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INDEX.

Abeunt studia in mores, 24, 95.
abjured all the rights of citizens,
108.

ablest pens, 92.

Abridgment of the History of Eng-
land, xxii, lxvi.

abrogation of Charter of Massa-

chusetts, see Massachusetts.
abstract liberty, 92.

abstract theories, Burke's oppo-
sition to, see theories.
Acadia, 119.

Account of the European Settle-

ments in America, xxii, lxvi,
lxx, 80, 81.

Achaeans, IOI.

Ackland, Mr., 85.

Act of Union, 88.

acta parentum, etc., 14, 87.

Acts, 100.

Acts of Navigation, see Naviga-
tion Acts.

Adams, John, president, lxix.
adaptation of government to tem-
per and circumstances, see tem-
per and circumstances.
Addison, Joseph, x.

Address to the King, xlix, liii, lxviii,

91, 99, IOI, 104.

addresses to the king, 8, 85, 106.
Admiral Hosier's Ghost, Glover,
87.

admiralty, courts of, lxiii, 60, 121.
Adolphus, History of England
from the Accession to the Decease
of George the Third, xiii, lxxi.
adventitious, 82.

advocate for the sovereignty of
Parliament, 122.

advocates and panegyrists, 101.
Eneid, 89, 101, 126.
Africa, xlix, 17, 32, 89.
African trade, 12, 87.
against the superior, 104.
Age of Reason, Paine, lxix.
agents for the colonies, see colony
agents.

agitation over the Stamp Act, see

Stamp Act.

agriculture of the colonies, lviii, 16.
Aix-la-Chapelle, Peace of, 119.
Algiers, li, 25, 96.

Ali, Hyder, ravages of, xxxv, 1.
all in all, 126.

all Ireland, III.
Alleghanies, 99.

altered the religion, 112.
altered the succession, 112.
America, English opinion of, xiii.
American Antiquarian Society,
xxx, lxxi.

American Committee, see Chair.
American Commonwealth, James
Bryce, see Bryce.

American Congress, see Congress;
Journals of, See Journals of the
American Congress.
American financiers, 39, 109.
American imports, duties on, see
imports.

American love of freedom, 1, lviii,

19-25.

American Mutiny. Act, 107.
American revenue impossible, see

revenue.

American Revolution, John Fiske,
see Fiske.

American Taxation, Speech on,
see Speech, etc.

Americans, descendants of Eng-
lishmen, 19-21.
Analogy, Butler, see Butler.
Anarchy is found tolerable, 98.
ancient commonwealths, 92.
And the rude swain, etc., see rude
swain.

Andrews, E. B., History of the

United States, xii, lxxi.
Anglesey, 114.
Angola, 32.

Anne, Queen, xi, 87.
Annual Register, v, xiii, xx, lxxii,
79, 80, 81, 83, 85, 88, 89, 94, 98,
108, 113, 114, 120; Burke's con-
nection with, xxii, lxvi, lxx, lxxi.
Anstey, Christopher, New Bath
Guide, xi.

antechamber of the noble lord,
124.

Anti-Jacobin, lxix.

Antiquarian Society, American,
see American, etc.
anti-slavery movement, xi.
Antoinette, Marie, Burke's de-
scription of, xlix, liii.

Appalachian Mountains, 29, 99.
Appeal from the New to the Old
Whigs, xxxvii, xlii, lxix, 112,

117.

Arabia, li, 25.

Arbuthnot, Dr., 102.
archers, 113.

Arcot, Speech on the Nabob of
Arcot's Debts, see Speech, etc.
Arginusae, battle of, 101.
Argumentation, Principles of, see
Baker.

Aristophanes, 101.
Aristotle, 63, 81, 123.
arm is not shortened, 115.
Armada, III.

as broad and general as the air,
93.

as great and as flagrant, 120.
Asia, xlix.

assemblies, colonial, dissolved, xix,
26, 107; form of, 21, 92, 93;
their competency, Ixii, 53.
atheism, Burke's dread of, xxvii,
xxviii.

Athenaid, Glover, 87.

attack upon judiciary, see judi-
ciary.

attorney-general, 119.

auction of finance, lvii, 8, 65, 84,
see also ransom by auction.
auspicate, 126.

auspicious, 88.

austerity of the Chair, 79.
Austrian family, III.
aversion from, 93.

Bacon, Francis, liv, 95; Essay on,
Macaulay, see Macaulay.
Baker, G. P., Principles of Argu-
mentation, lvi.

Bancroft, George, History of the
United States, v, xii, lxxi, 79,
86, 99, 101, 102, 110, 113, 120,

121.

bar, 87.

Barclay, David, 124.
Barré, Colonel, xvi.

Barrington, Daines, 48, 114.
Barry, James, befriended by
Burke, xl.

barter and compromise, see com-
promise.

Bath Guide, New, Christopher
Anstey, see Anstey.
Bathurst, Lord, 14, 87.
Beaconsfield, xlviii; Burke's pur-
chase of, xxiv, lxvii; Lord, title
to have been given to Burke,
xxxix.

Bee, Goldsmith, lxvi.

before the committee, 124.
beggar subjects into submission,
31.

Bengal, xlviii, 71; famine, 125.
Bentham, Jeremy, xliv.
Bible, 81, 87, 88, 95, 99, 100, 107,
108, 113, 115, 116, 117, 123, 126,
127; Burke's quotations from,
liii.

Birmingham, xiv.

Birrell, Augustine, Obiter Dicta,
Second Series, xxii, lxxi.
Black Hole of Calcutta, lxvi.
Blackstone, Sir William, Commen-
taries, lxvii, 23, 94.
Blake, William, lxvi, lxviii.
blind usages, 92.

blown about by every wind of

fashionable doctrine, see wind.
blue ribbon, 84.

Bolingbroke, Lord, lxv, lxvi.

Bonaparte, Napoleon, Italian cam-
paign, lxix; puts down rising of
13th Vendémiaire, lxix.

Book of Common Prayer, see Com-
mon Prayer.

books of curious science, 31, 100.
Boston, xviii, 94, 98; Massacre,
xviii, lxvii; motion to withdraw
troops from, see Chatham; Port
Bill, xviii, lxii, lxvii, 58, 59, 68,
102, 106, 120; Tea Party, see
Tea Party.

Boswell's Life of Johnson, ix, xxiii,

xli, lxix, lxxi.
boundaries, 83.
Brazil, 17.

break the American spirit, 91.
Breton, Cape, see Cape.
Brissot's Address, Preface to, see
Preface, etc.

Bristol chooses Burke as repre-
sentative, xxviii, lxvii; refuses
to reëlect Burke, xxx, lxviii.
British Eloquence, Select, C. A.
Goodrich, see Goodrich.
British strength, 91.

broad and general as the air, see
as broad.

Brougham, Lord, Inquiry into the
Colonial Policy of the European
Powers, li; Statesmen of the
Time of George the Third, lxxi,
84.
Brusa, li, 25.

Bryce, James, American Common-
wealth, 93.

Buckle, H. T., History of Civiliza-

tion in Europe, lxxi.
Bunker Hill, battle of, lxvii.
burgesses, 46, 50, 51, 114.

Burgoyne, General, 90, 91.

Burke, Edmund, a troublesome
colleague, xxxiii; accused of
dishonesty, xxiii, xxiv, xxxiii ;
acquaintance with literature, liii,
liv; acquaintance with the clas-
sics, liv; advocates economical
reform, xxxii; advocates reform
in India, xxxiii-xxxv, xxxviii,
xlii; agent for New York, xxx,
lxvii, lxxi; aim at utilitarian
effect, xliv, xlv; appeals to love
of right, xlii; arrival in London,
lxv; attitude in the Wilkes con-
test, xxiv, xxv; attitude toward
America, xxx-xxxii, xxxviii;
attitude toward Ireland, xxix,
Xxxviii, xxxix, xlii; attitude
toward parliamentary reform,
xxvi, xxxii; attitude toward
the French Revolution, xxxvi,
Xxxvii, xxxviii; birth, xx, lxv;
college life, xx, xxi, lxv; com-
mended by Chatham, xxiii;
conservatism, xxvi, xxvii, xxxii,
xxxiv, xxxvii, xlv, xlvi, 51, 117;
Correspondence, xx, xxi, xxii,
xxv, xxvi, xxvii, xxviii, xl, xlii,
lxx, 79, 96; dies, xxxix, lxix;
dread of atheism, xxvii, xxviii;
efforts to keep the Rocking-
ham Whigs united, xxvi, xxvii;
elected member for Bristol,
xxviii, lxvii; elected to Parlia-
ment, xxiii, lxvii, 80; enthusiasm
for study, xxi; establishes school
for children of French émigrés,
x1; excluded from cabinet, xxxiii;
failure to control temper, xxxiii;
faults, xli; friendship with Dr.
Johnson, ix, xl, xli; gradua-
tion from college, lxv; grief

over death of son, xli; improvi-
dence, xxiv; in Ireland, xxii,
lxvi; in London, xxi, xxii, xxxiii;
in the Literary Club, x, xxiii,
lxvii; indebted to Rockingham,
xxiv; independent of constitu-
ents, xxix, xxx; liberality, xliii,
xliv; life of, xix-xli; loses seat
at Bristol, xxx, lxviii; love of
justice, xlii; marriage, xli, lxvi;
member for Wendover, xxiii,
lxvii, 80; method of construct-
ing paragraphs, liv, lv; method of
quoting, liv; offered Indian com-
missionership, xxvi; opposed to
commercial restriction, xxix; op-
posed to theories, xxxii, xxxiv,
xliv, xlv, lvii, 9, 57; opposed to
use of force, XXV, XXX, xxxiv,
lviii, 17, 18, 31, 32, 100, 101;
oratory, xlvi-xlix; Paymaster of
the Forces, xxxiii, lxviii; person-
ality, xxxix, xl; philanthropy,
xl; political tracts, xxiii; power
of his imagination, xlii, xlviii,
1, lii; prosecution of Hastings,
XXXV, xxxvi, xxxix, xliii, xlvii,
lxviii, lxix; purchase of Bea-
consfield, xxiv, lxvii; quarrels
with Fox, xxxvi, lxix; quarrels
with Hamilton, xxii; quarrels
with Sheridan, lxix; receives a
pension, xxxix; relations with
Richard and William Burke,
xxiv, xxxiii; reliance on expe-
rience, xlv, lviii, lxi, 18, 41, 57,
65; religion, xx; retires from
Parliament, xxxix, lxix; school
days, xx; secretary to Lord
Rockingham, xxiii, lxvii; Select
Works, edited by E. J. Payne,

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