vi, xlvi, li, lxx, 81, 92, 93, 95, Burke, Richard, son of Edmund, Burke, William, xxiv, xxxiii. but three ways, 99. Bute ministry, lxvi. Byron, Lord, born, lxviii. Calcutta, Black Hole of, see Black Cambridge arsenal, 113. Candide, Voltaire, lxvi. Canute, 95. Cape Breton, 54, 119. Carlyle, Thomas, birth, lxix. Carnarvon, 114. Carolinas, effects of slavery there, Casius, Mount, 37. Castle of Otranto, Walpole, lxvii. Catholic Question, Letters on, see Cato, Addison, 107. Cause of the Present Discontents, Century Dictionary, 83. Chair of the American Committee, 81. changed the people, 112. character and circumstances of cumstances. chargeable, 100. charity, Roman, see Roman charity. Charles the First, 112. Charles the Second, 112, 122. Charleston, xviii. Charlestown, 113. Charter of Massachusetts abro- gated, see Massachusetts. complexions, 90. compromise and barter, 62, 122, 123. Comus, 109, 116. Conciliation, Speech on, see Speech, etc. Conclusion of the Poll, Speech at, see Speech, etc. confidence of the colonies in the mother country, see unsuspect- confident, 98. confound the innocent, 124. Congress, xix, lxvii, 83, 86; com- protests against Stamp Act, xv. Constitution of the United States, Constitution of the year III, lxix. Contrat Social, lxvi. converting ill-will into delinquency, 41. Cook, A. S., editor, Speech on Con- 121. cords of man, 123. Cornwall, Mr., 98. Cornwallis surrenders, lxviii. Correspondence, Burke's, xx, xxi, County Palatine, see Palatine. Crimea, li, 25, 96. criminal prosecution of the colo- Damiata, 37. D'Arblay, Madame, lxviii; descrip- Davis Strait, 16. day-star of the English Constitu- de facto, 122. de jure, 122. De minimis non curat lex, 86. debts of the colonies, 56. deceive the burden of life, 14, Declaration of Independence, lxviii, 86, 97. Declaration of Right, 118. declaring a rebellion, see Massa- Decline and Fall of the Roman Delaware, xv. delicate, 80. deposed kings, 112. descendants of Englishmen, lviii, description, 116. Deserted Village, Goldsmith, lxvii. Dictionary of National Biography, xx, lxxi, 79, 84, 87, 94, 97, 102. disarm New England, 113. Discourses on Revenue and Trade, Davenant, 87. Discovery of the True Causes, Davies, III. disgrace and a burden, 112. disherisons, 114. disreputably, 81. dissidence of dissent, 22. dissolution of provincial assem- divide et impera, 82. Dodsley's Annual Register, see drawing up an indictment against Dunmore, Governor, suspends Dunning, Mr., 124. Duration of Parliaments, Speech Durham an example for dealing during good behavior, 120. Ease would retract, etc., 70, 125. Speech on, see Speech, etc. Ecclesiastical Polity, Hooker, see Eclogues, Virgil, 88. economical reforms, xxxii. Economical Reform, Speech on the Plan, see Speech, etc. Edmund Burke: a Historical Study, John Morley, xli, lxx. education of the colonists, lviii, 23, 24. Edward the First in Wales, 44, II2. Edward the Third, act of, defining rebellion, 105. Elizabeth, Queen, attempts to England, France declares war England from the Accession to the England in the Eighteenth Cen- tury, History of, W. E. H. Lecky, England, social condition, ix-xii. see Thackeray. English Men of Letters, see Mor- English opinion of America, xiii. Esprit des Lois, Montesquieu, lxv. Essay on Chatham, Macaulay, Essay on Man, Pope, lxv, 96. eternal debt, see immense. European Settlements in America, evangelical movement, see Metho- Evelina, Madame D'Arblay, lxviii. ever-growing, eternal debt, see ex vi termini, 34, 103. experience, Burke's reliance on, 124. exploded, 100. export trade of England, 11-15. Falkland Island, 16, 89. Fielding, Henry, x, lxv, lxvi. Committee, see Chair, etc. First Letter on a Regicide Peace, xliv, 91, 93, 108. first lords of trade, see lord, etc. fisheries of the colonies, lviii, 16, 17, 67, 79, 88, 89. Fiske, John, American Revolution, force, Burke's opposition to, xxv, |