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INDEX.

A.

Abercromby, Mr, his motion on Buona-
parte's escape from Elba, and debate
thereon, I. 168

Abington, Earl, moves the address in the
Upper House, I. 3

Accounts, public, for the year, II. ccxxxiii
Acts, public, for the year, II. ccxviii
African female, account of one, a sailor
in the British navy, II. lxii
Agricultural report for January, II. x—
For March, xxvi-For August, Ixi-
For October, Ixix-For December, lxxxi
Allied Sovereigns enter into a treaty with
Britain against Buonaparte, I. 163. De-
bates in Parliament on this treaty, 174.
Amount of troops to be furnished by
each, 183. Their formidable prepa-
rations for war, and positions of their
armies, 220. Enter France at the
head of their troops, 279. Refuse to
treat with the provisional government,

282
America, North, affairs of, I. 353. At-
tack of New Orleans, 355. Ratifica-
tion of the treaty of peace, 356. Fol-
lowed by a commercial treaty, 359.
Ludicrous names of the rivers of, II.
xlix

America, South, affairs of, I. 362
Angouleme, Duchess of, driven from
Bourdeaux, I. 150. Arrives in Eng-
land, II. xxxix. Returns to Paris, xlix

--, Duke of, capitulates in the
south to Buonaparte's troops, I. 161
Appointments and promotions, list of
principal ones, II. cclxxxiii

Aremberg, Prince of, account of his
death, II. xix

Army estimates for the year, I. 17

motion for abolishing corporal pu-
nishments rejected in the House of
Commons. Remarks on the subject, I.

251

Arniston transport, narrative of the loss
of, II. xli

Arundel Castle, preparations for a grand
fete there, II. xxxix
Austria refuses permission to Murat to
march through her Italian dominions,
I. 187

B.

Baker, Mr, a respectable magistrate in
Ireland, murdered, I. 341

Bank of England, affairs of, I. 23. Re-
newal of the restrictions on cash pay-
ments, 25. Observations on the profits
derived from its transactions with go-
vernment, ib. State of its accounts; II.
iii

Barbary States, memorial of Sir Sydney
Smith, on the expediency of putting an
end to their piracies, II. ccxiv
Bath, order of the, divided into three
classes, I. 75

Bengal Indiaman, account of the loss of,
II. xxix

Berri, Duke de, his insolent and impru-

dent behaviour to a French officer, I.
93. Anecdote of him, II. xxxvii
Berthier, Marshal, throws himself from a
window, and is killed, I. 207

Best, Mr Serjeant, moves for a bill to
amend the insolvent debtor's act, I. 28;
but withdraws it, 29
Bigamy, curious case of, II. xxviii
Blacas, Count, unpopular in France, I. 91.
Dismissed from Louis's ministry, 303
Blucher, Marshal, in imminent danger at
the battle of Ligny, I. 228. Effects his
retreat unmolested, ib. His army ar-
rives on the field, and decides the bat-
tle of Waterloo, 246. He pursues the
flying French army, 247. Meeting of
him and Wellington after the battle of
Waterloo, 246. Anecdote of him, II.
Xxxvii

Bourbon, Duke of, endeavours, without
success, to raise a force in La Vendee,
1. 159

Brune, Marshal, murdered at Avignon, I.

341

Brunswick, Duke of, falls gloriously in
the battle of Quatre Bras, I. 230
Brussels, account of a masked ball there,
II. xvi

Buccleuch, Duke of, presents the Ettrick

Shepherd with a pastoral farm, II. xxxi
Buonaparte, account of his behaviour at
Elba, I. 137. He corresponds with
France and Italy, 138. Embarks at
Elba, and lands with a few attendants
at Frejus, 143. Advances without op-
position, 144. His first meeting with
the royal troops, 146. They join him
as he marches on Paris, 149. He issues
decrees from Lyons, 150. Arrives in
Paris, and resumes the government,
157. Makes proposals of peace to the
allies, which are rejected, 162. Dis-
putes between him and his ministers,
202. Pays court to the Federates, 205.
Disaffection of the people to his go-
vernment, 209. His speech to the Le-
gislative Chambers, 217. Prepares to
meet the allied armies, 222.

His

speech to his soldiers, *225. Attacks
the Prussians, and drives them from
Charleroi, 226, Defeats them again
at Ligny, 227. Attacks the British ar-
my at Waterloo, and, after a desperate
battle, is routed with great slaughter,
236, 246. His conduct in the field, 242,
243-and flight from it, 246. His car-
riage and baggage taken at Genappe,
247. He returns alone to Paris, 256.
Abdicates in favour of his son, 262,

His farewell proclamation to his sol-
diers, 267. He is removed to Roche-
fort, 270. Goes voluntarily on board
the British ship Bellerophon, and is
brought to Torbay-His letter to the
Prince Regent, 894, 335. Arguments
respecting the mode of treating him,
335. He protests against being kept a
prisoner, 338. Is sent to the Island of
St Helena in the Northumberland, 340
Bulletins of his Majesty's health, II. v,
xiii, xix, xxvii, xxxvii, li, lxvii, ixx,
lxxvii

C.

Calcutta, loss of a fleet of boats there, IL
xxxix

Cameron, Colonel, killed at Quatre Bras,
1. 231

Candy, conquest of the kingdom of, I. 351.
Farther particulars, II, 1

Canning, Lieut.-Colonel, killed at Water-
loo, I. 242

Carnot, M. history of, I. 125. His me-

morial against the Bourbons, 126. Me-
morial on the capitulation of Paris, 295
Castlereagh, Lord, his speech on Buona-
parte's escape from Elba, I. 164. Dis-
cussion of his motion on this subject,
167. Demands of France the restora-
tion of the foreign monuments of art in
the Louvre, 324

Champ de Mai, ceremony of, I. 213
Chancellor of the Exchequer for Ireland
brings forward the Irish budget for the
year, I. 21

Charleroi, the Prussians driven fram it by
Buonaparte, 1. 226

Chesters, Roxburghshire, singular occur
rence there, II. xxi
Chinese, disagreements between them and
the British, I. 349

Cochrane, Lord, escapes from prison, and
appears in the House of Commons-Is
arrested, tried, and sentenced to farther
imprisonment, I. 77, 78. Farther par
ticulars, II. xxiii

Congress of Vienna declares Buonaparte
without the pale of the law of nations,
1. 162. Removed to Frankfort, 220
Convention between Britain and the Ne-
therlands, II. cl. Between the same
and Prussia, clxxii. Between the same

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Dartmoor, seven American prisoners kill-
ed there, in an attempt to escape, II.
xxix

Davoust, Marshal, his address to the ar-
my of the Loire, I. 308. He is removed
from the command, 309
Death of Lady Hamilton at Calais, II.

xiv. Of the Duke of Dorset, xvi. Of
the Prince of Aremberg, xix. Of Lady
Mary Fitzgerald, xxx
Declaration of the allied powers relative

to the slave-trade, II. clvi. Of the
same on Buonaparte's return from Elba,
clxi. Of Louis from his court at Ghent,
clxxiii. Of Buonaparte to the French
on commencing war, clxxxiii
Delancey, Sir William, killed at Waterloo,
I. 242

Delawar, Lord, his speech on seconding

the address to the Prince Regent, I. 3
D'Esterre, Mr, of Dublin, killed in a duel
by Mr O'Connel, II. xi
Dispatches from Rear-Admiral Hotham,

dated H. M. ship Superb, before New
London, 23d January, with enclosures
from Captain Hayes and Hope, II.
lxxxvi

from Vice-Admiral Sir Alex-
ander Cochrane, dated H.M. ship Ar-
mide, off Isle-au-Chat, 16th December,
1814, inclosing one from Captain Lock-
yer, II. lxxxvii-Another, dated January
18, lxxxix

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May, inclosing military reports from
Colonel Church, II. xcii. Another, da-
ted Rome, May 22, xcvi
Dispatches from Lord Burghersh, dated
Rome, May 16, and Teano, May 21, in-
closing the military convention with
Naples, II. xcvi. Another, dated Na-
ples, 23d May, c

from the Duke of Wellington,
dated Waterloo, June 19, II. ci. Others
dated Cateau, 22d, and Joncourt 25th,
cv. Orville, 28th, cvi. Gonasse, July
2, cvii. Same place, July 4, inclosing
the military convention with Davoust,
cviii. Louvre, June 30, transmitting
one from Sir C. Colville, cx. Paris,
July 8, cxii

from Captain Maitland, dated
H. M. ship Bellerophon, July 14, II.
cxii
from Admiral Lord Keith,
dated Ville de Paris, in Hamoaze, July
21, with inclosures from Captains Ayl-
mer and Palmer, II. cxiii

from Colonel the Baron de
Montalembert, dated in the Gironde,
July 31, II. cxiii

from Lieut.-General Brown-
rigg, dated Candy, February 25, II. cxvi
from Sir Hudson Lowe, dated

Cujes, July 24, II. cxxiv

from Sir James Leith, dated
Guadaloupe, August 12, II. cxxiv

from the Vice-Presidency at
Fort-William, dated February 20, with
enclosures from Mr Secretary Adam,
and Sir David Ochterlony, II. cxxxiii
from Admiral Lord Exmouth,
with an enclosure from Captain Fahie,
dated H. M. ship, Malta, Gaeta Bay,
August 9, II. cxxxvii

from Earl Moira, dated Fut-
tyghur, June 1, II. cxxxix

from the Earl of Clancarty,
dated Vienna, May 6, II. clxviii
Dorset, Duke of, account of his death, II.
xvi

Dublin, interesting incident at Aston's
quay there, II, xxxvi

Duel between Mr O'Connel and Mr D'-
Esterre, II. xi-Between Colonels
Quentin and Palmer, xiv
Dundee, loss of a pinnace, with passengers,
at the ferry there, II. xxxviii
of a small
very
from E. Cooke, Esq. under Dwarf, description
secretary of state, dated Rome, 20th

Xxxvii

one,

II.

E.

Eclipse, Leith smack, lost near Yarmouth,
II. lxxv

Edinburgh, freedom of, conferred on J. C.
Curwen, Esq. II. xv-Bill for a canal
between it and Glasgow, xix-New road
over the Calton-hill, xxix-Celebration
of the Prince Regent's birth-day, lviii.
Musical Festival, lxxi. Visit of the
Austrian Archdukes John and Lewis,
lxxix

Excelmans, General, his letter to Murat
intercepted, I. 135. Trial and acquittal
of, 136

Execution of Elizabeth Fenning, for poi-
soning a family, II. xlvii

Explosion on board a vessel at Berwick,
II. v. Of fire-damp in a coal mine,
xliii. In a sugar refinery in London,
lxxv

F.

Fayette, M. de La, proposes resolutions
in the French legislature on the state
of the nation, I. 258. Hints to Buona-
parte the necessity of his abdication,

261

Fire, in St Paul's church-yard, London,
II. vii. In St George's street, London,
xxxiii. At Waterford, lvii. In the mint,
London, Ixviii. In High Holburn, lxvii
Fitzgerald, Lady Mary, account of her
death, II. xxx

Fouche, M. his conduct on the restoration

of Louis XVIII. I. 129. His duplicity
to Buonaparte, 269. Secretly embraces
the interests of the Bourbons, 282.
Resigns the ministry of police, and pub-
lishes reasons of his conduct, 318
France, internal state of, I. 87. Defects

of the administration, 90. Condition
and character of the royalists, 92. Di-
visions of the royal family, ib.-Fears
of the national proprietors, 96. Account
of the jacobin party, 97. The Buona-
partists, 98. Discontents of the army,
99. The constitutionalists, or neutrals,
the most numerous party, 102. Report
on the state of the country, 107. De-
hate on the liberty of the press, 112.
Censorship proposed by M. Faure, and
passed with some modifications, 116.

Expedients of the disaffected to elude
the law, 117. Scandalous affair in the
church of Durnac, 118. Debate on a
plan for indemnifying emigrants, ib.
Intrigues of the republicans, headed by
Carnot and Fouche, 130. Warlike pre-
parations, 132. Intrigues at the Congress
of Vienna, 138. Insubordination of the
army, 136. Interest excited by emis-
saries in favour of Buonaparte, 187.
Organization of a conspiracy for his re-
storation 139. Culpable indifference
of the ministry to the proceedings of
the conspirators, 140, 144. Landing of
Buonaparte at Frejus, 143. Suspicions
of treachery in the war department,
145. Confusion and bustle at Paris,
147. Defection of the troops from the
royal cause, 149, 156. Reins of go-
vernment seized by Buonaparte, 157.
The cities and provinces receive his au-
thority, 159. Plot to carry off the em-
press detected at Vienna, 201. Exer.
tions of the partizans of Louis, 203.
Preparations for war, 207. Additional
act to the constitution, 210. Ceremony
of the Champ de Mai, 212. Meeting of
the Legislative Chambers, and Buona-
parte's speech to them, 216. Battle of
Liguy, 227. Of Quatre Bras, 229.
Route of the army at Waterloo, 246.
Discussions in the chambers on Buona-
parte's return, 258. Furious debates on
acknowledging Napoleon II. 263, 266.
He is indirectly acknowledged, 267.
Movements of the French corps after
their defeat at Waterloo, 277. Effect
their retreat to Paris, 279. Provisional
government solicits an armistice, ib.
Austrian and Bavarian armies cross the
Rhine, and advance into the country,
283. The grand Russian army also
cross it, 284 Situation of the provi-
sional government, and debates in the
chambers, 285. Preparations to defend
Paris, 289. It surrenders by capitula-
tion, 293. Dissolution of the chambers,
and entrance of Louis into Paris, 302.
Proscription of peers and others, 804.
Distraction in the provinces, 306. The
army of the Loire disbanded, 309. Dis-
turbances in the south, 310. Assembly
of the chambers, 318. New ministry,
320. Sufferings inflicted on the country
by the Prussian soldiers, 322. Disper-
sion of the national Museum, 323.

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