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of, 506, reduction of, by the Romans, 512, fall of the
Roman power in, 518, settlement of the Saxons in, 522.
British colonists in North America, address to, ii. 401.
See AMERICAN COLONIES.

Building, the sublime in, i. 43: management of light in,

45.

Burgh, Thos., Burke's letter to, vindicating his conduct on
Irish affairs, ii. 407.
BURKE, EDMUND-

Difficulties attendant upon the formation of a just
opinion of his character, ii.

His birth and early life, ib.
His social habits, iv, lxxi.

His first poetical effort, iv.

His first political production, v.

Letters to his friends, upon his arrival in the metro-
polis, vi.

His application for the logic chair in the Glasgow
University, ib.

His contributions to the periodicals, vii.

His" Vindication of Natural Society," vii, and vol.
i. 3.

His essay on the "Sublime and Beautiful," vii, lxxiv,
and vol. i. 22.

His marriage, vii.

Various literary works undertaken by him, viii.
Becomes secretary to Mr. Hamilton, ix.

Obtained a pension, but relinquished it, to preserve

his independence, ix.

His generosity to Barry, x.

Becomes secretary to the Marquis of Rockingham, xii.
His first speech in parliament, xiii.

His activity in the ranks of the opposition, xv.
Appointed agent to the State of New York, ib.

His opposition to Pitt's policy in relation to America,

xvi.

Elected representative for Bristol, ib.

His propositions for American reconciliation, xvii.
Absents himself, with the Marquis of Rockingham's
party, from parliament, xviii.

His liberal policy for Ireland, ib.

His advocacy of economical reform, xix.

His defence before the electors of Bristol, xxi.

Joins the Marquis of Rockingham's second adminis-
tration, xxii.

Resigns his office, upon the death of the Marquis of
Rockingham, xxii, and joins the opposition, xxiii.
Joins the coalition ministry, xxiii, and goes out of
office with it, xxiv.

His preparation of, and speech on, the India Bill, xxiii.
Elected Lord Rector of the Glasgow University, xxiv.
His speech on the Nabob of Arcot's debts, xxv, lxxvii.
His prosecution of Governor-General Hastings, xxv,
lxxvii, extraordinary difficulties attendant upon this
undertaking, xxv, his extraordinary perseverance,
and the purity of his motives, xxvi, xxvii.
His opposition to Pitt's Regency bill, xxviii.
His views of the French revolution, xxviii, xxxiv.
His opposition to the repeal of the test and corpora-
tion acts, xxx.

His eulogy on Sir Joshua Reynolds, ib.

Death of his only son, xxxv, its effect on his health
and future life, xxxvi.

His death and funeral, xxxviii.

His will, xxxviii.

Elements of his intellectual character, xxxviii.
His powers of speculation and argument, xxxix.
His imagination, xl.

The variety and beauty of his illustrations, xli.
The vividness of his imagination, xliii, its effect on

his judgment and passions, xliv.

The extent and variety of his knowledge, xlv.
His conversational powers, xlvi.

The qualities of his wit, ib.
Peculiarities of his style, ib.

The measure of his political sagacity, xlviii, a passage
in the Edinburgh Review controverted, xlviii.
His alleged inconsistencies, xlix, lxxix, and vol. i. 501.
His abhorrence of abstract politics, liii, errors into
which this led him, lvi.

His inferiority as a political tactician, lvii.

His character as an orator, lviii, elements of oratorical
eloquence, lix.

Peculiarity of his speeches, lxi.

His qualifications as an historian, lxii.
His moral character, lxxi.

His benevolence and generosity, ib.

His simplicity and honesty, lxxii.

His imitation of Bolingbroke's style, lxxiv.
Remarks on his principal writings, lxxiii.

Animadversions on his theory of revolution, lxxxi.
Vindication of his public conduct, i. 256, ii. 260, and

of his pension, ii. 258.

Burke, Richard, letter to, from his father (Edmund) on
religious freedom, ii. 453.

Bute, the Earl of, i. 133.

his administration examined, i. 79.

Cabinet, a divided, consequences of, i. 136.
Canada, taken from France, i. 80.

Carnatic, the, description of, lxviii, vol. i. 291, 333, 363:
trade of, ii. 16.

Catholics, Roman, letter on the penal laws against them,
i. 537: Burke's plan for admitting them to the elective
franchise, 543.

Ceremonies, religious, within the jurisdiction of the civil
magistrate, ii. 472.

Chamber of regicide, lxx.

Chatham, Lord, portraiture of, lxiv, and i. 170.
China, silver sent thither from India, ii. 14.
Christianity, conversion of the Saxons to, ii. 526.
Church establishment, the, i. 415.

services rendered to, by the dissen-

ters, ii. 465.
Church reform, ii. 465: the Act of Union no impediment
to it, 466.

Church of Ireland, anomaly of, ii. 457: evils resulting from,

458.

Cicero, causes which have rendered his speeches so popu-
lar, lxi.

His "Reflections on the French Revolution,” xxxi, Civil list, the, necessity of a revision of, i. 238, 252.

testimonies to its literary merits, ib.

His quarrel with Fox, xxxii, xxxiv, and vol. i. 612.

His "Appeal from the New to the Old Whigs," &c.
xxxiii.

Civil liberty, a substantial benefit, i. 217.

Civil society, fundamental rules of, i. 403: based on reli-
gion, 415.

Civil wars, effects of, i. 210.

Clergy, the, a defence of, i. 435.

the French, ib.

evils of a poor one, ii. 498.

their position in the reign of Henry II., ii. 570.
Code for regulating the slave trade, ii. 419.
Coercive authority, limited to what is necessary for the
existence of a state, ii. 442.

Colonies, only to be held by a community of interests, i.
203. See AMERICAN COLONIES.

the, secretary for, i. 248.

Curiosity, the first and simplest emotion of the mind,
i. 30.

Dacca merchants, treatment of, ii. 31.

Darkness, productive of sublime ideas, i. 45.

Locke's opinion concerning it explained, i. 63,

considered as a source of the sublime, ib. painful in its
own nature, 64, the causes of this, ib.
Debt, the public, of England, i. 86.
of France, 93.

Colours, dependent upon light, i. 45: productive of the Debts, English laws affecting them, i. 261.
sublime, 45.

essential to beauty, i. 56: effects of black, 65.
Comedy, remarks on, ii. 501.
Commerce, British, i. 83.

Commons, House of, its nature and functions, i. 140, its
virtue consists in its being the express image of national
feeling, ib. 306, its control by the constituency essential
to its own control of the executive, 143, corrupt influence
in its composition the great source of national evils, 228,
difficulties in the way of its reform, 229, consequences
of not conceding reform of in time, 231, should be tem-
perate to be permanent, 232, duty of the House, 305,
its powers, 307, its independence of the ministers essen-
tial to its existence, 308, its interest in the integrity and
purity of the peerage, 309.

Commons and waste lands, enclosure of, ii. 347.

Definition, difficulty of, i. 24.

Deformity not opposed to beauty, i. 51.

Delicacy, essential to beauty, i. 56.

Delight, the sensation which accompanies the removal of
pain or danger, i. 32.

Democracy, a, character of, i. 13.

Demosthenes, causes which have rendered his speeches so
popular, Ixi.

Denmark and Norway, probable consequences of the
French Revolution on, i. 570.

Despotic governments, forms of, i. 11.

Dignitaries, church, generally averse from ecclesiastical
reformation, ii. 465.

Dimension, greatness of, a cause of the sublime, i. 42, 61.
Discontents, public, thoughts on those of 1770, i. 124:
difficulties of enquiring into the causes of, ib.

Commonwealths, moral essences, ii. 275: affected by Dissent, in what case it may be punished, ii. 471.
trifling events, 276.

Compurgation, trial by, among the Saxons, ii. 548.

Concessions to public opinion, to be acceptable should be
prompt, i. 219, 231.

Condorcet, character of, i. 574, 579.

Confiscation of property, deprecated, i. 439, 473, 476.
Consistency, Burke's assertion of, i. 501.

Constitution, the British, i. 488, 497, 509, 534.

i. 216.

excellence of, ii. 487.

Dissenters, services rendered by them to the church, ii.
465.

Irish, ii. 405.

Distrust, remarks on, i. 599.

Division in governments, evils of, i. 121.

Drama, the, difficulty of this species of composition, ii.

499.

Druids, some account of, ii. 508.

Duchies, English, i. 234.

powers conferred by, to be used with caution, Dundas, right hon. Henry, letter to, on a negro code, ii.

the people have no right to alter it when

once settled, i. 521.
Constitution of France, as proposed by the National
Assembly, i. 446, 453, 590: compared with that of
England, 530: reasons for destroying it, ii. 315.
Constitutional Society, the, i. 383.

Contracts, East India, Warren Hastings's disobedience to
the East India Company's orders on, ii. 141, 158.
Contributions, public, should be raised only by the public
will, ii. 339.

Coronation oath, the, i. 548.
Corporate bodies, i. 434.

Council, the Aulic, ii. 243.

County court, the Saxon, ii. 544.
Court Baron, the Saxon, ii. 543.
Cromwell, Oliver, i. 479.
Crown, the, influence of, i. 127.

prerogatives of, i. 308, do not extend to the terri-
torial possessions in the East Indies, 310.

the succession to, fixed at the Revolution of 1688,

i. 387, 513.

Crown lands and forests, i. 237.

Crown revenues, object of making them indefinite and
fluctuating, i. 145, the legal standard of these superseded
by an arbitrary one, 146.

Crusades, the, account of, ii. 579.

419.

Duties not voluntary, i. 522.

Ealderman, the office of, among the Saxons, ii. 544.
EAST INDIA COMPANY-

Importance of making it responsible for the exercise
of political power, i. 276, obligations created by its
charter, ib. extent of its territory, 277, enumeration
of circumstances that would justify the withdrawal
of its charter, ib. its proceedings towards native
princes, 278, consequences of its rule, 282, its
commercial policy, 293, 295, its administration of
justice, ib. ii. 4, incorrigible, i. 296, 312, state of
its affairs, in 1783, ii. 1, legislative attempts to
remedy abuses in its government, 2, proprietors,
their power, ib. the court of directors, 4, council
general, 5, powers given to governor-general, ib.
interference of the government into its affairs, ob
jectionable, 7, propositions for remedying evils in
its constitution, ib. effects of its revenue investments,
16, internal trade of Bengal, 21, gifts and presents
received by its servants, 61.

Ecclesiastical estates, defence of, i. 442.
Economical reform, Burke's plans of, i. 255, ii. 261,

262.

Economy, financial, i. 229.

not parsimony, ii. 264.

Election, popular, the great advantage of a free state, i. 134. | Friends of the people, society of, i. 613.
essential to the great object of govern- Fyzoola Khân, treatment of, by Warren Hastings, ii. 221.

ment, ii. 481.

evils connected with, ib.

Elegance, closely allied to the beautiful, i. 57.

Elliott, William, Esq., letter to, ii. 240.
Eloquence, oratorical, elements of, lix.
Enclosure of waste lands, ii. 347.
England, her advancement, ii. 292.
English History, abridgment of, ii. 503.

Enthusiasm, religion among the most powerful of its
causes, ii. 311.

Establishments, folly of retaining them when no longer
necessary or useful, i. 239.

Established church, the, ii. 465. See CHURCH.
Estimates, army, ii. 376.

Europe, antecedent to the prevalence of the Roman power,
ii. 503 at the time of the Norman conquest, 550.
Exchequer, the, management of, i. 242.
Executions, public, effects of, ii. 417.

Gauls, their character in remote times, ii. 504, 507.

Gavelkind, a Saxon law, ii. 550.

Generation of men and of brutes, i. 33

George II., some of the great measures of his reign, i. 130.
Germany, irruption of the Romans into, ii. 504.

- critical situation of, in 1791, i. 567.

GOD, contemplation of the idea of, its effect on the mind,
i. 41 scripture images of, 42.

Government, originates with the people, i. 140.

legitimate objects of, i. 403, ii. 256.

- its duty to foster and protect the interests of

every part of the empire, i. 227.

evils of subdivisions in, i. 235.
the great use of, restraint, ii. 247.
Governments, various forms of, i. 11.
Government, British, in India, ii. 49.
Gracefulness, much the same thing as beauty, i. 57.

Executive government, its power over the laws, i. 134: Granaries, England not favourable for, ii. 253.
should correspond with the legislature, ib.

Greece, situation of, in remote times, ii. 503.

Executive magistracy, a necessary element in its constitu- Green cloth, court of, its origin, i. 238.
tion pointed out, i. 456.

Grenville, Mr., portraiture of, lxiv, vol. i. 163.

Exercise, bodily, a remedy for melancholy or dejection, i. 61. | Grief, distinct from positive pain, i. 32.

Experiments, danger of making them on farmers, ii. 251.

Eye, the, beauty of, i. 56.

Farmers, danger of making experiments on, ii. 251.

Favouritism in appointments to the executory government

at variance with the constitution, i. 134.

Feeling, the beautiful in, i. 57.

enters into the sublime, i. 47.

Ferrers, Earl, his trial and conviction by the peers, ii. 631.
Financial reforms, i. 229, principles of, 233.

Financier, public, objects of, i. 467.

Fitness, not the cause of beauty, i. 52: its effects, 53.
Fitzwilliam, Earl, Burke's letter to, on the regicide peace,
ii. 354.

Flattery, causes of its prevalence, i. 36.

Force, objection to the employment of, for compelling
obedience to bad laws, i. 186, 211.

Forest lands, i. 237.

Fox, C. J., his formation of the coalition ministry, xxiii,
his praise of the French Revolution, xxx, his quarrel with
Burke, xxxii, xxxiv, his character, i. 302, remarks upon
his political conduct, i. 613.

France, affairs of, in 1790, i. 376, 563.

its influence on other European states, i. 581, its
movements in 1792, 582, probable consequences of, ib.
Burke's propositions for aiding the king of, in 1792,
586, condition of, in 1793, 591, its government fund-
amentally monarchical, 596.
Freedom, religious, ii. 453.
French nobility, the, i. 432.

French Revolution, the, character of, xxviii, lxxix, vol. ii.
297 as it affects other nations, 305: its objects, 310:
not to be compared with the English one of 1688, i. 379:
reflections on, 382, 481, 564: its effects, ib. 572, parti-
culars of, 632, ii. 263.

Reflections on, xxxi.
French revolutionists, the, description of, i. 597.
French republican constitution of the National Assembly,

i. 446, 453, 590: compared with that of England, 530.
Friends of the liberty of the press, society of, i. 616.

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to the Rajah of Sahlone, 140.

His disobedience to the orders of the court of direc-
tors, relative to contracts, 141, 158.
His treaty with the Ranna of Gohud, 162.
His mismanagement of the revenues of Bengal, 164.
Misdemeanours in Oude, 169.

His treatment of the Great Mogul, 201.
His libels on the court of directors, 209
The Mahratta war and peace, 212.

His conduct towards Fyzoola Khân, 221.

Hawes, Sir John, his political opinions, i. 511, 513.
Heathenism intolerant, ii. 472.

Henry I., reign of, ii. 564.

Irish toleration bill, thoughts on, ii. 405.

Henry II., reign of, ii. 569, condition of the clergy during Irish church, the, remarks on, ii. 457: evils resulting
his reign, 570: prerogatives claimed by, 572.
Hindostan. See INDIA.

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Imagination, the, qualities and powers of, i. 26.
Imitation, the passion of, i. 36: its influence on society, ib.
Impeachment, powers and proceedings of parliament, in
cases of, ii. 598.

Imprisonment for debt, cruelty of the law, i. 261.

Inconsistency, Burke's defence against the charge of, i.
501.

Indemnity, how far it should be granted to the French
Revolutionists, i. 604.

INDIA-

Importance of governing it well, i. 275.

Affairs of, 320.

Extent of the British territory in, 277.

Population of, ib.

Character of its population, ib.

British government in, ii. 49.

Treatment of its princes by the Company, i. 278.

Consequences of British rule, 282.

Revenues of, 354.

Connexion of Great Britain with in, ii. 12.

Mode of carrying on trade with, ib.

from it, 458.

Italy, situation of, in remote times, ii. 503: in 1791, i.

569.

Jacobinism, the revolt of talents against property, ii. 296,

451 principles of, 449: objects of its attack, 452.
Jekyl, Sir Joseph, his thoughts on the Revolution of 1688,
i. 512, 514.

John, reign of, ii. 582: contest between him and the
barons, 587.

Juries, power of, in prosecutions for libels, ii. 490: should
take the law from the bench, 493.
Jurisprudence, historical, its study much neglected, ii. 592.
Jury, trial by, among the Saxons, ii. 548.

Keppel, Lord, character of, ii. 272.

King of England, the, his power, i. 489.

King's Friends, the, a faction so called, i. 127: their pro-
ceedings, 128 the origin of, 138: consequences of
their acts, 149.

Labour, an article of trade, ii. 249: a remedy for melan-
choly, i. 61.

Labouring classes, the, happiness of, ii. 248.
Lancaster, duchy of, original use of, i. 236.

Lands and forests, crown, objections to them, i. 237.
Langrishe, Sir Hercules, letter to, on the Catholic question,
ii. 451.

Law, origin and progress of, an interesting object of en-
quiry, ii. 592: evils of, i. 17.

Laws, Saxon, ii. 546 character and objects of, 594.

of England, their sources not well laid open, ii. 592:
alterations in, subsequent to the Conquest, 593: hete-
rogeneous character of, ib.

Lechmere, Mr., his thoughts on the British constitution,
i. 509, 516.

Libel, power of juries, in prosecutions for, ii. 490.
bill, for defining the powers of juries, ii. 497.

Consequences of this, 18. See EAST INDIA COM- Liberty, description of, ii. 454.

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Early history of, ii. 575.

English policy towards, i. 194, 552.

Laws affecting the Roman catholics in, ii. 431: re-
marks on, 436, 448, 451: consequences of, 445.

Mutinous state of, lxviii.

Remarks on the condition of, ii. 391.

cannot long exist amongst a corrupt people, i. 221.
Light, all colours dependent upon it, i. 45.

Loans, remarks on, ii. 337.

Lords, House of, jurisdiction of, in cases of impeachment,
ii. 598 its laws and rules of proceeding, 600.
Louis XVI., cause of French hostility to him, i. 480.
his financial reforms, i. 230.

his character, ii. 315.

Love, distinct from lust, i. 47: generally described by
diminutive epithets, 55: physical cause of, 65.

forsaken, the feelings connected with it, i. 33.
Lust, distinct from love, i. 47.

Macartney, Lord, his statements on the Nabob of Arcot's
affairs not credible, i. 334.

Magna Charta, objects and provisions of, ii. 589: events
which led to it, 591.

Probable consequences of a separation between Eng- Magnificence, a source of the sublime, i. 44.

land and Ireland, 462.

Mahrattas, the, ii. 212.

Trade of, objections to Lord North's scheme for regu- Man, proportion not the cause of beauty in, i. 49.
lating it, i. 223.

Taxation of, 224.

Mankind, division of, into separate societies, i. 10.
Manufactures, English, ii. 345.

Irish affairs, vindication of Burke's conduct in relation to, Marriage Act, royal, remarks on, ii. 496.

ii. 407, 414.

Irish absentee tax, ii. 385: objections to it, 386.

Massacre of St. Bartholomew, i. 434.

Matrimony, objects of, ii. 496.

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Those which belong to society, 33.
Those which belong to generation, ib.
The social passions, 34.
Sympathy, ib.
Imitation, 36.
Ambition, ib.

Uses of the passions, 37.

Those caused by the sublime, 38.

Terror, its effect on the mind, ib., 60.

Effects of painting and poetry on the passions, 39:
difficulty of enquiring into their causes, 59.
How influenced by words, 72.

Peerage, the, servility of, to the court, i. 130.

Peers, House of. See LORDS (House of).

Penal laws, evils of suffering them to remain inoperative,
ii. 470.

Pension, Burke's defence of his, ii. 258.

Pensions, state, reasons for, i. 246.

paymaster of, i. 244.

the duty of government, to attend to their

voice, ii. 396.

Nabob of Arcot, the, some account of, i. 315: Burke's People, the, idea attached to the phrase, i. 524.
speech on Mr. Fox's motion for the production of
papers relating to him, 317: his debts, 347, 367.
Nantz, revocation of the edict of, ii. 438.
National Assembly of France, i. 455, 528.

Natural state of society, inconveniences attendant on, i. 5.
Navy Pay Office, proposed reform of, i. 243.
Neckar, Mons. his financial reforms, i. 231.
Negro slavery, abolition of, ii. 419.

Negro Code, a, Burke's sketch on, ii. 419.

Nobility, the French, i. 432.

generally right in their disputes with govern-
ment, i. 125 have no interest in disorder, ib.: the
source of power, 140, 254: in what sense so, 386.
Perfection, not the cause of beauty, i. 54.

Perry, right hon. Edmund, letter to, on the Irish toleration
bill, ii. 405.

Persecution, religious, indefensible, ii. 440, 470.
Physiognomy, essential to beauty in mankind, i. 56.

Normans, the, their invasion of Britain, ii. 537: state of Pitt, William, his administration, xiv: his policy towards

Europe at the time, 550.

Nova Scotia, province of, i. 250.

Novelty, the love of, the first and simplest emotion of the

human mind, i. 30.

Oaks, venerated by the Druids, ii. 510.

Oath, purgation by, among the Saxons, ii. 547.
coronation, the, i. 548.

Obscurity necessary to produce terror, i. 38.
Opium, sale of, in India, ii. 33.

Orange, the prince of, his declarations, i. 517.
Ordeal, purgation by, among the Saxons, ii. 547.
Oude, Nabob of, his treatment by the East India Com-
pany, i. 283.

Princesses of, treatment of, by Warren Hastings, ii.
113, 169.

Pain, nature of, i. 60: affects equally the mind and the
body, ib. how it becomes a cause of delight, 61.
Pain and pleasure, each of a positive nature, i. 30.
Paine, Thomas, ii. 241.

Painting, its effect on the passions, i. 39.

Paper money of the National Assembly of France, i. 471.
Parliament, a security provided for the protection of free-
dom, ii. 400.

Parliaments, short, thoughts on, i. 146.

Parliamentary control, importance of it, i. 134.
Parliamentary reform, thoughts on, i. 147, 228: short
parliaments, ii. 481. See COMMONS' HOUSE.

Party divisions inseparable from a free government, i. 77:
the part which a good citizen should take in them, ib.
THE PASSIONS-

Those which belong to self-preservation, i. 32.
Joy and grief, ib.

America, xvi.

Placemen, thoughts on their having seats in parliament, i.

147.

Pleasure, the manner in which its removal affects the
mind, i. 32, 33.

Pleasure and pain, each of a positive nature, i. 30.

Poetry, its effects on the passions, i. 39: the rationale of
this, 69 not strictly an imitative art, 72.

Poland, state of, previous to the revolution, i. 531.
Political parties, their influence on the public mind, i:
advantages of, i. 150, 220.

Politician, the, business of, i. 151.
Politicians, their fame distant, i.

Popery, laws affecting it, in Ireland, ii. 431: remarks on
them, 436, 448, 451: their consequences, 445.
Popular election, essential to the great object of govern-
ment, ii. 481 evils connected with it, ib. the great
advantage of a free state, i. 134.

Population, increase in, not compatible with bad govern-
ment, i. 429.

Power, idea of, its effect on the mind, i. 40.

Prerogative of the crown, the, growth of, i. 127: means
employed to effect this, ib.

Preservation, self, the passions which belong to it, i. 32.
Price, Dr. Richard, his sermon on the French Revolution,
i. 385.

Primogeniture, law of, i. 519.

Principalities, English, i. 234: evils resulting from them,
235 proposed reform of them, 237.
Property, necessity of securities for it in a republic, i. 447.
influence of, i. 131.

laws affecting, among the Saxons, ii. 549.
how affected by the laws against popery in Ire-

land, ii. 445.

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