322; ii. 163-165, 215, 221, 233;Saratoga, i. 324;France and America, i. 333;the French fleet, i. 337, 338, 343, 347, 363;Admiral Keppel, i. 339;Tickell'sAnticipation, i. 348;troubles in India, i. 349, 350, 357;Palliser and Keppel, i. 356;Militia Bill, i. 366;Macartney captured by French, i. 369;rumours of Civil War, i. 375;the Sussex protest,ibid.;Burke's Establishment Bill, i. 376;Rodney and the Spanish fleet, i. 376;the Sussex Dragoons, i. 384; ii. 23;Gibbon M.P. for Lymington, i. 387;the Coventry sheriffs, i. 393;Mrs. Abington, ii. 4;ships to warn West Indian fleet, ii. 5;list of new ministry (1782). ii. 19;Hyder Ali, ii. 19, 26;Lord Howe and Gibraltar, ii. 19, 20, 25;Lord Loughborough's marriage, ii. 24;Fox and American Independence, ii. 25;Lord Sheffield's Coventry speech, ii. 32;Gibbon's Lausanne scheme, ii. 56et seq.;the custody of Gibbon's books, ii. 60, 62, 63, 149;an odd peace, ii. 67;the Triumvirate from Dover to Boulogne, ii. 72;Sheffield'sObservations on the Commerce of the American States, ii. 73, 82, 148;Gibbon at Lausanne, ii. 74-157, 176-252, 255, 277-380passim;Abbé Raynal, ii. 75, 82;Lady E. Foster, ii. 81;Fox and his India Bills, ii. 86;Gibbon's opinion of North, ii. 87;Miss Hester Gibbon, "the Northamptonshire Saint," ii. 91, 185, 187, 190, 193;Loughborough's kindness, ii. 91;Miss Frith's scissors, ii. 91, 97;Coalition Cabinet, ii. 92;"prudence and patriotism," ii. 93;Gibbon's hopes of compensation, ii. 101;"Fox's Martyrs," ii. 102;a free-spoken counsellor, ii. 103;ways and means, ii. 104, 110, 113, 127, 138, 146, 182-258passim, 280, 281, 290, 300, 312, 360;Mrs. Fraser, ii. 105;society at Lausanne, ii. 111, 124, 135;Pitt's popularity on Continent, ii. 127;Sheffield'sObservations, etc., on Ireland, ii. 128;Gibbon's reported death, ii. 132;Achilles Pitt and Hector Fox, ii. 136;Joseph II. and Frederick II., ii. 137;Aunt Kitty's death, ii. 144;Lord Auckland, ii. 148;Madame de Crousaz, ii. 154;the conscious shame of the French, ii. 162;Sheridan's speech, ii. 172;twelve hours' talk with Fox, ii. 180;George III.'s illness and recovery, ii. 181, 191;Hugonin's death and dishonesty, ii. 183-185;Gibbon's madeira, ii. 190, 211, 214, 223, 282, 327;de Montagny and the Swiss transaction, ii. 195, 202;the Severys, ii. 199, 206;Sir S. Porten's death, ii. 201;low spirits, ii. 202;the French Revolution, ii. 204, 209;French exiles at Lausanne, ii. 210, 222;Gibbon's loneliness, ii. 215;Reynolds' portrait of Sheffield, ii. 216;happy though unmarried, ii. 220;Aunt Hester's death, ii. 222;the Newhaven property, ii. 235, 242;Burke'sFrench Revolution, ii. 237;Gibbon's hospitality at Lausanne, ii. 242;Louis XVI., ii. 255, 360;the Sheffields' visit to Lausanne, ii. 277;improvements in house and garden, ii. 278;peace or war, ii. 279;the St. Domingo insurrection, ii. 280;Madame de Staël and her father, ii. 292;march of the Marseillais, ii. 293;the "Friends of the People," ii. 295;Austrian Croats and Gallic cannibals, ii. 296;fate of the Gibbonian collection, ii. 301;Brunswick's march on Paris, ii. 311;Madame de Lamballe's murder, ii. 312;French invasion of Savoy, ii. 315;Geneva threatened, ii. 317, 322;preparations for flight, ii. 319;fears of siege removed, ii. 326;Mr. Nichols, ii. 328;treaty with France delayed, ii. 331, 345;the Gallic dogs, ii. 333;Montesquieu and the Neckers, ii. 345;Brunswick's retreat, ii. 346;Barthélemy, ii. 355;Geneva Revolution, ii. 355, 370;Fox deeply tinged with democracy, ii. 356;Gibbon's proposed return to England, ii. 357, 371, 379;plan of work, ii. 359;de Severy's death, ii. 369;Lady Sheffield's death, ii. 377;siege of Mayence, ii. 382;Lord Hervey's Memorial, ii. 388;the Althorpe library, ii. 392;Gibbon's serious illness, ii. 393-395;at Eden Farm, ii. 398.His letters to Gibbon, ii. 217, 224, 232, 238, 239, 243, 245, 253, 254, 256-258, 268, 272, 274, 275, 283, 294, 295, 302, 304, 319, 328, 343, 348, 350, 361, 367, 368, 373, 376, 382, 395;his pamphlets mentioned:Observations on the Commerce of the American States, ii. 72, 82, 148;—on the Manufactures, Trade, and Present State of Ireland, ii. 128;—on the French Treaty and Commerce, ii. 148;—on the Project for Abolishing the Slave Trade, ii. 217;—on the Corn Bill now depending in Parliament, ii. 239Shelburne, Earl, i. 26,373;Secretary of State, ii. 14, 17;Prime Minister, ii. 19, 25;resigns, ii. 33Shelley, Sir John, i. 351Shelley, Lady, ii. 31Shelly, Mrs., ii. 386Sheridan, i. 333;his speech on Begums of Oude, ii. 172;lines on Lord Glenbervie, ii. 180;"Friends of the People," ii. 297Siddons, Mrs., Gibbon's opinion of, ii. 29Sidney, Mr., i. 40*Simolin, M., ii. 254*Simpson, Mrs. J. Bridgman, i. 153Sivrac, Duchesse de, ii. 111Skipwith, Mr. (Gibbon's co-executor of Clarke's will), i. 239, 244, 245, 254Slave Trade, Abolition of, ii. 239, 294*Sloane, Sir Hans, i. 29, 89*Smith, General, ii. 85*Smithson, Sir Hugh (Duke of Northumberland), i. 82Smyrna Coffee House, i. 19Soho masquerade, the (Carlisle House), i. 131*Southerne's tragedy ofThe Fatal Marriage, ii. 29Southouse, Mr., Gibbon's solicitor, i. 93, 95, 96, 98, 102, 103, 127*Southwell, Lord, i. 6Spain, troubles with, i. 212, 344;Expeditionv.Barbary, i. 265;Rodney's defeat of Spanish fleet, i. 376;war with France, i. 362;convention between England and, ii. 226Speed, Miss Harriet (Comtesse de Viry), i. 314, 316Spencer, Lady, i.33, 370; ii. 300, 310, 312, 400Spencer, Lady Diana.SeeBolingbroke, Lady, and Beauclerk, Lady DianaSpencer Lady Elizabeth (Lady Pembroke), ii. 106, 110Spencer, Lord, i. 33; ii. 135, 187, 305Spencer, Lord Charles, i. 376*Spencer, Lord R., i. 366*Spring Gardens, Vauxhall, i. 114Staël-Holstein, Baron de, ii. 292Staël-Holstein, Madame de, i.41, 115, 291,292;escapes from Paris, ii. 311;birth of her sons, ii. 319, 347;rescues Princesse d'Hénin, ii.324;Miss Burney on, at Dorking, ii. 375;Lord Sheffield's guest, ii. 377Stafford, Marquis of, ii. 306Stamford, Lord, i. 254*Stamp Act, the i. 84*Standish, Sir Frank, i. 90*Stanhope, Mrs. Eugenia, i. 195Stanhope, Philip (Lord Chesterfield's son), i. 188, 191, 195*Stanislaus Poniatowski, King of Poland, i. 29, 158Stanley, Lord, his Fête Champêtre, i. 219Stanley, Rt. Hon. Hans, i. 29,44, 148*States-General, meeting of the, ii. 279Stawell, Lord, ii. 26, 175, 182, 189, 199*Steward, Colonel, i. 398Steward, Mr., i. 18Storer, Anthony Morris, i. 207; ii. 67,86, 87Stormont, Lord (2nd Lord Mansfield), i.314, 333, 371;President of Council, ii.34, 305Strahan, William, printer to His Majesty, i.222, 263, 279Strange, Lord, i. 90Strathmore, Lord, ii. 276Stratton, member of Madras Council, i. 362*Strode, William, i. 89, 90*Struensee, Dr., i. 143Stuart, Andrew, M.P. for Lanarkshire, i. 366Stuart, Gilbert,View of Society in Europe, etc., ii. 22Stuart, Mrs., ii. 11Stuart, Sir Simeon, i. 84, 92, 105, 112*Sturm'sReligious Meditations, etc., i. 181Suard, J. B. Antoine, translatesDecline and Fall, i. 292Suess, George, Gibbon's valet, ii. 49Suffield, Lord, i. 250, 252Sujah Dowlah, Nawab of Oude, i. 187, 209Sulens, Mdlle., ii. 43Sussex Militia, i. 336, 340, 361Sutton, Sir Richard, i. 260*Sweden, Gustavus III., King of, ii. 279Swiss Guard massacred in Paris, ii. 312, 322, 355Swiss Militia, i. 38Sylva, Madame de, ii. 388, 400Sydney, Lord (Tommy Townshend), i. 151, 210; ii. 19,86TTaaffe, i. 6, 35*Taboureau des Réaux, i. 304*Talleyrand, ii. 292, 326*Tandy, Napper, ii. 115*Tanjore, Rajah of, i. 209, 308*Tankerville, Earl of, i. 67Tavistock, Marquis of, i. 27Temple, Lord, i.50, 185-187; ii. 19;the "stormy petrel" of politics, ii.86Tessier, M., i. 278Theodore, Charles, Elector of Bavaria, ii. 265*Thiars, Comte de, ii. 324*Thiers, M., ii. 326Thomas, Dr., i. 223, 224, 241Thompson, Sir Benjamin (Count of Rumford), ii. 72Thompson, Sir Charles, i. 261Thurlow, Lord, Attorney General, i.173;Lord Chancellor, i. 341; ii.13, 86;dismissed, ii. 306Tickell, Richard, on Gibbon's snuff-box i.58;his pamphletAnticipation, i. 341;on Brooks's Club, i.376Tippoo (Hyder Ali's son), ii. 19;defeated by Cornwallis, ii.276Tissot, Dr. Simon André, ii. 77, 105, 108, 115, 130, 179Titchfield, Marquis of, ii. 363Tollemache, Hon. W., i. 386Tonyn, Governor of Florida, i. 300*Toussaint d'Ouverture, ii. 75*Towers, Dr., ii. 305Townley, Colonel, i. 148*Townshend, C., i. 347Townshend, Hon. John, i.58,376; ii.18, 19,179Townshend, Lord, duel with Lord Bellamont, i. 180;Master of Ordnance, ii.34;on Coalition Ministry, ii. 34Townshend, Thomas.SeeSydney, LordTrade and Plantations.SeeBoard of TradeTrajan's Pillar, i. 67Tremlet,Life of Almanzor, i. 238, 243Trevor, Mrs., i. 361; ii. 148, 153, 279, 284Trevor, Hon. John Hampden, ii. 135, 274, 279, 294*Truguet, Admiral, ii. 314Tryon, Governor, i. 284*Turgot, M., i. 304Turin, Gibbon at, i. 55Turton, Dr. John, attends Goldsmith, i. 16;Gibbon, i. 114, 150, 371, 378;Godfrey Clarke, i. 224*Tyers, Jonathan, i. 114Tylney, Lord, i. 60Tyrconnell, Countess of, ii. 275*Tyrconnell, Earl of, ii. 275Tyrone, Lord, ii. 112U*Unitarian Society, the, ii. 305*Ushant, battle of, i. 349V*Vallant, Paul, ii. 60*Valmy, Duc de (F. C. de Kellerman), ii. 319*Valory, M. de, ii. 256Van Berchem, ii. 370*Vanbrugh'sThe Provoked Wife, i. 19;The Provoked Husband, etc., i. 366; ii. 29Vassall, Elizabeth (Lady Holland), ii. 257Vaucluse, Mdlle. de, i. 20Venice, Gibbon at, i. 75*Vergennes, M. de, i. 334Verney, Earl, i. 126, 167, 170, 332Vernon, Mr., i. 149Versailles, Peace of, ii. 67*Victor Amadeus III. of Sardinia, ii. 265Viry, Count de, Foreign Secretary to King of Sardinia, i. 56, 314Viry, Countess de, i. 314, 316Voltaire, atles Délices, near Geneva, i. 5;at Ferney, i. 43;Gibbon on his acting, i. 43;his financial difficulties, i. 91;protests against French translation of Shakespeare, i. 294;quotation from hisMélanges de Poésies, ii. 154;his death, ii. 258*Volunteer movement, the, i. 373WWaldegrave, Lady, i.131,146, 154*Waldegrave, Lord, i. 146Wales, Prince of (George IV.), ii.97, 150, 173,181, 368*Wales, Princess Dowager of, i.143, 149Walpole, Horace (Lord Orford), his writings quoted on "The Seven Years' War," i.14;Madame Geoffrin, i.29;Duke of Bedford's temper, i.30;Lord Lichfield and the Jacobites, i.34;correspondence with Sir H. Mann, i.65; ii.16;Mrs. Cornelys, i.131;the Pantheon, i.146;Lord Chesterfield'sLetters, i.195;Kelly'sSchool of Wives, i.199;Colman'sThe Man of Business, i.202;Louis XV.'s daughters, i.218;N. America, i.231;America: Ireland—Journal of Reign of George III., i.271; ii. 68;the story of Essex's ring, i. 276;Tessier's acting, i.278;Mrs. Damer, i. 287;introduces Gibbon to Madame du Deffand, i. 312;American privateers, i.317;Lord North and America, i.329;Admiral Keppel, i.340,343;on Gibbon'sVindication, i.355;his quarrel with Gibbon, i.396;Lady Miller, ii.2;combined French and Spanish fleets, ii.5;Lady E. Foster, ii.15;on Rodney's defeat of Comte de Grasse, ii.16;Fox's library, ii.68;Sheridan, ii.172;peace with Spain, ii.226;Necker's fall, ii.236;Gibbon's admiration for Burke, ii.237;Essay on Modern Gardening, ii. 375*Walpole, Sir Edward, i. 146*Walsingham, Lord, i. 387*Warburton, General, i. 65Ward, Colonel, i. 258Ward, Dr., i. 8*Waring, Walter, i. 375Warkworth, Lord, i. 82*Warren, Admiral Sir Peter, i. 90Warren, Miss (Countess of Abingdon), i. 90Warren, Sir George, i. 301Warton, his picture of Gibbon, i. 364Warville, de.SeeBrissot, J. Pierre*Washington, Fort, taken by British i. 298Washington, George, i. 279, 286,298, 300, 303,323Watson, Dr. Richard (Bishop of Llandaff), criticizesDecline and Fall, i. 289, 291, 295Watteville, M. de, ii. 316Way, Miss Abigail.SeeSheffield, LadyWay, Benjamin, i.139, 157,243Way, Mrs. Benjamin, i. 259*Way, Gregory Lewis, i. 139; ii. 64Way, Lewis, i.85, 139Way, Richard, i. 173, 186, 187, 200, 201, 205, 207, 211, 213; ii. 104, 113Webster, Lady (Elizabeth Vassall), ii. 257, 388*Webster, Sir Godfrey, ii. 257Wedderburn, Alexander.SeeRosslyn, EarlWentzel, Baron de, the famous oculist, i. 105, 112*Wesley, Dr., hisCalm Address to our American Colonies, i. 271*Westmorland, Lord, ii. 321Weymouth, Lord, i. 333, 371; ii.5*Whately, Thomas, i. 243*Whitbread, Mr., ii. 368Whitehead, "the hirer of horses," ii. 104, 113*White's Club, "The School of Vice," i. 84Whitshed, James, M.P. for Cirencester, i. 239Wibault, Miss Mary (Lady Porten), i. 220, 246, 250Wilberforce, William, ii. 32;Abolition of Slave Trade, ii.239, 294;"Massa King," ii. 289Wilbraham, George, i. 144, 229Wilkes, John, his duel with Martin, i. 50;expelled from House of Commons and outlawed, i. 91;chosen Alderman, i. 93;the Middlesex election, i.146,251;his illness, i. 223;elected Lord Mayor, i. 233;on Lord George Germain, i.290;the Royal debts, i. 308*William III., ii. 321*Williams, Captain, R.E., 118Williams, Mrs. Arabella, i. 118-121, 123-125, 372, 374; ii. 4Williamson, Mrs., i. 95, 97, 100*Wilmot, John, ii. 216Wilson, Sir Thomas S., i.225, 232, 233, 237Winchester Camp, Gibbon at, i. 25Windham, William ("Weather-Cock"), M.P. for Norwich, ii. 60, 305;Secretary at War, ii.306,363, 369Windsor, Captain, i. 343Winton, tenant of Beriton, i. 164, 167, 196, 199, 201, 213, 244, 246, 346; ii. 84*Wolfe at Quebec, i. 145Wood, Mr., i. 107Wood, Mrs., ii. 267, 282*Woodfall, Henry, ii. 92Woodfall, William ("Memory Woodfall"), editor ofMorning Chronicle, ii. 82, 91, 97, 246, 250, 368, 370Woolfe, George, i. 35*Worcester, Marquis of, ii. 216Worsley, Sir James, i.34, 88Worsley, Sir Richard, i.34,82, 111, 153, 261; ii. 4, 10Worsley, Sir Thomas, i. 34, 44,50, 52, 76, 78,87, 88, 90*Wraxall'sHistorical Memoirsquoted, i. 381;Posthumous Memoirsquoted, ii. 275Wray, Mrs., i. 20Wurtemberg (Wirtenbergh), Duke of, i. 91*Wyatt, architect of Pantheon, i. 146Wyndham, Lady F., i. 247Wynn, Sir Watkin Williams, i. 148Wyttenbach, M., ii. 260XXaintes (Saintes), Bishop of, ii. 342Y*Yarborough, Earl of, i. 153*Yates, Mrs., i. 252*Yeo, Edward Roe, i. 393York, Duchess of (Princess Frederica of Prussia), ii. 275York, Edward Augustus, Duke of, i. 54, 65; ii. 275;with troops in Flanders, ii. 376, 394Young, Arthur, ii. 324Young, Sir George, ii. 19