Indexes to the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill 9781442676145

This volume provides an index to the previously published collected works of John Stuart Mill.

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Indexes to the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill
 9781442676145

Table of contents :
Contents
INTRODUCTION
Alphabetical List of Titles in the Collected Works
Chronological List of Mill's Writings in the Collected Works
Index of Persons and Works
Subject Index

Citation preview

COLLECTED WORKS OF JOHN STUART MILL VOLUME XXXIII

The Collected Edition of the Works of John Stuart Mill has been planned and directed by an editorial committee appointed from the Faculty of Arts and Science of the University of Toronto, and from the University of Toronto Press. The primary aim of the edition is to present fully collated texts of those works which exist in a number of versions, both printed and manuscript, and to provide accurate texts of works previously unpublished or which have become relatively inaccessible. Editorial Committee J.M. ROBSON, General Editor HARALD BOHNE, J.C. CAIRNS, J.B. CONACHER, D.P. DRYER, MARION FILIPIUK, FRANCESS HALPENNY, SAMUEL HOLLANDER, R.F. MCRAE, IAN MONT AGNES, ANN P. ROBSON, F.E. SPARSHOTT

Indexes to the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill Edited by

JEAN O'GRADY Post-doctoral Fellow, J.S. Mill Project, University of Toronto

with

JOHN M. ROBSON University Professor and Professor of English, Victoria College, University of Toronto

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS ROUTLEDGE

www.utppublishing.com University of Toronto Press 1991 Toronto and Buffalo Printed in Canada ISBN 0-8020-2769-5 London: Routledge ISBN 0-415-06400-7

Printed on acid-free paper

Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data Mill, John Stuart, 1806–1873. [Works] Collected works of John Stuart Mill Includes bibliographies and indexes. Partial contents: v. 33. Index to Collected Works / edited by Jean O'Grady with John M. Robson ISBN 0-8020-2769-5 (v. 33). 1. — Collected works. 2. —Collected works. 3. —Collected works. I. Robson, John M., 1927II. Title. B1602.A21963 192 C65-188-2rev.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Mill, John Stuart, 1806-1873 Indexes, introduction by Jean O'Grady. (Collected works of John Stuart Mill, vol. 33). 1. English philosophy, Mill, John Stuart, 1806-1873 I. O'Grady, Jean II. Robson, John M. 192 ISBN 0-415-06400-7

This volume has been published with the assistance of a grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Contents

INTRODUCTION, by Jean O'Grady Alphabetical List of Titles in the Collected Works

vii 1

Chronological List of Mill's Writings in the Collected Works

19

Index of Persons and Works

63

Subject Index

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Introduction JEAN O'GRADY THIS VOLUME, which incorporates in slightly modified and abbreviated form the separate indexes of the individual volumes, consists of four sections: an alphabetical list of all the writings in the Collected Works with their locations; a chronological list of Mill's writings, also keyed to the Collected Works; an index of persons and works referred to by Mill; and a subject index. Throughout, the "word-by-word" order is used (except that "de," "la," and "le" are treated as part of the following word), so that Church rates, for instance, comes before Churches. Basic information on the form of the entry and the abbreviations used is given in the headnote to each list. This introduction is intended as a more detailed guide, explaining some of the dilemmas encountered and choices made in the process of reducing the vast corpus of Mill's work to four lists.

ALPHABETICAL LIST THE ALPHABETICAL LIST provides a guide for those seeking the location of a known work within the other thirty-two volumes of the Collected Works. It is divided into two sections, Part A containing the works of Mill and Part B those of others, specifically modern scholars who have contributed introductions to the volumes, and friends and contemporaries of Mill whose works are in appendices to the Collected Works. Because anyone using this list will also be consulting individual volumes, brevity has been judged to be a virtue, and so titles for works that appeared in several parts are listed only once, with inclusive page numbers; the precise page numbers for each part may be ascertained from the appropriate volume's table of contents. For the same parsimonious reason, only the year of publication is given. In compiling this list it has been necessary to be somewhat arbitrary about what constitutes a "work." The list includes all the books, pamphlets, articles, letters to the editor, speeches, journals, parliamentary evidence, and so on that have separate titles in the Collected Works. It does not, however, include the more than 2700 individual letters in the volumes of correspondence (Vols. XII-XVII and XXXII), which may be located under the name of the correspondent in the Index of Persons and Works. Generally speaking, these letters are personal, while letters to

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the editor on public themes appear in the volumes of newspaper writings and thus find their place in the Alphabetical List. This distinction is somewhat muddied by the fact that some ostensibly personal letters were made public: as he became a modest celebrity, Mill often received letters from strangers soliciting his views, and he tended to answer them conscientiously with the full knowledge that they might be published; his support added a certain cachet to a cause. Occasionally he even used the vehicle of a private letter deliberately to reach a wider public, as is the case in his responding to a request for comments on the American national debt by a letter addressed, to avoid the appearance of presumption, to Charles Eliot Norton rather than to the American people.1 Other letters again were published without his knowledge and consent, and to his chagrin. For the purposes of this index, however, we have kept to the simple distinction that letters which appear in the volumes of correspondence, whether or not later published, are excluded. The Alphabetical List also excludes the list-like appendices provided in different volumes of the Collected Works, such as those concerning textual apparatus (textual emendations, descriptions of MSS, lists of Mill's signatures, and the like), and the list of letters to Mill, with their locations, given in Vol. XXXII. Two list-like appendices have, however, been included in Part A of the Alphabetical List. The first is the list of the questions Mill provided for discussion at different meetings of the Political Economy Club. The second is a list that Mill himself kept of the 1700-odd despatches he wrote to India during the thirty-five years he was employed at the East India Company's office (entered as "Indian despatches" to facilitate its being found). This entry appears among Mill's works, not so much because he compiled it himself over the years as because it stands for a vast body of work that, in a world of inexhaustible forests, wealthy publishers, and endlessly extensible library shelves, might have been printed in the Collected Works, and whose existence demanded recognition in some form. Also included in the Alphabetical List are alternative titles sometimes used by Mill which users might come across in their reading; cross-references are given to the title used in the Collected Works. The list identifies some works as "joint productions," signalling them with an obelisk and appending the name of the collaborator in parentheses. It has not always been easy to identify the joint authors of periodical articles published anonymously: Charles Buller's participation in "The Vixen, and Circassia," for instance, was ascertained from the fact that Mill had written "J.S. Mill and C. Duller" beside the article in the copy of the London and Westminster Review, not now located, that he gave to Caroline Fox.2 It has been even harder to distinguish ^Later Letters [LL], ed. Francis E. Mineka, Collected Works [CW], Vols. XIV-XVII (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1972), XVI, 1443-8; for the request for this expression of opinion, see ibid., 1376, 1466. See headnote to the article in Miscellaneous Writings, CW, XXXI (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1989), 345.

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between the writings and joint writings of Mill, his wife Harriet, and later his stepdaughter Helen Taylor, given the spiritual continuum of authorship and thoughts in the Mill family. Mill's contention that during his association with Harriet "all my published writings were as much her work as mine"3 cannot be ignored, but neither can it be taken at its face value; it must be tempered by the knowledge of the touching humility and self-depreciation that mingle so oddly with intellectual arrogance in Mill's character. It is evident that Harriet genuinely shared in every aspect of her husband's intellectual life, and that together they planned what was to be written next and how the ideas were to be developed. Like many a loyal spouse, Harriet read the drafts, marked awkward passages, and suggested revisions and additions. But whether she actually wrote much of Mill's corpus, in the sense of shaping arguments, paragraphs, and sentences, remains a vexed question. The pieces known to be hers have a characteristic breathless vehemence (caused in part by a tendency to suppress the logical links in an argument) and a robust impatience with fools that are alien to Mill's eminently reasonable style.4 The degree to which the critic credits Harriet with joint authorship perhaps depends partly on his or her reaction to the claims of this singular woman. Leaving the reader to ponder this wider issue, however, we have generally marked as joint productions with Harriet only those that Mill specifically so designated. In his own record of his published work, the first of such writings is "The Acquittal of Capt. Johnstone" (10 Feb., 1846), said to be "a joint production, very little of which was mine." Thereafter, during the period of close collaboration before their marriage, nearly all of the letters to the newspapers on domestic violence and day-to-day injustice to women are marked by a similar phrase. So is the Principles of Political Economy, though in so designating it Mill ^Autobiography [A], CW, I (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1981), 251. In the Introduction to "The Enfranchisement of Women" that he wrote for its republication in Dissertations and Discussions shortly after Harriet's death, Mill said that "all the more recent of these papers were joint productions": this would prima facie include "Early Grecian History and Legend," "Vindication of the French Revolution of February 1848," "Dr. Whewell on Moral Philosophy," and "Grote's History of Greece." Later, Helen proving almost as remarkable as her mother, he claimed that his best work was "the product not of one intellect or conscience but of three, the least considerable of whom, and above all the least original, is the one whose name is attached to it" (A, CW, I, 265). 4 Many of her letters to Mill, three poems, and an early essay are published in F.A. Hayek, John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor: Their Friendship and Subsequent Marriage (London: Routledge, 1951). Some of her unfinished pieces on marriage and women's rights are in Essays on Equality, Law, and Education, CW, XXI (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1984), 575-92, and Mill News Letter, XVIII (Summer, 1983), 2-6. In her chief work, "The Enfranchisement of Women" (CW, XXI, 393-415), Mill claims that his role was "little more than that of an editor and amanuensis" (ibid., 393), but it seems likely that as editor he aided considerably in shaping the argument.

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seems to give inordinate weight to the chapter "On the Probable Futurity of the Labouring Classes," to which Harriet's contribution was considerable, and to make light of his own work, most of the rest of the book, which was "purely abstract and scientific,"5 and, by implication, less remarkable. On Liberty is marked as joint because the Autobiography describes it as "more directly and literally our joint production than anything else which bears my name."6 Bending the rule a little in the name of common sense, we have marked an unpublished letter to the editor of the Reasoner as joint since an extant letter of Harriet's outlines the way in which "the excessive fool" is to be set straight.7 Finally, an unpublished letter to a feminist newspaper on the subject of George Sand is called a joint production because, though Mill says nothing about it, the English version speaks "for myself and for all women of strong mind" and is signed "une anglaise." The fact that both French and English versions are in Mill's hand shows how much they worked as one. After Harriet's death Helen Taylor took on some of the roles of her mother, including that of helping to answer Mill's burdensome correspondence.8 "I thought the letters she wrote superior to mine," Mill wrote, going on to credit her generally with many of the finest passages in his later speeches and writings.9 Most of Helen's contributions, however, are in the volumes of Later Letters and so not individually listed here; and it must remain for the user to detect, perhaps by their positive tone and lack of self-doubt, passages that may be Helen's in the public writings.

CHRONOLOGICAL LIST THE SECOND LIST, the Chronological, is designed to provide a detailed record of Mill's writing life. It encompasses fewer works than the Alphabetical List (only those written by Mill, alone or in collaboration), but gives more detail. In this list each item is entered under the date of its publication. Every separate part of a series is listed as it came out, even in the case of "French News," where 105 short articles appeared over four years. Books and pamphlets are listed under the month, when known, in which they were published, and periodical articles under the date 5

A, CW, I, 257. lbid. 7 Hayek, John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor, 126. 8 Some of the letters in Hugh R. Elliot's Letters of John Stuart Mill, 2 vols. (London: Longmans, Green, 1910) are published as Helen's because they were kept in envelopes marked by Mill "for publication as Helen's," though they may be in Mill's hand. 9 A, CW, I, 286. Cf. his reply to a correspondent who praised a sentence in his letter on women's suffrage: "It was dictated to me as I wrote it word for word by my dear daughter. We always agree in sentiments but she sometimes can find better words to put them in than I can myself." (LL, CW, XVII, 1540.) 6

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printed on the title page (although this did not always correspond to the actual date of issue). The oral or written evidence that Mill gave to parliamentary committees forms an exception to the pattern of listing under date of publication. Here the date on which Mill gave the evidence is used, as this is both more significant in Mill's life and more precise than the year date of the volumes of Parliamentary Papers. Items for which only the year of publication can be ascertained are listed at the head of the year. The Chronological List also incorporates the descriptions Mill gave in the list he kept of his publications—an early and very challenging example of a curriculum vitae, and one that, in an age when such documents were not required submissions, throws an interesting light on his sense of self-worth. This list is, of course, a "work" of his, and so might have been included in the Collected Works on its own. But there are good reasons to hesitate over that decision. The extant manuscript must be assumed to be a copy of a list in Mill's hand that has been destroyed.10 The original cataloguer, C.J. Allen, then Keeper of Manuscripts in the British Library of Political and Economic Science, affixed in 1960 the following note to the manuscript: The first page and the running dates are in Helen Taylor's hand, the forms being characteristic of her later style; the remainder is in that of Fanny Erskine, who acted as literary secretary to Helen Taylor in the summer of 1875. The nature of the miscopyings, e.g., Charta for Charter, Pembertin for Pemberton, Mamborough for Flamborough, Thee for Free, Bungham for Brougham, make it probable that it was copied from a manuscript by Mill and was not corrected by him. It would seem therefore that the copy was made in 1875, after Mill's death.

Mistakes of the kind Allen mentions suggest that neither Mill nor Helen Taylor checked the transcription, although her secretary seems to have been unfamiliar with Mill's ambiance and unfortunate in her attempts to decipher his handwriting. Thus, while the list has been essential to editorial and scholarly work on Mill since its discovery, its exact wording cannot be taken as authoritative. Furthermore, there are gaps and other difficulties11 that have led us to resist the temptation to print it separately.12 The information from it, however, is included whenever 10 British Library of Political and Economic Science, London School of Economics, Mill-Taylor Collection, Vol. XXXVI. H For instance, the running dates supplied by Helen Taylor do not correspond to the actual dates of entries, and there is occasional repetition. Another special problem is presented by the despatches Mill wrote to India as one of his main duties in the East India Company, for which see n 14 below. 12 It is available in the edition by Ney MacMinn, J.R. Hainds, and J.M. McCrimmon, Bibliography of the Published Writings of John Stuart Mill (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1945; reissued New York: AMS Press, 1970). For a physical description of the MS, see MacMinn's Preface, pp. vii-viii.

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possible in the form of corrected entries,13 signalled by "JSM:" added to our titles; the entries that have not been incorporated are given below.14 Since Mill's list is a compilation of works published during his lifetime, it is not co-extensive with the contents of the Collected Works. The walking tour journals, for instance, were never intended for publication and never listed. Speeches that were published in Parliamentary Debates or newspapers were not listed by him, unless they later appeared in pamphlet or book form. The Collected Works also includes works that were published posthumously under the supervision of Helen Taylor, such as the Autobiography and the Three Essays on Religion, and the Chronological List has been extended beyond Mill's death to include them. These too are naturally not on his list. No attention is drawn to the absence of such works from that list, though the speeches are marked with an explanatory "(s)." The description "Not on Mill's list" is used to draw attention to works that were published in Mill's lifetime yet are unaccountably absent, the most startling of which is The Subjection of Women. Little ingenuity was required to identify that work as Mill's. Those who are interested in the means used to discover other unlisted items may consult the headnotes to the items and the volumes' introductions for full details. In briefest summary, the most useful sources were the library catalogues that listed works 13 Substantive corrections, even of silly mistakes such as those cited by Allen, are given in footnotes to the items. In the places where a gap was left in the entry, presumably for later consideration, the information we have added is given in square brackets. Other corrections and normalizations are not signalled: these include full forms for peculiar or uninformative abbreviations (such as "f." for "for," "whch" for "which," and the like), expansion of shortened words within titles for periodicals (e.g., "Exam." for "Examiner"), normal abbreviations for months, normalization of spellings such as the change of "entituled" to "entitled," and removal or modification of anomalous punctuation. 14 Entries concerning despatches to India form the largest group of those not included in the Chronological List. Most of the despatches Mill wrote during his working hours, not being intended for publication, did not appear in the list of published works we are considering here. However, Mill showed great punctiliousness in placing on that list extracts or whole despatches that were called for in Parliament and printed in Blue Books, entering them in batches under the date on which they were published—which might be years after they had been despatched. These published extracts (the shortest of which consists of the single word "Agreed") do not represent in any way the best or the most important of Mill's despatches, but are simply those on topics that were drawn to the attention of Parliament. They are therefore not printed in CW and not entered in the Chronological List. However, the descriptions that Mill gave of them in his list of published works, with the location of the extract in PP, may be found in Appendix B of Writings on India, CW, XXX (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1990). One entry in the list remains an annoying blank: "An article on wages and profits, capital & prices, which appeared in the Edinburgh Times of May 1825." We have not been able to find any copy of the Edinburgh Times, though Jacob Viner in Modern Philology, XLIII (1945), 150, called attention to an announcement in the Examiner, 16 Jan., 1825,48,

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15

attributed to Mill, and a set of the Examiner for 1830 to 1834 among Mill's books in Somerville College, Oxford, where Mill not only listed his contributions but also marked in many cases the specific parts of articles written by him.16 Apart from this, the Mill canon was assembled by the laborious following of clues, turning of pages, and sifting of archives. It would not have been possible without hours of selfless assistance from scholars and librarians, details of which are given in the individual volumes, but cumulative thanks for which are here inadequately offered. As in the Alphabetical List, joint works are signalled by an obelisk, and the location in the Collected Works is given for each entry. For completeness, we have indicated where appropriate in the Chronological List the location of essays within the two collections Mill made of his own shorter works. The main collection, signalled by D&D, is Dissertations and Discussions, first issued in two volumes in 1859, expanded to three volumes in 1867, and made a four-volume set posthumously by Helen Taylor in 1875. The second is Chapters and Speeches on the Irish Land Question (C&S), which Mill himself issued in 1868. Apart from these, we have not listed any of the many reprints or second and subsequent editions of Mill's works, whether in his lifetime or later. To have attempted a complete publishing history would have made the list impossibly bulky. Information on subsequent editions authorized by Mill is available in the headnote to each item in the Collected Works. The Alphabetical List alone is sufficient to renew one's sense of Mill's sheer

that the Edinburgh Times would appear on 22 January; specific issues are mentioned in the Examiner on 20 Feb., 1825, 122, and 10 Apr., 1825, 233. There is an entry for a few of the public/private letters discussed at vii. Under the date 1853 Mill mentions "A letter dated January 22nd 1850, respecting the proposed National Poor Law Association, published in No. 5 of their organ The Constitutional' for May 1853 [sic for 1850]" (LL, XIV, 43-5). Under 1865 appears "Letters to Mr. Beal dated 7th Marchl865, being a declaration of opinions with a view to the Westminster Election" (one letter in LL, XVI, 1005-7; published in The Times and other papers). Later in 1865, when he had been elected to Parliament, Mill notes that "From this time no memorandum has been made of my letters which have appeared in print: numbers of my public or private letters having found their way into newspapers, of all of which (I believe) the original drafts have been retained in my possession. No note has been made of my speeches, either in the House of Commons or at public meetings except when they have been separately reprinted as pamphlets." An apparent exception to this practice is the entry for the letter to Norton mentioned at viii, described as "A letter on the proposals for Repudiation in the United States, published in the American Newspaper The Nation' in [ October 1868 ] and reprinted in many American newspapers." 15 From this source, only one item was rejected as not by Mill, On Social Freedom, which was mistakenly published over his name. For details, see LL, CW, XIV, xix. 16 The Textual Introduction to Newspaper Writings, Vols. XXII-XXV of CW (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1986), XXII, cvi-cvii, gives details.

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energy and industriousness: he wrote 841 works,17 from squibs to tomes, in the course of a life-span not unusually long, not to speak of over 2700 letters and over 1700 official drafts; and he did so while suffering one serious depression and intermittent periods of despondency. Few would dispute his modest claim, made on his death-bed, that he had done his work.18 But the Chronological List will probably prove the more interesting to scholars, for it brings into focus the works Mill was writing contemporaneously. It is amusing to note, for instance, that Mill's Statement on his marriage was followed shortly by an article on wife murder, or that Mill both wrote in the Monthly Repository of April 1833 and reviewed the number in the Examiner. Significant links can be seen between such works as the two articles on the reform of the House of Lords and the review of Tocqueville on democracy in America in 1835, or the article on Bentham and the review of the Indian penal code in 1838. A clear chronology of writings allows us to interpret as distorted by gloom such a comment as that of Mill to W.J. Fox in May 1833, that he has been "idle of late," uninterested in what he understands, and probably incapable of ever understanding anything that might be interesting.19 By that date in 1833 he had published three long articles, an obituary, four argumentative shorter articles, three news items, and five review notices! In the Chronological List one can also study the rhythm of Mill's creative career. His precocity is apparent in the early burgeoning of the list. Having tried his hand with his first two letters to a newspaper in December 1822, he followed them with twenty-six more the next year. Surely contemporary readers would have been amazed to learn that the "Friend to Responsible Government" who argued for the removability of judges, the "Wickliff" who defended religious freedom, the "S." who discoursed on thorny points of economic theory, and a host of other crusty letter-writers were all the same clever youth just turned seventeen.20 In 1823 Mill was also writing speeches for debates, further sharpening the argumentative and dialectical skills instilled by his father; and in 1824 the list begins to include hefty articles for almost every number of the newly founded Westminster Review. Mill scholars might expect to find this flood reduced to a 17

The total depends on one's method of counting. I have counted speeches, private journals, and joint works, but not wills or oral questions and answers to parliamentary committees. I have not counted separately the different parts of works such as Utilitarianism and Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy that were eventually issued as a single work by Mill. If this seems to deflate the total unfairly, it is reinflated by counting all the editorial notes to the London and Westminster Review separately; some are exceedingly brief. 18 Michael St. John Packe, The Life of John Stuart Mill (London: Seeker and Warburg, 1954), 507. l9 Earlier Letters [EL], ed. Francis E. Mineka, Vols. XII-XIII of CW (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1963), XII, 157. 20 He turned seventeen in May 1823. At this time he also began his first and only job, with the East India Company, but official duties interfered with authorship as little then as later.

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trickle during the "mental crisis" of the winter of 1826-27. Certainly there is a blank in the second half of 1826; but the pace picks up again in 1827, and in May of that year Mill published his first book, his edition of Bentham's Rationale of Judicial Evidence. Since it had taken months to reduce Bentham's manuscripts to order and to annotate them, evidently he had managed to keep plugging away at his work, however heavy his spirit and unsatisfying the outcome. A real gap begins, unexpectedly, in the fall of 1828—just the time when Mill began to read Wordsworth and his spirits lifted—and continues until July 1830. During this period he withdrew even from the debating society, and wrote nothing that was published or has survived, but quietly digested the new influences that were transforming and tempering his Benthamite creed. The French Revolution of July 1830 ushered in a new period of activity. The years 1830-34 were productive for Mill's journalistic output: in 1834 alone he dashed off sixty-two pieces for publication, besides keeping private journals. Hereafter the list reveals a gradual concentration on less numerous but weightier periodical articles, especially for the London Review (later the London and Westminster Review}, which Mill edited from 1835 to 1840. While these articles continued to appear Mill brought out his System of Logic in 1843 and his Essays on Some Unsettled Questions in Political Economy in 1844. This pattern of increasing mastery is, however, interrupted by another spate of journalism beginning in 1846, when immediate events called for desperate remedies. These short articles Mill wrote on the Irish famine and on domestic cruelty testify to a continued interest, which Harriet encouraged, in practical reforms and improvement of the condition as well as the minds and hearts of the people. After the publication of Principles of Political Economy in 1848 (preceded understandably by a short gap), the list again reverses the expected pattern. During the years of his marriage, 1851-58, Mill published very little, in spite of the emotional security he must have attained; but after his bereavement, when one might have thought his faculties would be paralyzed, there was an outpouring of major works. We learn from the Autobiography and correspondence that many of these projects were begun during the period of Mill's marriage,21 and that the manuscripts were regularly taken out, worked on, and then laid aside again. Harriet particularly seems to have been an inveterate reviser and polisher; perhaps that explains why so few works were brought to completion in the period, and why she herself only finished one major essay in her lifetime.22 At any rate, after her 21

A, CW, I,245; LL, CW, XIV, 152, and also 126,142,144,165-6,168,190,212,214, 218, 294, 348. 22 The fact that she was more fastidious than he is brought out amusingly in an interchange of letters over the early draft of the Autobiography. Mill writes on 23 Jan., 1854, "What there is of it is in perfectly publishable state—as far as writing goes it could be published tomorrow" (LL, CW, XIV, 137). Shortly thereafter Harriet is gently chiding, "I feel sure dear that the Life is not half written and that half that is written will not do" (Hayek, John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor, 196).

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death Mill began to complete and publish these works in her memory—a motive that was to dominate the rest of his life.23 Thereafter large works alternated with small. The end of the list suggests that Mill was willing to address practical matters such as land reform even in his last year, when he had won a secure reputation in "the investigation of abstract truth, and the more abstract the better," that he had long considered his proper element.24

INDEX OF PERSONS AND WORKS OUR THIRD INDEX is a guide to the people and their writings referred to by Mill in all of his letters and works except his translations. A consolidation of all such indexes in previous volumes, it is pared down to the author and short title of works or to the person and his dates or other brief identification, followed by volume and page references. The latter are also compressed, with "VI, 250-2" standing sometimes for three short references at VI, 250, 251, and 252. As explained in the headnote, these page numbers are followed by "q" when the work in question is quoted, "e" when it is evidence before a parliamentary committee, and "rev" when it is reviewed. In citing names we have followed the practice of the Dictionary of National Biography in listing English peers under their family names, with cross-references from their titles. French peers, however, are listed under their titles in the Gallic manner. To preserve the distinction in style between English peers and their spouses, and younger sons and their wives, and daughters of peers, the listing Ward, Emily (Lady) is used for Lady Ward, whereas Hastings, Flora (Lady Flora) is used for Lady Flora Hastings. Saints, many of whom had appeared under "S" in previous volumes, have been redistributed under their forenames according to standard practice, with their prescribed precedence over kings of the same name. In the alphabetization of compound names or of the added surnames so frequently adopted by the English, the DNB has again been our authority of choice, followed by the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Generally a cross-reference has been given, but it is difficult to foresee all cases in which this will be needed. An amusing example of just such an unenvisioned need is found in the index to a French financial report to which Mill himself contributed. His name appears to be missing from the index, until it is eventually discovered under "S," as "Stuart-Mill, John"—just where the French would expect him to be. Married women are indexed under their married 23 The first, On Liberty, was offered to Parker as early as 30 November, 1858, less than a month after Harriet's death on 3 November. We learn from the Autobiography that every sentence in it had been "several times gone through by us together, turned over in many ways, and carefully weeded of any faults," yet that it still "never underwent her final revision" (CW, I, 257-9). 24 Letter to John Sterling (20-22 Oct., 1831), EL, CW, XII, 78.

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names. Roman emperors and artists are indexed by their well-known names (Nero or Raphael), with their full names if necessary in parentheses. In many cases the language native to the name's possessor has been used (Henry, Henri, or Heinrich). Common sense has set limits to this policy, however. Ruskin's remarks in the introduction to the indexes of The Stones of Venice might be cited as defence: "Various inconsistencies will be noticed in the manner of indicating the buildings, some being named in Italian, some in English, and some half in one, and half in the other. But these inconsistencies are permitted in order to save trouble, and make the Index more practically useful. "25 That is, as he goes on to explain, the names most likely to be looked for by readers are chosen. Maintaining the traditions of our previous indexes (which in hindsight perhaps suffered from a trace of sansculottism), the titles Sir and Dr. are omitted. Descending in the social scale, we find that eponymous tradesmen (such as Debenham) are in the subject index if the reference is considered to be to the firm, and in the Index of Persons only if they are introduced as an individual (Mr. Roby of Fentons & Roby). We have hunted for identifying dates as far as time allowed; for those, often of the proletariat, who have left few traces, an identifying tag has been substituted ("a poacher," "a policeman"). Publication information for books and articles cited by Mill is not given, but may be found in the first footnote citation in each volume, as well as in the bibliographical indexes, which may contain further nuggets of information. Those books known to have been in Mill's library when it was donated to Somerville College, Oxford, have been marked with an asterisk.26 To save space, entries have been consolidated wherever possible under their general title (such as Bacon's Essays or Plutarch's Lives), without the minute discrimination of different parts or editions; more specific references are indicated parenthetically following the applicable page number. Speeches, when three or more, appear chronologically at the end of their author's listing. Pseudonymous characters such as "Buz Hum" and "Philo-Puseyite" have been eliminated as authors, as has "Anon.," but their writings are included. Anonymous books are indexed under their titles. Unsigned periodical articles are listed under the journal they appear in, alphabetically by title. Unsigned newspaper articles, however, are listed chronologically under the 25

The Stones of Venice, 3 vols. (London: Smith, Elder, 1853), III, 253. Mill's library at Blackheath was apparently put into storage in the Pantechnicon when he sold the house in January 1872; a handwritten list of its contents, made by a clerk of the Pantechnicon, still exists at Somerville College. In 1905 the books were retrieved from storage and presented to Somerville College on Helen Taylor's behalf. There is another list of the books, not identical, made by a librarian of Somerville in the 1930s. Books on these lists and others found in the library with a Mill bookplate are marked as having belonged to Mill; however, as the College sold some of the books, not all those on the lists can be found in the collection today. Books not on the lists or present in that library are not marked, even when we can be reasonably certain Mill must have possessed them—as is the case with books he reviewed in detail. 26

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name of the paper. This apparently anomalous form of listing was used because the titles of newspaper articles are often of no significance—they may be merely a dateline, or the standard name of a news feature such as "Election Results"— whereas the historical order provides a ready means of locating the article. Anyone who has had occasion to consult Palmer's index to The Times and has had to ponder whether the sought-after article might be under "S" for "Surprising event," or under "D" for "Didn't believe it, says boy," will agree that an alphabetical order is not always an aid to clarity. Mill's letters and other works contain a number of references to translations of books—not surprisingly, since Mill was a friend of Sarah Austin, one of the translators par excellence of nineteenth-century England—and also to editions of thinkers such as Plato or Reid being prepared by his friends and associates. Such books have been indexed under both the editor or translator and the original author, with the title in both cases in the language of the translation or edition cited. When there is already an entry under the original author for the work in its native language, the translated title immediately follows this. This policy of course applies only to translators and editors mentioned by Mill himself, and not to those supplied incidentally by the editors of the Collected Works. The index of persons and works has as its most prolific author J. S. Mill himself. The list of his works here cites his references to his own works, or quotations from them, and is not to be confused with the somewhat similar Alphabetical List which shows where those and all his other works may be found. The fact that a number of his parliamentary speeches are listed here (under the titles used in the Collected Works) makes this an important source for his parliamentary career. There are also a number of translations of Mill's works. He naturally took an interest in these, particularly in the monumental German edition that Theodor Gomperz was agonizing and procrastinating over during the 1860s. The double arrangement of entries under author and translator allows ready access to the work of such translators and, at the same time, reveals under each of Mill's works the translations appearing in his lifetime that we know he was aware of. Parliamentary Papers and Statutes appear in a separate section at the end of this index. In the interests of brevity, we have shortened the titles of these official documents as much as seemed consistent with intelligibility. As with other entries in this index, further information is available in the indexes of individual volumes, which in this case yield the precise location within Parliamentary Papers. British non-statutory documents have been subdivided into bills and other official documents. The official documents pertaining to India proved to be puzzling to classify. Enquiries of the British Parliament into Indian affairs seemed to belong among English documents; letters sent out by the East India Company and the Board of Control were also judged to be a part of English public life, and placed under England. Letters, minutes, instructions, and reports written in India, however, have been classed as Indian documents, even though these were almost invariably written by English officials, were scrutinized by the East India

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Company at home, and at times were called for by the British Parliament. The mixed batches of reports and correspondence sometimes published among the Parliamentary Papers under such titles as "Papers Relating to the Godavery Anicut", falling between two stools, were placed among English documents. Obviously the line of demarcation is wavering, and both sections should be consulted. One of the chief labours of compiling an Index of Persons and Works has been the smooth incorporation of the indexes to the Letters volumes (XII-XVII). As users of the Collected Works are no doubt aware, these indexes were prepared by Francis E. Mineka of Cornell, who used conventions differing in some respects from those of the rest of the Collected Works.27 For instance, he made two indexes, a General Index and an Index of Correspondents, for both the Earlier Letters and Later Letters. The index of correspondents has been interfiled with the rest of the Index of Persons and Works, with the designation "Letter to," because experience using the indexes has shown that it is useful, while checking references for other purposes, to see whether Mill wrote to a person. It was then found that a number of the references in Mineka's subject index repeat the page references of the index of correspondents; the name of the correspondent, and details of his or her personal life that emerge from the correspondence, were generally indexed in the main index as well as being part of a "letter to" him or her. To save space and annoyance, these overlapping references have been eliminated from the main entry—although some have no doubt escaped detection. In two other respects, the indexes to the Letters volumes have been shortened: references to works and persons mentioned only in editorial notes have been deleted, and so have references to the introductions. But in another way the indexes have been expanded, since they now incorporate documentation that would have been given in the original volumes, had they used the style of the Collected Works. For books and articles, such details as publisher and page numbers are given if these are not ascertainable from the volume or elsewhere in the Collected Works. The listing is as brief as possible, with London understood as the place of publication when none is given. For parliamentary speeches, volume and column references in Hansard's Parliamentary Debates are given where they are lacking; the reference is understood to be to the long "3rd series" unless otherwise indicated. The volumes themselves have also been perused to find citations not originally indexed by Mineka: these include quotations from the Bible, recognizable quotations from other authors, and references to specific speeches, Statutes, and Parliamentary Papers. Adding the publication details of such references in the index, when for citations from the rest of the Collected Works it has been omitted, creates a superficial inconsistency of listing that has 27 His volumes of the Earlier Letters were in fact almost ready for the press when CW was inaugurated. Cornell University Press generously allowed the University of Toronto Press to publish them as part of the series.

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been tolerated for the sake of a more fundamental consistency of information. Perhaps users of the Letters volumes will not be aware of the documentation thus added in the index volume (unless they read this Introduction with preternatural attention), but those working from the index listings to the volumes will be given citations and details they would otherwise have missed. Mineka's indexes to the Letters have among their many delightful features the provision of details to make sense of the references to people ("goes to France," "never believed in God," "invited to dinner," etc.). Unfortunately, these details have not found their way into the cumulative Index because they were so different from entries found in other volumes. In a perfect world, the references to people in the rest of the Collected Works might have been made parallel to Mineka's rather than vice versa. Undoubtedly this practice would have constituted an improvement over our simple lists of page numbers; a few of the cumulated entries, such as those for Napoleon and Plato, are dauntingly long and dense. In an imperfect world, however, time and money being limited, we have to present these few long entries with apologies; they certainly were not envisaged when the comparatively simple indexes to the larger works were being drawn up years ago. Much time was spent both in supplementing the publication information in the Letters volumes and in identifying and dating the individuals indexed simply by a name in the earlier volumes. The magnitude of both these tasks is a compliment to Mill. That he knew so many names is not necessarily a sign of his natural bonhomie; many of them are mentioned as authors (that was one of the reasons for putting people and books in the same index in the original plan of the Collected Works). But the personal references are numerous enough to contradict, if that is necessary, any picture of Mill as lonely and solitary. He co-operated with people from all walks of life in pursuit of his goals—lords, parliamentarians, working men, emigrants to Australia, pamphleteers. As for the references to books, Mill was such a voracious reader that the bibliography comes close to indicating the mainstream culture of the nineteenth century. His historical and classical allusions suggest the amount of knowledge he could count upon in his readers (the "what every schoolboy knows" that varies so much with different centuries), and his references to contemporary works give a fascinating picture of what was being read and discussed. To judge from the difficulty of finding out about them, some pamphlets and obscurer works seem to have received their only known mention here, so that a contribution is made to the bibliography of the period. For these reasons the index may prove a useful basis for many further studies, not all of them directly connected with Mill.

CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX THIS FINAL INDEX represents a merging of the nineteen separate subject indexes of CW. Indexing being as much an art as a science, the indexes necessarily reflect the

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very different approaches and temperaments of seven indexers over the course of twenty-seven years28 as well as the great differences in subject matter and form of Mill's works. Choice of headings naturally varied, as did the judgment of what constituted a significant reference;29 and the nature of the texts made it inevitable that what received a main entry in one volume might, in another, form only a subhead to another term, be hidden in a phrase, or even for one reason or another not be indexed at all. I have not embarked on the tempting but very expensive task of re-indexing the works from a single point of view (and I speak as an individual in this section, since such tasks do not lend themselves to joint production). Rather, working with the references given by each index, I have standardized, compressed, and redistributed them.30 A master list of all the headings used in the volumes provided a ready means of determining whether synonyms, or terms closely related to the one under consideration, had been used in different volumes. Working on these combined groups of related headings, I hoped to get a sense of Mill's thought on a given subject and then to itemize it under one chosen heading. When I add that clarity, economy of space, and consistency were also goals, and that the list of headings alone took up 196 typed pages, it will be apparent that the finished product must fall short of the aim. Nevertheless, I believe it gives a clearer picture than would be obtained by simply looking at each volume in turn. In the process of constructing entries it was of course necessary to look up many of the references, and thus they have been verified and, inevitably, some errors in earlier volumes have been discovered and corrected.31 But not every reference has been individually re-checked, and it would be idle to hope that no anomalies remain. The choice of key words for the headings has been dictated partly by the existing indexes and partly by utility. Indexers are sometimes reminded of Macaulay's advice to the indexer of his History of England, to keep to proper names: "such heads as Priestcraft, Priesthood, Party Spirit, Insurrection, War, Bible, Crown, 28 Bruce Kinzer prepared the indexes for Vols. I, IX, XI, and XVIII-XIX; Julian Patrick for Vols. II-III; R.I.K. Davidson for Vols. IV-V and X; Maureen Clarke for Vol. VI and part of XX; R.F. McRae for Vols. VII-VIII; Francis Mineka for Vols. XII-XVII; and I myself for part of Vol. XX, and Vols. XXI-XXXII. With the exception of the last, I should like to extend heartfelt thanks to all these individuals, without whose work this volume would not have been possible. 29 The word "thought," for instance, probably a constant in philosophic discourse, had seventy-five different phrases and 120 page references in the Hamilton (Vol. IX), as against one in the Logic (Vols. Vll-Vffl) ("defined, 51"). 30 The chief exception to this practice was the Principles of Political Economy (Vols. II-III), the first work to be indexed at the Mill Project. Here I expanded the range and added a number of terms later found to be significant in Mill's work. Apart from this, and the indexing of App. A of Vol. VI (previously unindexed) to bring it in line with other early drafts in appendices, I have added references sporadically where necessary, or where memory prompted, to bring together similar passages and ideas. 3 'The most amusing is the fact that the references to the Fur trade in the Principles turned out to be nothing of the sort, but a misprint for Free trade—a disappointment to Canadians.

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Controversies, Dissent, are quite useless. Nobody will ever look at them. . . ,"32 The last sentence, if true, sounds the death-knell for the most ingenious index. But readers of Mill are presumably at home with abstractions, and we hope they will look at some very abstract headings such as Principles or Method, where some of Mill's most interesting thoughts are found. The index avoids the minute classification and subdivision of a subject found in some indexes, however, like Cook and Wedderburn's monumental index to Ruskin's works.33 One can only marvel at the way these indexers deploy their subheads and sub-subheads under a topic such as Art or Gothic architecture so that Ruskin's thought unfolds itself in a clearer way than in the text; and one sympathizes with Cook in the satisfaction, perhaps endemic to Ruskin scholars, of "finding order evolve itself out of seeming chaos. "34 But Mill's thought is not lacking in clarity; the Collected Works indexes are designed not so much to analyse ideas as to provide a check-list of them. They were prepared according to the stringent advice of Henry Wheatley: "Wealth should be found under W, Finance under F, and Population under P; and they should not all be grouped under Political Economy, because each of these subjects is distinct. "35 Under Political economy, Logic, etc., will be found only what Mill says about the nature of the disciplines themselves. There is a saying current among indexers that "the index of a book should be made by the author even if the book were written by some one else."36 Mill's books lacked indexes, even when Harriet helped to write them,37 but his own words have been chosen for headings in preference to modern terms. Capitalism, for instance, is not a term Mill uses, though he does speak of Capitalists: his term for the economic system of free enterprise is Competition. Culture, again, is used of an individual but not usually of a group in the modern sense, where Civilization is the term. Admittedly the modern term Birth control is used in the index (people seem to associate it with Mill), but most of his more general thoughts on limiting births are given under Population. Cross-references are supplied from the modern term when Mill's equivalent is not likely to be obvious. 32

George Otto Trevelyan, The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, 2 vols. (Leipsig: Lemmermann, 1876), II, 150n. 33 "General Index," in John Ruskin, Works, ed. Edward Cook and Alexander Wedderburn, 39 vols. (London: Allen, 1903-12), XXXIX. 34 Edward Cook, "The Art of Indexing," in Literary Recreations (London: Macmillan, 1919), 76. 35 Henry B. Wheatley, How to Make an Index (London: Stock, 1902), 70. 36 Ibid., 109. Wheatley attributes the remark to the Spanish bibliographer Nicholas Antonio (1617-84). 37 His only known remark on indexes bears out Antonio's saying. Thinking of an index to the Principles of Political Economy, he says, "but most Indexes of philosophical treatises are so badly and stupidly done, that unless I could have made it myself or got it made by a political economist, I thought it better let alone." The methodical arrangement of the book, and the detailed table of contents, he continued, made an index less necessary. (Letter to I.E. Cairnes, 4 Feb., 1865; LL, CW, XVI, 989.)

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An uninverted form of heading is generally used for names of organizations ("Bank of England, ""Society of Apothecaries,""University of Paris"). When an indexed phrase begins with an adjective, it is usually indexed under its noun, especially when that noun is already a heading in its own right (Philosophical Radicals are found under "Radicals," Rotten boroughs under "Boroughs"). However, I have put some phrases under the adjective when that seemed an integral part of the phrase and the part a user would most probably look under ("Free trade," "Catholic emancipation," "Stationary state"). Drawing the line is necessarily subjective; complete consistency cannot be claimed (is there such a thing as partial consistency?), and both parts of a phrase should be checked. To avoid scattered information, all similar references are under one head. Previous Collected Works indexes, for good local reasons, sometimes had "Freedom. See Liberty," sometimes "Liberty. See Freedom," and sometimes used both terms depending on which Mill chose. I have put most of these references under "Liberty," a term that seems particularly Mill's, and reserved "Freedom, national," for what we would now call independence or liberation movements. "Progress" and "Improvement" proved two of the most difficult terms to disentangle; Mill obviously does not think of them as synonymous, yet sometimes he uses both terms in the same passage to vary his vocabulary, and to index each word as it occurred would be to dislocate his thought. "Progress of society" was chosen for the tendency, not always entirely beneficial, for society to mature and diversify, to spawn abundance of goods and complexity of organization, as time passes. This is the process studied by the social scientist and lamented by the nostalgic. The heading "Improvement" is reserved for the beneficial changes sought by the visionary. As one might expect, this topic proved bulky, and so a separate category was formed, "Improvement of mankind," for Mill's reflections on his ultimate goal. Where scattered information seemed inevitable, cross-references have been inserted. For instance, under "Mathematics" there are some references to Mill's contention that its axioms rest upon induction, but a reminder is given that Mill develops this idea particularly in reference to Geometry. Another example, perhaps more contentious, is seen in the indexing of the terms Mill used to describe what he called the two great opposing schools of philosophy. One school is associated with the terms a priori, ontological, metaphysical, German, transcendental, of innate principles, intuitive, common sense, and Platonic, while the other is variously described as a posteriori, analytical, psychological, of experience, associationist, and Aristotelian. Mill's references ring so many changes on these terms that information would be hopelessly scattered if indexing were strictly by specific word. In this case I have tried to compromise between respecting Mill's terminology and interpreting a little to bring together (under two or three terms, with cross-references) his thoughts on a division that he considered to be fundamental.

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Minor geographical references have been eliminated, where noticed, for consistency. They had not been indexed in the Letters volumes, and proved far too numerous to be indexed in the volume of Walking Tours (XXVII). The lack of an entry for "J.S. Mill" conforms to the most extreme recommendations of the anti-classification school of indexers. It came about, however, not for doctrinaire but for historical reasons: all references to people in the Collected Works volumes are in the Index of Persons and Works. Most aspects of Mill's personal life are distributed throughout the index: parts of his parliamentary career under "Parliament" and "Westminster," his botanical interests under "Botany," his mental crisis under "Mental crisis," his attitude to his work under "Writings" and "Letters," and so on. However, there remains an area that has not been so indexed, for few readers could be expected to turn to "Portrait" or "Photograph" when wondering whether Mill gave away a likeness of himself, or to "Watch" to find out about his youthful sense of shame in losing one. Such details demand to be placed under the heading Mill or nowhere. Fortunately, most of them are found in the Letters volumes (other works such as the Autobiography being notoriously austere), and these volumes do have an analytic entry for Mill. Here one may find, for instance, under the subhead "Self-analysis" in the Earlier Letters, a sensitive survey of the young Mill struggling to define himself. There is also a subhead "Childhood and education" under which the browser can learn of Mill's finding his first friend and of writing a Roman history at the age of six. In the Later Letters entry for Mill there are 160 references under the subhead "Health" alone (most of them actually to its absence)—it seemed inappropriate either to transcribe them all into the Cumulative Index under "Illnesses" or to break them down into categories of afflictions. Finally, the subhead "Travels" allows one to see at a glance which countries Mill visited. So useful did these long Mill entries prove that a similar one headed "Mill, J.S." has been inserted into the volume of Additional Letters recently published and otherwise differently indexed, to complete the survey of Mill's life as reflected in his letters. Within individual entries, I have generally aimed for brevity and broad general outlines rather than minute particularity. The entry "Government" will stand as an example of some of the difficulties faced, as it was used to test methods and procedures. All the references under this heading, gathered together from the different volumes, occupied sixteen pages of double-spaced typing and used 350 descriptive phrases, scarcely two of which were the same. There seemed little to be gained by simply alphabetizing these phrases; the entry needed consolidation and summary to be useful. Several means were found practicable to reduce this and other large entries to manageable proportions: some particular aspects were made a separate entry, with a cross-reference ("Centralization" was detached from "Government," "Schools" from "Education"); subheads were formed; similar descriptive phrases were combined under a more all-inclusive phrase; and references that seemed insignificant in the larger view were downgraded to the

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category of "mentioned," or in rare cases omitted altogether. To avoid sub-subheads, what might have been a complex subhead was given a separate entry ("Government, reform of," became the separate entry "Reform, parliamentary"; and "Land, tenure of," became "Land tenure"). Because of this splitting of large entries, the directions under See also are to be taken seriously. They are kept to a minimum to avoid discouraging the user, and represent not so much other things one might be interested in as the location of material freshly detached from the original heading. Working out appropriate phrases constitutes the chief joy and challenge of the indexer's task (to use a vocabulary that only indexers will not think wildly inflated), but in the case of a cumulative index it has a negative aspect too: much of the colour and wit of the original indexes is lost as phrases are brought together under their lowest common denominator. I have interpreted the notion that every index is allowed a joke to imply that a cumulative index is allowed several, and have preserved intact a number of my predecessors' phrases for that reason. But apart from these, some may perhaps judge that heterogeneous ideas have been yoked by violence together in an effort to economize on phrases, and this without any increment of wit. In Vol. XIII the French Revolution was delightfully indexed as "a healthful shake-up to Europe"; for brevity's sake this and eight other references were combined under the colourless "significance of." Under "Government," the informative phrases "inadequacy of Bentham and JM's [James Mill's] theory of," "JM's service to cause of good," and "influence of JM's essay on" were telescoped into a laconic "JM's views on." Further, the fine distinction made in some indexes between "Bailey on" a topic (when he is actually quoted) and "Bailey's idea of" (when Mill explains his ideas) has been lost, and both have been considered "Bailey on"; indeed, in some cases Bailey (and others) have dropped out completely to merge in an entry for "misinterpretations of." (Those in search of Bailey should look him up in the Index of Persons and Works.) The phrase "in the Hamiltonian philosophy" is sometimes used to include the ideas of Hamilton's disciple, Mansel. A slightly different method of shortening entries was to use one general phrase for a topic that occupies several pages. For instance, the reference under "Radicals" to "principles and beliefs of, VI, 396-404," actually replaces seven more detailed sub-entries: "and property, 399-401; leadership of, 404; and labouring classes, 396-7; conservative principles of, 399, 400, 402; power of, 401; and middle classes, 402; and aristocracy, 402." These distinctions, useful within a volume, would have made the task of looking up references very tedious and disjointed. People in search of a specific phrase or idea, however, might go from the Cumulative Index to the more detailed original indexes of the volumes. Alternatively they might look up another key word; in this example they would find an entry for "Radicals and" under "Property," "Labouring class," and "Conservatism." The heading "England" calls for special comment, since it is much compressed.

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"England" is like a default drive in the index—much of what Mill says applies to his native land, unless otherwise specified. References like "Journalism in England" or "the Poor Law of England" have been indexed simply under "Journalism" or "Poor Law." Under "England" are found chiefly the characteristics of English life and the peculiarities distinguishing it from other countries —mostly to its detriment, according to Mill. As a result of the process of boiling down or simply bringing together references from several volumes, some phrases are followed by a considerable string of numbers. The recommendation against such strings by indexing authorities seems more applicable to continuous works than to collections. Though an author is unlikely to say virtually the same thing eight times in a work, he may well do so in the course of writing letters to six of his friends, an article, and a book; and the labour of discriminating minutely among a series such as Mill's twenty-two references to the poor quality of English education would be ill repaid. To save space, strings of more than ten numbers have not usually been repeated, though they may belong under two different headings. The question of the place of religion in education, for instance, is indexed only under "Education," with a note to that effect under "Religion." Where the references are numerous or important enough to warrant their being analysed further under a subhead, the reference is to that subhead (so that those looking under "America" for "democracy in" are advised to "see Democracy, American"). The elimination of some phrases means also that strings of references after such phrases (under "France") as "and Spain" and (under "Spain") "and France" will not always be exact reciprocals. Some of the numbers under one phrase will have been subsumed under a more inclusive phrase, in this example perhaps (under "France") "foreign policy of." Again, both key words should be checked when searching for a very specific reference. For an even greater level of abstraction, principal references have been added wherever possible in parentheses after the main headings. These "ready reference" numbers indicate an essay, a chapter, or occasionally a smaller unit, of which the heading is the subject, and provide a quick way of finding Mill's chief thoughts on it. Since they indicate the whole essay in which the ideas are developed, they include a sweep of pages not all of which will be found in the specific references below. For the arrangement of the phrases within an entry, as well as of subheads, alphabetical order is used rather than order of occurrence. The individual indexes use the latter convention and, within volumes, it has some advantages, since it suggests the way an idea develops within a specific text. But when the references from different volumes are combined, this shape is obscured, and the advantages of easy reference by way of the alphabet appear overwhelming—especially as Mill did not write his works in the volume order of the Collected Works. Occasionally, however, when all the sub-entries or subheads are aspects of a

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historical progression, a chronological order has been followed. Even more occasionally, the subheads flout both alphabetical and chronological conventions to appear in what seemed the most logical order. Under France, for instance, the subheads "economy of," "foreign policy of," and "government of" are followed by a subhead "July monarchy, 1830-48" (a particular government that Mill treated in detail); "intellectual movements in" follows. To make the alphabetical order more meaningful, some attempt has been made to bring significant words to the beginning of the phrase. For this reason some rather unprepossessing phrases of the form "relation of to improvement" (under "Progress of society") have been preferred to the form "its relation to improvement," which makes for pleasanter reading. However, the form "improvement, its relation to" has generally been rejected as too uncouth. In these phrases, "not," "how," "when," and so on are counted as significant words. Short forms such as JSM and HTM are alphabetized within entries under their first letter. Individuals are alphabetized within entries by their surname, whether that is considered sufficient (Aristotle, Bentham), or whether the first name is added for identification (Adam Smith, Goldwin Smith). Dates, except in a chronological entry, are alphabetized as if spelled out, though this rule has occasionally been transgressed in order to place 1830 before 1840. One of the amusements of long indexing hours has been to attempt to arrange some of the ideas in a logical as well as an alphabetical sequence. Thus the word "basically," not in itself o'f tremendous significance, is useful to bring to the front of the alphabet a point that seems important: "Reformation, Protestant, basically a struggle for liberty of thought." To avoid having the alphabetical order reverse the historical, the Saint Simonians do not embark on their "later careers" before their "trial," but rather have "subsequent careers" after their "persecution and trial." In the same way there is something unsatisfactory in reading of a bill first "defeated," then "discussed," and later "introduced"; better, it might be "advocated," "discussed," and at the end of the entry "voted down." Pope's great goddess Dulness boasts of How index-learning turns no student pale Yet holds the eel of science by the tail.

Reading an index could be construed as a short-cut to learning only by the Colley Gibbers of this world,38 but the very acts of sorting, gathering, and arranging do bring some of the characteristics of an author's work into view. Mesmerized perhaps by modern critical theory, one notes first some interesting and occasionally puzzling silences. The Darwinian controversy, for instance, receives very little public comment, although we know from his letters that Mill was 38 Alexander Pope, The Dunciad Variorum, with the Prolegomena of Scriblerus (London: Gilliver, 1729), 83.

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Introduction

interested in The Origin of Species.39 Since he had never had a religious faith, Mill was not as troubled by the implications of Darwinism as were some of his contemporaries and was less drawn to write about it. Communism appears, but Marxian communism was not an issue; Fourierism and Saint Simonism were the better known communistic schemes of the day, and we know of only one brief reference to Karl Marx.40 Many political movements of the 1840s did not, surprisingly, elicit any public comment from the eager student of social change. He scarcely mentioned the Anti-Corn Law League and he made no evaluation of the agitation for the Ten Hours Act, passing up the opportunity of pointing out the folly of placing restrictions on the labour of adults. More strangely, he devoted no major article to the Chartists, although he shared many of their goals and had a good deal of respect for them. It is perhaps not so surprising that the Exhibition of 1851 called forth only a passing reference many years after, for Mill was unlikely to think it necessary to reinforce a euphoric national mood. But one might have expected the Crimean War to bulk larger in the Index; here were some of Mill's favourite themes—international law, aristocratic mismanagement, bumbling in the army, and, through Florence Nightingale, the role of women. But perhaps because he had chosen to live reclusively at this time, Mill made no public comment. Finally, most notable of all in view of Mill's professional employment, is the paucity of references to the Indian Mutiny.41 Apart from a few necessary mentions of the "present unhappy disturbances"42 in his official pamphlets against the transfer of India to the Crown, there was no public comment on this cataclysmic event. Perhaps Mill felt constrained by his official position; perhaps he was not inclined to open himself to charges of conflict of interest. Whatever the reason, not until ten years after the Mutiny did he allude publicly to his disgust at the vengeful glee, "almost disgraceful to humanity,"43 with which some people boasted of 39

LL, CW, XV, 695. Mill's two public allusions to evolution occur in his Inaugural Address, where Darwin himself is not mentioned (CW, XXI, 242), and in a footnote added in 1862 to the Logic (System of Logic: Ratiocinative and Inductive, Vols. VII-VIII of CW [Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1973], VII, 498n-9n). ^his favourable comment on a speech of Marx's in 1871, to which attention was drawn by Mineka (LL, CW, XVII, 1754n), appears in Additional Letters (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1991), 220. 41 India itself is mentioned frequently but—apart from the chiefly "official" documents in Vol. XXX—usually briefly. Indeed, given the difficulty of determining the extent to which the despatches Mill wrote in East India House embody his own opinions, the withdrawal of his offer in 1853 to write an article on the present mode of governing India (now newly indexed under "India") is as tantalizing to Mill scholars as the arrival of the person from Porlock is to Coleridgeans. (See CW, XIV, 106, 111-12, 163.) 42 CW, XXX, 89. Cf. ibid., 164. 43 The Petition concerning the Fenians (14 June, 1867), Public and Parliamentary Speeches, Vols. XXVIII-XXIX of CW (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1988), XXVIII, 189.

Introduction

xxix

its savage suppression. At that time he was in Parliament, active once again, and vigorously attempting to prosecute those responsible for the atrocities in Jamaica. Inclusions being less shadowy than omissions, they reveal more clearly Mill's central interests. The enormous range of his concerns—a posteriori to Zoroastrianism—hardly needs comment. It will come as no surprise that "France" is the single largest entry (even larger when combined with "French Revolution"), or that "Government" is close behind. "Education," "Labouring class," "Law," and "United States" are all expectedly weighty subjects, "India" perhaps less expectedly so. The number of references under "Co-operation" testifies to Mill's belief that this was the coming mode of economic organization—a prediction that history has not borne out. History has not yet pronounced on another topic to which Mill referred frequently and even fervently—proportional representation —though the particular form of "personal" representation advocated by Hare seems unlikely to prevail. These entries mark Mill as a man of his time; many more show him to be ahead of it. We find him anticipating twentieth-century concerns of varying degrees of social significance. The academic job crisis, for instance, is glimpsed in his concern for "Professors, retirement of aged," and how to facilitate it. He offers an early contribution to the smoking-in-confined-spaces dispute under "Smoking (in railway carriages)," taking a disdainful but tolerant view of offenders. Under "House of Lords" we find early references to the idea of life peers. In twentieth-century terms Mill takes on not only shades of Red but also shades of Green: there are entries for "Environment," "Parks," and "Industrial Smoke," and under "Animals" are found protests against cruelty to them and commendation of a scheme to establish a hospital for them (including birds). Under "Leisure" are two references that nicely reflect Mill's outlook. In one he advocates a gospel of leisure in place of Carlyle's gospel of work, on the grounds that most work in modern society is grinding toil to produce unnecessary fopperies. In the other, he confesses that to him the true meaning of leisure is choice of work. Mill has sometimes been accused of inconsistency, but to an indexer, at least, his inconsistencies are no more than might be expected of a man who began to reason early and continued to do so as circumstances changed and new light emerged. The index entries that most often clash with others are those from the early debating speeches, where youthful dogmatism and the desire to annihilate the opposition both preclude a balanced view. My impression is that, among entries from Mill's mature years, there are remarkably few in which the rhetorical situation leads to a substantial alteration of views stated elsewhere. Even entries from the private letters harmonize with those from the published works; the regathering of his scattered references serves to emphasize the coherence and interdependence of his views. But these matters await the further investigation of scholars. With the index volume the publication of the Collected Works of John Stuart Mill is complete,

xxx

Introduction

and the Mill Project comes to an end after more than thirty years. It was originally undertaken with the goal of making Mill's writings available to scholars; and a glance at these indexes suggests that much interesting and significant work on Mill remains to be done. The index volume will have served its purpose if it provides a way into those writings and facilitates the first steps of many a new Mill project.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS OUR THANKS are due to Professor R.F. McRae for reading the subject index and weeding it of some philosophical blunders. All the staff of the Mill Project over the years have contributed to the Index of Persons and Works, but our chief debt here is to Marion Filipiuk, the senior research assistant. We have been fortunate in a consistency-loving editorial assistant, Rea Wilmshurst, whose input goes far beyond the word-processor. Among student workers, Jannifer Smith-Rubenzahl has researched countless missing biographies with quiet competence, and Oliver Tsai has found missing publication information. Lastly, our respective spouses have each taken an interest in the abstrusest problems of classification, and have been living and valued examples of "Halves, better."

ALPHABETICAL LIST OF TITLES IN THE COLLECTED WORKS

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Alphabetical List of Titles in the Collected Works

THIS LIST is in effect an index to the titles in the Collected Works [CW]. Detailed information will be found in the headnotes to the items in the various volumes, and is not here repeated. Part A gives Mill's writings; Part B the Introductions and writings by others that have been included as ancillary items in CW. Works of joint authorship are included in Part A, marked with an obelisk (t); the name of the collaborator is given in parentheses at the end of the entry. The abbreviation "HTM" is used for Harriet Taylor Mill; for an explanation of our interpretation of her "joint authorship" with Mill, see the Introduction, viii-x above. The entries consist of the titles used in CW, followed by the year of publication, and volume and page references to CW. When other titles were used in the original publication, cross-references are supplied: for example, "The Right and Wrong of State Interference with Corporation and Church Property" (the title used in Vol. I of Dissertations and Discussions [D&D]) is listed with the note, "See Corporation and Church Property" (the title used in Vol. IV of CW). Titles of books and pamphlets by Mill are given in italic type; other items appear in roman type without inverted commas. Page references to material in appendices in CW are given in italic type, and page references to material that represents other versions of texts (such as manuscripts) are given in parentheses. Discrete items that have the same titles are listed separately; however, titles that appear repeatedly as parts of a series are given only once, with an indication of how often they are repeated: the number of repetitions is followed by "pts" (for parts) or "s" (for speeches). For example, the entry for "The Spirit of the Age" is completed thus: "(6 pts), 1831: XXII, 227-316 passim"; that for the twelve speeches entitled "Election Petitions and Corrupt Practices at Elections" ends: "(12 s), 1868: XXVIII, 262-328passim."

PART A. WORKS BY J.S. MILL Absenteeism, 1825: XXII, 103-6. tAcquittal of Captain Johnstone, The, 1846: XXIV, 865-6 (with HTM). Additional Guildford Stations, 1841: XXXI, 261. tAddress to Friends of the Jamaica Committee, 1866: XXI, 427-9 (with other members of the Committee). Admission of Women to the Electoral Franchise, The, 1867: XXVIII, 151-62. Advertisements Free of Duty, 1828: XXII, 111-12.

4

Alphabetical Index

Advice to Land Reformers, 1873: XXV, 1227-31. Alabama Claims, The, 1868: XXVIII, 242-6. Alison's History of the French Revolution, 1833: XX, 111-22. Another Opinion of Dr. Croker's, 1828: XXII, 113-14. Answer to Bowling's Criticism of Prospects of France, II, 1830: XXII, 147-9. Aphorisms: Thoughts in the Cloister and the Crowd, 1837:1, 419-29. Appointment of Judges under the New Local Courts Act, The, 1846: XXIV, 945-9. Armand Carrel, 1837: XX, 167-215. Army Bill, The, 1871: XXIX, 411-15. Atrocities of the Tread Wheel, 1823: XXII, 67-70. Attack on Literature, 1831: XXII, 318-27. Attempt to Exclude Unbelievers from Parliament, The, 1849: XXV, 1135-8. Attempt to Save the Ex-Ministers, 1830: XXII, 163-8. Auguste Comte and Positivism, 1865: X, 263-368. Austin on Centralization, 1847: XXIV, 1062-6. Austin on Jurisprudence, 1863: XXI, 165-205. Austin's Lectures on Jurisprudence, 1832: XXI, 51-60. Autobiography, 1873:1, 5-259 (odd pages), 260-90. Avere et 1'imposta, L' (D&D, IV, 231-6). See Property and Taxation. Bailey on Berkeley's Theory of Vision (2 pts), 1842, 1843: XI, 245-69. Bain's On the Applications of Science to Human Health and Well-Being, 1848: XXV, 1118-20. Bain's Psychology, 1859: XI, 339-73. Ballot, The, 1830: XXII, 204-7. Ballot, The, 1868: XXV, 1218. Bank Acts, The, 1857: V, 499-547. Bank Charter Bill, The (2 pts), 1833: XXIII, 575-6, 590-2. Bank Charter Question, The (4 pts), 1844: XXIV, 844-59. Bankruptcy Acts Repeal Bill, The, 1867: XXVIII, 187-8. Bentham, 1838: X, 75-115. Bentham's Rationale. See Jeremy Bentham's Rationale. Beolchi's Saggio di Poesie Italiane, 1833: XXIII, 573. Berkeley's Life and Writings, 1871: XI, 449-71. Blakey's History of Moral Science, 1833: X, 19-29. Blessings of Equal Justice, 1823: XXII, 43-6. Blunders of The Times, 1827: XXII, 106-7. Botany of Spain (5 pts), 1861-62: XXXI, 289-320. Bouverie versus Chadwick, 1868: XXV, 1220. Bribery and Intimidation at Elections, 1835: XXIV, 767-9. British Constitution, The (2 s), 1826: XXVI, 358-85. Brodie's History of the British Empire, 1824: VI, 1-58. Brunswick Clubs, The, 1828: XXII, 116-20. Budget, The, 1831: XXII, 263-9. Budget, The, 1833: XXIII, 563-6.

Advice - Conduct

5

Calendar of Odours, 1840: XXXI, 257. Californian Constitution, The, 1850: XXV, 1147-51. Capital Punishment, 1868: XXVIII, 266-72. Carlyle's French Revolution, 1837: XX, 131-66. Carpenter's Physiology, 1842: XXXI, 323-4. tCase of Anne Bird, The, 1850: XXV, 1153-7 (with HTM). Case of Fulford and Wellstead, The, 1867: XXVIII, 212-13. tCase of Mary Ann Parsons, The (2 pts), 1850: XXV, 1151-3, 1164-7 (with HTM). tCase of Private Matthewson, The, 1846: XXIV, 882-5 (with HTM). tCase of Susan Moir, The, 1850: XXV, 1167-70 (with HTM). tCase of the North Family, The, 1846: XXIV, 1020-3 (with HTM). tCase of William Burn, The, 1846: XXIV, 952-4 (with HTM). Case of William Smith, The, 1869: XXV, 1221-2. Catiline's Conspiracy, 1826: XXVI, 341-8. Cattle Diseases Bill, The (2 s), 1866: XXVIII, 47-52. Cavaignac's Defence, 1831: XXII, 303. Centralisation, 1862: XIX, 579-613. Chapters and Speeches on the Irish Land Question, 1868. See Chichester Fortesque's Land Bill, The Principles of Political Economy (Bk. II, Chaps, vi-x), and The State of Ireland. Chapters on Socialism, 1879: V, 703-53. Chichester Fortescue's Land Bill, 1866: XXVIII, 75-83. Church, The, 1828: XXVI, 418-27. Civil War in the United States, The, 1864: XXV, 1204-5. Civilization, 1836: XVIII, 117-47. Claims of Labour, The, 1845: IV, 363-89. Clifton Plants, 1858: XXXI, 279. Close of the Session, The, 1834: VI, 281-93. Close of the Session in France, The, 1832: XXIII, 453-9. Cnicus Fosteri, 1841: XXXI, 260. Coalition Ministry, The, 1827: XXVI, 397-408. Cobden Club, The, 1869: XXIX, 371-3. Coleridge, 1840: X, 117-63. tComment on Bentham in Bulwer's England and the English, 1833: X, 499-502 (with Edward Lytton Bulwer). Commercial Crisis in the United States of America, 1837: XXIV, 793-4. Commodore Wiseman and the Turkish Navy (2 s), 1867: XXVIII, 213-14. Comparison of the Tendencies of French and English Intellect, 1832: XXIII, 442-7 (XXV, 1251-5, in French, as Lettre a Charles Duveyrier). Compensation to the Shopkeepers on the Approaches to London Bridge, 1828: XXII, 114-16. Condition of Ireland, The (43 pts), 1846: XXIV, 879-1035 passim. Conduct of the Ministry with Respect to the Poor Laws, 1833: XXIII, 634-8. Conduct of the Ministry with Respect to the Post-Office Department, and the Payment of Officers by Fees, 1833: XXIII, 643-6.

6

Alphabetical Index

Conduct of the United States towards the Indian Tribes, 1831: XXII, 235-7. Confiscation Scheme of The Times, 1833: XXIE, 566-8. Considerations on Representative Government, 1861: XIX, 371-577. Constitutional View of the India Question, A, 1858: XXX, 173-8. Constraints of Communism, 1850: XXV, 1179-80. Contagious Diseases Acts, The, 1871: XXI, 349-71. Contest in America, The, 1862: XXI, 125-42. Controversy on the Ballot, 1830: XXII, 209-11. Cooperation, 1864: XXVIII, 5-9. Cooperation: Closing Speech, 1825: XXVI, 313-25. Cooperation: First Speech, 1825: XXVI, 308. Cooperation: Intended Speech, 1825: XXVI, 308-13. Cooperation: Notes, 1825: XXVI, 325-6. Corn Laws, The, 1825: IV, 45-70. Corn Laws, The, 1832: XXIII, 522-3. tCorporal Punishment, 1849: XXV, 1138-41 (with HTM). Corporation and Church Property, 1833: IV, 193-222. Corporation Bill, The, 1833: XXIII, 628-34. Correction of an Error in the Notes on the Species of Oenanthe, 1845: XXXI, 266. Corrections and Additions in List of Plants in the Isle of Wight, 1842: XXXI, 263. Corruption at Elections, 1864: XXVIII, 9-11. Courts-Martial in Jamaica, The, 1867: XXVIII, 218-19. Croix de Juillet, The, 1831: XXII, 308-10. Cumulative Vote, The, 1871: XXIX, 409-11. Currency and Banking, 1867: V, 599-611. Currency Juggle, The, 1833: IV, 181-92. Currency Question, The, 1844: IV, 341-61. Czar and the Hungarian Refugees in Turkey, The (2 pts), 1849: XXV, 1141-4. Death of Charles Lameth, 1833: XXIH, 541-2. Death of Hyde Villiers, 1832: XXIII, 533. Death of Jeremy Bentham, 1832: XXHI, 467-73 (X, 495-8). Death of Lafayette, 1834: XXIII, 716-17. Death of the Abbe" Gregroire, 1831: XXII, 317. Deaths of Casimir Perier and Georges Cuvier, 1832: XXIII, 462-4. Debate on East and West India Sugars, The, 1823: XXII, 25-30. Debate on the Petition of Mary Ann Carlile, The, 1823: XXII, 21-4. De Laveleye on the Eastern Question, 1870: XXV, 1226. De Quincey's Logic of Political Economy, 1845: IV, 391-404. De Tocqueville on Democracy in America [I], 1835: XVIII, 47-90. De Tocqueville on Democracy in America [II], 1840: XVIII, 153-204. Diary, 1854: XXVII, 639-68. Discussion of the Contagious Diseases Acts, 1871: XXIX, 411. Dissertations and Discussions (apart from the preface, all articles are listed separately under their titles), 1859: X, 493-4.

Conduct — Examination

1

Disturbances in Jamaica, The (3 s), 1866: XXVIII, 93-5, 105-13, 123-4. Dr. Croker's Opinion, 1828: XXII, 113. tDr. Ellis's Conviction, 1846: XXIV, 875-7 (with HTM). Dr. King's Lecture on the Study of Anatomy, 1834: XXXI, 323. Dr. Whately's Elevation to an Archbishopric, 1831: XXIII, 356. Dr. Whewell on Moral Philosophy (D&D, II, 450-509). See Whewell on Moral Philosophy. Donation (to Helen Taylor), 1869: XXXI, 340-4. Duveyrier's Political Views of French Affairs, 1846: XX, 295-316. tEarly Draft of the Autobiography, 1854-55:1, 4-258 (even pages) (608-24) (with HTM). Early Draft of the Logic, 1830-36?: VIII, 955-1110. Early Grecian History and Legend (D&D, II, 283-334). See Crete's History of Greece [I]. East India Company's Charter, The, 1852: XXX, 31-74. East India Revenue, 1867: XXVIII, 233-6. Editorial Notes in the London and Westminster Review (22 pts), 1835-39:1, 598-607. Education Bill, The (2 s), 1870: XXIX, 381-6, 391-6 (610-13). Education Bill, The, 1870: XXV, 1222-3. Educational Endowments, 1867: XXI, 207-14. Effects of Gambling, 1823: XXII, 77-9. Effects of Periodical Literature, 1824: XXII, 100-2. Election Petitions and Corrupt Practices at Elections (12 s), 1868: XXVIII, 262-328 passim. Election to School Boards (2 s), 1870: XXIX, 396-401. Electoral Districts, 1848: XXV, 1107-9. Electoral Franchise for Women, 1866: XXVIII, 91-3. Emigration Bill, The, 1831: XXII, 270-3. Emigration from Ireland, 1847: XXIV, 1075-8. Employment of Children in Manufactories, 1832: XXIII, 398-401. Endowments, 1869: V, 613-29. England and Europe, 1864: XXV, 1205-8. England and Ireland, 1848: XXV, 1095-1100. England and Ireland, 1868: VI, 505-32 (535-43). England's Danger through the Suppression of Her Maritime Power, 1867: XXVIII, 220-7. English National Character, The, 1834: XXIII, 717-27. tEnlightened Infidelity, 1847: XXIV, 1082-4 (with HTM). Errors and Truths on a Property Tax, 1833: XXIII, 549-54. Errors of the Spanish Government, 1823: XXII, 39-42. Essays on Government, 1840: XVIII, 149-52. Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy, 1843: IV, 229-339. Established Church in Ireland, The, 1868: XXVIII, 276-7. Eugene Sue, 1847: XXV, 1089-91. Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy, An, 1865: IX.

8

Alphabetical Index

Examination Paper in Political Economy, 1872: V, 764-5. Exception to the Objections to Nominal Punishments, 1838: XXIV, 801-3. Exchangeable Value (2 pts), 1822: XXII, 3-6. Explanatory Statement of the Programme of the Land Tenure Reform Association. See Land Tenure Reform. Extradition Treaties Act, The (4 s), 1866: XXVIII, 115-23 passim, 227-30. Faversham Plants, 1858: XXXI, 282. Fawcett for Brighton, 1868: XXVIII, 350-5. Female Emigrants, 1832: XXIII, 419-20. Fenian Convicts, The, 1867: XXVIII, 165-7. Fenian Prisoners (2 s), 1868: XXVIII, 310-11, 315-16. tFew Observations on Mr. Mill, A, 1833:1, 589-94 (with Edward Lytton Bulwer). Few Observations on Mr. Mill, A, 1842:1, 595. Few Observations on the French Revolution, A (D&D, I, 56-62). See Alison's History of the French Revolution. Few Words on Non-intervention, A, 1859: XXI, 109-24. First Report of the Poor Law Commissioners, 1835: XXIV, 776-8. Flower's Hymn of the Polish Exiles, 1833: XXIII, 554-5. Flower's Mignon's Song and When Thou Wert Here, 1833: XXIII, 562-3. Flower's Musical Illustrations of the Waverley Novels, 1831: XXII, 331-3. Flower's Songs of the Months (2 pts), 1834: XXHI, 702-3, 759-60. Flower's Songs of the Seasons, 1832: XXIII, 436-8. Fonblanque's England under Seven Administrations, 1837: VI, 349-80. Fontana and Prati's St. Simonism in London, 1834: XXIII, 674-80. France, 1831: XXII, 246-7. France and the Quarterly Review, 1830: XXII, 172-80. Free Discussion (3 pts), 1823: XXII, 9-18. French Affairs, 1848: XXV, 1110-12. French and English Journals, 1832: XXHI, 525-30. French Elections, The, 1830: XXII, 121-8. French Law against the Press, The, 1848: XXV, 1116-18. French News (105 pts), 1830-34: XXII, 180-XXIII, 748 passim. Game Laws, The, 1826: VI, 99-120. Garnier's Deutsches Leben, Kunst, und Poesie (2 pts), 1834: XXIII, 746, 748-9. General Fast, The, 1847: XXIV, 1073-5. tGeorge Sand, 1848: XXV, 1094-5 (1260-1) (with HTM). Gladstone for Greenwich, 1868: XXV, 1219-20. Gladstone, W.E. (2 s), 1866, 1868: XXVIII, 96-8, 363-7. Goldwin Smith, 1867: XXVIII, 130-3. Government of India Bill, The (3 s), 1868: XXVIII, 288-9, 296-7, 305-6. Grant's Arithmetic for Young Children and Exercises for the Improvement of the Senses, 1835: XXIV, 785-7. Grate's Aristotle, 1873: XI, 473-510.

Examination — Landed

9

Grate's History of Greece (5 pts), 1846-50: XXIV, 867-75, 1084-8, 1121-34, XXV, 1157-64. Grate's History of Greece [I], 1846: XI, 271-305. Grate's History of Greece [II], 1853: XI, 307-37. Grate's Plato, 1866: XI, 375-440. Guizot's Essays and Lectures on History, 1845 (1867): XX, 257-94. tGuizot's Lectures on European Civilization, 1836: XX, 367-93 (with Joseph Blanco White). Hare's Plan for the Metropolis, 1865: XXVIII, 11-13. Herschel's Preliminary Discourse, 1831: XXII, 284-7. Hickson's The New Charter, 1832: XXIII, 404-5. History of Rome, 1812:1, 542-8. House of Lords, The (2 pts), 1835: XXIV, 779-85. Hutchinsia Petraea, 1858: XXXI, 278. Ignorance of French Affairs by the English Press, 1830: XXII, 182-4. Imprisonment for Costs on a Dismissed Charge (2s), 1868: XXVIII, 314-15, 333-4. Inaugural Address Delivered to the University of St. Andrews, 1867: XXI, 215-57 (41621). Inclosure of Hainault Forest, 1866: XXVIII, 74. Income and Property Tax, The (2 pts), 1852, 1861: V, 463-98, 549-98. India Bill (2 pts), 1853: XXV, 1189-96. Indian Despatches (1823-58): XXX, 239-96; XXXII, 255 (Check List only). Influence of Lawyers, The, 1827: XXVI, 385-91. Influence of the Aristocracy, 1825: XXVI, 326-35. Inhabitants of Queenborough, The, 1827: XXII, 108-9. Intercourse between the United States and the British Colonies in the West Indies, 1828: VI, 121-47. Ireland, 1826: VI, 59-98. Irish Character, The, 1832: XXIII, 397-8. Irish Debates in the House of Commons, The, 1847: XXIV, 1058-62. Isatis Tinctoria, 1841: XXXI, 258. Jamaica Committee, The, 1866: XXVIII, 90-1. James Mill on the Question of Population, 1824: XXII, 97-100. James Mill's Analysis of the Phenomena of the Human Mind, 1869: XXXI, 93-253. Jeremy Bentham's Rationale of Judicial Evidence, 1827: XXXI, 3-92. Journal and Notebook of a Year in France, 1820-21: XXVI, 3-143; XXVII, 679-82. Judicial Oaths, 1823: XXII, 30-3. Labouring Agriculturists, The, 1830: XXII, 216-18. Land Tenure Reform (2 pts), 1871, 1873: XXIX, 416-31. Land Tenure Reform, 1871: V, 687-95. Landed Tenure in Ireland, 1848: XXV, 1112-15.

10

Alphabetical Index

Late (Early?) Flowering Plants, 1858: XXXI, 276-8. Later Speculations of M. Comte, The. Part 2 of Auguste Comte and Positivism: X, 328-68. tLaw of Assault, The, 1850: XXV, 1172-6 (with HTM). Law of Libel and Liberty of the Press, 1825: XXI, 1-34. Law of Lunacy, 1858: XXV, 1198-9. Law of Partnership, The, 1851: V, 459-62. Lechevalier's Declaration, 1849: XXV, 1146-7. Lecture Notes on Logic, 1820-21: XXVI, 191-253. Lepidium Ruderale, 1859: XXXI, 282-3. Leslie on the Land Question, 1870: V, 669-85. Letter from the East India Company to the President of the Board of Control, 1858: XXX, 205-12. Letter to the Editor of the Edinburgh Review, on James Mill, 1844:1, 533-8. Letters. Earlier Letters: XH-XIII; Later Letters: XIV-XVII; Additional Letters, XXXII. Lettre a Charles Duveyrier. See Comparison of the Tendencies of French and English Intellect. Leucojum Aestivum, 1858: XXXI, 278-9. Lewin's The Fisherman of Flamborough Head, 1832: XXIII, 494-5. Lewis's Remarks on the Use and Abuse of Political Terms, 1832: XXIII, 447-52. Libel Bill, The, 1867: XXVIII, 193-4. Linaria Purpurea, 1858: XXXI, 281-2. Local Charges on Real Property, 1868: XXVIII, 277-9. Lodger Registration, 1868: XXVIH, 289. Logic. See System of Logic. London Review on Municipal Corporation Reform, The, 1835: XXIV, 769-74. Lord Ashburton's Treaty, 1842: XXIV, 830-36. Lord Brougham and M. de Tocqueville, 1843: XXIV, 841-4. Lord Brougham's Law Reforms, 1833: XXIII, 622-8. Lord Chief Baron, The, 1866: XXVIII, 124-5. Lord Durham and His Assailants, 1838: VI, 437-43. Lord Durham's Return, 1838: VI, 445-64. M. Cabet, 1849: XXV, 1144-6. M. de Tocqueville on Democracy in America (D&D, I, 470-4; II, 1-83). See De Tocqueville on Democracy in America [I] and [II]. Macaulay's Lays of Ancient Rome, 1843:1, 523-32. tMcCulloch's Discourse on Political Economy, 1825: V, 757-60 (with William Ellis). Maine on Village Communities, 1871: XXX, 213-28. Malt Duty, The, 1866: XXVIII, 69-73. Malt Tax, The, 1846: XXIV, 859-62. Malthus's Measure of Value, 1823: XXII, 51-60. Married Women's Property, 1868: XXVIII, 283-6. Martial Law, 1867: XXVffl, 203-5. Martineau's A Tale of the Tyne, 1833: XXIII, 638-42. Marvellous Ministry, The, 1833: XXIII, 608-17.

Late - New

11

Meeting in the Tea-Room of the House of Commons, 1867: XXVIII, 219. Meetings in Royal Parks (2 s), 1867: XXVIII, 215-17, 236-8. Memorandum of the Improvements in the Administration of India during the Last Thirty Years, 1858: XXX, 91-160. Metropolitan Foreign Cattle Market, The, 1868: XXVIII, 332. Metropolitan Government Bill, The, 1867: XXVIII, 230-1. Metropolitan Poor Bill, The (4 s), 1867: XXVIII, 134, 136-43. Michelet's History of France, 1844: XX, 217-55. Mignet's French Revolution, 1826: XX, 1-14. Milnes's Poems, 1838:1, 503-16. Milnes's Poetry for the People, 1840:1, 517-21. Ministerial Crisis, The, 1866: XXVIII, 86-90. Ministerial Manifesto, The, 1833: XXIII, 596-607. Ministerial Measure Respecting the Bank, The, 1833: XXIII, 576-83. Minute on the Black Act, 1836: XXX, 11-15. Mischievousness of an Oath, The, 1823: XXII, 42-3. Miss Martineau's Summary of Political Economy, 1834: IV, 223-8. Mile Le"ontine Fay (2 pts), 1831: XXII, 307-8, 310-11. Modern French Historical Works, 1826: XX, 15-52. Molesworth's Address to the Electors of Leeds, 1837: XXIV, 797-801. Monster Trial, The, 1835: XX, 123-9. Montesquieu, 1829: XXVI, 443-53. Monthly Repository for April 1833, The, 1833: XXIII, 561-2. Monthly Repository for December 1833, The, 1833: XXIII, 651-6. Monthly Repository for January 1834, The, 1834: XXIII, 659-61. Monthly Repository for June 1833, The, 1833: XXIII, 574-5. Monthly Repository for March 1833, The, 1833: XXIII, 555-9. Monthly Repository for September 1833, The, 1833: XXIII, 595. Moral of the India Debate, The, 1858: XXX, 193-8. Mr. Huskisson and the Jacobin Club, 1830: XXII, 140-1. Mrs. Austin's Translation of M. Cousin's Report. See Reform in Education. Municipal Corporations Bill, The, 1867: XXVIII, 162-5. Municipal Corporations (Metropolis) Bill, The (3 s), 1868: XXVIII, 273-6, 290-5, 300-1. Municipal Institutions, 1833: XXIII, 585-90. Municipal Institutions of France, The, 1831: XXII, 259-62. Napier's The Colonies, 1833: XXIII, 647-51. Nature. Essay I of Three Essays on Religion: X, 373-402. Nature, Origin, and Progress of Rent, The, 1828: IV, 161-80. Naval Dockyards, The, 1866: XXVIII, 119-20. Necessity of Revising the Present System of Taxation, 1833: XXIII, 545-8. Negro Question, The, 1850: XXI, 85-95. New Australian Colony, 1834: XXIII, 749-51. New Colony, The (2 pts), 1834: XXIII, 733-4, 735-7. New Corn Law, The, 1827: IV, 141-59.

12

Alphabetical Index

New England Woman's Suffrage Association, 1869: XXV, 1220-1. New Ministerial Publications, 1828: XXII, 109-11. Newman's Political Economy, 1851: V, 439-57. Nichol's Views of the Architecture of the Heavens, 1837: XXIV, 794-6. Note on Benefactors of Mankind, 1833: XXIII, 596. Note on Browning's Pauline, 1833:1, 596-7. Note on West Surrey Plants, 1856: XXXI, 274. Notes on Plants Growing in the Neighbourhood of Guildford, Surrey, 1841: XXXI, 258-60. Notes on Some of the More Popular Dialogues of Plato (9 pts), 1834: XI, 39-238. Notes on the Newspapers (7 pts), 1834: VI, 151-280. Notes on the Species of Oenanthe, 1845: XXXI, 265-6. Obituary of Bentham. See Death of Jeremy Bentham. Observations on Isatis Tinctoria and Other Plants, 1856: XXXI, 266-8. Observations on the Proposed Council of India, 1858: XXX, 179-83. Ode to Diana, 1812:1, 549-50. Of the Influence of Consumption on Production. Essay II of the Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy: IV, 262-79. Of the Laws of Interchange Between Nations. Essay I of the Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy: IV, 232-61. Old and New Institutions, 1823: XXII, 72-4. On Genius, 1832:1,327-39. On Hare's Plan, 1865: XXV, 1208-10. Wn Liberty, 1859: XVIII, 213-310 (with HTM). On Marriage, 1832-33?: XXI, 35-49. On Profits, and Interest. Essay IV of the Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy: IV, 290-308. On Punishment, 1834: XXI, 75-9. On Reform, 1848: XXV, 1104-7. On the Definition of Political Economy. Essay V of the Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy: IV, 309-39. On the Necessity of Uniting the Question of Corn Laws with That of Tithes, 1832: XXIII, 534-40. On the Words Productive and Unproductive. Essay III of the Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy: IV, 280-9. Opening of the Prussian Diet, The, 1847: XXIV, 1079-82. Paper Currency and Commercial Distress, 1826: IV, 71-123. tPapers on Women's Rights, 1847: XXI, 378-92 (with HTM). Paragraph on France, 1831: XXII, 301. Parliamentary Proceedings of the Session, 1835: VI, 295-308. Parliamentary Reform, 1823: XXII, 64-6. Parliamentary Reform (2 s), 1824: XXVI, 261-85. Parliamentary Reform Bill, The, 1831: XXII, 276-7. Parties and the Ministry, 1837: VI, 381-404.

New - Procedure

13

Peerage Question in France, The, 1831: XXIII, 341-5. Pemberton's Lectures on Shakespeare, 1832: XXIII, 464-6. Penal Code for India, 1838: XXX, 17-30. Perfectibility, 1828: XXVI, 428-33. Periodical Literature: Edinburgh Review, 1824:1, 291-325. Persecution for Religious Scruples, 1823: XXII, 46-8. Personal Representation, 1867: XXVIII, 176-87. Petition Concerning the Fenians, 1867: XXVIII, 188-90. Petition for Free Trade, 1841: XXIV, 803-6 (V, 761-3). Petition of the East-India Company, The, 1858: XXX, 75-89. Phytologist; a Botanical Magazine, The, 1843: XXXI, 263-5. Place's On the Law of Libel, 1824: XXII, 91-4. Plants Growing on or near Blackheath, 1857: XXXI, 276. Plants Growing Wild in the District of Luxford's Reigate Flora, 1856: XXXI, 268-74. Plants on Sherborn Sands, Blackheath, and Other Stations, 1858: XXXI, 279-80. Plato (D&D, III, 275-379). See Grote's Plato. Pleadings, 1824: XXII, 95. Pledges (2 pts), 1832: XXIII, 487-94, 496-504. Poland, 1863: XXV, 1201-4. Political Economy. See Principles of Political Economy. Political Economy Club, Mill at the, 1840-65: XXXI, 407-10. Political Progress, 1867: XXVIII, 127-30. Polygonum Dumetorum, 1841: XXXI, 261 Poor Law Amendment Bill, The, 1834: XXIII, 713-16. Poor Law Bill, The, 1834: XXIII, 743-4. Poor Law Report, The, 1834: XXIII, 685-6. Poor Laws, The, 1834: XXIII, 686-8. Poor Rates as a Burden on Agriculture, The, 1846: XXIV, 862-4. Poor Relief (2 s), 1868: XXVHI, 312, 334. Population, 1825: XXVI, 287-96. Population: Proaemium, 1825: XXVI, 286-7. Population: Reply to Thirlwall, 1825: XXVI, 296-307. Positive Philosophy of Auguste Comte, The. Part I ofAuguste Comte and Positivism: X, 263-327. Postscript: The Close of the Session, 1835: VI, 309-17. Postscript to the London Review, No. 1, 1835: VI, 289-93. Poulett Scrope on the Poor Laws, 1846: XXIV, 923-6. Practicability of Reform in the Law, 1823: XXII, 70-2. Practical Observations on the First Two of the Proposed Resolutions on the Government of India, 1858: XXX, 185-92. Present State of Literature, The, 1827: XXVI, 409-17. President in Council the Best Government for India, A, 1858: XXX, 199-204. President's Message, The, 1833: XXIII, 543-5. Primogeniture, 1826: XXVI, 335-40. ^Principles of Political Economy, 1848: II & III (with HTM). Procedure in the House: Amendments, 1868: XXVIII, 265-6.

14

Alphabetical Index

Professor Leslie on the Land Question (D&D, IV, 86-110). See Leslie on the Land Question. Professor Sedgwick's Discourse (D&D, I, 95-159). See Sedgwick's Discourse. Property and Taxation, 1873: V, 697-702. Property in Land, 1832: XXIII, 459-60. Prophecy, A (D&D, I, 284-6). See Ware's Letters. Proportional Representation and Redistribution, 1868: XXVIII, 239-42. Proposed Irish Poor Law, The (2 pts), 1847: XXIV, 1066-73. Prospects of France, 1830 (7 pts): XXII, 128-202 passim. Prospects of France, The, 1831: XXII, 295-301. Provisional Government in France, The, 1848: XXV, 1091-3. Public Education, 1867: XXVffl, 217-18. Public Health, 1866: XXVIII, 114-15. Public Schools (3 s), 1868: XXVIII, 289-90, 297-9, 304. tPunishment of Children, 1850: XXV, 1176-8 (with HTM). Puseyism (2 pts), 1842: XXIV, 811-22. Quarterly Review on France, The, 1833: XXIH, 593-5. Quarterly Review on French Agriculture, The (4 pts), 1847: XXIV, 1035-58 (II, 434-51). Quarterly Review on Political Economy, The, 1825: IV, 23-43. Quarterly Review on the Political Economists, The, 1831: XXII, 248-50. Quarterly Review versus France, The, 1830: XXII, 168-72. Question of Population (3 pts), 1823, 1824: XXII, 80-91, 95-7. tQuestionable Charity, 1850: XXV, 1170-2 (with HTM). Questions before the Select Committee on Extradition, 1868: XXIX, 542-71. Questions before the Select Committee on Metropolitan Local Government, 1866, 1867: XXIX, 437-542; XXXI, 389-406. Radical Party and Canada: Lord Durham and the Canadians, 1838: VI, 405-35. Rare Plants in West Surrey, 1841: XXXI, 258. Rarer Plants of the Isle of Wight, 1841: XXXI, 262-3. Rationale of Representation, 1835: XVIII, 15-46. Recent Combination of Journeymen Printers at Paris, The, 1830: XXII, 141-2. tRecent Magisterial Decision, A, 1854: XXV, 1196-7 (with HTM). Recent Writers on Reform, 1859: XIX, 341-70. Recommendations of Candidates to Parliament, 1832: XXIII, 507-9. Redistribution, 1867: XXVIII, 197-201. Reform Bill, The (10 s), 1867: XXVIII, 143-232 passim. Reform Debate, The, 1848: XXV, 1101-4. Reform in Education, 1834: XXI, 61-74. Reform Meeting in Hyde Park, The (5 s), 1866: XXVIII, 96-114 passim. Reform of Parliament, 1867: XXVIII, 167-74. Reform of the Civil Service, 1854: XVIII, 205-11. Registration of Publications, 1868: XXVIII, 287. Regulation of the London Water Supply, The, 1851: V, 431 -7.

Professor - Some

15

Reigate Plants, 1856; XXXI, 274-5. Religious Persecution, 1823: XXII, 6-8. Religious Sceptics, 1851: XXV, 1182-3. Remarks on Bentham's Philosophy, 1833: X, 3-18. ^Remarks on Mr. Fitzroy's Bill for the More Effectual Prevention of Assaults on Women and Children, 1853: XXI, 101-8 (with HTM). Reorganization of the Reform Party, 1839: VI, 465-95. Reply of the Brighton Guardian to the Examiner, 1831: XXII, 329-31. Reply to Dr. Prati, 1834: XXIII, 689-91. tReport on the Sanitary Condition of the Labouring Population of Great Britain, 1842: XXIV, 822-30 (with an unknown collaborator). Report to the General Court of Proprietors, 1858: XXX, 161-71. Representation of the People (5 s), 1866: XXVIII, 54-86 passim (XXIX, 599-603). Representation of the People (Ireland), 1868: XXVffl, 287-8. Representation of the People (Scotland) (2 s), 1868: XXVIII, 281-3. Representative Government. See Considerations on Representative Government. Reputed Thieves, 1823: XXII, 75-7. Resurrection-Men, 1823: XXII, 48-50. Review of the Session Continued, The, 1833: XXIII, 618-22. Right and Wrong of State Interference with Corporation and Church Property, The (D&D, I, 1-41). See Corporation and Church Property. Right of Property in Land, The, 1873: XXV, 1235-43. Romilly's Public Responsibility and the Ballot, 1865: XXV, 1212-17. Royal Commission on Trades' Unions, The, 1867: XXVIII, 133-4. Rules of the Booksellers' Association, The (2 pts), 1852: XXV, 1188-9. Sale of Colonial Land, The, 1837: XXIV, 791-3. "Sanitary" v. "Sanatory," 1847: XXIV, 1078-9. Sarah Austin's Translation of Cousin, 1834: XXIII, 727-32. Savings of the Middle and Working Classes, The, 1850: V, 405-29. Scott's Life of Napoleon, 1828: XX, 53-110. Sea-Fisheries (Ireland) Bill, The, 1868: XXVIII, 299. Secular Education, 1850: XXVIII, 3-5. Securities for Good Government, 1823: XXII, 62-4. Sedgwick's Discourse, 1835: X, 31-74. Senior's On National Property (2 pts), 1835: XXIV, 753-9, 763-7. Senior's Preface to the Foreign Communications in the Poor Law Report, 1835: XXIV, 774-6. Should Public Bodies be Required to Sell Their Lands?, 1873: XXV, 1232-5. Silk Trade, The, 1826: IV, 125-39. Slave Power, The, 1862: XXI, 143-64. Smart's Outline of Sematology (2 pts), 1832: XXIII, 425-7, 429-35. Smith on Law Reform, 1841: XXI, 81-4. Smoking in Railway Carriages (2 s), 1868: XXVIH, 328, 333. Society of Arts, The, 1871: XXV, 1226-7. Some Derbyshire Plants, 1858: XXXI, 280-1.

16

Alphabetical Index

tSpanish Question, The, 1837: XXXI, 359-88 (with an unidentified collaborator). Spirit of the Age, The (6 pts), 1831: XXII, 227-316 passim. Spring Flowers of the South of Europe, 1860: XXXI, 283-9. Stability of Society, 1850: XXV, 1180-2. State of Ireland, The, 1868: XXVIII, 247-61. State of Opinion in France, 1834: XXIII, 691-7. State of Parties in France, 1831: XXIII, 336-41. State of Politics in 1836, 1836: VI, 319-28. State of Society in America, 1836: XVIII, 91-115. tStatement of the Jamaica Committee (2 pts), 1866, 1868: XXI, 422-7, 429-35 (with other members of the Committee). Statement on Marriage, 1851: XXI, 97-9. Sterling's The Election, 1841: XXIV, 806-11. Straits Settlements, The, 1867: XXVIII, 135-6. Street Organs, 1851: XXV, 1187. Subjection of Women, The, 1869: XXI, 259-340. Sugar Refinery Bill and the Slave Trade, The, 1831: XXIII, 347-50. tSuicide of Sarah Brown, The, 1846: XXIV, 916-19 (with HTM). Sunday Lectures Bill, The, 1867: XXVIII, 190-3. Supply—Post Office, 1868: XXVIII, 304-5. Suspension of Habeas Corpus in Ireland, 1866: XXVIII, 52-4. System of Logic, A, 1843: VII & VIII. Taine's De 1'intelligence, 1870: XI, 441-7. Tancred's Charity Bill, 1867: XXVIII, 206-7. tTaylor's Statesman, 1837: XIX, 617-47 (with George Grote). Technicalities of English Law, 1823: XXII, 60-2. Tennyson's Poems, 1835:1, 395-418. Theism. Essay III of Three Essays on Religion: X, 429-89. Thornton on Labour and Its Claims (2 pts), 1869: V, 631-68. Thoughts on Parliamentary Reform, 1859: XIX, 311-39. Thoughts on Poetry and Its Varieties (2 pts), 1833:1, 341-65. Three Essays on Religion, 1874: X, 369-489. Todd's Book of Analysis, 1832: XXIII, 411-16. Tooke's Thoughts on High and Low Prices (2 pts), 1823: XXII, 18-20, 34-9. Torrens's Letter to Sir Robert Peel, 1843: XXIV, 836-41. Trade with India, 1828: XXX, 1-9. Trades Unions, 1867: XXVIII, 144-5. Traite de Logique, 1820-21: XXVI, 145-90. Treaty Obligations, 1870: XXI, 341-8. Treaty of 1856, The (2 pts), 1870: XXV, 1223-6. Truck System (2 pts), 1830: XXII, 212-13, 218-22. Two Kinds of Poetry, The. Part n of Thoughts on Poetry: I, 354-65. Two Publications on Plato, 1840: XI, 239-43. Universities, The (2 s), 1826: XXVI, 348-58.

Spanish - Writings

17

Use and Abuse of Political Terms, 1832: XVIII, 1-13. Use and Abuse of the Ballot, 1830: XXII, 193-5. Use of History, The, 1827: XXVI, 392-7. Utilitarianism (3 pts), 1861: X, 203-59. Utility of Knowledge, The, 1823: XXVI, 257-61. Utility of Religion. Essay II of Three Essays on Religion: X, 403-28. Value of Land, The, 1866: XXVIII, 100. Verbascum Thapsiforme, 1862: XXXI, 320. Views of the Pyrenees, 1833:1, 391-3. Vindication of the French Revolution of February 1848, 1849: XX, 317-63 (394-400). Wixen, and Circassia, The, 1837: XXXI, 345-58 (with Charles Buller). Wakefield's Popular Politics, 1837: XXIV, 787-91. Wakefield's The New British Province of South Australia, 1834: XXIII, 738-42. Walking Tour of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, and Surrey, 1828: XXVII, 477-99. Walking Tour of Cornwall, 1832: XXVII, 613-37. Walking Tour of Hampshire, West Sussex, and the Isle of Wight, 1832: XXVII, 557-611. Walking Tour of Sussex, 1827: XXVII, 455-75. Walking Tour of Yorkshire and the Lake District, 1831: XXVII, 501-56. Wallflower Growing on the Living Rock, 1860: XXXI, 283. Walsh's Contemporary History, 1836: VI, 329-48. Walter on the Poor Law Amendment Bill, 1834: XXIII, 707-13. War Expenditure, 1824: IV, 1-22. War with Russia, 1834: XXIII, 658-9. Ware's Letters from Palmyra, 1838:1, 431-61. Westminster Election, The (2 pts), 1865: XXV, 1210-12, 1217-18. Westminster Election of 1865, The (7 s), 1865: XXVIII, 13-45. Westminster Election of 1868, The (10 s), 1868: XXVIII, 319-7Q passim. What Is Poetry? Part I of Thoughts on Poetry: I, 343-53. What Is to be Done with Ireland?, 1848: VI, 497-503. Whately' s Elements of Logic, 1828: XI, 1 - 35. Whately's Introductory Lectures on Political Economy, 1831: XXII, 327-9. Whewell on Moral Philosophy, 1852: X, 165-201. tWife Murder, 1851: XXV, 1183-6 (with HTM). Will, English (1853, 1872): XXXI, 327-37. Will, French (1859, 1864, 1867): XXXI, 337-40. William Lloyd Garrison, 1867: XXVIII, 201-3. Wilson's History of Rome, 1834: XXIII, 663-4. Women's Suffrage (3 s), 1869, 1870, 1871: XXIX, 373-81, 386-91,402-9 (604-9). Word "Destructive," The, 1835: XXIV, 760-3. Word "Nature," The, 1823: XXII, 8-9. Wordsworth and Byron, 1829: XXVI, 434-42. Writings of Alfred de Vigny, 1838:1, 463-501. Writings of Junius Redivivus (2 pts), 1833:1, 367-90.

18

Alphabetical Index PART B. WORKS BY OTHERS

Cavaignac's Defence, by Godefroi Cavaignac, 1831: XXV, 1247-50 (trans. JSM). Continuation of the Autobiography, by Helen Taylor, 1873:1, 625-7. Civil Service Examinations, by Benjamin Jowett, 1854: XIX, 654-6. Correspondence on the Principles of Political Economy, by John Elliot Cairnes, 1864-65: III, 1038-95 passim. Death of Francis Place, authorship doubtful, 1854: XXV, 1262-5. Enfantin's Farewell Address, by Barthelemy Prosper Enfantin, 1832: XXV, 1256-9 (trans. JSM). Enfranchisement of Women, by Harriet Taylor Mill, 1851: XXI, 393-415. Introduction, by Vincent Bladen: II, xxiii-lxiii. , by Alexander Brady: XVIII, ix-lxx. , by John C. Cairns: XX, vii-xcii. , by Stefan Collini: XXI, vii-lvi. , by Douglas Dryer: X, Ixiii-cxiii. , by Marion Filipiuk: XXXII, vii-xlii. , by Joseph Hamburger: VI, vii-liii. , by F.A. Hayek: XII, xv-xxiv. , by Bruce L. Kinzer: XXVIII, xiii-lxi. , by Robert F. McRae: VII, xxi-xlviii. , by Francis E. Mineka and Dwight N. Lindley: XIV, xv-xlviii. , by Martin Moir: XXX, vii-liv. , by Jean O'Grady: XXXIII, vii-xxx. , by F.E.L. Priestley: X, vii-lxii. , by Lionel Robbins: IV, vii-xli. , by Ann P. Robson: XXII, xix-ciii. , by John M. Robson: XXVI, xi-lv; XXXI, vii-1. , by John M. Robson and Jack Stillinger: I, vii-liv. , by Alan Ryan: IX, vii-lxvii. , by Francis E. Sparshott: XI, vii-lxxv. Introductory Notice to Three Essays on Religion, by Helen Taylor: X, 371-2. Land Tenure Reform Association: Public Lands and Commons Bill, authorship unknown, 1870: V, 766-7. Notes on the Principles of Political Economy, by John Elliot Cairnes, 1864: HI, 1042-55, 1058-72. Notes on the State of Ireland, by John Elliot Cairnes, 1864: HI, 1075-86. On Marriage, by Harriet Taylor, 1832-33?: XXI, 375-7. Preface, by Francis E. Mineka: XII, vii-xii. , by Francis E. Mineka and Dwight N. Lindley: XIV, vii-xi. Preliminary Remarks to "Chapters on Socialism," by Helen Taylor: V, 705. Textual Introductions, by John M. Robson: II, Ixv-lxxxvii; IV, xliii-lv; VI, liv-lxvi; VII, xlix-cviii; IX, Ixix-cii; X, cxv-cxxxix; XI, Ixxvii-c; XVIII, Ixxi-xcv; XX, xciii-cxix; XXI, Ivii-lxxxiii; XXII, cv-cxvii; XXVI, Ivii-lxix; XXVIII, Ixiii-lxxiii; XXX, Iv-lvii. War and Peace, by Helen Taylor, 1871: XXIX, 675-77.

CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF MILL'S WRITINGS IN THE COLLECTED WORKS

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Chronological List of Mill's Writings in the Collected Works

THIS LIST is based on the dates of publication and, for unpublished works, on apparent dates of composition. Speeches and questions and answers before parliamentary committees are located by their dates of delivery. Further information, including dates of subsequent publication and later authorized editions and reprintings, will be found in the editorial notes to each item in the separate volumes of the Collected Works [CW]. All correspondence except public letters is excluded, as are the titles of works known to have existed but not extant. Only those posthumous works prepared for publication by Helen Taylor, Mill's executor, are included. The date of original publication is followed by the title in CW and, signalled by " JSM:", the entry in the list of published writings kept by Mill himself. That list is preserved in a scribal copy in the Mill-Taylor Collection (see the Introduction, xi-xii, for a detailed account and a description of our editorial practice), which contains many errors and some gaps; the substantive errors are here corrected, with the mistaken readings in footnotes, and information to fill the gaps is given in square brackets. Often there is an inclusive entry in Mill's list, covering several similar but not necessarily consecutive items; rather than repeat the entry, we say, for example, "[see entry for 6 Mar. above]." When a work published in Mill's lifetime is not in his record, the notation "Not on Mill's list" appears, and the provenance is given. The abbreviations "(s)," "(j)," and "(pe)" are used to indicate speeches, journals, and parliamentary evidence respectively; "HTM" signifies Harriet Taylor Mill. As in the alphabetical list above, the locations in CW are given at the end of each entry, with, when appropriate, the location of items in Mill's own collections, Dissertations and Discussions [D&D] and Chapters and Speeches on the Irish Land Question [C&S]. References to the Appendices are in italic. Writings in which someone else collaborated with Mill are signalled by an obelisk (t), as explained in the Introduction, viii-x above. 1812

History of Rome. I, 541 -8. Ode to Diana. I, 549-50. 1820-21 May 1820 to July 1821. Journal and Notebook of a Year in France (j). XXVI, 3-143; XXVH, 679-84.

22

Chronological Index Traite de Logique. XXVI, 145-90. Lecture Notes on Logic. XXVI, 191-253.

1822 6 Dec. Exchangeable Value [ 1 ]. JSM: "Two letters in the Traveller of [6th Dec. ] and [ 13th Dec.] 1822 containing a controversy with Col. Torrens on the question whether value depends upon quantity of labour. Signed S." XXII, 3-5. 13 Dec. Exchangeable Value [2]. JSM: [see entry for 6 Dec.}. XXII, 5-6.

1823 The Utility of Knowledge (s). XXVI, 257-61. 1 Jan. Religious Persecution. JSM: "A letter in the Morning Chronicle of 1st January 1823 on Free Discussion, signed, An Enemy to Religious Persecution." XXII, 6-8. 3 Jan. The Word "Nature." JSM: "A letter in the Republican of [3 Jan., 1823,] on the word Nature."XXII, 8-9. 28 Jan. Free Discussion, Letter I. JSM: "Three letters, signed Wickliff, on the same subject [as that of 1 January, i.e. freedom of religious discussion], inserted in the Morning Chronicle of 28th January[, 8th February and 12th February,] 1823." XXII, 9-12. 8 Feb. Free Discussion, Letter II. JSM: [see entry for 28 Jan.]. XXII, 12-15. 12 Feb. Free Discussion, Letter III. JSM: [see entry for 28 Jan.]. XXII, 15-18. 4 Mar. Tooke's Thoughts on High and Low Prices [ 1 ]. JSM: "A Notice of Part I of Mr. Tooke's work on High and Low Prices, which appeared in the [Globe and] Traveller of 4th March 1823." XXII, 18-20. 9 May. The Debate on the Petition of Mary Ann Carlile. JSM: "Observations on the Debate concerning the petition of Mary Ann Carlile, which appeared as a leading article in the [Morning] Chronicle of [9th May] 1823." XXII, 21-4. 7 June. The Debate on East and West India Sugars. JSM: "Strictures on the Debate concerning East and West India sugars, which appeared in the Globe and Traveller of [7th June] 1823." XXII, 25-30. 25 July. Judicial Oaths. JSM: "A letter on1 Judicial Oaths, signed No Lawyer, which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of 23rd [sic] July 1823." XXII, 30-3. 9 Aug. Tooke's Thoughts on High and Low Prices [2]. JSM: "A notice of Part II of Mr. Tooke's work on High and Low Prices, which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of 9th August 1823." XXII, 34-9. 12 Aug. Errors of the Spanish Government. JSM: "A letter on the errors of the Spanish Government in the [ Morning ] Chronicle of 12th August 1823, signed M." XXII, 39-42. 15 Aug. The Mischievousness of an Oath. JSM: "A short letter signed A Lover of Caution pointing out a case of the mischievousness of an oath, in the [Morning] Chronicle of 15th August 1823. "XXII, 42-3. 20 Aug. Blessings of Equal Justice. JSM: "A letter on publicity in judicature, and its infraction by a Queen Square magistrate, in the [Morning] Chronicle of 20 August 1823."XXn, 43-6. 'MS reads "and".

1820-1824

23

26 Aug. Persecution for Religious Scruples. JSM:" A letter on the conduct of an Irish judge in fining a witness for refusing to take an oath, in the [Morning] Chronicle of 26th August 1823, signed the Censor of the Judges." XXII, 46-8. 1 Sept. Resurrection-Men. JSM: "A letter on the punishment of body-stealers, in the [Morning] Chronicle of 1st September 1823, signed a Friend to Science." XXII, 48-50. 5 Sept. Malthus's Measure of Value. JSM: "A review of Mr. Malthus's pamphlet on the 'Measure of Value' which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of 5th September 1823." XXII, 51-60. 18 Sept. Technicalities of English Law. JSM: "A letter on the Technicalities of English Law, which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of 18th September 1823. Not signed." XXII, 60-2. 25 Sept. Securities for Good Government. JSM: "A letter on the advantages of a judicial establishment consisting of judges removeable by the people, in the [Morning] Chronicle of 24th [sic] September [1823]. Signed a Friend to Responsible Governments." XXII, 62-4. 3 Oct. Parliamentary Reform. JSM: "A letter signed Quesnai, on the consequences of denying the capacity of the people, in the [Morning] Chronicle of 3rd October 1823." XXII, 64-6. Atrocities of the Tread Wheel. JSM: "An article on the atrocities of the Tread Wheel which appeared in the Globe & Traveller of 4th [sic] October 1823." XXII, 67-70. 8 Oct. Practicability of Reform in the Law. JSM: "A letter on the practicability of reform in the law, which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of 8th October 1823. Not signed." XXII, 70-2. 17 Oct. Old and New Institutions. JSM: "A letter on Old and New Institutions signed No Worshipper of Antiquity, which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of 17th October 1823."XXII, 72-4. 30 Oct. Reputed Thieves. JSM: "A letter on the practice of sending reputed thieves to the treadmill, signed the Censor of the Judges, which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of 29th [sic] October 1823." XXII, 75-7. 9 Nov. Effects of Gambling. JSM: "An article on the evil consequences of gaming which appeared in the Lancet of 9th November 1823." XXII, 77-9. 27 Nov. Question of Population [1]. JSM: "A letter on the necessity of checking population, which appeared in the Black Dwarf of November 20th [sic] 1823, signed A.M. "XXII, 80-5. 10 Dec. Question of Population [2]. JSM: "A second letter on the same subject which appeared in the Black Dwarf of December 10th 1823, signed A.M." XXII, 85-91.

1824 1 Jan. Place's On the Law of Libel. JSM: "A review of Place's pamphlet on the Law of Libel which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of January 1st 1824." XXII, 91-4. 5 Jan. Pleadings. JSM: "A short letter on Indictments, signed an Enemy to Legal Fictions, which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of January 5th 1824." XXII, 95. 7 Jan. Question of Population [3]. JSM: "A third letter on the necessity of checking population which appeared in the Black Dwarf of January 9th [sic] 1824, signed A.M." XXII, 95-7.

24

Chronological Index

25 Feb. James Mill on the Question of Population, Black Dwarf. Not on Mill's list. XXII, 97-100. Apr. Periodical Literature: Edinburgh Review. JSM: "An article on the Edinburgh Review, in the second number of the Westminster Review." I, 291-325. July. War Expenditure. JSM: "An article in the third number of the Westminster Review, on Mr. Blake's pamphlet on depreciation and war expenditure." IV, 1-22. Aug. Parliamentary Reform [1] (s). XXVI, 261-71. Parliamentary Reform [2] (s). XXVI, 271-85. Oct. Brodie's History of the British Empire. JSM: "A review of Brodie's history of Charles I and the Commonwealth, in the fourth number of the Westminster Review." VI, 1-58. 27 Dec. Effects of Periodical Literature. JSM: "A short letter on [Periodical Literature (?)] which appeared in the Morning Chronicle of 1824." XXII, 100-2.

1825 Population: Proaemium (s). XXVI, 286-7. Population (s). XXVI, 287-96. Population: Reply to Thirlwall (s). XXVI, 296-307. Cooperation: First Speech (s). XXVI, 308. Cooperation: Intended Speech (s). XXVI, 308-13. Cooperation: Closing Speech (s). XXVI, 313-25. Cooperation: Notes (s). XXVI, 325-6. Jan. The Quarterly Review on Political Economy. JSM: "A review of an Article on Political Economy in the Quarterly Review—in the fifth number of the Westminster Review."IV, 23-43. Apr. Law of Libel and Liberty of the Press. JSM: "An article on the Liberty of the Press, in the sixth number of the Westminster Review." XXI, 1-34. The Corn Laws. JSM: "An article on the Corn Laws also in the sixth number of the Westminster Review." IV, 45-70. July. tMcCulloch's Discourse on Political Economy, Westminster Review. Not on Mill's list. V, 757-60. (With William Ellis.) 16 Sept. Absenteeism. JSM: "A letter on Absenteeism, signed J.S., which appeared in the [Morning] Chronicle of 16 September 1825." XXII, 103-6. 9 Dec. Influence of the Aristocracy (s). XXVI, 326-35.

1826 Jan. The Game Laws. JSM: "An article on the Game Laws, in the 9th number of the Westminster Review." VI, 99-120. The Silk Trade, Westminster Review. Not on Mill's list. IV, 125-39. 20 Jan. Primogeniture (s). XXVI, 335-40. Feb. Ireland. JSM: "An article on the Catholic Question which appeared in the Parliamentary Review for 1825." VI, 59-98. 28 Feb. Catiline's Conspiracy (s). XXVI, 341-8. Apr. Mignet's French Revolution. JSM: "A review of Mignet's History of the French Revolution, in the 10th number of the Westminster Review." XX, 1-14.

1824-1828

25

7 Apr. The Universities [1] (s). XXVI, 348-54. The Universities [2] (s). XXVI, 354-8. 19 May. The British Constitution [ 1 ] (s). XXVI, 358-71. The British Constitution [2] (s). XXVI, 371-85. July. Modern French Historical Works. JSM: "A review of Dulaure's History of Paris and Sismondi's History of France. In the llth number of the Westminster Review." XX, 15-52. Oct. Paper Currency and Commercial Distress. JSM: "An article on Paper Currency and Commercial Distress which appeared in the Parliamentary Review for the session of 1826."IV, 71-123.

1827 The Use of History (s). XXVI, 392-7. Jan. The New Corn Law. JSM: "An article on the New Corn Bill, which appeared in the 13th number of the Westminster Review." IV, 141-59. 30 Mar. The Influence of Lawyers (s). XXVI, 385-91. May. Jeremy Bentham's Rationale of Judicial Evidence. JSM: "The Preface, Additions and Editorial Notes to the Rationale of Judicial Evidence by Jeremy Bentham." XXXI, 3-92. 6 June. Blunders of The Times. JSM: "A letter on the blunders of the 'Times' newspaper which appeared in the New Times of 6th June 1827, signed A.B." XXII, 106-7. 29 June. The Coalition Ministry (s). XXVI, 397-408. 20-30 July. Walking Tour of Sussex (j). XXVII, 455-75. 16 Nov. The Present State of Literature (s). XXVI, 409-17. 28 Dec. The Inhabitants of Queenborough. JSM: "A letter on the Queenborough case, inclosing a subscription for the inhabitants of Queenborough, signed Ph., in the Times of 28th December 1827." XXII, 108-9.

1828 Jan. Intercourse between the United States and the British Colonies in the West Indies. JSM: "An article on the Commerce between the West-Indies and the United States of America, which appeared in the Parliamentary review for the session of 1827." VI, 121-47. Trade with India. JSM: "An article on trade with India which appeared in the Parliamentary Review for the session of 1827." XXX, 1-9. Whately's Elements of Logic. JSM: "A review of Whately's Elements of Logic, in the 17th number of the Westminster Review." XI, 1-35. Feb. The Nature, Origin, and Progress of Rent. JSM: "A dissertation on Rent, in the notes subjoined to McCulloch's edition of Smith's Wealth of Nations. (Some parts of this note were however, altered by McCulloch.)" IV, 161-80. 15 Feb. The Church (s). XXVI, 418-27. Apr. Scott's Life of Napoleon. JSM: "A review of Sir Walter Scott's Life of Napoleon Bonaparte, in the 18th number of the Westminster Review." XX, 53-110. 2 May. Perfectibility (s). XXVI, 428-33.

26

Chronological Index

31 May. New Ministerial Publications. JSM: "A squib on the Wellington ministry, headed New Publications—and two following paragraphs in the Morning Chronicle of 31 st May 1828. "XXH, 109-11. 3 June. Advertisements Free of Duty. JSM: "Another squib on the same subject, headed Advertisements Free2 of Duty, in the Morning Chronicle of 3rd June 1828." XXII, 111-12. 4 June. Dr. Croker's Opinion. JSM: "A third short squib on the same subject in the same paper of 4th June consisting of two paragraphs, beginning, Dr. Croker's opinion on the cause of the late ministerial dispute." XXII, 113. 5 June. Another Opinion of Dr. Croker's. JSM: "A fourth short squib, on the same subject in the same paper of 5th June, only one paragraph concerning Dr. Croker." XXII, 113-14. 3-15 July. Walking Tour of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire, and Surrey (j). XXVH, 477-99. 29 Sept. Compensation to the Shopkeepers on the Approaches to London Bridge. JSM: "A leading article in the British Traveller of 27th [sic] September 1828 on the question of compensation to the shopkeepers on the approaches to London Bridge." XXII, 114-16. 30 Oct. The Brunswick Clubs. JSM: "A letter signed Lamoignon3 in the Morning Chronicle of 30th October 1828 on the Brunswick Clubs." XXII, 116-20.

1829 30 Jan. Wordsworth and Byron (s). XXVI, 434-42. 3 Apr. Montesquieu (s). XXVI, 443-53.

1830 18 July. The French Elections. JSM: "A leading article on the French Elections in the Examiner of 18th July 1830." XXII, 121-8. 19 Sept. Prospects of France, I. JSM: "A series of essays entitled the Prospects of France and signed S in the Examiner of 19th Sept., 26th Sept., 3rd Oct., 10th Oct., 17th Oct., 14th Nov., and 28th November, 1830, in all seven numbers." XXII, 128-34. 26 Sept. Prospects of France, II. JSM: [see entry for 19 Sept.]. XXII, 134-40. Mr. Huskisson and the Jacobin Club. JSM: "Two short leading articles in the Examiner of 26th Sept. 1830 headed 'Mr. Huskisson and the Jacobin Club' and 'The recent Combination of the [Journeymen] Printers in Paris.'" XXII, 140-1. The Recent Combination of Journeymen Printers at Paris. JSM: [see preceding entry}. XXII, 141-2. 3 Oct. Prospects of France, III [see entry for 19 Sept. above]. XXII, 142-6. Answer to Bowrmg's Criticism of Prospects of France, II, Examiner. Not on Mill's list. XXII, 147-9. 10 Oct. Prospects of France, IV. JSM: [see entry for 19 Sept.]. XXII, 149-58. 17 Oct. Prospects of France, V. JSM: [see entry for 19 Sept.}. XXII, 158-63. 2

MS reads "Thee". MS reads "Lamoignen".

3

1828-1831

27

24 Oct. Attempt to Save the Ex-Ministers. JSM: "A leading article in the Examiner of 24th October 1830, headed 'Attempt to save the ex-ministers.'" XXII, 163-8. The Quarterly Review versus France. JSM: "A leading article in the Examiner of 24 Oct. 1830, headed 'The Quarterly Review and France.'" XXII, 168-72. 31 Oct. France and the Quarterly Review, Examiner. Not on Mill's list. XXII, 172-80. 7 Nov. French News [ 1 ]. JSM: "The summary of French affairs in the Examiner from 7th November 1830 to 17th April 1831 inclusive: comprising several long articles." XXII, 180-2. 14 Nov. Ignorance of French Affairs by the English Press. JSM: "A leading article in the Examiner of 14th Nov. 1830 headed Ignorance of French affairs by the English press." XXII, 182-4. Prospects of France, VI. JSM: [see entry for 19 Sept.]. XXII, 184-90. French News [2]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov.}. XXII, 190-1. 21 Nov. French News [3]. JSM: [see entry for? Nov.}. XXII, 191-3. 28 Nov. Use and Abuse of the Ballot. JSM: "A leading article in the Examiner of 28 Nov. 1830, headed, Use and Abuse of the Ballot."4 XXII, 193-5. Prospects of France, VII. JSM: [see entry for 19 Sept.}. XXII, 196-202. French News [4]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov.}. XXII, 203-4. 5 Dec. The Ballot. JSM: "The first twelve paragraphs of a leading article on the Ballot, in the Examiner of 5th December 1830." XXII, 204-7. French News [5]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov.}. XXII, 207-8. 12 Dec. Controversy on the Ballot. JSM: "An article headed 'Controversy on the Ballot' in the Examiner of 12th December 1830." XXII, 209-11. French News [6]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov.}. XXII, 211-12. 19 Dec. The Truck System [ 1 ]. JSM: "An article headed 'Truck5 System' in the Examiner of 19th December 1830." XXII, 212-13. The Labouring Agriculturists. JSM: "An article headed 'The labouring Agriculturists' in the Examiner of the same date." XXII, 216-18. French News [7]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov.}. XXII, 214-15. 26 Dec. The Truck System [2]. JSM: "An article headed 'Truck System' in the Examiner of 26th December 1830." XXII, 218-22. French News [8]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov.}. XXII, 222-3.

1831 2 Jan. French News [9]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830}. XXII, 224-7. 9 Jan. The Spirit of the Age, I. JSM: "A series of Essays headed 'The Spirit of the Age' and signed A.B., in the Examiner of 9th Jan., 23rd Jan., 6Feb., 13th March, 3rd April, 15th May, and 29th May 1831." XXII, 227-34. French News [10]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 235. Conduct of the United States towards the Indian Tribes. JSM: "A short article on the conduct of the United States towards the Indian tribes, without heading, in the Examiner of 9th January 1831. "XXII, 235-7. 4

Here and in the entries for 5 and 12 December the MS reads "Ballet". Here and in the entry for 26 December the MS reads "Track".

5

28

Chronological Index

16 Jan. French News [11]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 237-8. 23 Jan. The Spirit of the Age, II. JSM: [see first entry for 9 Jan.]. XXII, 238-45. France. JSM: "Paragraphs introductory to a series of letters from France, in the Examiner of 23rd Jan. 1831." XXII, 246-7. French News [ 12]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 247-8. 30 Jan. The Quarterly Review on the Political Economists. JSM: "An article headed 'The Quarterly Review on the Political Economists' in the Examiner of 30th January 1831." XXII, 248-50. French News [13]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 250-1. 6Feb. The Spirit of the Age, III [Part 1]. JSM: [see first entry for 9 Jan.]. XXII, 252-8. French News [14]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 258-9. 13 Feb. The Municipal Institutions of France. JSM: "An article headed 'The Municipal Institutions of France' in the Examiner of 13th Feb. 1830 [sic]." XXII, 259-62. French News [15]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 262-3. 20 Feb. The Budget. JSM: "An article headed The Budget' in the Examiner of 20th February 1831." XXII, 263-9. French News [16]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 269-70. 27 Feb. The Emigration Bill. JSM: "An article headed The Emigration Bill' in the Examiner of 27th February 1831." XXII, 270-3. French News [17]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 273-6. 6 Mar. The Parliamentary Reform Bill. JSM: "Paragraphs on the Parliamentary Reform Bill headed 'from a Correspondent' in the Examiner of 6th March 1831."XXII, 276-7. French News [18]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 278. 13 Mar. The Spirit of the Age, III [Part 2]. JSM: [see first entry for 9 Jan.]. XXII, 278-82. French News [19]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 283-4. 20 Mar. Herschel's Preliminary Discourse. JSM: "Review of Herschel's Discourse on the Study of Natural Philosophy, in the Examiner of 20th March 1831." XXII, 284-7. French News [20]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 287-8. 27 Mar. French News [21]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 288-9. 3 Apr. The Spirit of the Age, IV. JSM: [see first entry for 9 Jan.]. XXII, 289-95. 10 Apr. The Prospects of France. JSM: "An article headed The Prospects of France,' in the Examiner of 10th April 1831." XXII, 295-301. Paragraph on France, Examiner. Not on Mill's list. XXII, 301. 17 Apr. French News. [22]. JSM: [see entry for 7 Nov., 1830]. XXII, 301-2. 24 Apr. Cavaignac's Defence (trans.), Examiner. Not on Mill's list. XXII, 303 (XXV, 1247-50). French News [23], Examiner. Not on Mill's list. XXII, 303. 15 May. The Spirit of the Age, V [Part 1]. JSM: [see first entry for 9 Jan.]. XXII, 304-7. Mile Le"ontine Fay [ 1 ]. JSM: "A paragraph on Mile Leontine Fay, in the Examiner of 15th May 1831." XXII, 307-8. The Croix de Juillet. JSM: "An article on the Croix de Juillet in the Examiner of the same date, standing as the summary of French news." XXII, 308-10. 22 May. Mile Leontine Fay [2]. JSM: "An article on Mile Leontine Fay in the Examiner of 22nd May 1831. "XXII, 310-11.

1831

29

29 May. The Spirit of the Age, V [Part2]. JSM: [seefirst entry for9 Jan.]. XXII, 312-16. 5 June. Death of the Abbe Gr6goire. JSM: "An obituary notice of the abbe" Gregoire in the Examiner of 5th June 1831, included in the summary of French news." XXII, 317. 12 June. Attack on Literature. JSM: "A leading article headed 'Attack on Literature' in answer to the Brighton Guardian; in the Examiner of 12th June 1831."XXII, 318-27. Whately's Introductory Lectures on Political Economy. JSM: "A review of Whately's Introductory Lectures on Political Economy; in the Examiner of the same date. "XXII, 327-9. 19 June. Reply of the Brighton Guardian to the Examiner. JSM: "An article headed 'Reply of the Brighton Guardian to the Examiner'; in the Examiner of 19th June 1831." XXII, 329-31. July-Aug. Walking Tour of Yorkshire and the Lake District (j). XXVII, 501-56. 3 July. Flower's Musical Illustrations of the Waverley Novels. JSM: "A review of Miss Flower's Musical Illustrations of the Waverley Novels, in the Examiner of 3rd July 1831."XXH, 331-3. 21 Aug. French News [24]. JSM: "A short summary of French affairs in the Examiner of 21st August 1831." XXIII, 335-6. 28 Aug. State of Parties in France. JSM: "An article headed 'State of Parties in France' in the Examiner of 28th August 1831." XXIII, 336-41. 4 Sept. French News [25]. JSM: "The summary of French news in the Examiner from 4th September 1831 to 15th July 1832 inclusive, missing only one Sunday (July 1st) and comprising many long articles." XXIII, 346. The Peerage Question in France. JSM: "An article headed 'The Peerage Question in France' in the Examiner of 4th September 1831." XXIII, 341-5. 11 Sept. French News [26]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 346-7. 18 Sept. The Sugar Refinery Bill and the Slave Trade. JSM: "An article headed 'The Sugar Refinery Bill and the Slave Trade' in the Examiner of 18th September 1831." XXIII, 347-50. French News [27]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 351. 25 Sept. French News [28]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 351-5. Dr. Whately's Elevation to an Archbishopric. JSM: "A paragraph in the Examiner of 25th Sept. 1831 on Dr. Whately's elevation to an Archbishopric." XXIII, 356. 2 Oct. French News [29]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.]. XXIII, 356-7. 9 Oct. French News [30]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 357. 16 Oct. French News [31]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 357-9. 23 Oct. French News [32]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.]. XXIII, 359. 30 Oct. French News [33]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 359-63. 6 Nov. French News [34]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 363. 20 Nov. French News [35]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 364. 27 Nov. French News [36]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.]. XXIII, 364-7. 4 Dec. French News [37]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 367-71. 11 Dec. French News [38]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.]. XXIII, 372-3. 18 Dec. French News [39]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 373-6. 25 Dec. French News [40]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept.}. XXIII, 377-80.

30

Chronological Index

1832 On Marriage. XXI, 35-49. I Jan. French News [41]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 381-7. 8 Jan. French News [42]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 387-92. 15 Jan. French News [43]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 392-5. 22 Jan. French News [44]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 395-7. The Irish Character. JSM: "Article on the Irish character in reply to a correspondent signing himself 'Erinensis,'6 subjoined to the summary of French news, in the Examiner of 22nd January 1832." XXIII, 397-8. 29 Jan. Employment of Children in Manufactories. JSM: "An article headed 'Employment of children in Manufactories' in the Examiner of 29th Jan. 1832." XXIII, 398-401. French News [45]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 401-3. 5 Feb. Hickson's The New Charter. JSM: "A review of a pamphlet entitled 'The New Charter'7 (by William Hickson), in the Examiner of 5th February 1832." XXIII, 404-5. French News [46]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 405-6. 12 Feb. French News [47]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXHI, 407-11. 19 Feb. Todd's Book of Analysis. JSM: "A review of a work entitled 'The Book of Analysis, or a New Method of Experience'8 by Tweedy John Todd, Esq. M.D.—In the Examiner of 19th February 1832." XXIII, 411-16. French News [48]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 417-19. 26 Feb. Female Emigrants. JSM: "A paragraph in answer to a letter from 'the female operatives of [Todmorden]' in the Examiner of 26th February 1832." XXIII, 419-20. French News [49]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 421-2. 4 Mar. French News [50]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 422. II Mar. French News [51]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 423. 18 Mar. French News [52]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 424. 25 Mar. Smart's Outline of Sematology [1]. JSM: "A re view of a work entitled 'An Outline of Sematology,' in two parts, the first of which on the study of Metaphysics; both signed A.B. In the Examiner of 25th March 1832 and 1st April 1832." XXIII, 425-7. French News [53]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 427-9. 1 Apr. Smart's Outline of Sematology [2]. JSM: [see first entry for 25 Mar.]. XXIII, 429-35. French News [54]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 435. 8 Apr. Flower's Songs of the Seasons. JSM: "A review of Miss Flower's9 'Songs of the Seasons,' in the Examiner of 8th April 1832." XXIII, 436-8. French News [55]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 438-40. 15 Apr. French News [56]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 440-1. 18 Apr. Comparison of the Tendencies of French and English Intellect. JSM: "A letter to Charles Duveyrier, intended as introductory to a series of letters to the Editor of Le Globe, the Saint Simonian paper at Paris. This was translated garbled in some passages and published in 'Le Globe' of 18th April 1832. The stoppage of the paper prevented any 6

MS reads "Eviniensis". MS reads "Charta". MS reads "Experiences". 'MS reads "Flewers". 7

8

1832

31

continuation. The English original of this letter with an introductory paragraph appeared in the Monthly Repository for November 1833, headed Comparison of the Tendencies of French and English intellect." [See also entry at Nov. 1833.] XXV, 1251-5. 22 Apr. Lewis's Remarks on the Use and Abuse of Political Terms. JSM: "A review of George Cornewall Lewis's Remarks on the Use and Abuse of certain political terms. In the Examiner of 22rd April 1832." XXIII, 447-52. French News [57]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 452. 27 Apr. Enfantin's Farewell Address (trans.), Morning Chronicle. Not on Mill's list. XXV, 7256-9. 29 Apr. French News [58]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 453. May. Use and Abuse of Political Terms. JSM: "A review of Geo. Cornewall Lewis's Remarks on the Use and Abuse of Political Terms, in the second number of Tait's Edinburgh Magazine (May, 1832)." XVIII, 1-13. 6 May. The Close of the Session in France. JSM: "An article headed 'Close of the Session' in the Examiner of 6th May 1832." XXIII, 453-9. Property in Land. JSM: "A paragraph in the same paper, on Property in Land, in answer to a Correspondent." XXIII, 459-60. French News [59]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 460-1. 13 May. French News [60]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 461-2. 20 May. Deaths of Casimir Perier and Georges Cuvier. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831 ]. XXIII, 462-4. 27 May. French News [61]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 464. 3 June. Pemberton's10 Lectures on Shakespeare. JSM: "A notice of Mr. Pemberton's Lectures on Shakespeare in the Examiner of 3rd June 1832." XXIII, 464-6. French News [62]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 466-7. 10 June. Death of Jeremy Bentham. JSM: "An obituary notice of Jeremy Bentham in the Examiner of 10th June 1832." XXIII, 467-73 (X, 495-8). French News [63]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 473-4. 17 June. French News [64]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 474-84. 24 June. French News [65]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXJJI, 485-7. 1 July. Pledges [ 1 ]. JSM: "An article headed 'Pledges' in the Examiner of 1 st July." XXIII, 487-94. 8 July. Lewin's The Fisherman of Flamborough Head. JSM: "A short notice of Miss Charlotte Lewin' s account of a Fisherman at Flamborough11 Head in the Examiner of 8th July 1832." XXIII, 494-5. French News [66]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 495-6. 15 July. Pledges [2]. JSM: "A second article headed 'Pledges,' in the Examiner of 15th July 1832." XXffl, 496-504. French News [67]. JSM: [see entry for 4 Sept., 1831]. XXIII, 504-5. 19 July-6 Aug. Walking Tour of Hampshire, West Sussex, and the Isle of Wight (j). XXVH, 557-611. 2 Sept. Recommendations of Candidates to Parliament. JSM: "Recommendations of several candidates for seats in Parliament in the Examiner of 20 Sept. 1832. (Some were 10

MS reads "Pambertin's". "MS reads "Mamborough".

32

Chronological Index

not mine. Mine were J. & E. Romilly,12 C. Buller, T.H. Lloyd, Hyde Villiers, Hutt,13 Hawkins, and W.H. Ord.)" XXIII, 507-9. 9 Sept. French News [68]. JSM: "A summary of French affairs in the Examiner of 9th September 1832." XXIII, 509-11. Oct. On Genius. JSM: "An article in the 70th number of the New Series of the Monthly Repository (for October 1832) headed (by the Editor) 'On Genius' and signed 'Antiquus.'"!, 327-39. 3-9 Oct. Walking Tour of Cornwall (j). XXVII, 613-37. 21 Oct. French News [69]. JSM: "The summary of French news in the Examiner from 21st Oct. 1832, to 24th Dec. of the same year, inclusive—comprising [ten articles]." XXIII, 511-16. 28 Oct. French News [70]. JSM: [see entry for 21 Oct.}. XXIII, 517-19. 4 Nov. French News [71]. JSM: [see entry for 21 Oct.}. XXIII, 519-22. 18 Nov. The Cora Laws. JSM: "Two paragraphs of observations on14 a letter respecting the Com Laws; in the Examiner of 18th Nov. 1832." XXIII, 522-3. 25 Nov. French News [72]. JSM: [see entry for 21 Oct.}. XXIII, 523-5. Dec. Austin's Lectures on Jurisprudence. JSM: "A review of Austin's Lectures on Jurisprudence in the 9th number of Tait's Edinburgh Magazine (December 1832)." XXI, 51-60. 2 Dec. French and English Journals. JSM: "An article headed 'French and English Journals' in the Examiner of 2nd December." XXIII, 525-30. French News [73]. JSM: [see entry for 21 Oct.}. XXIII, 530-2. 9 Dec. French News [74]. JSM: [see entry for 21 Oct.}. XXIII, 532. Death of Hyde Villiers. JSM: "Paragraph on the death of Mr. Hyde Villiers,15 in the Examiner of 9th December 1832." XXIII, 533. 16 Dec. French News [75]. JSM: [see entry for 21 Oct.}. XXIII, 533-4. 23 Dec. On the Necessity of Uniting the Question of Com Laws with That of Tithes. JSM: "An article headed 'On the Necessity of Uniting the question of Corn Laws with that of Tithes.' Examiner, 23rd Dec. 1832." XXIII, 534-40. French News [76]. JSM: [see entry for 21 Oct.}. XXIII, 540-1.

1833 Jan. The Currency Juggle. JSM: "An article headed 'the Currency Juggle' in the 10th number of Tait's Magazine, Jan. 1833. (N.B. The foot-note at the end is not mine.) "IV, 181-92; DIN, PIERRE THEODORE FLORENTIN (b. 1806): XXIII, 487 PE>IN D'HERISTAL (d. 714 A.D.): XX, 24 PEPOLI, COUNT CARLO (1796-1881): XIII, 378 PEPYS, CHARLES CHRISTOPHER (Lord Cottenham) (1781-1851): XXIV, 948, 1023 PERCEVAL, SPENCER (1795-1859). Speech on the General Fast (26 Jan., 1832): VI, 373q, 373-4 PERCY, ALGERNON (10th Earl of Northumberland) (1602-68): VI, 52n Letter to the Earl of Leicester (10 Dec., 1640): VI, 32n PERCY, GEORGE (5th Duke of Northumberland) (1778-1867): XXIX, 438-9 PERCY, HENRY (9th Earl of Northumberland) (1564-1632): XXVII, 565 PERCY, HUGH (3rd Duke of Northumberland) (1785-1847): XXIII, 343, 588

Peel-Peter

315

PERCY, THOMAS (1729-1811). *Reliques of Ancient English Poetry: I, 526 PfiREiRE, ISAAC (1806-80): XIII, 432 PfiREiRE, JACOB EMILE (1800-75). "Examen du budget de 1832": XXIII, 411 PERICLES (d. 429 B.C.): I, 75 (74), 587; XI, 48, 52, 86-7, 103, 114, 133, 141, 143, 298, 311, 316-27 passim, 331-5, 395, 435; XVIII, 266; XIX, 438, 460; XX, 224; XXIV, 868, 1086; XXV, 1122-4, 1127-34 passim, 1160-1; XXXI, 110 Funeral Oration: XI, 318-19q, 377, 397n; XXV, 1129 PE'RIER, AUGUSTE VICTOR LAURENT CASIMIR PIERRE (1811-76). Les societes de cooperation: III, 785n; XV, 943 PfiRiER, CASIMIR PIERRE (1777-1832): XII, 58, 112; XVIII, 4q; XX, 177, 197-8; XXII, 181,190, 288, 302; XXIII, 339, 341-2, 351-2, 363-5, 372, 377, 381-2, 387-8, 390, 395, 397, 403, 405, 417-18, 421, 423, 428, 435, 439, 441, 453, 460-4, 467, 484, 514-15,518,520 SPEECHES: On Being Elected President of the Council of Ministers (18 Mar., 1831): XXIII, 417-18q, 481q On the Disturbances in Lyons (26 July, 1831): XXIII, 388 On Abolishing the Hereditary Peerage (27 Aug., 1831): XXIII, 341-5, 343q On the Events inLyons (17 Dec., 1831): XXIII, 381, 418q On the Disturbances in Paris (21 Dec., 1831): XXIII, 390 On the Budget (13 Mar., 1832): XXIII, 428q On the Disturbances in Grenoble (20 Mar., 1832): XXIII, 435, 518 PERRINCHIEF, RICHARD (1623-73). The Royal Martyr: VI, 7, 54-6 PERRON, PIERRE CUELLIER (ca. 1755-1843): XIII, 538 PERROT, GEORGE (1832-1914). "Souvenirs d'Asie-Mineure/'flevwe des Deux Mondes, XLIV (1 and 15 Apr., 1863), 571-608 and 896-929: XV, 856 PERRY, MR. (Irish field botanist; fl. 1855): XIV, 407, 413-15, 418, 429, 432 PERRY, JAMES (1756-1821): I, 91 (90); XVII, 1985 PERRY, THOMAS ERSKINE (1806-82). LETTER TO: XVII, 2004-5 Speech on the Married Women's Property Bill (14 May, 1857): XXVIII, 284 PERSIGNY, JEAN GILBERT FIALIN, DUC DE (1808-72). "Rapport au Prince President de la Republique Frangaise": II, 437n PERSIL, JEAN CHARLES (1785-1870): XXII, 204; XXIII, 407, 511, 666, 701, 706 Speech before the Cour royale de Paris (4 Nov., 1833): XXIII, 666, 701 Speech introducing the projet de loi relative au detenteurs d'armes (15 Apr., 1834): XXHI, 706 PERSIUS (Aulus Persius Flaccus) (34-62 A.D.). Satires: IX, 286q PERSOON, CHRISTIAAN HENRIK (fl. 1805). Synopsisplantarum: XXXI, 292, 302 PERUGINO, PIETRO (ca. 1445-1523): XIV, 297, 311, 313, 477, 482-3 PESTALOZZI, JOHANN HEINRICH (1746-1827): I, 260; IV, 215; XXI, 65 PETER (St.) (d. ca. 64 A.D.): XIV, 313; XX, 253; XXVI, 35, 226

316

Index of Persons and Works

PETER (the Hermit) (ca. 1050-1115): XXII, 258 PETER I (of Russia) (1672-1725): VIII, 892; XIX, 419; XXXI, 349 PETER LEOPOLD. See Leopold II. PETERS, WILLIAM (of the EIC; fl. 1850s): XXXII, 90, 113-14 POTION DE VILLENEUVE, JEROME (1756-94): XX, 12, 100, 105q, 106-7 PETIT, ALEXIS THERESE (1791-1820): XV, 928 PETO, SAMUEL MORTON (1809-89): XVI, 1298 PETRARCH, FRANCESCO (1304-74): XIV, 251, 258, 273 PSTRESKOU, ALEXANDRE (Walachian student of political economy; fl. 1861): XV, 736-7 PETRONILLA (of Aragon) (1137-64): XXXI, 379 PETRONIUS ARBITER (mid-lst c. A.D.). *Satyricon: XXI, 231q PETTY, WILLIAM (Earl of Shelburne) (1737-1805): VI, 135 PETTY-FITZMAURICE, HENRY (3rdMarquis of Lansdowne) (1780-1863): IV, 110-11; VI, 265; XIII, 709; XX, 320; XXIII, 636; XXVI, 398-9, 427; XXXII, 66 Statement of a Plan of Finance: XXIII, 406 SPEECHES: On the Roman Catholic Question (17 May, 1819): XXVI, 399 On Employment for Agricultural Labourers (13 June, 1833): XXIII, 636 On the Church of Ireland (6 June, 1834): VI, 253 On the Destitute Persons (Ireland) Bill (15 Feb., 1847), PD, Vol. 89, cols. 1324-7: XIII, 709 PETTY-FITZMAURICE, HENRY THOMAS (Earl of Shelburne, later 4th Marquis of Lansdowne) (1816-66): XXXII, 87 PEYRONNET, LAURA DE. See Russell, Laura PEYRONNET, PIERRE DENIS, COMTEDE (1778-1854): XXII, 126q, 127,163-8,177,215, 223, 225-6; XXIII, 373 PEZENAS, ESPRIT DE (fl. 1770s). Histoire critique de la decouverte de la longitude (Avignon: Offray, 1775): XVI, 1467 PHAEDRUS (in Plato): XI, 62-96 passim PHAEDRUS (fl. 27 B.C.-50 A.D.). *Pabularurn Aesopiarum: I, 15 (14), 557; XII, 10 PHANAGARA, MR. (Greek judge; fl. 1855): XIV, 460 PHARAZYN, ROBERT (1833-96). LETTER TO: XVI, 1194-6 Pharmacopaea Londinensis: XXIV, 950 PHEIDIAS (ca. 500-430 B.C.): I, 333; II, 16; X, 324; XI, 45; XIV, 464, 467; XV, 745 PHELIPS, ROBERT (15867-1638): VI, 14 PHILIPII(of Macedon) (ca. 382-336B.C.): 1,11 (10);XI, 243,284,312; XIV, 384,447; XV, 947; XVII, 1726; XX, 224; XXI, 231; XXIV, 868 PHILIP H (of Spain) (1527-98): VIII, 885; XII, 9, 352; XVII, 1633 PHILIP V (of Spain) (1683-1746): XXXI, 379-80 PHILIPPE I (of France) (1052-1108): XX, 27, 29

Peter - Phipps

317

PHILIPPE II (of France; "Philippe Auguste") (1165-1223): XX, 33, 35-6, 36n, 50n, 239, 248,251,289 PHILIPPE IV (of France; "le Bel") (1268-1314): XX, 38,50n, 239,244,251-2,289; XXI, 286; XXIV, 819; XXXI, 379 PHILIPPE, COMTE DE MONTES (son of Philip I of France) (fl. 1110): XX, 29 PHILIPS, MR. (chemistry lecturer at Sandhurst; fl. 1819): XII, 9 PHILIPS, GEORGE RICHARD (1789-1883). Speech on Special Juries (28 May, 1823): XXII, 93-4 PHILLIPPS, CHARLES SPENCER MARCH (1815-69). "Alison's History of Europe": XIII, 551 PHILLIPPS, LUCY F. MARCH ("An Inquirer") (fl. 1866-83). The Battle of the Two Philosophies: IX, ciii, 38n, 46n-7n q, 49n, 124q, 141n q, 147n q, 441n, 447n q, 451-2q, 458n-9n q, 466n q, 492n q, 493n PHILLIPPS, SAMUEL MARCH (1780-1862). A Treatise on the Law of Evidence: I, 116; XXXI, 7n, 22q, 39, 40-2q, 44-5q, 49, 51, 53q, 54-5, 56q, 68-70q, 73,74q, 78-83q, 86-8q, 89 PHILLIPS, ALEXANDER (Jamaican; fl. 1865): XVII, 1605; XXVIII, 95 PHILLIPS, HENRY WYNDHAM (1820-68). LETTER TO: XXXII, 177 PHILLIPS, RICHARD (1767-1840): XIX, 642 Essays on the Proximate Causes of the General Phenomena of the Universe: XXII, 239-40 Protest against the Prevailing Principles of Natural Philosophy: XXII, 239-40 PHILLIPS, THOMAS (1770-1845): XXVII, 566 PHILLIPS, WENDELL (1811-84): I, 266; XIV, 49; XVI, 1143, 1314 Letter to John Stuart Mill: XXI, 133n q Two Speeches at the Annual Meeting of the Massachusetts Anti-Slavery Society, Liberator (10 and 17 Feb., 1865), 21 and 26: XVI, 1105-6 Speech at the American Anti-Slavery Society, Liberator (19 May, 1865), 78: XVI, 1105-6 PHILLPOTTS, HENRY (1778-1869): XII, 106; XXIV, 813 PHILO JUDAEUS (ca. 30 B.C.-45 A.D.): X, 487; XIII, 515, 532 Philological Museum: XII, 181 PHILOPOEMEN (d. 182 B.C.): XI, 337n Philosophy; or, The Science of Truth: VII, 34n-5n PHILPOTTS, HENRY. See Phillpotts, Henry PHINN, THOMAS (1814-66): XIX, 496n Speech on Mr. Fitzroy's Bill (10 Mar., 1853): XXI, 105-6 PHIPPS, CONSTANTINE HENRY (Lord Mulgrave, later Lord Normanby) (1797-1863): VI, 411-12, 474; XII, 423 The English in France (Saunders and Otley, 1828): XII, 132, 139 A Year of Revolution (Longman, etal., 1857): XV, 562, 804

318

Index of Persons and Works

PHOCION (402/1-319 B.C.): XI, 336n PHRA NARAI (of Siam) (fl. ca. 1680): XX, 145 PHRYNICHUS (d. 411 B.C.): XI, 322, 328q *Phytologist: XXXI, 264-5 "Notes of a Day's Botanizing about Tring, Herts, June 29, 1855": XXXI, 267 PIANO, DONATO DEL (1698-1785): XIV, 383 PICARD, ADOLPH (French clerk; fl. 1860s): XXIX, 548 PICARD, AUGUSTE (Avignon author; fl. 1850s-60s): XV, 772; XVI, 1008; XXXII, 128 PICARD, Louis BENOIT (1769-1828). Le Gilblas de la revolution (Paris: Baudouin freres, 1824): XII, 139 PICKERING, WILLIAM (1796-1854): XIII, 408 PICKFORD, F. (fl. 1860), trans. UberdieFreiheitby].S. Mill: XV, 621, 739-40; XXXII, 124-5 Pico DELLA MIRANDOLA, GIOVANNI (1463-94): XXXII, 6 PICOT DE LAPEYROUSE , PHILIPPE (1744-1818). Histoire abregee desplantes des Pyrenees: I, 574, 587; XXVI, 96, 97n, 126 PIDGEON, THOMAS (cattle dealer; fl. 1823): XXII, 30 PIERROTOU (servant to the Samuel Benthams; fl. 1820): XXVI, 21, 24, 25n, 29, 31n, 37, 54, 60n PIERS, WILLIAM (Bishop of Bath and Wells) (1580-1670): VI, 29, 39 PIGAULT-LEBRUN, GUILLAUME CHARLES ANTOINE (1753-1835): XII, 139 PIGEARD, JEAN CHARLES EDOUARD (b. 1818): XXXII, 88, 95, 103 PILGRIM, GEORGE (gamekeeper; fl. 1867): XXVIII, 199-200, 212 PILKINGTON, JAMES (1804-90): XXVIII, 272 PILLET, REN£ MARTIN (1762-1816). L'Angleterre vue d Londres et dans ses provinces'. XXIV, 1039 PILLSBURY, PARKER (1809-98). LETTER TO: XVI, 1289 PIM, JONATHAN (1806-85): III, 1074, 1079, 1088, 1092-3 The Condition and Prospects of Ireland (Dublin: Hodges and Smith, 1848): XVI, 985, 1001-2, 1406 The Land Question in Ireland (Dublin: Hodges and Smith, 1853): III, 1074n On the Connection between the Condition of Tenant Farmers and the Laws Respecting the Ownership and Transfer of Land in Ireland (Dublin: Hodges and Smith, 1853): III, 1074n; XVI, 985, 1001-2, 1406 PINARD, MARIE OSCAR (1801-67): XXIII, 657-8 PINDAR (ca. 518-446 B.C.): XI, 315, 390n q; XII, 7; XXI, 314 *Carmina: I, 532, 560 Odes: IX, 499n q; XI, 122q; XXXI, 132q PINDEMONTE, ippOLiTo (1753-1828): XXin, 573

Phocion- Plato

319

PINNOCK, WILLIAM (1782-1843). A Catechism of Sacred Geography: I, 460 Pinnock's Catechism of Drawing: I, 460 PIOLA, DOMENICO (1627-1703): XIV, 487 PIOMBO, SEBASTIAN DEL (ca. 1485-1547): XIV, 309 PIRANESI, GIOVANNI BATTISTA (1720-78): XIV, 280 PIRON, ALEXIS (1689-1773): XX, 67 PISISTRATUS (d. 527 B.C.): XI, 291, 299, 327; XXIV, 871, 1085 PITMAN, HENRY (1826-1909): III, 789n; VI, 267, 272-3; XVI, 1019, 1028, 1275; XXXII, 188-9. LETTERS TO: XV, 821; XVI, 1016, 1160-1, 1163 PITMAN, JOHN (£1. 1820-32). Panorama of Constantinople: XXVII, 568 PITT, WILLIAM (the elder; Earl of Chatham) (1708-78): VI, 178; XIV, 331; XIX, 438; XXni, 641; XXV, 1216 Speech on the Motion to Remove Walpole (13 Feb., 1741): XXV, 1127 Speech on Impressment (22 Nov., 1770): VI, 178; XXIII, 641 PITT, WILLIAM (the younger) (1759-1806): I, 317; IV, 115, 121; V, 474, 479, 486, 591; VI, 135, 312, 346,404; X, 155; XX, 343; XXI, 26; XXIII, 406,480, 512,643; XXVI, 384; XXX, 56 Speech on Fox's Motion on the East India Bills (18 Nov., 1783): VI, 33n q PITTACUS (ca. 600 B.C.; also in Plato): XI, 54q; XIX, 403; XXIV, 1086 Pius VII (Barnabo Chiaramonti; Pope) (1742-1823): XXVI, 58 Pius IX (Giovanni Maria Mastai-Ferretti; Pope) (1792-1878): VI, 523; XIII, 710; XIV, 292, 297, 302-3, 308, 313, 317, 376, 492 PLACE, ELIZABETH. See Adams, Elizabeth PLACE, FRANCIS (1771-1854): XII, 124, 327-8; XIV, 76-7; XXI, 3; XXV, 7262-5; XXXH, 7. LETTERS TO: XII, 244, 324-6; XVII, 1956

Autobiography: XXV, 7264 "Historical Narrative 1838": VI, 486 On the Law of Libel: XXI, 1-34 rev, 33q; XXII, 91-4 rev PLATNER, ERNST (1744-1818). Philosophische Aphorismen: IX, 223-4q, 224-5, 227, 229, 237-8 PLATO (427-347 B.C.): I, 25 (24), 49 (48), 67 (66), 69 (68), 115 (114), 153 (752), 207 (206), 336-7,370,438; III, 969; VII, 79,621; VIII, 677,802, 815,876n, 938,970-7; IX, 502; X, 16, 54,60, 90,172, 271,278, 373,441; XI, 39-45,61-2, 84n, 93-6,167, 171, 186, 210, 222-4, 238, 241-3, 282, 298, 300-2, 310, 314, 320, 329, 332, 336n, 337-400passim, 451, 463, 466, 470, 475-7, 480, 483, 487-94, 506; XII, 185, 189, 203, 218, 222q, 237; XIII, 515, 520, 532, 544; XIV, 18, 428; XV, 793, 818, 838-9; XVI, 1067-8, 1084, 1096, 1115-16, 1120; XVII, 1586, 1725; XVIII, 7, 235; XIX, 675; XXI, 225, 229-30, 254; XXIV, 869; XXV, 1130,1162-3; XXVI, 147,175,187, 238, 352; XXVII, 657; XXXI, 103, 362; XXXII, 152 *Apology (Apologia): I, 9 (8), 554; IX, 129-30; XI, 151-74 (JSM's trans.), 153n q, 399q, 403, 435; XVI, 1115, 1120; XVIII, 235; XXVI, 390q; XXVIII, 76

320

Index of Persons and Works

[PLATO]

The Apology . .., theCrito, andPartofthePhaedo,ed. William Smith: XI, 241-3

rev *Charmides: XI, 53n, 175-86 (JSM's trans.), 187, 407-8, 439n *Cratylus: I, 9 (8), 554; XI, 393, 429 *Critias: XI, 385-6 *Crito: I, 9 (8), 554; XI, 241, 417n *Dialogues: X, 88; XVIII, 251 *Epinomis: XI, 385-6, 421 *Erastae: XI, 407 *Euthydemus: XI, 393, 435 Euthydemus et Gorgias, ed. Martin Joseph Routh: XI, 39 *Euthyphron: I, 9 (8), 553-4; XI, 187-96 (JSM's trans.), 406 *Gorgias: 1, 25 (24), 568; IV, 312; VI, 179; VII, 150; VIII, 780, 1048; XI, 97-150 (JSM's trans.), 390n q, 394-6, 394-5q, 399, 401q, 407, 413, 415-16, 418, 419q, 422-4,435q; XII, 8; XVI, 1061; XIX, 508; XXII, 256; XXV, 1122,1128,1162; XXXI, 180 ^Greater Hippias: XI, 389, 392, 407, 409 *Hipparchus: XI, 407 *Laches: XI, 186-7, 197-209 (JSM's trans.), 407, 409 *Laws: X, 437; XI, 385-6, 395, 397n q, 414, 417n, 418, 424, 434-5, 438; XIV, 28; XXII, 292 *Lesser Hippias: XI, 389, 392-3 *Lysis: XI, 210-21 (JSM's trans.), 389, 407-8 *Meno: XI, 398q, 407, 409, 422q, 430q, 435; XXVI, 187 *Minos: XI, 407 Oeuvres de Platan, trans. Victor Cousin (1822-40): VIII, 780; XI, 42n, 203n q *Parmenides: XI, 222-38 (JSM's trans.), 381, 385, 412-13, 508; XVI, 1116; XXXI, 103, 141 *Phaedo: I, 9 (8), 554; VII, 361n q; X, 437, 460; XI, 412-13, 422-5,431; XVI, 1115; XXXI, 103 *Phaedrus: IX, 2-3; XI, 62-96 (JSM's trans.), 291, 407, 412-14, 423, 430q, 463; XVIII, 6 *Philebus: XI, 387, 413-14, 418, 420q *Platonis scripta Graece omnia, ed. Immanuel Bekker: XI, 39 - *Protagoras: 1,25 (24), 568; VIII, 813n; X, 205; XI, 39-61 (JSM's trans.), 106n, 197, 328-9, 389-91, 395, 401n, 407-8, 413, 417-19; XII, 8; XV, 764; XXVIII, 76; XXXI, 180 ^Republic: I, 25 (24), 321, 373, 568, 585; V, 741; VII, 150; VIII, 1048; IX, 45n-6n, 457n; XI, 77n, 285, 301-2,386,396-7, 399-400q, 407,41 Iq, 412,414,416, 418-21, 426n, 428, 430, 434-9, 438q, 505; XII, 8; XIII, 520; XIX, 484, 498, 610q, 641n q; XX, 314; XXI, 176, 270, 399; XXIII, 678; XXV, 1130; XXVI, 307; XXVIII, 34; XXXI, 103, 141

Plato - Plummer

321

* Second Alcibiades: XI, 435 *Seventh Epistle: XI, 405n, 431 *Sophist: VIII, 825; IX, 44n q; X, 320n; XI, 385, 397q, 400-2,405,407,426n q, 428, 429q; XXVI, 239 ^Statesman: X, 320n, 391,425; XI, 385,405,407,432-4; XVI, 1116; XXVI, 239 *Symposium: XI, 414; XXXI, 103 *Theaetetus: I, 9 (8), 554; XI, 385, 391, 407, 409, 417n, 426, 428-30, 430q, 501n; XVI, 1061, 1116; XVIII, 6; XXXI, 180 *Timaeus: IX, 419; XI, 385-6, 413, 420n; XV, 754 (in English) The Works of Plato, trans. F. Sydenham and Thomas Taylor: XI, 42 PLAUTUS, TITUS MACCIUS (d. 184 B.C.). Rudens; or, The Rope: XXIV, 982q PLAYFAIR, JOHN (1748-1819): XII, 364; XXVI, 352, 357 Dissertation Second: Exhibiting a General View of the Progress of Mathematical and Physical Science: VIII, 754q, 760q, 777q, 816q Elements of Geometry: I, 559, 562; VII, 145, 160-1, 166, 191-2, 215-16, 229, 230q, 255,617,618n; VIII, 961,1046-7,1054-5,1057,1069-70,1083,1091n, 1104; XII, 7-8 PLAYFAIR, LYON (1818-98). LETTER TO: XVI, 1386 "On the Declining Production of Human Food in Ireland": V, 676 PLIMSOLL, SAMUEL (1824-98): XVI, 1362 PLINY (the Elder) (ca. 23-79 A.D.). *NaturalHistory: I, 437q; VI, 194; VII, 313, 628; VIII, 1110; XXIV, 1016q; XXVIII, 160q, 269q PLOT, ROBERT (1640-96). The Natural History of Oxfordshire: XXVII, 482n PLOTINUS (204-270 A.D.). Operumphilosophicorum omnium: IX, 39-40 PLUMMER, JOHN (1831-1914): XV, 892; XVI, 1252-3, 1288; XXXII, 193-4. LETTERS TO: XV, 609-10,616-17,794,841,855, 868, 873,879,887-8,894,908,923,930-1, 938-9, 943, 945, 952-4; XVI, 995-6, 1021, 1029, 1042, 1048, 1053, 1078, 1082-3, 1089, 1104, 1121-2, 1146-7, 1173-4, 1176-7, 1185-6, 1188-9, 1200-1, 1236, 1249-50, 1254, 1307, 1358-9, 1396, 1409-10, 1424-5, 1479, 1504; XVII, 1546-7, 1631-2, 1754, 1817, 1924-5, 1941, 1950; XXXII, 145-6 "Co-operation in Lancashire and Yorkshire": III, 785n-6n, 790q "Decimal Notation": XV, 887-8 "Distress at the East End": XVI, 1358 "On the Past and Present Aspects of Co-operation": XV, 887-8 Our Colonies: XV, 923; XXXII, 145 "Our Wayside Poets: John Askham—J.A. Leatherland": XV, 930 Reduction of the Hours of Labour (Tweedie, 1859): XV, 609 "Remarkable Men: Members of the New Parliament, No. I. John Stuart Mill": XVI, 1089, 1200 The Story of a Blind Inventor (Tweedie, 1868): XVI, 1424 Strikes: Their Causes and Their Evils (Tweedie, 1859): XV, 609

322

Index of Persons and Works

[PLUMMER, J.] "The Transportation Question": XV, 930 "The Working Men's International Exhibition": XVII, 1754 PLUMMER, MARY ANN (nee Jenkinson; wife of John): XVI, 1479, 1504; XVII, 1631-2, 1754, 1924-5, 1941, 1950; XXXII, 146 PLUMPTRE, JOHN PEMBERTON (1791-1864). Speech on the Address to Her Majesty (20 Jan., 1847): XIII, 709-10; XXIV, 1074 PLUNKET, WILLIAM CONYNGHAM (1764-1854): XXXI, 49 Speech on Roman Catholic Claims (1 Mar., 1825): VI, 79 Speech on the Elective Franchise in Ireland (26 Apr., 1825): VI, 89q PLUTARCH (fl. A.D. 50-120): XIV, 447 Lives: I, 11 (10), 115 (114), 386,555; VI, 132 (Pompey); IX, 281 (Caesar); XI, 300, 326; XIII, 450q (Demosthenes); XIV, 368 (Caius Marius); XVI, 1474; XX, 215, 224; XXIII, 342, 394, 497, 716-17; XXIV, 872; XXV, 1122, 1124; XXVI, 152 (Marcellus); XXXI, 44 (Alexander), 351 (Pompey) Moralia: VIII, 761q; XXIV, 1002 IJepi 7raL'8(ov aywyry? ("On the Education of Children"): I, 559 POCHIN, HENRY DAVIS (1824-95): XVI, 1488 POCKLINGTON, JOSEPH. See Senhouse, Joseph Pocklington POERIO, CARLO (1803-67): XIV, 321 POINSOT, Louis (1777-1859): XIII, 587, 651 POIRET, PETER (1646-1719): IX, 151 POLE, THOMAS (1753-1829). Observations Relative to Infant Schools: I, 307n q The Policy of England towards Spain: XXXI, 359-88 rev, 382q, 383q, 383-4q POLIGNAC, JULES, DUC DE (1743-1817): XX, 88 POLIGNAC, JULES AUGUSTE ARMAND MARIE, PRINCE DE (1780-1847): VI, 389, 419; XIX, 608; XXII, 123-4, 135-7, 139, 148, 162-8, 177, 183, 215, 223, 225-6, 288; XXIII, 373, 457, 483 POLIGNAC, YOLANDE MARTINE GABRIELLE DE POLASTRON, DUCHESSE DE (ca. 1749-93): XX, 7, 88 POLITI, MICHELANGELO (Italian guide, brother of the following; fl. 1850s): XIV, 386, 387 POLITI, RAFFAELE (Italian author and dealer in antiques; fl. 1850s): XIV, 375, 386 Political Portraits, Reprinted from the Daily News (Strahan, 1873): XVII, 1943 POLK, JAMES KNOX (1795-1849): XIII, 687 POLLARD-URQUHART, WILLIAM (1815-71): V, 591-4e; XXXII, 183 POLLEXFEN, HENRY (1632-91): XXXI, 58 POLLIO, TREBELLIUS (fl. end 3rd c. A.D.). The Thirty Pretenders: I, 438-9q POLLOCK, JONATHAN FREDERICK (1783-1870): XXI, 107 POLLOCK, WILLIAM FREDERICK (1815-88): XVI, 990, 1001, 1011, 1015, 1018, 1026 POLLOK, ROBERT (1798-1827). The Course of Time (Edinburgh: Blackwood, 1827): XII, 248 POLUS (fl. ca. 427 B.C.; also in Plato): XI, 85, 97-150passim, 394-6

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POLYBIUS (ca. 200-120 B.C.): XII, 7; XIX, 353; XXVI, 367 Histories: I, 15 (14), 561 POLYCHRONOPOULOS, EuAS (Greek inn-keeper and guide; fl. 1855): XIV, 424, 436 POLYCLEITUS (in Plato): XI, 45 POMBAL, SEBASTIAO Jos£ DE CARVALHO Y.MELLO (1699-1782): XIX, 382 POMPADOUR, JEANNE ANTOINETTE POISSON LE NORMANT D'ETOILES, MARQUISE DE (1721-64): XX, 165 POMPEY (Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus) (106-48 B.C.): VI, 132; XIV, 313; XXXI, 351,353 POMPIGNAN, JEAN JACQUES LE FRANC, MARQUIS DE (1709-84): I, 59 (58); XII, 177 Discours prononce a VAcademic frangoise (Paris: Brunei, 1760): XII, 177 POMPIGNAN, JEAN Louis GEORGES MARIE LEFRANC, MARQUIS DE (1760-1840): I, 59 (58); XXVI, 20-1, 24, 27, 30-1, 56 POMPIGNAN, JEAN MARIE CLAUDE ALPHONSE LEFRANC, COMTE DE (1788-1869): XXVI, 27, 31-2, 34 POMPIGNAN, LOUISE LEFRANC, MARQUISE DE (nee de Beaumont-Baynac) (wife of Jean Louis Georges Pompignan): XXVI, 20-1, 27-9, 31-2 POMPONE, HUGH DE (seigneur de Crecy) (fl. 12th c.): XX, 30 PONCE, JOHN (fl. 1630s). Annotation in Duns Scotus, Opera omnia: IX, 418q PONCELET, Louis (b. ca. 1803): XXIII, 407 PONS DE L'HERAULT, ANDRE (1772-1853): XXII, 263 PONSONBY, JOHN WILLIAM (Lord Bessborough) (1781-1847): XXIV, 900, 902, 932, 934-5 PONT^COULANT, Louis GUSTAVE DE DOULCET, COMTE DE (1764-1853): XXII, 198; XXIII, 542 PONTECOULANT , PHILIPE GUSTAYE LE DOULCET , COMTE DE (1795-1874). Traite elementaire de physique celeste (Paris: Carilian-Goeury and Dalmont, 1840): XIV, 29 POOLEY, THOMAS (labourer; fl. 1850s): XVIII, 239 The Poor Man's Guardian. Leading article on the Reform Bill (26 May, 1832): VI, 161 Leading article on labour and capital (3 Aug., 1833): VI, 485q POPE, ALEXANDER (1688-1744): X, 21; XXIII, 590; XXIV, 808; XXVI, 437 *The Dunciad: XX, 62; XXVI, 408, 417 *An Essay on Criticism: VI, 362q *An Essay on Man: I, 115 (114); VIII, 834q; X, 384q, 388-9q; XIX, 622q; XX, 224q; XXI, 241q; XXIII, 596q *Moral Essays: VII, 456q; XXIII, 574q; XXVII, 659q *Poems: XVI, 1474 *Satires and Epistles of Horace Imitated: X, 82q *Windsor Forest: XXVII, 478 , et al. *Memoirs o f . . . Martinus Scriblerus: XXXI, 360 , trans. *The Iliad of Homer: I, 13-15 (12-14), 19 (18), 557, 583; XVI, 1474 , trans. The Odyssey of Homer: XVI, 1474

324

Index of Persons and Works

POPE, FREDERICK (barrister; fl. 1854): XIV, 216-18, 226-7, 232, 234, 248, 264, 266, 274, 277, 280-1, 292, 297, 318, 322, 401 POPE, SAMUEL (fl. 1850s). Letter to Lord Stanley (26 Sept., 1856): XVIII, 288q Le Populaire: XXIII, 688 PORCHESTER, LORD. See Herbert, Henry John George PORLIER, JUAN DIAZ (1785-1815): XX, 89 PORPHYRY (233-ca. 300 A.D.): XI, 23 Isagoge: VII, 11 In q, 119; VIII, 1017n q, 1030 PORSENNA, LARS (King of Clusium in Etruria) (late 6th c. B.C.): XIV, 287 Port Royal Logic. See Arnauld PORTALIS, AUGUSTE, BARON (1801-55): XXIII, 375 Proposition . . . relative a la celebration forcee des dimanches et des fetes (6 Dec., 1831): XXIII, 375 Proposition . . . relative au deuil public du 21 Janvier (6 Dec., 1831): XXIII, 375-6,421,479 Proposition . . . relative au travail des fetes et dimanches (11 Feb., 1832): XXIII, 375, 418 PORTALIS, JOSEPH MARIE, COMTE (1778-1858): XXII, 199 PORTER, GEORGE R. (1792-1852): XII, 220 PORTMAN, EDWARD BERKELEY (Viscount) (1799-1888): V, 453n Post-Office London Court Guide: XXXII, 198 The Post-Office London Directory (issued annually): XXXII, 198 POTHIER, ROBERT JOSEPH (1699-1772). Oeuvres: XXX, 19 POTTER, EDMUND (1802-83): XV, 891 POTTER, GEORGE (1832-93): XVI, 1458 POTTER, JOHN PHILLIPS (1793-1861): XIII, 515 "The Diffusion of Knowledge amongst the People": XXIII, 660 "The Philosophy of Socrates": XIII, 515, 532; XXXII, 66 POTTER, THOMAS BAYLEY (1817-98): I, 276; XV, 891; XVI, 1350, 1352; XVII, 1597, 1604, 2010; XXVIII, 128. LETTERS TO: XV, 924-6; XVI, 1012-14, 1028; XXXII, 141-2 POTTINGER, HENRY (1789-1856): XXX, 63 POUSSIN, GASPARD (formerly Gaspard Dughet) (1613-75): XIV, 312 POUSSIN, NICOLAS (ca. 1594-1665): XIV, 263 POUZIN, MARTIN HUGUES CESAR (1768-1822): XXVI, 143 POUZIN, ROMEO (professor in Montpellier; fl. 1843): Xffl, 568, 595 POWELL, MR. (Blackheath neighbour of JSM and HTM): XIV, 180, 182, 188, 195; XV, 681 POWELL, BADEN (1796-1860). Essays on the Spirit of the Inductive Philosophy: VII, 333n, 367n; VIII, 566n-7n q The Order of Nature (Longmans, 1859): XV, 695-6

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POWELL, FRANCIS SHARP (1827-1911). Speech on the Representation of the People Bill (17 May, 1867): XXVIII, 150 POWELL, THOMAS (Irish major; fl. 1825). Evidence on the Disturbances in Ireland (PP): VI, 96 POYNTZ, ELIZABETH MARY (nee Browne) (wife of William): XXVII, 564 POYNTZ, WILLIAM STEPHEN (1770-1840): XXVII, 564 Pozzo DI BORGO, CARLO ANDREA, COUNT (1764-1842): XXIII, 698 PRAED, WINTHROP MACKWORTH (1802-39): I, 131 (130); XXIII, 337 Speech on Parliamentary Reform (24 Aug., 1831): XXIII, 337q PRANDI, FORTUNATO (d. 1868). LETTER TO: XVII, 1960; XXXII, 22 PRATAP SINGH (Rajah of Sattara) (d. 1847): XXX, 34 PRATI, GIOACCHINO (1790-1863): XII, 203; XXIII, 675-6, 679, 689-91, 689-90q PRATT, MR. (Essex poacher; fl. 1823): VI, 106 PRATT, CHARLES (Lord Camden) (1714-94): X, 82; XXI, 25 Charge to the Jury in the Case of Entick v. Carrington, 1704: XXI, 24q PRATT, HENRY MARCH (officer in the Indian Army; b. 1838): XVII, 1728 PRATT, HODGSON (1824-1907). LETTER TO: XXXII, 229 PRATT, JOHN JEFFREYS (Earl and Marquis of Camden) (1759-1840): XXVII, 471 PRATTEN, WILLIAM SIMS (Westminster elector; fl. 1860s): XVI, 1481. LETTERS TO: XVI, 1410-12, 1415; XVII, 1947 The Preamble. "Lord Durham's Return" (Nov. 1838): VI, 445-64 rev PREBBLE, MR. (British traveller; fl. 1855): XIV, 418, 421, 424, 432-3, 435 PRELLER, LUDWIG (1809-61), and AUGUST HEINRICH RITTER (1791-1869). Historia philosophiae Graeco-Romanae: VII, 364q PRESCOTT, GROTE AND Co. LETTERS TO: XVII, 1915, 1916; XXXII, 151 PRESCOTT, WILLIAM GEORGE (1800-65): 1,81 (80), 123(722), 125 (124); XIV, 123,130; XV, 660; XXXII, 3, 7 PRESCOTT, WILLIAM HICKLING (1796-1859). History of the Reign of Ferdinand and Isabella (Boston: American Stationers, 1838): XVI, 1474 History of the Conquest of Peru: III, 975 The Press. Notice of Bain's The Emotions and the Will: XV, 639 La Presse: XIII, 571; XXV, 1093 PRESSENsfi, EDMOND DEHAULT DE (1824-91): XV, 750; XIX, 584n, 611 PRESSLY, CHARLES (1794-1880). Evidence on Income and Property Tax (PP): V, 590,597 PRE"VOST-PARADOL, LUCIEN ANATOLE ("Lucien Sorel") (1829-70). Les anciens partis: XIX,584-5 PRIAULX, OSMOND DE BEAUVOIR (1805-91): XII, 240 PRICE, MR. (tradesman dealing with JSM and HTM; fl. 1854): XIV, 172 PRICE, RICHARD (1723-91): X, 21, 85; XXXI, 17 "On the Importance of Christianity": XXXI, 16-18 PRICE, ROSE (1768-1834): XXVII, 635

326

Index of Persons and Works

PRICE, SAMUEL GROVE (1793-1839): XXXI, 361, 368 Speech on Spain (10 Mar., 1837): XXXI, 360 PRIDEAUX, FRANCIS WILLIAM (d. 1871): XIV, 42; XXXII, 90, 113-14 PRIESTLEY, JOSEPH (1733-1804): VII, 481; X, 21, 122, 130; XXIII, 561-2; XXXI, 98 *An Examination of Dr. Reid's Inquiry into the Human Mind: VII, 577q -Hartley's Theory of the Human Mind: I, 125-7 (124-6); VII, 560n; XXXI, 98 PRIESTLEY, RICHARD (London bookseller; fl. 1820s): XI, 39 PRIEUR DE LA MARNE, PIERRE Louis (1756-1827): XXIII, 542n PRIM, JUAN, MARQUIS DE LOS CASTILLEJOS, COUNT DE REUS (1814-70): XVII, 1542 PRINSEP, HENRY THOBY (1793-1878): XIV, 181 The Printing Machine: XII, 299 PRIOR, JAMES (17907-1869). Life of Oliver Goldsmith (Murray, 1837): XII, 318 PRIOR, THOMAS (16827-1751): XI, 471 Proceedings of the Royal Horticultural Society, London, IV (1864), 93-4: XV, 948 Proces en cow d'assises, 27 et 28 aout 1832 (Paris: Carpentier-Mericourt, 1832): XII, 120, 133, 146, 150 A Proclamation for a Generall Fast to Bee Held throughout This Realme of England (14 Feb., 1629): XXIV, 1073 PROCOPIUS (ca. 326-366 A.D.). Procopius: XXXI, 351 PRODICUS (b. ca. 470/460; also in Plato): XI, 46-61 passim, 85, 154, 178, 207, 389, 391-2; XXV, 1162 "The Choice of Hercules": XI, 329, 391 Le Producteur: XII, 34-5, 40, 47 Programme of the Land Tenure Reform Association. See under Mill, John Stuart Prospective Review. "The White Lady and Undine": XXXII, 72 PROTAGORAS (ca. 490-420 B.C.): VII, 60n; X, 205; XI, 42-61 passim, 44n q, 85, 389, 392-3, 395, 401n, 425q, 426-8, 501n; XV, 818; XX, 273n; XXXII, 108 PROUDFOOT, ANN (victim of assault; fl. 1853): XXI, 107 PROUDHON, PIERRE JOSEPH (1809-65): III, 1027, 1031; V, 651; XIV, 21, 32-4; XVII, 1609-10,1859 Qu'est-ce lapropriete? 2 vols. (Paris: PrSvot, 1841-48): XIV, 8 PROUT, WILLIAM (1785-1850): XIV, 113 Chemistry, Meteorology, and the Function of Digestion, Considered with Reference to Natural Theology: VIII, 751n-2n q, 821q PROVANA DI COLLEGNO, GIACINTO (1794-1856). Carta geologica d'ltalia (Paris: Audriveau Goujon, 1846): XVII, 1899 PROVENCAL, JEAN MICHEL (1781-1845): I, 59 (58); XII, 11; XXVI, 132-43 passim PROVENCE, LOUISE MARIE JOSEPHINE, COMTESSE DE ("Madame") (1753-1810): XX, 88 PRUSSIAN CODE. See under Statutes, Prussia PRYME, GEORGE (1781-1868): XXXII, 19 A Letter to the Electors of Cambridge: VI, 381-404 rev

Price - Quantamissa

327

A Syllabus of a Course of Lectures on the Principles of Political Economy. XXXII, 19 PRYNNE, WILLIAM (1600-69): VI, 13, 22, 29 Histrio-Mastix: VI, 22 News from Ipswich: VI, 22 PSEUDO-ATHANASIUS: X, 161

PSEUDO-XENOPHON. Xenophontis qui inscribitur libellus Athenaion politeia: XXV, 1132 PTOLEMY (Claudius Ptolemaeus; fl. 2nd cent. A.D.): VII, 260; VIII, 7097; IX, 333; X, 122; XXII, 11; XXIII, 424; XXVI, 251 Almagestum: XXVI, 251 The Public Register; or, The Freeman's Journal. "Location on the Waste Lands" (17 Oct., 1846): XXIV, 908q, 910q PucKLER-MuSKAU, HERMANN LuowiG HEINRICH (1785-1871). Tour in England, Ireland and France, trans. Sarah Austin: XXIII, 729 Tour in Germany, Holland and England, trans. Sarah Austin: XII, 107; XXIII, 729 PUFENDORF, SAMUEL VON (1632-94). *Le droit de la nature et des gens: XX, 345 PUGH, DAVID ("David Hughson"). London: XX, 18 PuisficuR, COMTE DE. See Puysegur PUJADE, JEAN ANTOINE (Bastille prisoner): XX, 146 PULLER, CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM GILES (1807-64): V, 505e, 542-7e PULLING, ALEXANDER (1813-95): I, 283; XXVIII, 300; XXXII, 192 "Electoral Bribery and Corruption": XVI, 1384, 1397, 1400, 1404 "The Law of England Relating to Purity of Elections": XXXII, 192 Our Parliamentary Elections (Hardwicke, 1866): XVI, 1384 Punch: XIV, 437 PUPIKOFER, JOHANN ADAM (fl. 1830s). Der Kanton Thurgau: II, 258n, 259n q; XXIV, 1054q Puranas: XXIV, 869 PURCHAS, SAMUEL (15757-1626). Purchas His Pilgrimes: I, 556 PUSEY, EDWARD BOUVERIE (1800-82): XIII, 416; XXIV, 811-22; XXVII, 643 Patience and Confidence the Strength of the Church (Parker, 1837): XIII, 416 Putnam's Magazine: XVII, 1566 PUYRAVEAU, PIERRE FRANCOIS AUDRY DE (1773-1852): XII, 65 PUYS&JUR, PIERRE Louis DE CHASTENET, COMTE DE (1727-1807): XX, 9, 86-7 PYM, JOHN (1584-1643): VI, 23, 40-2, 47; XXII, 282 PYTHAGORAS (6th c. B.C.): VII, 359; XI, 381 PYTHODORUS (in Plato): XI, 222 QUAIN, RICHARD (1800-87): XIV, 195, 204 QUANTAMISSA, WILLIAM (d. 1859): XIII, 437

328

Index of Persons and Works

Quarterly Review: I, 93 (92), 97 (96), 215 (214), 293, 309, 398,590; X, 45; XI, 43, 47n; XII, 316; Xm, 445-6, 465, 479-80, 528, 683; XV, 672; XVII, 1973; XVIII, 112; XXII, 169, 173, 248; XXIII, 446, 593, 691; XXIV, 762, 806 "Socialism": XIII, 446 "Tours in America": XVIII, 115 The Quebec Gazette: VI, 445-64 rev QUEIPO DE LLANO Ruiz DE SARA VIA, Jos6 MARIA, CONDE DE TORENO (1786-1843): XXII, 40 QUELEN, HYACINTHS Louis, COMTE DE (1778-1839): XXII, 269, 317 QUER Y MARTINEZ, Jos£ (1695-1764). Flora Espanola: XXXI, 290 QUESNAY, FRANCOIS (1674-1774): XXII, 66 QUETELET, LAMBERT ADOLPHE JACQUES (1796-1874): VII, 203n; XII, 274 Sur I'homme: II, 288n q QUINTILIAN (Marcus Fabius Quintilianus) (33-100 A.D.): XII, 8 *Institutio oratoria: 1,14n, 25 (24), 421,566; XX, 188; XXI, 229; XXIII, 450-1; XXVI, 413q La Quotidienne: XXII, 152, 177 RABAUT SAINT-ETIENNE, JEAN PAUL (1743-93): XX, 12, 73n RABELAIS, FRANCOIS (1494-1553): XI, 149q; XX, 50 RACINE, JEAN BAPTISTE (1639-99): I, 487, 500, 570; XXVI, 20-1, 46-7, 56 *Athalie: I, 500 *Esther: I, 500 *Les plaideurs: XXI, 69q RADCLIFFE, ANN (1764-1823). The Mysteries of Udolpho (Robinson, 1794): XVI, 1475 RADCLIFFE, GEORGE (1593-1657): VI, 30 RADFORD, JOHN (tradesman; fl. 1867): XVI, 1251 RADNOR, LORD. See Bouverie, William Pleydell RAE, JOHN (1796-1872). LETTER TO: XIV, 240-1 "Polynesian Languages": XIV, 241; XV, 834 Statement of Some New Principles on the Subject of Political Economy: II, 129q, 162-70q; ffl, 869n-70n q, 918; XIV, 240 "Thoughts on the System of Legislation Which Has Prevailed in the Hawaiian Islands for the Last Forty Years": XV, 834 RAE, WILLIAM FRASER (1835-1905): XVI, 1026, 1058, 1062; XXXII, 211 LETTERS TO: XVI, 1064, 1105, 1126, 1174, 1400-1; XVII, 1589-90, 1624, 1708, 1853; XXXII, 211 "The Future of Reform": XXXII, 211 "The Hopes and Fears of Reformers": XXXII, 211 "Reform and Reformers": XXXII, 211

Quarterly Review - Ratcliffe

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"Taine's History of English Literature": XVI, 1026 Westward by Rail: XVII, 1624, 1708; XXXII, 218 RAGHUJI III (Raja of Nagpur) (1818-53): XXXII, 60 RAGLAN, LORD. See Somerset, Fitzroy RAGUSA, MR. (Palmero landlord; fl. 1855): XIV, 338, 355-6, 390 RAINFORD, EDWARD (Holborn bookseller; fl. 1840): XIII, 433, 438 RAMADGE, FRANK (1793-1867): XIV, 173-4, 198-203, 285, 294, 296, 304; XV, 678 The Curability of Consumption (Longmans, 1850): XIV, 171, 190 Ramayun: XI, 282 The Rambler. XVI, 1474 RAMBUTEAU, CLAUDE PHILIBERT DE BARTHELOT, COMTE DE (1781-1869): XXIII, 345 RAMOND, Louis FRANCOIS ELISABETH DE CARBONNIERE, BARON (1753-1827): XXVI, 122. RAMSAY, GEORGE (1800-71). An Enquiry into the Principles of Human Happiness and Human Duty (Pickering, 1843): XIII, 579 RAMSAY, GORDON DUBERRY (d. 1866): XXI, 426, 433 RAMSAY, JAMES ANDREW BROUN (Marquis and Earl of Dalhousie) (1812-60): VI, 414; XVI, 1202; XXVII, 656; XXX, 100, 148, 204, 209 "Minute by the Governor-General of India, Concurred in by the Commander-inChief" (PP): XXI, 120 RAMSAY, SUSAN GEORGIANA (Marchioness of Dalhousie) (1817-53): XXX, 148 RAMUS. See La Ramee RANKE, LEOPOLD VON (1795-1886). Die romischen Pdpste, ihre Kirche und ihr Staat im 16 und 17 Jahrhundert: XX, 220, 249 (in English) The Ecclesiastical and Political History of the Popes of Rome during the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, trans. Sarah Austin: XIII, 522; XX, 220 - (in English) The History of the Popes, Their Church and State in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, trans. Walter Keating Kelly: XX, 220 History of the Reformation in Germany, trans. Sarah Austin: XIII, 572 RAPHAEL (Raphael Sanzio) (1483-1520): I, 333, 352; XII, 275; XIII, 441; XIV, 270, 278, 295, 297-8, 305, 309-10, 312-13, 478, 481, 483, 489; XVII, 1662; XXI, 316; XXII, 324; XXV, 1240 Transfiguration: XIV, 299, 305 RAPIN DE THOYRAS, PAUL DE (1661-1725). L'histoire d'Angleterre: XX, 221 RAPP, GEORGE (d. 1847): II, 202 Rapport de la commission d'enquete sur I'insurrection qui a eclate dans la journee du 23 juin et sur les evenements du 15 mai [1848]: XX, 339 "Rapport officiel sur les operations de guerre centre les montagnards Musulmans du Caucase", trans. H.J. Klaproth: XXXI, 354, 355-6q RASPAIL, FRANCOIS VINCENT (1794-1878): XXIII, 396, 421-2, 656-7 RATCLIFFE. See Radcliffe, George

330

Index of Persons and Works

RATHBONE, PHILIP HENRY (1828-95). LETTERS TO: XVI, 1531-2; XVII, 1544-5 RATHBONE, WILLIAM, JR. (1819-1902): XVI, 1162, 1342. LETTER TO: XV, 904-6 RATTAZZI, URBANO (1808-73): XV, 796; XXXII, 133 RAU, Miss (daughter of Karl; fl. 1852): XIV, 96 RAU, KARL DAVID HEINRICH (1792-1870): XXIV, 968, 971, 975-7. LETTERS TO: XIV, 86-7, 94-6 Lehrbuch der politischen Oekonomie: XXIV, 968 (in French) Traite d'economic nationale, trans. F. de Kemmeter: II, 150, 288n q, 292q • UeberdieLandwirthscha.fi der Rheinpfalz: II, 265q, 266,291nq; XXIV, 968,971, 975-7q RAUMER, FRIEDRICH LUDWIG GEORG VON (1781-1873): II, 329; III, 995 England im Jahre 1835: XXIV, 897 (in English) England in 1835, trans. Sarah Austin: VI, 530; XII, 292; XXXII, 31 RAVAILLAC, FRANCOIS (1578-1610): IX, 461, 462n; XXVI, 10-11 RAVEZ, AUGUSTS SIMON HUBERT MARIE (1770-1849): XXVI, 23 RAWLINSON, JOHN (ca. 1778-1847): VI, 245-6q, 247 RAY, JOHN (1627-1705): VI, 20; XII, 50; XXXI, 274 Synopsis methodica stirpium Britannicarum: XXVII, 482n RAYMOND, ROBERT (Baron) (1673-1733): XXXI, 86q Speech in the Trial of Richard Francklin (1731): XXI, 29q Speech in the Trial of Thomas Woolston (1729): XXI, 29q RAYNAL, GUILLAUME THOMAS FRANCOIS (1713-96). Histoire . . . des Europeens dans les deux Indes: VII, 357q RAYNOUARD, FRANCOIS JUST MARIE (1761-1836): I, 310 , ed. Choix des poesies originales des troubadours: XX, 36n q REA. See Ray READ, ALEXANDER (d. 1804): XXX, 97 READ, CLARE SEWELL (1826-1905). Speech on the Election Petitions and Corrupt Practices at Elections Bill (24 July, 1868): XXVIII, 327 The Reader. XV, 974-5, 984; XVI, 986, 990,994,1011-12,1015, 1017-8,1026,1029, 1057-8, 1105, 1237, 1394 "Criticism on Crutches": XVI, 1062 "The Edinburgh Review": XVI, 1062 "Travellers' Tales": XVI, 990, 1001, 1003 READE, ALEXANDER. See Read, Alexander RfiAL, FfiLix (1792-1864): XXIII, 530 The Reasoner: XVII, 1876-7; XXIV, 1082-4 Belfast Resolutions (8 May, 1859): XV, 683

Rathbone — Remusat

331

Reasons for a Legislative Measure . . . to Limit and Regulate the Hours during Which Young Persons May Be Employed to Labour in Flax-Spinning Mills throughout Scotland: XXIII, 399 Rebellion Record: XV, 946 REBOUL, HENRI PAUL IRENEE (1763-1839): XXVI, 97n, 122, 124 "Nivellement des principaux sommets de la chaine des Pyrenees": XXVI, 97n Record. Articles on the Sterling Club (8 Mar., 1849 et seq.): XIV, 16, 23 "Mr. J.S. Mill and His Supporters" (2 June, 1865): XVI, 1068, 1071 Leading articles charging JSM with irreligion (14, 19,26 June, 1865): XVI, 1069, 1483 REDESDALE, LORD. See Mitford, John Freeman REEVE, HENRY (1813-95): XII, 335; XIV, 421; XV, 606,616,631,639,643q, 729,753, 761, 764, 776; XVI, 1096, 1115,1145. LETTERS TO: XIII, 680-1; XV, 725-6, 822-3; XVI, 1142-3; XVII, 1574-7, 1582; XXXII, 73 "Popular Education in England": XV, 729 La Reforme. Unheaded leader on Press Law (12 Aug., 1848): XXV, 1117 REGIS, REY. See Cazillac REGNARD, JEAN FRANCOIS (1655-1709): I, 577; XXVI, 28 REHOBOAM (Bible): VI, 42n REICHENSPERGER, PETER FRANZ (1810-92). Die Agrarfrage aus dem Gesichtspunkte der Nationalokonomie, der Politik und des Rechts (Trier: Lintz, 1847): II, 260n, 266 REICHSTADT, DUG DE. See Napoleon II REID, ANDREW (fl. 1869): XVII, 1658. LETTERS TO: XVII, 1643-5, 1649-51 REID, JOHN (1809-49): XVII, 1999 REID, THOMAS (1710-96): I, 71 (70), 269,579; VII, 14, 61n-2n, 235n, 263, 287n, 306, 326, 577; VIII, 768-9, 830, 967, 994,1119; IX, 1, 62, 109-11, 113, 119, 123, 128, 137-8,143,151,153n, 155, 157, 168-9, 175,183,196-7,216,239, 250, 257,493n; X, 6, 86, 125, 129-30; XI, 3, 247, 251, 341, 343, 443, 477; XIII, 638; XX, 183; XXI, 463; XXVII, 657 Essays on the Active Powers of Man: VII, 353n, 357-8q; IX, 356n q, 440q, 444q, 468; X, 266n; XI, 356 •Essays on the Intellectual Powers of Man: VII, 338; VIII, 768-9; IX, 69n q, 75, lll-12q, 113,137nq, 162,172-4q, 190, 257, 323q, 328q, 498n; XI, 13n, 343-4, 356 Essays on the Powers of the Human Mind: XI, 13n, 343-4, 356 •*An Inquiry into the Human Mind: IX, 72nq,74n, 169-71q, 172,175,234n, 257, 356, 421; XV, 936; XVI, 1096 REINHART, CHARLES FREDERIC, COMTE (1761-1837): XXIII, 521 REMBRANDT (Rembrandt Harmens van Rijn) (1606-69): I, 352n; X, 136n REMQUET (Parisian printer; fl. 1849): III, 779n R&MUSAT, FRANCOIS MARIE CHARLES, COMTE DE (1797-1875). Politique liberale: XIX, 545q

332

Index of Persons and Works

[R6MUSAT]

Speech on the Budget (20 Jan., 1832): XXIII, 401q RENAN, ERNEST (1823-92): XV, 926 RENDLE, WILLIAM (1811-93): XXIX, 540-2e Fever in London: XXIX, 540-2 London Vestries, and Their Sanitary Work: XXIX, 540-1 RENDLESHAM, BARONS. See Thelusson, Peter Isaac; and Thelusson, Frederick RENI, GUIDO. See Guido RENNIE, GEORGE (1791-1866): XXIII, 529 RENNIE, JOHN (1794-1874): XXIII, 529 RENOUARD, AUGUSTIN CHARLES (1794-1878). Discours sur la Loi relative a la composition des cours d'assises (8 Jan., 1831): XXII, 238 RENOUVIER, CHARLES BERNARD JOSEPH (1815-1903). "Critique generate: L'infmi, la substance et la liberte": XVII, 1652-3 REOLE (attacker of the Bastille): XX, 145 "Report and Circular of the Law Department of the NAPSS on Measures to Check Bribery and Corruption at Elections": XV, 951 Report of a Meeting of the London National Society for Women's Suffrage (NSWS, 1869): XVII, 1700-1 Reports and Prospectus of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge: XXII, 243 Le Republicain: XX, 100 The Republican: XXII, 8 Letter to the Editor (signed "Gallus"; 29 Nov., 1822): XXII, 8 LaRepublique: XIV, 143, 156; XXXII, 82 Retrospective Review: I, 94n REVANS, JOHN (Secretary to the Poor Law Commission; fl. 1854). LETTERS TO: XIV, 242, 245 Evils of the State of Ireland: II, 317-18q; XII, 317; XVII, 1992 A Per Centage Tax on Domestic Expenditure, to Supply the Whole of the Public Revenue: III, 832-3; XIII, 733 REVANS, SAMUEL (1808-88): XIII, 643, 688; XVI, 1196. LETTERS TO: XIV, 242, 245 "The Safety Principle of Joint-Stock Banks": XVII, 1971 REVELL, MAJOR (founder of the National Political Union; fl. 1832): XII, 115 R&VILLE, ALBERT (1826-1906). "De la liberte et du progres a propos des anciens et des modernes": IX, 458n q The Revolution: XVII, 1700 La Revue Britannique: XII, 344 La Revue de Paris: XII, 262 La Revue des Deux Mondes: XII, 150; XV, 652, 655, 657, 659, 750, 760, 763, 935; XVII, 1573; XIX, 584 La Revue des Economistes: XIII, 687

Remusat - Rich

333

La Revue Encydopedique: XII, 133-4, 140, 194; XXIII, 677; XXVI, 48 La Revue Franqaise. "De la politique de la France" (1829): XXII, 224q La Revue Rationale: XV, 760, 799; XIX, 584 REY, Louis (1837-1936). LETTER TO: XV, 770 REYBAUD, MARIE ROCH Louis (1799-1879). Economistes modernes (Paris: Le"vy freres, 1862): XVII, 1665 REYNAUD, JEAN (1806-63): XII, 133, 140, 194; XXIII, 677 "De la soci6t6 saint-simonienne," Revue Encydopedique, LIII (Jan. 1832), 9-36: XII, 194 REYNELL, CHARLES WEATHERBY (1798-1892): XIII, 386; XXXII, 35, 49 REYNOLDS, JOSHUA (1723-92): XXI, 317; XXVII, 565 ^Discourse VII (1776): XXI, 319n q REYNOLDS, SUSANNAH FRANCES (Mrs. George William; fl. 1840s). Gretna Green: XXV, 1089 RHAM, WILLIAM LEWIS (early 19th-c.). Outlines of Flemish Husbandry: II, 145n q, 267-70q, 279 RIANCOURT. See Martin, Joseph Calixte RICARDO, DAVID (1772-1823): I, 31 (30), 55 (54), 15 (74), 89 (88), 93 (92), 103 (102), 128, 538, 614; II, 80, 341, 392, 413, 426-8; III, 457, 472, 479, 589, 648, 727, 823, 7052, 1055n, 1056, 1094; IV, 10-11, 30, 37, 69, 115-16, 151n-2n, 172, 394, 398, 401 ;V, 447-8, 642, 759; VI, 91,130; IX, 110n;XII, 170-1,178; XIII, 458, 659,731, 736; XIV, 88, 93, 198; XV, 859, 968; XVII, 1910; XX, 193; XXII, 323; XXVI, 409n; XXVII, 657; XXXI, 100; XXXII, 10 Essay on the Influence of a Low Price of Corn on the Profits of Stock: II, 419; IV, 174, 179 The High Price of Bullion: I, 31 (30), 569; IV, 188; VI, 176; XXIV, 853 Observations . . . on the Depreciation of Paper Currency: IV, 188; VI, 176 On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation: I, 31 (30), 123 (722), 568, 585; III, 477-8q, 636q, 1052, 1055; IV, 31-2q, 35, 152n, 174, 232-6, 241, 293-5, 297, 299, 393; V, 758; XII, 8; XIII, 642, 659-60; XXII, 3, 53; XXXI^ 100; XXXI, 408q Proposals for an Economical and Secure Currency: IV, 188; VI, 176 Reply to Mr. Bosanquet's Practical Observations on the Report of the Bullion Committee: I, 31 (30), 569; IV, 188; VI, 176; XXIV, 853 SPEECHES: On a Motion for a Committee on the Agricultural Distress (18 Feb., 1822): VI, 131 On East and West India Sugars (22 May, 1823): XXII, 25-6 On Free Discussion (1 July, 1823): XXII, 33 RICARDO, JOHN LEWIS (1812-62): V, 472e, 474e, 496-8e RicciOLi, GIOVANNI BATTISTA (1598-1671). Almagestum novum: XXII, 11 RICH, EDWARD (Earl of Warwick, Earl Holland) (1673-1701): XXXI, 56

334

Index of Persons and Works

RICHARD I (of England; "Coeur de Lion") (1157-99): XX, 34-6, 47, 185, 226 RICHARD II (of England) (1367-1400): XIX, 437; XXII, 280 RICHARD (Earl of Cornwall) (1209-72): XX, 49 RICHARDS, MR. (registrar at JSM and HTM's marriage in Weymouth, 1851): XIV, 96 RICHARDSON, JOHN (1796-1852). Movements of the British Legion: XXXI, 359-88 rev, 370q RICHARDSON, SAMUEL (1689-1761): XXVI, 415 Clarissa, 1 vols. (Richardson, 1748): XVI, 1474 *The History of Sir Charles Grandison: XVI, 1474; XX, 22 RICHELIEU, ARMAND JEAN DU PLESSIS, CARDINAL, DUC DE (1585-1642): I, 472-3, 483-4; H, 296n; III, 1004; VI, 404; XVIII, 167; XIX, 416 Maximes d'etat: XIX, 44Iq RICHERAND, BALTHASAR ANTHELME (1779-1840). Elements of Physiology: XXXI, 106 RICHMOND, DUKES OF. See Lennox, Charles Gordon; and Stuart, James RICHMOND, CHRISTOPHER WILLIAM (1821-95): XVII, 1829 RICHTER, JEAN PAUL FRIEDRICH (1763-1825): XII, 118; XIII, 582; XV, 523 RICHTER, JOHN (d. 1830): XXV, 7262 RICKARDS, GEORGE KETTILBY (1812-89). "Trades' Unions": XVII, 1576 RICKETTS, MORDAUNT (of the EIC; fl. 1833): XXXII, 17 RIDDELL, THOMAS ALEXANDER (of the EIC; fl. 1857): XXXII, 104 RIDDLE, WILLIAM (fl. 1870). LETTER TO: XVII, 1771 RIDLEY, NICHOLAS (1500-55): XXIII, 463 RIGBY, EDWARD (1747-1821): II, 298n, 303n RIGG, MARY (witness; fl. 1851): XXV, 1185 RIGG, THOMAS (witness; fl. 1851): XXV, 1185 RIGNY, HENRI GAUTHIER, COMTE DE (1782-1835): XXII, 288; XXIII, 700 Speech on the Supplementary Credit for the Navy (26 Mar., 1834): XXIII, 699 RINALDI, ODORICO (1595-1671). Annales ecdesiastici: XX, 234 RING, W. I. (captain in the EIC army; fl. 1856): XXXII, 92 RINTOUL, ROBERT STEPHEN (1787-1858): XII, 254, 365; XIII, 391, 699; XVII, 1976, 1989 RIPON, LORD. See Robinson, Frederick John RITTER, AUGUST HEINRICH (1791-1869). Geschichte der Philosophic alter Zeit: VII, 364q Vorlesungen zur Einleitung in die Logik (Berlin: Trautwein, 1823): XIV, 451 RITTER, KARL (1779-1859). Die ErdkundeimVerhdltniszurNaturundzur Geschichte des Menschen: XXXII, 32 (in French) Geographic generale comparee, trans. E. Buret and Edouard Desor: XXXH, 32 RIVET, JEAN CHARLES [Revel] (1800-72): XVII, 1565-6

Richard I - Robespierre

335

RIVIER, VINCENT (1771-1838): XXIII, 441 ROBERT II (of France; "le Pieux") (ca. 970-1031): XX, 32, 238 ROBERTS, MR. (tradesman dealing with JSM and HTM; fl. 1854): XIV, 131,136,140,148 ROBERTSON, ALEXANDER (d. 1856). Speech on East and West India Sugars (22 May, 1823): XXII, 27q ROBERTSON, ANNE ISABELLA (Irish suffragist; fl. 1870): XVII, 1785-6 Society in a Garrison Town (Newby, 1869): XVII, 1546-7 The Story of Nelly Dillon (Newby, 1866): XVII, 1546-7 Women's Need of Representation (Dublin: Irish National Society for Women's Suffrage, 1873): XVII, 1546-7 ROBERTSON, ARCHIBALD (d. 1847): XXX, 63 ROBERTSON, GEORGE CROOM (1842-92): XVI, 1181, 1211, 1222. LETTERS TO: XVII, 1634-5, 1818-19, 1823-5,1834-7, 1842-3, 1845-6,1848-57, 1859-61, 1866-7, 1880, 1886, 1899-1900, 1913-19, 1921-24, 1927, 1938 ROBERTSON, JOHN (ca. 1811-75): 1,215 (214); XII, 332-3,337,364; XIII, 381, 383-4, 388, 392, 398, 412, 417, 420, 430, 432; XVII, 1971, 1974, 1976-8, 1986, 1993; XXXII, 46-7 LETTERS TO: XII, 338-9, 342-6, 349-57, 362-3; XIII, 367, 371-2, 385-6,388-9, 391-4, 396-7, 399-400, 402-3, 422-3, 485; XXXII, 35-6 "The Arctic Discoveries": XIII, 386 "Caricatures": XII, 362; XIII, 430; XXXII, 35-6 "Congregational Dissenters": XII, 350, 364; XIII, 430; XVII, 1977 "Criticism on Women": XIII, 396 "History of Hanover": XII, 346; XVII, 1975, 1978-9 "Irish Humour and Pathos": I, 606 — "Lives of Bacon": XII, 284 "Miss Martineau's Western Travel": I, 605; XIII, 367q "Oliver Cromwell": XIII, 408, 430 "Shakespeare": XII, 333 "Transactions of the Statistical Society of London": XII, 344, 363; XIII, 430 "Works of Theodore Hook": XII, 350-1 ROBERTSON, THOMAS CAMPBELL (1789-1863): XXX, 34-5 ROBERTSON, WILLIAM (1721-93): XXII, 292; XXVI, 383-4 *The History of America: I, 11 (10), 554; XVI, 1474; XX, 134 *The History of Scotland: I, 11 (10), 554; XX, 134 *The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V: I, 11 (10), 554; XVI, 1474; XX, 134; XXH, 292q; XXVI, 368, 383-4 ROBESPIERRE, MAXIMILIEN FRANCOIS MARIE ISIDORE DE (1758-94): I, 495; V, 737; X, 123; XII, 139,150,196; XX, 5,12,126-7,347; XXIII, 418,478-9,501, 662,672-3; XXVI, 285; XXVIII, 109-10

336

Index of Persons and Works

[ROBESPIERRE] Declaration des droits de I'homme et du citoyen proposee par Maximilien Robespierre 24 avril, 1793: XX, 126q, 127, 205; XXIII, 672q Discours sur le Decret sur les fetes decadaires (7 May, 1794): XXIII, 478-9 ROBINET, JEAN FRANCOIS EUGENE (1825-99). *Notice sur 1' oeuvre et sur la vie d'Auguste Comte: X, 328n, 329, 346; XV, 884, 886 ROBINSON, DANIEL (manager of the Irish Waste Land Society; fl. 1840s). "Report... to the Directors of the Irish Waste Land Improvement Society" (PP): II, 331n-2n q; III, 992-3q ROBINSON, DAVID (d. 1849). "Letter . . . on the Spirit of the Age": XXII, 229 ROBINSON, FREDERICK JOHN (Viscount Goderich, later Earl of Ripon) (1782-1859): VI, 344; XXIII, 620, 650-1, 735; XXVI, 409n SPEECHES: On the Bank Charter Amendment Bill (14 Apr., 1826): XXIII, 607 On the New Administration (2 May, 1827): XXVI, 401 On the Corn Bill (25 May, 1827): XXVI, 401 On the Corn Laws (14 May, 1833): XXIII, 620 ROBINSON, GEORGE RICHARD (d. 1850). Speech on Taxation (24 Mar., 1836): VI, 326 ROBINSON, HENRY CRABB (1775-1867). "Goethe's Works," Monthly Repository, n.s. VI-VII (June 1832-May 1833): XII, 127 ROBINSON, WILLIAM L. (d. 1877). LETTER TO: XVII, 1839 ROBISON, JOHN (fl. 1800s). Elements of Mechanical Philosophy (Edinburgh: Constable, 1804): I, 564; XII, 8 ROBY, JOHN (1793-1850): IV, 95 ROCHAMBEAU, JEAN BAPTISTE DONATIEN DE VIMEUR, COMTE DE (1725-1807): XX, 97 Rochdale Equitable Pioneers' Co-operative Society's Almanack for 1861: III, 789q Rochdale Observer. "Co-operative Manufacturing Companies": III, 790q ROCHE, ACHILLE (1801-34): XII, 149; XXIII, 428 ROCHE, EUGENIUS (1786-1829): XXIII, 529 ROCHEFORT, VICTOR HENRI (1830-1913): XVII, 1609 ROCHE-GUYON, GUY DE LA (d. 1109): XX, 31 ROCHETTE, PAUL (fl. 1830s). "Proces des quinze": XXIII, 397 ROCHFORT, JOHN STAUNTON (witness; fl. 1825). Evidence on the State of Ireland (PP): VI, 88n, 89n, 96 ROCK, EDWARD (of the EIC; fl. 1856): XXXII, 86 RODEN, LORD. See Jocelyn, Robert RODRIGUES, BENJAMIN OLINDE (1794-1850): XII, 119; XXIII, 403, 509, 676 RODRIGUEZ BURON, MME (wife of Tomas): XXVI, 12, 13, 18 RODRIGUEZ BUR£N, TOMAS (Spanish author resident in France; fl. 1820): XXVI, 8-13 passim ROEBUCK, JOHN ARTHUR (1801-79): I, 83 (82), 99 (98), 125 (124), 127 (726), 129 (128), 131 (130), 133 (132), 153-9 (152-8), 178n, 203 (202), 206; VI, 191, 200-3,

Robespierre - Roebuck

337

327, 384-6, 389, 396,420-1; XII, 20, 64, 87,116,128,134,165-6,171,198-9, 201, 203,211-13,233,238, 242, 246,256,273-4, 317, 324, 326,334,338,365; XIII, 370, 372, 377, 640, 709; XIV, 34, 376; XV, 860; XVI, 1459, 1471; XVII, 1957, 1959, 1975-6, 1978; XIX, 563n; XXIV, 770; XXVI, 341-8 passim, 418-27 passim, 434n, 436; XXVIII, 16; XXXII, 14, 16 LETTER TO: XXXII, 26 "Affairs of Canada," London and Westminster Review, XXIII (Oct. 1835), 269-91: XIII, 377 "British Dominions in North America," Westminster Review, XV (Oct. 1831), 367-74: XIII, 377 "Canada": VI, 420; XIII, 377 "The Canadas and Their Grievances": VI, 420; XIII, 377 —— "Children's Books": XII, 210q "Jean Jacques Rousseau": XII, 128 A Letter to the Electors of Bath, on the Municipal Corporation Reform Bill: VI, 307n "Lord Durham's Administration in Canada": VI, 452n, 453n q, 455-6, 458n "Municipal Corporation Reform": XXIV, 769-74 rev, 770-4q "National Education": XII, 145 "Organic Reform": XIV, 66 •"Politics of Lower Canada," Westminster Review, XIII (July 1830), 45-69: XIII, 377 "The Reformed Parliament": XII, 145 "Timber Trade": IV, 148 , et al. The Canadian Portfolio: VI, 405-35 rev, 417q, 425, 426q , etal. Pamphlets for the People (Ely, 1835): XII, 270, 274, 296 SPEECHES: On National Education (30 July, 1833): I, 203 (158); VI, 200; XII, 233; XXIII, 589q On Free Trade—Corn Laws (19 Mar., 1834): VI, 193 On the Canadas (15 Apr., 1834): VI, 202 On Newspaper Stamps (22 May, 1834): VI, 237 On National Education (3 June, 1834): VI, 200, 254; XII, 233; XXI, 63 On the State of the Mauritius (15 Feb., 1836): VI, 326 - On the Address in Answer to the King's Speech (31 Jan., 1837), PD, Vol. 36, cols. 28-41: XII, 324, 326 On the Vixen (17 Mar., 1837): XXXI, 345, 346, 348 On Canada (14 Apr., 1837): VI, 433 On the Affairs of Spain (19 Apr., 1837): XXXI, 373 Against the Puritanical Observance of Sunday (7 June, 1837): 1,158 On the Affairs of Canada (5 Feb., 1838): VI, 458

338

Index of Persons and Works

[ROEBUCK, J.A.] On the Labouring Poor (Ireland) Bill (1 Feb., 1847): XXIV, 1059-60 On the Conduct of Admiral Wilkes (23 Apr. ,1863), PD, Vol. 170, cols. 576-9: XV, 860 On the Habeas Corpus Suspension Bill, Ireland (17 Feb., 1866): XXVIII, 54 ROEBUCK, ZIPPORAH (nee Tickell; John Roebuck's mother; fl. early 1800s): 1,154 ROEDERER, PIERRE Louis, COMTE (1754-1835): XXIII, 520, 542 Louis XII et Franqois ler. XX, 33, 37n-8n, 43q, 48q, 51n ROGER OF HOVEDEN (fl. 1174-1201). Annalium: XX, 35 ROGER, JACQUES FRANCOIS, BARON DE (1787-1849): XXIII, 417 ROGERS, MR. (magistrate; fl. 1823): XXII, 75-6, 79 ROGERS, JAMES EDWIN THOROLD (1823-90). LETTERS TO: XXXII, 137, 141, 219 *The History of Agriculture and Prices in England: XXXII, 137 ROGERS, SAMUEL (1763-1855): XIII, 456, 655 "The Boy of Egremond": XXVII, 508 ROHAN, CHARLES ALAIN GABRIEL DE, PRINCE DE GU^ME^E, DUC DE MONTBAZON (1764-1836): XXIII, 374 ROHAN, JULES ARMAND Louis DE, PRINCE DE GU^ME^E (1768-1836): XXIII, 374 ROHAN, VICTOR Louis M^RIADEC DE, PRINCE DE GufiM&sifiE, COMTE DE SAINT-POL (1766-1846): XXIII, 374 ROLAND DE LA PLATIERE, JEAN MARIE (1734-93): III, 945n q; XX, 12, 101-2, 108 ROLAND DE LA PLATIERE, MARIE JEANNE (nee Phlipon) (1754-93): XII, 172, 174, 184; XX, 68n-9n *Appel a I'impartiale posterite: I, 346q Memoires de Madame Roland: XII, 138-9, 164, 203; XIX, 644q; XX, 68n-9n, lOOq, 102 ROLANDI, PETER (London bookseller; fl. 1855): XIV, 298; XV, 526 ROLLIN, CHARLES (1661-1741): XX, 224 The Ancient History of the Egyptians, Carthaginians, Assyrians, Babylonians, Medes and Persians, Macedonians, and Grecians: I, 11 (10), 552, 555 ROLT, JOHN (1804-71): XXI, 423 Speech on the Representation of the People Bill (17 May, 1867): XXVIII, 150 ROMA, CANDIANO, COUNT (Regent of Corfu; fl. 1855): XIV, 419 ROMANO, GIULIO (ca. 1499-1546): XIV, 310, 485-6 ROMILLY, CHARLES (1808-87): XXXII, 11,14 ROMILLY, EDWARD (1804-70): I, 203 (202); XXIII, 507 ROMILLY, HENRY (1805-84). Public Responsibility and Vote by Ballot: XXV, 1212-17 rev, 1214-16q ROMILLY, JOHN (Baron) (1802-74): I, 79, 105 (104), 121 (120), 131 (130), 203 (202); XII, 72, 134, 165; XV, 674; XVI, 1007, 1315; XVII, 1867; XXIII, 507 ROMILLY, SAMUEL (1757-1818): 1,105 (104); VI, 342; XV, 595; XXII, 323; XXIII, 507; XXV, 1263; XXVI, 275

Roebuck - Rossetti

339

"Bentham on Codification": XXI, 190q Observations on the Criminal Law of England: XXII, 323 ROMILLY, WILLIAM (d. ca. 1154): XXVII, 508 ROMNEY, GEORGE (1734-1802): XXVII, 565 ROMULUS (son of Maxentius; 4th c. A.D.): XIV, 308 RONCHAUD, Louis DE (1816-87). Phidias, sa vieetsesouvrages (Paris: Gide, 1861): XV, 745 RONNIGER, JANE (author and editor; fl. 1870s): XVII, 1916 ROPER, WILLIAM (fl. 1620s). The Mirrour of Venue in Worldly Greatness; or, The Life of Syr Thomas More: I, 266n-7n ROSA, FRANCISCO MARTINEZ DE LA (1787-1862): XII, 249 ROSA, SALVATOR (1615-73): I, 353n; XIV, 260, 312; XXVII, 565 ROSALIA, SANTA (1130-60): XIV, 340 ROSCELINUS (ca. 1050-1120). "Ad Petrum Abaelardum epistola": XX, 246 ROSCOE, WILLIAM (1743-1831): XXII, 318 *The Life of Lorenzo de Medici: XXII, 318 , ed. The Works of Alexander Pope: XXII, 318 "ROSCOMMON, FRANCIS." Letters for the Press: XVIII, 41q ROSE, GEORGE HENRY (1771-1855): XXVII, 600-2 ROSE, GEORGE PITT (1797-1851): XXVII, 600 ROSE, JAMES ANDERSON (1819-90): XXVIII, 343 ROSE, JOSEPH (London baker; fl. 1823): XXII, 60 ROSE, PHILIP (1816-83): XXVIII, 264, 307 Evidence on the Probable Increase of the Number of Electors in the Counties and Boroughs of England and Wales from a Reduction of the Franchise (PP): XXVIII, 264q, 343 Evidence on the Corrupt Practices Prevention Act (PP): XXVIII, 307q, 343 ROSECRANS, WILLIAM (1819-98): XV, 890 ROSEN. See Rozen Ross, MR. (landlordof JSM andHTM'sBlackheathhouse): XIV, 248; XV, 662,666,673, 681,687 Ross, ALEXANDER (b. 1777): XXXII, 40-1 Ross, CHARLES (1799-1860): XII, 345 "Political History of France since the Restoration": XXII, 168-72, 169-74q, 176-80q Ross, CHARLES (1799-1860). Speech on Trade with India (15 May, 1827): XXX, 5 Ross, CHARLES (1800-84). LETTER TO: XVI, 1173 Ross, JANET (nee Duff-Gordon) (1842-1927): XV, 671. LETTER TO: XV, 658 ROSSE, LORD. See Parsons ROSSETTI, GABRIELI (1783-1854): XXIII, 573

340

Index of Persons and Works

Rossi, JOHN CHARLES FELIX (1762-1839): XXVII, 565 Rossi, PELLEGRINO LUIGI EDOARDO, COMTE (1787-1848): XII, 164, 179; XXXII, 21 ROSSINI, GIOACCHINO ANTONIO (1792-1868). Cenerentola: XIV, 306 La gazza ladra: I, 351 Tancredi: I, 351 ROSSITER, WILLIAM (d. 1897): XVII, 1645. LETTERS TO: XXXII, 184, 193-4, 210, 226 *An Elementary Handbook of Physics: XXXII, 226 ROTH, ALBRECHT WILHELM (1757-1834). Tentamen florae germanicae: XXXI, 297 ROTHSCHILD, KARL MAYER (Baron) (1788-1855): XIV, 322, 328-9, 332 ROTHSCHILD, LIONEL NATHAN DE (1808-79): XXV, 1138 ROTHSCHILD, NATHAN MEYER (1777-1836): IV, 86, 184n Evidence on the Bank of England Charter (PP): IV, 351 ROTHWELL, RICHARD (witness; fl. 1820s). Evidence on the Depressed State of the Agriculture of the United Kingdom (PP): IV, 19-20 ROTTIERS, BERNARD EUGENE ANTOINE (1771-1858). Itineraire de Tiflis d Constantinople: XXXI, 351q, 353, 354q ROUHER, EUGENE (1814-84): XVI, 1225 ROUNDELL, CHARLES SAVILLE (1827-1906): XVI, 1395; XXVIII, 132-3 Rous, M., SR. (of Montauban; fl. 1820): XXVI, 20, 54, 57 Rous, M., JR. (son of the above): XXVI, 54, 57 Rous, JOHN (ironmonger; fl. 1821). Evidence on the Depressed State of the Agriculture of the United Kingdom (PP): IV, 19-20 ROUSSEAU, JEAN JACQUES (1712-78): 1,487; IV, 211; V, 651-2; VIII, 827, 866; X, 110, 123, 299, 304, 376, 395; XI, 387; XII, 128; XVIII, 7, 10, 155, 253; XX, 66-7,371n; XXI, 187; XXII, 320; XXIII, 675; XXVI, 257; XXVII, 657 *Discours sur I'origine et lesfondements de 1'inegalite parmi les hommes: XXV, 1117; XXVI, 257 *Du contrat social: XX, 141; XXII, 120 *Julie, ou La nouvelle Heloi'se: XXII, 320 ROUSSEAU DE SAINT-AIGNAN, Louis MARIE (1767-1837): XXIII, 519 ROUSSIN, ALBIN REINE, BARON (1781-1854): XXIII, 701 ROUTH, MARTIN JOSEPH (1755-1854), ed. Platonis Euthydemus et Gorgias: XI, 39 ROUTH, MATTHEW (soldier; fl. 1846): XXIV, 884q ROUVIERE, PIERRE AUGUSTIN (b. ca. 1803). LETTER TO: XXXII, 228 ROWNTREE, HENRY ISAAC (1838-83). LETTER TO: XVI, 1246 ROY, ANTOINE, COMTE (1764-1847): XXII, 157-8, 199 Speech on Salverte's Proposition (3 Feb., 1832): XXIII, 409 ROY, RAM MOHUN (1774-1833): XXXII, 66 ROYCHUND, PREMCHUND (broker; fl. 1860s): XVII, 1737

Rossi — Russell

341

ROYER-COLLARD, ALBERT PAUL (1797-1865): XIX, 582

ROYER-COLLARD, PIERRE PAUL (1763-1845): X, 263; XI, 443; XX, 192; XXIII, 522 Speech in the National Assembly: XIX, 608q ROYLE, JOHN FORBES (1799-1858): XIII, 685; XIV, 248, 250; XXX, 149; XXXII, 64. LETTERS TO: XIV, 41-2, 59 The Fibrous Plants of India: XXX, 149-50 On the Culture and Commerce of Cotton in India, and Elsewhere: XIV, 41-2; XXX, 149 Review of the Measures Which Have Been Adopted in India for the Improved Culture in Cotton: XV, 549; XXX, 149 ROZEN, GRIGORY VLADMIROVICH (1781-1841): XXXI, 355 RUBENS, PETER PAUL (1577-1640): I, 353; X, 136; XIV, 270, 311; XXVII, 648 RUBICHON, MAURICE. De I'agriculture en France. See Mounier RUDDIMAN, THOMAS (1674-1757). The Rudiments of the Latin Tongue: XXI, 221 RUGE, ARNOLD (1802-80): XXXII, 91. LETTERS TO: XV, 598; XVI, 1233-4 RUMIGNY, MARIE THEODORE GUEILLY, COMTE DE (1789-1860): XXIII, 683 RUNDALL, WHARTON (writer in the EIC; fl. 1856): XXXII, 86, 92, 102, 109, 111 RUPPELL, EDUARD (1794-1884). Reise in Abyssienien (Frankfurt-am-Main: Schmerker, 1838-40): XIII, 479, 482 RUSDEN, HENRY KEYLOCK (1826-1910): XXXII, 233. LETTER TO: XVII, 1750-1 RUSH, JAMES BLOMFIELD (d. 1849): XXV, 1153 RUSHWORTH, JOHN (fl. late 17th c.). Historical Collections: VI, 6-7, 20n, 25n, 48 RUSKIN, JOHN (1819-1900): XIV, 312; XV, 667; XXI, 317, 428; XXVII, 645 Modern Painters: XI, 363-4; XIV, 312; XXXI, 224-6, 320 The Seven Lamps of Architecture (Smith, Elder, 1849): XIV, 251 RUSSELL, MR. (aspiring teacher; fl. 1858): XV, 556-7 RUSSELL, MRS. (wife of William Thomas Russell; fl. 1820): XXVI, 22, 36, 43, 57 RUSSELL, ARTHUR JOHN EDWARD (Lord Arthur) (1825-92): XVII, 1906 RUSSELL, FRANCES ANNA MARIA (Lady) (1815-98). LETTER TO: XVII, 2013-14 RUSSELL, FRANCIS (son of William Thomas Russell): XXVI, 22-59 passim, 112 RUSSELL, JOHN (Lord John, later 1st Earl) (1792-1878): I, 278-9; V, 432; VI, 232, 390, 408-11, 413, 421-3, 428, 435; X, 153; XII, 168, 261, 299, 325, 365; XIII, 375-7, 382, 707, 709; XIV, 13, 59-60, 152, 159, 169, 188, 331-2, 344, 488; XV, 550, 694, 802-3,885-6,904; XVI, 1139,1306; XVII, 1594-5,1820,1979,2013; XIX, 316-18, 347, 352, 452; XXII, 276; XXIV, 776, 911, 920, 923, 937-8, 1059, 1071-2, 1075; XXV, 1099-1100, 1135-8, 1142; XXVI, 398-9, 404; XXVII, 574; XXVIII, 57, 201; XXX, 28; XXXII, 8, 88 "Address to the Electors of the Southern Division of the County of Devon": VI, 298 An Essay on the History of the English Government and Constitution from the Reign of Henry VII to the Present Time (Longman, 1865): XVI, 1021 Letter to Joseph Hume: XXV, 1142

342

Index of Persons and Works

[RUSSELL, J.] Memoirs of the Affairs of Europe from the Peace of Utrecht: XXXII, 8 SPEECHES: On the New Administration (11 May, 1827): XXVI, 403 On the Test and Corporation Acts (7 June, 1827): XXVI, 403 On the Ministerial Plan of Parliamentary Reform (1 Mar., 1831): XXIV, 790 At Torquay (18 Sept., 1832): VI, 410 On Duration of Parliaments (23 July, 1833): XXIII, 600 On Dissenters' Marriages (10 Mar., 1834): VI, 196 At Totnes (2 Dec., 1834): VI, 292 On the Church of Ireland (7 Apr., 1835): VI, 301 On the Ballot (2 June, 1835): VI, 299 On the Affairs of Canada (6 Mar., 1837): VI, 417, 421 On Criminal Law (23 Mar., 1837), PD, Vol. 37, cols. 709-33: XVII, 1979 On Canada (14 Apr., 1837): VI, 433 Corrected Report of the Speech of Lord John Russell, at the Dinner Given on His Election for Stroud, on Friday, July 28, 1837: VI, 381-404 rev, 410 On the Address in Answer to the Queen's Speech (20 Nov., 1837): VI, 408-11; XII, 240q, 360, 365; XIII, 376-7; XXIV, 798-9; XXV, 1102; XXVIII, 57 On the Affairs of Canada( 16 Jan., 1838): VI, 418,421q, 422,428,435,458;XIII, 382 On the Corn Laws (7 May, 1841): XXIV, 805 On the State of Ireland (25 Jan., 1847): XIII, 709; XXIV, 1027,1030,1033,1058, 1061-2, 1072 On the Poor Relief (Ireland) Bill (12 Mar., 1847): XXIV, 1071q, 1075q On the Poor Law Administration Bill (17 June, 1847), PD, Vol. 93, cols. 675-8: XIII, 721 On National Representation (20 June, 1848): XXIV, 1101-2 On the Parliamentary Oaths Bill (19 Feb., 1849): XXV, 1135-8 On Public Business (10 Feb., 1853): XXI, 106 On Education in Scotland (23 Feb., 1854), PD, Vol. 130, cols. 1185-9: XIV, 169 On Prosecution of the War (5 June, 1855), PD, Vol. 138, cols. 1469-81: XIV, 488 On Conspiracy to Murder (9 Feb., 1858), PD, Vol. 148, cols. 1035-49: XV, 550 On the Government of India (No. 3) Bill (26 Apr., 1858): XXX, 181 At Newcastle (14 Oct., 1861): XV, 802-3; XXI, 159 RUSSELL, JOHN (Viscount Amberley) (1842-76): XVI, 991, 1000, 1004, 1008, 1050, 1305-6,1326,1338,1395; XVII, 1698; XXXII, 178,225. LETTERS TO: XVI, 1007-8, 1015-16, 1024, 1494-5; XVII, 1585-7, 1692-5; XXXII, 151 "Clerical Subscription in the Church of England": XVI, 1000 "Education at Public Schools": XVI, 1000 "Political Economy": XVI, 1008

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SPEECHES: On Parliamentary Reform (31 Jan., 1865): XVI, 991 To the Electors of Leeds (16 Mar., 1865): XVI, 1016 On the Sunday Lectures Bill (19 June, 1867): XXVIII, 190-1 On the Election Petitions and Corrupt Practices at Elections Bill (17 July, 1868): XXVIII, 311 RUSSELL, KATHERINE LOUISA (Lady Amberley; nee Stanley) (1842-74): XVI, 1495; XVII, 1587, 1695, 1698. LETTERS TO: XVI, 1174-5, 1179; XXXII, 177-8 "The Claims of Women": XVII, 1774 RUSSELL, LAURA (Lady Arthur, nee de Peyronnet; "P.E. de la Friche") (d. 1910), trans. L'utilitarisme, by J.S. Mill: XVII, 1787, 1906 RUSSELL, RACHEL (Lady) (1636-1723). Letters of Rachel, Lady Russell (Longman, etal., 1853): XIV, 152 RUSSELL, RICHARD (resident of Islington; fl. 1867): XVI, 1305. LETTERS TO: XVI, 1251-2, 1257-8, 1261-2 RUSSELL, RICHARD (b. ca. 1809): XXVI, 22-59 passim, 112 RUSSELL, WILLIAM (Lord William) (1639-83): XXXI, 58 RUSSELL, WILLIAM (1798-1850): XXVII, 484 RUSSELL, WILLIAM (son of William Thomas Russell; fl. 1820): XXVI, 22-59 passim, 112,114 RUSSELL, WILLIAM HOWARD (1820-1907). "The Civil War in America": XXI, 135, 161-2 RUSSELL, WILLIAM THOMAS (b. 1776): XXVI, 19-60passim, 112, 114 RUTHERFORTH, THOMAS (1712-71): X, 21 RUTTY, JOHN (1698-1775), and THOMAS WIGHT (fl. 1150s). A History . . . ofthePeople Called Quakers in Ireland: I, 11 (10}, 555 RYAN, EDWARD (1793-1875): XXX, 14 RYDER, DUDLEY (Lord Harrowby) (1762-1847). Speech on Roman Catholic Relief (17 May, 1825): VI, 92 SA DE BANDEIRA, BERNARDO (Prime Minister of Portugal after 1847 rebellion): XXI, 122 SACKVILLE, GEORGE JOHN FREDERICK (Duke of Dorset) (1794-1815): XXVII, 474 SACKVILLE, THOMAS (Earl of Dorset) (1536-1608): XXVII, 474 SACY, Louis DE. See Lancelot, Claude SADLER, MICHAEL THOMAS (1780-1835). Ireland: XXII, 217 SAID IBN SULTAN (of Oman; the Imaum of Muscat) (ruled 1804-56): XXXII, 100 SAINTS. See under their forenames ST. AUBYN, JOHN (1758-1839): XXVII, 623, 633 ST. AUBYN, JULIANA (nee Vinicombe) (ca. 1769-1856): XXVII, 633 SAINT-CRICQ, PIERRE LAURENT BARTH£LEMY, COMTE DE (1772-1854): XXII, 270; XXHI, 370, 435

344

Index of Persons and Works

[SAINT-CRICQ] Speech on the Customs Bill (25 June, 1822): XXII, 157 Speech on the Corn Bill (23 Mar., 1832): XXIII, 435 ST. CROIX, M. (Captain; fl. 1840): XIII, 418 ST. ETIENNE, RABAUT (fl. 1789): XIX, 613q ST. GERMANS. See Eliot, Edward Granville ST.-HILAIRE, AGLAE" (counsel for Enfantin; fl. 1830s): XII, 120 SAINT HILAIRE, ETIENNE GEOFFROY (1772-1844): VII, 523n; XVII, 1937 SAINT-JOHN, HENRY (Viscount Bolingbroke) (1678-1751): X, 21; XXVI, 396, 415 ST. JOHN, OLIVER (ca. 1598-1673): VI, 47 SAINT-JUST, ANTOINE Louis LfioN DE RICHEBOURGE DE (1767-94): I, 495; V, 737 ST. LAWRENCE, WILLIAM ULICK TRISTRAM (Earl of Howth) (1827-1909): XXIV, 884q, 885 SAINT-MARTIN-VALOGNE, CHARLES VAISSIERE DE (1750-1807): XX, 12 St. Petersburgh Gazette: XXXI, 358 SAINT-PRIEST, FRANCOIS EMMANUEL GUIGNARD, COMTE (1735-1821): XX, 9, 86-7 SAINT SIMON, CLAUDE HENRI [DE ROUVROY], COMTE DE (1760-1825): I, 63 (62), 173 (772), 675; XII, 33, 37,40, 89,92, 108,133,151; XV, 931; XX, 126,185,203,370n; XXm, 403, 417-18, 442-8, 509, 671, 674-80, 689-91, 696, 719, 722; XXV, 7257-5,7257 Doctrine Saint-Simonienne (Nouveau Christianisme): XII, 106q, 15 Iq; XXIII, 653; XXIV, 863q Nouveau christianisme, dialogues entre un conservateur et un novateur. I, 372; XII, 73 -, et al. Opinions litteraires, philosophiques et industrielles (Paris: Bossange pere, 1829-30): XII, 35 SAINT SIMON, Louis DE ROUVROY, DUC DE (1675-1755). *Memoires (Paris: Sautelet, 1829-30): XII, 218 SAINT-VICTOR. See Bins de Saint-Victor SAINTE-BEUVE, CHARLES AUGUSTIN (1804-69). "M. de Vigny": I, 472 SALISBURY, EARL OF. See Cecil, William SALISBURY, MARQUIS OF. See Cecil, Robert Arthur SALLUST (Gaius Sallustius Crispus) (86-35 B.C.): XII, lOq *"Jugurtha": XII, 10 *Opera omnia: I, 15 (14), 557, 586 *"The War with Catiline": XII, 10, 30q; XXVI, 48, 50-1, 53-4, 344, 347q SALMASIUS, CLAUDIUS (1588-1653): VIII, 749 SALOMONS, DAVID (1797-1873): XVI, 1154; XXVIII, 367 SALTER, JONATHAN (of St. Pancras vestry; fl. 1866): XXIX, 494-7e SALVADOR, JOSEPH (fl. 1830s). L'histoire des institutions de Mo'ise et du peuple hebreu: XIH, 468, 487, 496-7; XIX, 397

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Jesus-Christ et sa doctrine (Paris: Guyot and Scribe, 1838): XIII, 468, 487, 496-7; XV, 870; XVII, 1998 SALVERTE, ANNE JOSEPH EUSEBE BACONNIERE DE (1771-1839): XXII, 227 Motion to Transfer the Remains of Great Men to the Pantheon: XXIII, 419 Proposition relative a la revision de 1'article 23 de la charte constitutionnelle (9 Aug., 1831): XXIII, 339 • Proposition pour la reprise a une autre session des travaux tegislatifs non termin6s dans la session pre'ce'dente (7 Dec., 1831): XXIII, 376, 386, 391, 409, 479, 571, 583 SAMPSON, MARMADUKE BLAKE (d. 1876): XV, 956 SAMUELLS, EDWARD ALEXANDER (1813-60): XXX, 156 SAN MIGUEL Y VALLEDOR, EVARISTO (1785-1862): XXII, 41-2 SANCHEZ, FRANCISCO (1523-1601). *Minerva, siveDe causis latinae linguae commentarius: IX, 476 SANCHIOLI, GIULIA (fl. 1855): XIV, 490 "SAND, GEORGE." See Dupin, Amandine Aurore SAND, KARL LUDWIG (1795-1820): XXVI, 24 SANDERSON, ROBERT (1587-1663): VI, 53n *Logicae artis compendium: I, 572; IX, 414q; XXVI, 35, 37 — "The Sixth Sermon ad Populum. . . . April 15, 1627": XXII, 22-3q SANDFORD, GEORGE MONTAGU WARREN (1821-79). Speech on the Alabama Claims (6 Mar., 1868): XXVIII, 243-4, 246 SANTAROSA, SANTORRE ANNIBALE DE Rossi DE POMAROLO, COUNT OF (1783-1825): XII, 15 SANTERRE, ANTOINE JOSEPH (1752-1809): XX, 146 SANUTO, MARINO (1466-1533): XX, 251q SAPOR. See Shapur I. SAPPHO (7th-6th c. B.C.): XI, 67, 351n; XIV, 421; XXI, 314 SARAMBUS (in Plato): XI, 143 SARRUT, GERMAIN MARIE (1800-83): XXIII, 402 SARUP SINGH (Maharana of Odeypore) (d. 1861): XXX, 123 The Satirist: XIII, 396 SATTLER, WILHELM FERDINAND (German philologist; fl. 1868): XVI, 1357, 1391 Saturday Review: XV, 661,664,667,671,673-4,680,687,799, 802,829, 892,958,975, 977; XVI, 1053, 1058, 1139, 1395 Review of Louis Blanc's Historical Revelations (8 May, 1858): XV, 563 Review of JSM's On Liberty (12 Feb., 1859): XV, 597 Review of JSM's Dissertations and Discussions (9 and 16 July, 1859): XV, 631 "American Prospects" (3 Jan., 1863): XV, 828 "The Church and Mr. Lincoln" (3 Jan., 1863): XV, 828 "America" (10 and 17 Jan., 1863): XV, 828

346

Index of Persons and Works

[Saturday Review] "Carnival of Cant" (24 Jan., 1863): XV, 828 Article on the Partnership Law Amendment Bill (4 Apr., 1863): XV, 857 "America" (5 Sept., 1863): XV, 910 "Fawcett's Manual of Political Economy" (26 Sept., 1863): XV, 891 Review of Gomperz's edition ofPhilodemi Epicurei de ira liber (20 Aug., 1864): XV, 953-4 "England and the United States" (18 Mar., 1865): XVI, 1019 "Mr. Mill on the Philosophy of Comte" (15 Apr., 1865): XVI, 1036 "Ireland" (7 Mar., 1868): XVI, 1373 "The Bribery Bill" (25 July, 1868): XVI, 1425 "Women's Rights" (21 May, 1870): XVII, 1730 SAUL. See Paul (St.) SAUNDERS, SIDNEY SMITH (1809-84): XIV, 470 SAUNDERS, WILLIAM WILSON (1809-79): XIV, 41. LETTER TO: XV, 937 SAUNDERSON. See Sanderson SAUVAGE, M. (JSM's French teacher; fl. 1820): XXVI, 40-60 passim, 114 SAVAGE, JOHN (d. 1875): XXIX, 535-Se SAVAGE, MARMION (1803-72): XII, 299 Review of The Fudges in England: XII, 297 SAVIGNY, FRIEDRICH KARL VON (1779-1861): XXI, 204; XXVII, 654 SAVILE, THOMAS (Earl of Sussex) (15907-1658?): VI, 46 SAVILLE, EDWARDS & Co. LETTER TO: XVII, 1939 SAVONAROLA, GIROLAMO (1452-98): XIV, 38, 482; XV, 726; XVIII, 238 SAWYER, ROBERT (1633-92): XXXI, 58 SAY, ALFRED (son of J.B. Say) (b. ca. 1807): XII, 14-15; XXVI, 7, 9 SAY, ANDRIENNE. See Comte, Andrienne SAY, HORACE EMILE (1794-1860): XII, 22, 54; XIII, 687; XXVI, 7, 9, 12 SAY, JEAN BAPTISTS LfiON (1767-1832): I, 61-3 (60-2), 310-11; II, 45-6, 59, 80; III, 466,576,1055n; XII, 12,22,25,54,164,236; XIII, 664; XIV, 93; XVII, 1664; XXII, 323; XXHI, 522, 524-5; XXVI, 7-14 passim, 22, 26; XXXII, 21 LETTER TO: XXXII, 9-10 Cours complet d'economic politique pratique: II, 123q; XXXII, 9, lOq *Traite d'economicpolitique: I, 575, 586; IV, 321; V, 758; XXVI, 47, 137-8 SAY, JULIE (nee Gourdel-Deloche; wife of the above) (d. 1830): XII, 22; XXVI, 7, 9, 12;

xxxn, 9

SAY, LfiON (1826-96): V, 718 SAY, OCTAVIE (1804-65): XII, 22; XXVI, 7, 9, 12 SAYAJI RAO (Gaikwar of Baroda; ruled 1819-47): XXXII, 38 SCALINGER, JULIUS CAESAR (1484-1558): VII, 60n

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SCARLETT, JAMES (Baron Abinger) (1769-1844): VI, 351; X, 61 SCARLETT, PETER CAMPBELL (1804-81): XV, 812 SCHEFFER, ARNOLD (ca. 1797-1853): XXIII, 668-9 SCHEIBLER, CHRISTOPH (1589-1653). Operaphilosophica: IX, 400n SCHELLING, FRIEDRICH WILHELM JOSEPH VON (1775-1854): VII, 60n; IX, 19, 33n, 42, 52n, 56n, 68, 152, 486, 495; X, 171; XI, 341; XII, 168; XIII, 509, 652; XV, 817 SCHERER, EDMOND HENRI (1815-89): XV, 763 SCHIEL, J. VON (fl. 1840s-60s), trans. Die induktiveLogik, by J.S. Mill (1849): XIV, 238 , trans. System der deductiven und inductiven Logik, by J.S. Mill (1862): XXXII, 133 SCHILLER, JOHANN CHRISTOPH FRIEDRICH VON (1759-1805): 1,163 (762); XII, 127,303; XIII, 582; XX, 184; XXV, 1108-9 *Geschichte des dreissigjdhrigen Kriegs: XVI, 1474; XX, 137 *Wallenstein: XX, 134, 136-7 (in English) The Piccolomini; and The Death ofWallenstein, trans. Samuel Taylor Coleridge: XII, 127; XX, 136; XXV, 1108q SCHLEIERMACHER, FRIEDRICH DANIEL ERNST (1768-1834): XII, 168; XVI, 1115 "Introduction to Plato's Apology of Socrates," trans. Connop Thirlwall: XI, 151, 241; XII, 181 "On the Worth of Socrates as a Philosopher," trans. Connop Thirlwall: XI, 41,241; XII, 181 SCHLESINGER, MAX (1822-81): XV, 863 SCHLOSSER, FRIEDRICH CHRISTOPH (1776-1861). Geschichte des achtzehnten Jahrhunderts und des neunzehnten: XX, 220 Universalhistorische Uebersicht der Geschichte der alien Welt: XX, 220; XXIII, 663-4 SCHMALZ, THEODOR ANTON HEINRICH (1760-1831). Economie politique, trans. Henri Jouffroy Fritob: II, 248n SCHMID, HEINRICH (1799-1836). Versuch einer Metaphysik der inneren Natur: IX, 251n, 273n-4n q SCHMIDT-PHISELDEK, CONRAD GEORG FRIEDRICH ELIAS VON (1770-1832). Philosoph-

iae criticae secundum Kantium expositio systematica: XII, 303 SCHMIDTS, M. (student; fl. 1850s): IX, 246 SCHMITZ, LEONHARD (1807-90): XVI, 1184 , trans. Lectures on Ancient History, by Barthold Georg Niebuhr: XI, 331 SCHOELL, MAXIMILIAN SAMSON FRIEDRICH (1766-1833), ed. Histoire abregee des traites de paix, entre les puissances de 1'Europe, depuis lapaix de Westphalie, by Christophe Guillaume de Koch: XX, 372n SCHOLEFIELD, WILLIAM (1809-67): XV, 856. LETTER TO: XVI, 1193 SCHONEN, AUGUSTE JEAN MARIE, BARON DE (1782-1849): XXIII, 379, 658 SCHOPENHAUER, ARTHUR (1788-1860). Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung: IX, 248q

348

Index of Persons and Works

SCHREIBER, CHARLES (1826-84). Speech on the Election Petitions and Corrupt Practices at Elections Bill (22 July, 1868): XXVIII, 331, 343 SCHRODER-DEVRIENT, WILHELMINE (1804-60): I, 351; XXIII, 465; XXXII, 15 SCHULZE-DELITZSCH, HERMANN (1808-83): XV, 907; XVI, 1224 SCHUYLER, GEORGE LEE (1811-90): XVI, 1176, 1187, 1215-16 SCHUYLER, GEORGINA (daughter of the above; fl. 1866): XVI, 1176, 1187 SCHUYLER, LOUISA LEE (1837-1926): XVI, 1176, 1187 SCHWEDIAUER, FRANCOIS XAVIER (1748-1824): XXVI, 8-9,

11

SCHWERZ, JOHANN NEPOMUK HUBERT (1759-1844), ed. Landwirthschaftliche Mittheilungen (Stuttgart and Tubingen: Cotta'schen Buchhandlung, 1826): II, 292n SCIPIO AFRICANUS, PUBLIUS CORNELIUS (237-183 B.C.): XIV, 307; XX, 37-8 SCIPIO ASIATICUS (fl. 208-184 B.C.): XIV, 307 SCIPIO BARBATUS (fl. 298 B.C.): XIV, 307 The Scotsman: XII, 91 "French Ministry" ( 10 Nov., 1830): XXII, 183 Leading article on secular education in Ireland (29 Jan., 1866): XXXII, 161 SCOTT, BENJAMIN (1814-92): XVI, 1262; XXIX, 443-4e; XXXI, 390-le, 402-4e; XXXII, 174, 179 SCOTT, EDWARD (1752/3-1842). LETTER TO: XXXII, 44-5 SCOTT, JOHN (1st Lord Eldon) (1751-1838): I, 298; IV, 151; VI, 82n, 359; VII, 447q; VIII, 71 Iq, 1020q; X, 146; XXI, 189; XXVI, 368, 384; XXXI, 55 SPEECHES: On the Unitarian Marriage Bill (4 May, 1824): XXXI, 55 On Roman Catholic Claims (5 May, 1825): XXVI, 368, 384 On Roman Catholic Relief (17 May, 1825): VI, 71; XXVI, 368, 384 On the Abolition of Slavery (7 Mar., 1826): XXVI, 368, 384 On the Dissenters' Marriages Bill (26 June, 1827): VI, 341 SCOTT, JOHN (1803-59): XV, 548 SCOTT, JOHN (Lord Encombe, later 2nd Lord Eldon) (1805-54): VI, 250 SCOTT, JOHN (Irish radical; fl. 1860): XV, 683 SCOTT, LOUISA MARY (nee Anwyl) (d. 1812): XXXII, 45 SCOTT, ROBERT. Greek-English Lexicon. See Liddell SCOTT, WALTER (1771-1832): I, 19-21 (18-20), 151, 320, 472, 481, 525-6, 565; II, 392; VI, 356; XII, 112, 357; XVI, 1475; XVIII, 108, 112; XX, 184, 221, 226; XXII, 331-3; XXIII, 343, 436-8; XXIV, 760; XXVI, 415, 436-7; XXXII, 227 "Amadis de Gaul, [translations] by Southey and by Rose": I, 309q The Bride of Lammermoor. XXII, 333; XXIII, 556q Guy Mannering: XXII, 332 The Heart of Mid-lothian: XIX, 375q; XXII, 332 Ivanhoe: VI, 3; XX, 184, 226

Schreiber - Seeker

349

A Legend ofMontrose: XXII, 332 The Life of Napoleon Buonaparte: I, 99n, 135 (134); XII, 21-2, 24; XIX, 613q; XX, 53-110 rev, 66-99q passim, 109n q Marmion: I, 526 Old Mortality: VI, 3; XX, 57, 164 The Pirate: XXII, 332 Poetical Works (Longman, et al., 1820): XVI, 1475 Redgauntlet: XXIII, 647q Rob Roy: VI, 402q; XXI, 92q; XXXI, 364q Thoughts on the Proposed Change of Currency (by "Malachi Malagrowther"): IV, 116 The Vision of Don Roderick: XXXI, 366n q Waverley: XX, 55, 164; XXII, 333 Woodstock: XXII, 333 SCOTT, WALTER FRANCIS (Duke of Buccleuch) (1806-84): XXIX, 438, 459 SCOTUS, DUNS. See Duns Scotus SCOTUS ERIGENA. See Johannes Scotus SCROPE, GEORGE JULIUS POULETT (1797-1876): XXII, 248-50; XXIII, 736; XXIV, 911-13, 923-6, 928, 942-5, 991, 1004-7, 1069-73 "The Edinburgh Review and Mr. Poulett Scrope": XXIV, 923, 926 How Is Ireland to Be Governed?: XXIV, 1013q, 1014-15 Letter to Lord John Russell (20 Oct., 1846): XXIV, 911-12 q, 913, 923 Letter to Lord John Russell (7 Dec., 1846): XXIV, 999 Letter to the Editor of the Morning Chronicle (9 Dec., 1846): XXIV, 991-3q, 1004 Letter to the Editor of the Morning Chronicle (14 Dec., 1846): XXIV, 1004-7, 1005q Letter to the Editor of the Morning Chronicle (17 Mar., 1847): XXIV, 1069-73, 1070q - Letters to the Right Hon. Lord John Russell, on the Expediency of Enlarging the Irish Poor-Law: XXIV, 911, 923, 942-5, 978-9, 991-2 "The Political Economists": XXII, 248-50 "Poor-Laws in Ireland": XXIV, 942-5, 942-3q Principles of Political Economy: XXIV, 893 Speech on the New Colony (30 June, 1834): XXIII, 736 Speech on Waste Lands (Ireland) (28 Apr., 1846): XXIV, 911 Seances et Travaux de I'Academic des Sciences Morales et Politiques: XXXII, 130 S£BASTIANI, FRANCOIS HORACE BASTIEN, COMTE (1772-1851): XII, 61; XXII, 203; XXffl, 351,700 Letter to the Belgian Government (25 Jan., 1831): XXII, 250 SECKER, ISAAC ONSLOW (1799-1861): XXV, 1139-41

350

Index of Persons and Works

SECRETAN, JOHN JAMES (author; fl. 1824): XXXII, 4 SECRETARY TO THE BOARD OF CONTROL. LETTERS TO: XXXII, 87-9, 94, 101-2, 112 SEDGWICK, ADAM (1785-1873): XXVII, 534 A Discourse on the Studies of the University: I, 209 (208); X, 33-74 rev, 36-45q, 48-52q, 57-72q, 494; XII, 235, 238, 245; XIII, 429 Four Letters to the Editors of the Leeds Mercury: X, 36n "The Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation": XIII, 677-8 SEDGWICK, CATHERINE MARIA (1789-1867): XII, 343, 349 SEDGWICK, ROBERT (d. 1656): XXI, 92 SEELEY, ROBERT BENTON (1798-1866) (prob.). "Whig Foreign Policy": XXIII, 691 SEELY, CHARLES (1803-87). Speech on Supply (1 Mar., 1866): XXVIII, 119-20 SfiGUR, Louis PHILIPPE, COMTE DE (1753-1830): I, 310 SfiGUR, PHILIPPE PAUL, COMTE DE (1780-1873): XXIII, 365 SEKUNDER (Begum of Bhopal) (1816-68): XVII, 1687 SELBY, W.B. (of the Indian Navy; fl. 1856): XXXII, 93 SELDEN, JOHN (1584-1654): VI, 16; XXII, 282 SELIM PASHA (fl. 1854): XIV, 136 SELWYN, CHARLES JASPER (1813-69). Speech on the Bankruptcy Acts Repeal Bill (4 June, 1867): XXVIII, 187 SEMIRAMIS (of Assyria) (fl. 800 B.C.): I, 438 SENECA, Lucius ANNAEUS (ca. 3 B.C.-65 A.D.): X, 136n SENEFELDER, ALOIS (1771-1834): XXXI, 38 SENHOUSE, JOSEPH POCKLINGTON (1804-74): XXVII, 540, 548 SENIOR, MR. (bookseller; fl. 1840): XIII, 445 SENIOR, NASSAU WILLIAM (1790-1864): II, 347-8, 400; III, 620, 712, 1064; XII, 147, 234,248-9, 268, 310, 334; XIII, 541,709; XIV, 31, 35,241, 337; XV, 720, 807, 850, 920; XVI, 1431; XVII, 1969; XXII, 216, 218, 327; XXIII, 744; XXIV, 766, 775-6, 778, 923, 930; XXXII, 17, 19 LETTERS TO: XVII, 1955; XXXII, 47, 124-5, 244 Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville with Nassau William Senior from 1834-1859: XXXII, 124 "France, America, and Britain," Edinburgh Review, LXXV (Apr. 1842), 1-48: XIII, 701 "Grounds and Objects of the Budget": XIII, 481, 483 *An Introductory Lecture on Political Economy: XXXII, 19 "Ireland": XIII, 619 "J.S. Mill on Political Economy": II, 37n q "The Law of Nations," Edinburgh Review, LXXVII (Apr. 1843), 303-73: XIII, 701 A Letter to Lord Howick, on a Legal Provision for the Irish Poor: XXIV, 775

Secretan - Seymour

351

"Letter... on the Third Report. . . into the Condition of the Poor in Ireland" (PP): XXIV, 993 On National Property: XXIV, 753-9 rev, 753-8q, 763-7 rev and q *An Outline of the Science of Political Economy: III, 843-4, 846, 1043; XII, 295 "Proposals for Extending the Irish Poor Law": XXIV, 923, 930 "Report—On the State of Agriculture": IV, 151n-2n Statement of the Provision for the Poor, and of the Condition of the Labouring Classes, in a Considerable Portion of America and Europe: II, 236n q, 286-7q, 347-50q; XXIV, 774-6 rev, 775q Suggestions on Popular Education: XXXII, 124-5 Three Lectures on the Cost of Obtaining Money: III, 616; XXXII, 19 Three Lectures on the Rate of Wages: XXII, 216-18q Three Lectures on the Transmission of the Precious Metals from Country to Country: XXXII, 19 Three Lectures on the Value of Money: III, 522q Two Lectures on Population: XXXII, 19 SERGEANT, LEWIS (1841-1902). LETTER TO: XVII, 1908-9 SERMON, THOMAS (master of Bideford workhouse; fl. 1850): XXV, 1152q SERTORIUS, QUINTUS (d. 72 B.C.): XX, 237 SERVAN, JOSEPH MICHEL ANTOINE (1737-1807): XX, 108 SETHds (fl. ca. 700 B.C.): X, 320n SETON, CHARLES (Earl of Dunfermline) (d. 1673): VI, 28 SETTELE, GIUSEPPE (d. 1841): XXII, 11 SEVENE, Louis (1758-1828): XXVI, 130 SEVERN, JOSEPH (1793-1879): XXXII, 43 SfviGNfi, MARIE DE RABUTIN CHANTAL, MARQUISE DE (1626-96): XX, 222n Lettres: XVIII, 181 SEWARD, WILLIAM HENRY (1801-72): XV, 765, 783 "Despatch to Mr. Adams" (27 Aug., 1866): XXVIII, 245-6 Letter to Lord Lyons (26 Dec., 1861): XXI, 130, 131n q SEWEL, WILLIAM (1654-1720). The History of the .. .People Called Quakers: 1,11(10), 555 SEWELL, WILLIAM (1804-74). "Carlyle's Works": XIII, 446 "Memorials of Oxford": XIII, 385 SEXTIUS, Lucius (fl. 375-368 B.C.): XX, 64-5 SEXTUS EMPIRICUS (fl. 2nd/3rd c. B.C.). Against the Logicians II: IX, 39-40 Outlines of Pyrrhonism: IX, 383n q SEYMOUR, FRANCIS (Baron) (15907-1664): VI, 14 SEYMOUR, HENRY DANBY (1820-77): XXXII, 87

352

Index of Persons and Works

SEYMOUR, WILLIAM (1st Marquis of Hertford) (1588-1660): VI, 53n, 55 SEYMOUR-CONWAY, FRANCIS CHARLES (3rd Marquis of Hertford) (1777-1842): XXII, 112 SGOUTAS, LEONIDAS (1820-78): XVI, 1096-7 SHADWELL, LANCELOT (1779-1850): VI, 370 SHAEN, WILLIAM (1821-87): I, 282n; XVI, 1367; XXI, 425, 427, 431-2 SHAFTESBURY, LORD. See Cooper, Anthony Ashley SHAH JEHAN (Begum of Bhopal) (1838-1901): XVII, 1687 SHAH SHUJA (King of Afghanistan) (17807-1842): XXXII, 60-1 SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM (1564-1616): 1,19 (78), 26,309,312,319-20,346-7,564;l\, 401; XIII, 450; XVI, 1475; XX, 134-5,567; XXI, 252, 302,414; XXIII, 426,464-6; XXVII, 651; XXVIII, 73; XXXI, 110 *As You Like It: XXIV, 827; XXVII, 499q; XXXI, 356q, 363q *Coriolanus: I, 386; XXV, 1263q *Cymbeline: XI, 284 *Hamlet: VI, lllq; VIII, 852; X, 7q; XI, 224q; XII, lOOq, 124q, 134q, 292q; XIII, 529q, 661; XVIII, 103n q; XX, 114, 122; XXII, 176q, 325q; XXIII, 393q, 466; XXIV, 1080q; XXXI, 110 *Henry IV, Part I: I, 435; XX, 145, 164; XXVIII, 89; XXXI, 110, 173-4 *Henry IV, Part II: I, 434q; VI, 132q; XX, 161, 164; XXIV, 792q, 942q, 970q *Henry the Eighth: VI, 152q; XXI, 414 *Julius Caesar: I, 213 (272); VI, 372q; XXVIII, 251q; XXXI, 59q *King John: I, 435 *King Lear: XI, 284, 285n q; XXVI, 343 *Love's Labour's Lost: XXII, 89q; XXIII, 577q ^Macbeth: 1,139 (138); VI, 161q; IX, 408-9; X, 139q; XII, 150q; XIV, 224; XX, 143, 145; XXII, 169q; XXIII, 462q, 466, 608q; XXVII, 596q, 649q ^Measure for Measure: I, 399, 401; VI, 440q; XXIII, 528q, 602q; XXIV, 764q *The Merchant of Venice: XXIII, 466 *A Midsummer Night's Dream: XX, 135q, 224q *0thello: I, 408n q, 473, 498; VI, 107q, 307q; VII, 314q; VIII, lllOq; XX, 145, 149; XXI, 55q; XXII, 297q; XXV, 1113q; XXVIII, 147q; XXIX, 378q *Romeo and Juliet: VIII, 852n; XXVIII, 245 *The Tempest: XXIII, 558 *Twelfth Night: IX, 464q; XX, 333q *The Two Noble Kinsmen: XXVI, 408 SHAPUR (SAPOR) I (of Persia) (A.D. 241-272): I, 438-9 SHARP, CHARLES (of the Liverpool Institute; fl. 1870). LETTER TO: XXXII, 222-3 SHARP, G.W. (fl. 1867). LETTER TO: XVI, 1275 SHARP, GRANVILLE (1735-1813): XXI, 141

Seymour - Shirreff

353

SHARPERS, MR. (tradesman dealing with JSM and HTM; fl. 1854): XIV, 150, 162, 169, 178 SHATTUCK, DAVID O. (of Mississippi; fl. 1841): XIII, 486 SHAW, CHARLES (1795-1871). Personal Memoirs and Correspondence: XVII, 1972; XXXI, 359-88 rev, 387-8q SHAW, JAMES JOHNSTON (1849-1910). LETTER TO: XXXII, 207 SHAW, T. GEORGE (brother of Charles): XXXI, 388 SHAW-LEFEVRE, GEORGE JOHN (1831-1928). SPEECHES: On the Alabama Claims (6 Mar., 1868): XXVIII, 245 On the Married Women's Property Bill (10 June, 1868): XXVIII, 284 On the Sea Fisheries Bill, Ireland (25 June, 1868): XXVIII, 299 SHAW-LEFEVRE, JOHN GEORGE (1797-1879): XIV, 203; XXIII, 743-4; XXIV, 776 SHEE, WILLIAM (1804-68): I, 133 (132) SHEIL, JUSTIN (1803-71): XXXII, 101 SHEIL, RICHARD LALOR (1791-1851): VI, 155-7; XXIII, 526 SHELBURNE, EARL OF. See Petty, William SHELLEY, JOHN (1771-1852): VI, 117n-18n; XXVII, 465 Speech on the Game Laws Amendment Bill (11 Mar., 1824): VI, 117q, 118 SHELLEY, JOHN VILLIERS (1808-67): XVI, 1072; XXV, 1212 SHELLEY, MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT (1797-1851). Frankenstein: XI, 348 SHELLEY, PERCY BYSSHE (1792-1822): 1,195 (194), 358-60, 363-4,413-14,467,497, 619,623; II, 392; III, 1030; XII, 336, 348; XIII, 448-9; XIV, 19,275, 302, 332; XVI, 1475, 1517; XXI, 233; XXIV, 1023 The Cenci: I, 363 Epipsychidion: I, 497q "Hymn to Intellectual Beauty": XXI, 254 "Ode to Liberty": XIV, 290q "Stanzas Written in Dejection, near Naples": XIV, 321q SHEPHERD, JOHN (1792-1859): XIV, 13, 181; XXX, 35; XXXII, 79 SHEPHERD, SAMUEL (1760-1840): XXI, 30-lq SHERIDAN, ELIZABETH ANN (nee Linley) (1754-92): I, 754 SHERIDAN, RICHARD BRINSLEY BUTLER (1751-1816): VI, 371 Speeches on Summing up the Evidence on the Second, or Begum Charge (3,6,10, and 13 June, 1788): XXVI, 420q SHERMAN, JOSIAH (of the Amnesty Committee; fl. 1869). LETTER TO: XVII, 1559 SHERMAN , WILLIAM TECUMSEH (1820-91): XV, 950 SHIEL, RICHARD. See Sheil, Richard The Shilling Magazine: XVI, 1037 SHIRREFF, EMILY (1814-97): XVI, 1481, 1490; XVII, 1619

354

Index of Persons and Works

SHIRREFF, PATRICK (fl. 1830). A Tour through North America: XVIII, 113n SHOBERL, FREDERICK (fl. 1830s), trans. History of the French Revolution, by Louis Adolphe Thiers: XX, 143n SHORT, BOB [pseud.] (fl. early 1800s). Twelve Short Standing Rules . . . at the Game of Whist: XXII, 109 Hoyle Abridged: A Treatise on Backgammon: XXII, 109 Hoyle Abridged: A Treatise on the Game of Chess: XXII, 109 SHORTER, THOMAS (1823-99): XV, 531 SHORTT, JOHN (1840-1932). LETTER TO: XVII, 1707 SHREWSBURY, EARL OF. See Talbot, Henry John SHRIVES, C. (of the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, fl. 1873). LETTER TO: XVII, 1951-2 SICARD, ROCH AMBROISE CUCURRON, ABB£ (1742-1822). Elemens de grammaire generate appliques a la langue franc.aise: XXVI, 199 SIDGWICK, HENRY (1838-1900). LETTERS TO: XXXII, 180-1, 185 The Ethics of Conformity and Subscription: XXXII, 180, 185 SIDMOUTH, LORD. See Addington, Henry SIDNEY, ALGERNON (1622-83): XX, 121; XXVI, 447 SIDNEY, PHILIP (1554-86): XXXI, 364 The Countesse of Pembrokes Arcadia (Ponsonbie, 1590): XVI, 1474 SIDNEY, ROBERT (Earl of Leicester) (1595-1677): VI, 32n SlEBENPFEIFFER, PHILIPP JAKOB (1789-1845): XII, 251

Le Siecle: XX, 303 Unheaded leader (29 Dec., 1846): II, 437; XXIV, 1043 SIEVES, EMMANUEL JOSEPH, COMTE (1748-1836): XII, 278; XX, 90, 96q, 106, 141; XXII, 141; XXIII, 520, 542 "Deliberations a prendre dans les assemblies de bailliages": XX, 141 Qu'est-ce que le tiers etat?: XX, 141q SIGNORELLI, LUCA (1441-1523): XIV, 288, 483 SILSEY, MR. (friend of D'Eichthal; fl. 1831): XII, 73 SIM, JOHN (ca. 1812-93): XXXI, 283 SIMEON, JOSEPH JEROME, COMTE (1749-1842): XXII, 199 SIMEON, RICHARD GODIN (1784-1854): XXVII, 569, 574 SIMIOT, ALEXANDRE ETIENNE (1807-78?). Reforme de notre systeme d'election (Bordeaux: Gounouilhou, 1862): XV, 955 SIMON OF TOURNAI (fl. 1184-1200): XX, 248q SIMON, EDOUARD THOMAS (1740-1818): XXII, 317 SIMON, JULES (1814-96): XV, 972; XVI, 1224; XVII, 1694. LETTERS TO: XVI, 1401-2 L'ouvriere: XVII, 1700 SIMOND, Louis (1767-1831). "France": I, 301-2q

Shirreff- Smalley

355

SIMONIDES (of Ceos) (ca. 557-468/7 B.C.): XI, 315n; XIII, 387; XIV, 428; XXVIII, 229 "Human Imperfection": XI, 54q SIMPSON, GEORGE (1792-1860): XIII, 386 SIMPSON, JOHN (1788-1873): I, 154 SIMPSON, RICHARD (witness; fl. 1825). Evidence on the Disturbances in Ireland (PP): VI, 89n SIMPSON, THOMAS (1710-61). The Doctrine and Applications of Fluxions: I, 564; XII, 8 Select Exercises for Young Proficients in the Mathematicks: I, 568; XII, 8 A Treatise of Algebra: I, 562; XII, 8 SIMSON, ROBERT (1687-1768): XXVI, 352, 357 *Sectionum conicarum: I, 561; XII, 7 SINCLAIR, GEORGE (1790-1868). Speech on the East-India Company's Charter (17 July, 1833): XXIII, 606 SINDHIA, DAULAT RAO (Maharajah of Sind) (1780-1827): XXXII, 28 SINDIA, JIAJI RAO (Maharaja of Gwalior) (1835-86): XXX, 152 SING, GOPAL (sub-inspector of schools, North-West Provinces; fl. 1856): XXX, 148 SINNETT, FREDERICK (1831-66): XIV, 133. LETTER TO: XV, 541-2 SISMONDI, JEAN CHARLES LEONARD SIMONDE DE (1773-1842): II, 67n, 371; III, 570, 574, 576, 741, 869, 922; XIV, 91; XXIV, 951, 988-91, 1008, 1011 Etudes sur I'economicpolitique: II, 227n-8n q, 254-6q, 298-300q, 31 ln-12n q; XIV, 91; XXIV, 951, 988q, 990q, 1011 -HistoiredesFranc,ais: I, 99n; XX, 15-52 rev, 20-Iq, 30-Iq, 34nq, 39q, 40n-ln q, 45q, 49q, 50n q, 276 *Histoire des republiques italiennes du moyen age: XIV, 133, 144, 273, 484 -Nouveauxprincipes d'economic politique: II, 256n q, 284-5q, 31 Inq, 348n-9n q, 369q; V, 718; XIV, 91; XXIV, 988-9q Tableau de I'agriculture toscane (Geneva: Paschoud, 1801): XIV, 484 SIWARD (Earl of Northumberland) (d. 1055): XX, 24 Sketches and Eccentricities of Colonel David Crockett (Rich, 1834): XII, 357 SKINNER, ROBERT (Bishop of Oxford) (1591-1670): VI, 39 SKIPPON, PHILIP (d. 1660): VI, 48 SLACK, HENRY JAMES (1818-96): I, 282n; XIV, 57, 61-2, 65-6 SLANEY, ROBERT AGLIONBY (1791-1862): III, 786, 904n; V, 407-16e, 418-29e SLATER, ABRAHAM (b. 1765): XXIV, 925 SLATER, PHILIP (warehouse pensioner of the EIC; fl. 1850s): XXXII, 86 SLEEMAN, WILLIAM HENRY (1788-1856). Rambles and Recollections of an Indian Official: XI, 288n, 290n SLIDELL, JOHN (1793-1871): I, 267-8; XXI, 130 SMALLEY, GEORGE WASHBURN( 1833-1916). LETTERS TO: XVII, 1541-2; XXXII, 201-2 "The English Elections": XVII, 1541

356

Index of Persons and Works

[SMALLEY] "The Lesson of the English Elections": XVII, 1541 SMART, BENJAMIN HUMPHREY (17867-1872). An Outline of Sematology: VII, 115n q; XXIII, 425-7 rev, 429-35 rev, 432-3q SMILES, SAMUEL (1812-1904). "Workmen's Benefit Societies": XXVIII, 29 SMITH, ADAM (1723-90): II, 4-5, 7, 29, 66, 116n, 127-8, 138-9, 162n, 349n, 405; III, 456,465n, 472-3, 579-81, 592, 597, 642, 648, 733-5, 753, 830, 833, 923,1044; IV, 25-7, 29-30, 32, 37, 149, 214-15, 395; V, 411, 718; VI, 130; VIII, 782; X, 21, 26, 150,290,305; XI, 247,469; XII, 264; XIII, 638,643,659; XIV, 93; XVII, 1812; XXI, 65; XXII, 323; XXVII, 657 *Essays on Philosophical Subjects: X, 288q *An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations: I, 31 (30), 242, 569; II, 116-18q, 122q, 124-6q, 300-lq, 349n, 380-92q, 404q; III, 733-4q, 805-6q, 924-5q, 932q, 1044; IV, 26-7, 163-4, 164q, 168-9, 174, 177-80, 238q, 293q, 300q, 301, 312, 367; V, 657q, 758; VIII, 805; XI, 439; XIII, 626, 631, 642, 708; XXI, 65; XXIV, 755q; XXXII, 219 *"Of the External Senses": XI, 253q *"The Principles Which Lead and Direct Philosophical Enquiries; Illustrated by the History of Astronomy": XXI, 25q *The Theory of Moral Sentiments: XXI, 13; XXXI, 230-1; XXXII, 193 SMITH, ALEXANDER (commission agent; fl. 1849): XXV, 1139-41 SMITH, GOLDWIN (1823-1910): I, 281n-2n; III, 1075n; XV, 820, 828, 909; XVI, 1192, 1206, 1222, 1416; XXVIII, 130-3 passim; XXXII, 145. LETTER TO: XVI, 1404-5 The Empire: XV, 784, 965; XXXII, 145 "England and America": XV, 809-10, 820, 828; XXVIII, 130 "The Prospects of Peace in America": XVI, 994 — Speech at the Union League Club, New York City (12 Nov., 1864): XV, 974 War Ships for the Southern Confederacy: XXXII, 142 SMITH, HENRY (of Taunton; fl. 1820s). Speech at a Public Meeting (30 Jan., 1826): IV, 129n q SMITH, HENRY BOYNTON (1815-77). "Mill's Examination of Hamilton's Philosophy": IX, civ, 58n q, 187n q SMITH, JAMES EDWARD (1759-1828): XXXI, 259 The English Flora: XII, 67-8; XIV, 361; XXXI, 278, 282 Flora Britannica: XXVII, 472, 495 SMITH, JOHN (1580-1631). Advertisements for the Unexperienced Planters of New England, or Anywhere: VI, 447q SMITH, JOHN (1767-1842). Speech on the Currency (15 Feb., 1826): IV, 109q Speech on the Ministerial Plan of Parliamentary Reform (4 Mar., 1831): XXIV, 790q SMITH, JOHN ABEL (1801-71): V, 416-20e, 422-8e; XXVII, 460 Motion on the Sale of Liquors on Sunday Bill (27 Mar., 1867): XXVIII, 191

Smalley - Smith

357

SMITH, JOHN ORRIN (1799-1843): XII, 387 SMITH, JOHN PYE (1774-1851): VI, 480 SMITH, JOSEPH (1805-44): XVIII, 290; XXVII, 667 SMITH, JOSHUA TOULMIN (1816-69). LETTER TO: XXXII, 167 SMITH, LEVESON (ca. 1802-27): 1,130 SMITH, MARTIN TUCKER (1803-80): V, 516e; XIV, 181 SMITH, N.S. (fl. 1820), trans. The Expedition of Cyrus into Persia, by Xenophon: XX, 222-3q SMITH, OCTAVIUS HENRY (1796-1871): XVI, 1228 SMITH, RICHARD (translator; fl. 1835): XIII, 369 SMITH, RICHARD BAIRD (1818-61). Revenue Reports of the Ganges Canal for the Year 1855-56: XXX, 128 SMITH, ROBERT (Baron Carrington) (1752-1838): XXVII, 488 SMITH, ROBERT VERNON (Baron Lyveden) (1800-73): 1,130; XIV, 413 SMITH, RUSSELL (bookseller; fl. 1840): XIII, 438 SMITH, SAMUEL (1587-1620). Aditus ad logicam: I, 21 (20), 567; IX, 414q; XII, 8 SMITH, SYDNEY (1771-1845): XIII, 655; XIV, 431 Ballot (Longman, etal., 1839): XIV, 227 "Bentham's Book of Fallacies": VI, 331 "Female Education": XI, 275n-6n q; XXI, 401n q "The Game Laws": VI, 112q "Ireland": I, 306 "Madame d'Epinay": I, 309q Speech at Taunton (12 Oct., 1831): VI, 383 "Travellers in America": I, 300 "Walcheren Expedition": I, 308 SMITH, THOMAS (of Nottingham; fl. 1872). LETTER TO: XVII, 1910-12 The Law of the Revolution: XVII, 1910-11 SMITH, THOMAS SOUTHWOOD (1788-1861): XII, 211 "Education": I, 96 "The Factories": I, 602 SMITH, VERNON. See Smith, Robert Vernon SMITH, WILLIAM (1756-1835). Speech on Trade with India (15 May, 1827): XXX, 3 SMITH, WILLIAM (1813-93). LETTER TO: XXXII, 170 , ed. Plato: The Apology of Socrates, the Crito, andPartofthePhaedo: XI, 241-3 rev SMITH, WILLIAM (police constable; fl. 1869): XVII, 1677-9, 1705-6; XXV, 1221; XXXII, 217-18 SMITH, WILLIAM HENRY (1808-72): XII, 293; XIII, 511. LETTERS TO: XV, 542; XVII, 1997

358

Index of Persons and Works

[SMITH, W.H.]

Athelwold (Edinburgh: Blackwood, 1842): XIII, 511-12; XVII, 1997 — *A Discourse on Ethics of the School ofPaley (Pickering, 1839): XIII, 511 "J.S. Mill on Our Belief in the External World": IX, civ, 201nq, 240,244q;XVI, 1147 "The Poets of Our Age, Considered as to Their Philosophic Tendencies," London and Westminster Review, III & XXV (Apr. 1836): XII, 303 Remarks on Law Reform: XIII, 511; XXI, 81-4 rev, 83r4q *Thorndale (Edinburgh: Blackwood, 1857): XV, 542 "The Visible and Tangible": XVII, 2003 SMITH, WILLIAM HENRY (1825-91): I, 275, 289; XVI, 1050, 1067, 1072, 1085, 1495, 1497, 1522, 1526, 1531; XVII, 1541; XXVIII, 15, 25-6,40-1, 44-5, 336, 339, 348, 369 SMITZIO, MR. (London agent; fl. 1872). LETTER TO: XVII, 1877-8 SMOLLETT, TOBIAS GEORGE (1721-71). The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle: VI, 160 A History of England: XXII, 45 SMYTHE, MR. (fl. 1859): XXXII, 118 SNELL, THOMAS GEORGE (fl. 1868): XVII, 1716-17 SNEYD, ELIZABETH and HONORA. See Edgeworth SNOOKE, WILLIAM DREW (1787-1857). Flora Vectiana: XXVII, 588-9, 592 SOAMES, JAMES (fl. 1868): XVI, 1489 The Social Economist: XVI, 1425 SOCIETY FOR THE DIFFUSION OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE. Reports and Prospectus: XXII, 243 SOCRATES (469-399 B.C.): I, 49 (48), 115 (114); VIII, 938; IX, 45n, 129-30,484, 502; X, 16, 90, 205, 212, 276, 422, 441-2; XI, 39-238p