Autobiography (Mill)/Index
INDEX.
ABOLITIONISTS, 268
Address to University of St. Andrews, 306
Æsop's Fables, 5
Age, Spirit of the, articles on the, 173
Agrarian Laws, 13
Agricultural Hall, meeting of working men at the, 291
Aldrich's Logic, a superficial textbook, 122
Alexander's Feast, 16
America, civil contest in, 266; democracy in, 191, 202. See Canada
Analysis of the Mind, by James Mill, prepared and published, 68; discussed, 123; posthumous edition of, 307
Ancient History, early reading of, 12
Anglada, M., his lectures on chemistry, 57
Annals of the Parish, one of Galt's novels, suggests the word Utilitarian, 79
Annual "Register, 7
Anson's Yoyages, a delightful book, 8
Anstruther, Sir Robert, 302
Arabian Nights, 9
Argument. See Logic
Aristotle, studies in, 11, 17
Arithmetic, 6
Association Psychology, promoted by Hartley, James Mill, and their editors, 68, 108, 308; applied by the Author to logic, 225; vindicated against Hamilton and his school, 273
Atheism, 39
Austin, Charles, his abilities and peculiar influence over the Author, 76; writes for the Westminster Review, 96; propagandism of, 103; reviews the Parliamentary Debates, 118; as a speaker, 78, 124-6
Austin, John, his friendship and assistance, 63, 72; on primogeniture, 96; his Lectures on Jurisprudence, 177, 271; his later views on parliamentary reform 260; his life, character, and opinions, 73-6, 176-9; phrases quoted from him, 178, 215, 234
Autobiography, why written, 1; later portions of, when written, 240, 251
Avignon, 250
Ayrton, Mr., 287
BAGNÈRES DE BIGORRE}}, 57
Bagshot Heath, 18
Bailey, his work on Value, discussed, 120
Baillie, Joanna, inspiring influence of one of her dramas, 15
Bain, Mr., assists the Author in preparing the System of Logic, 245; helps to annotate James Mill's Analysis, 307; further aids the Association Psychology by his great treatise on the Mind, 260, 274
Baldwin, first publisher of the Westminster Review, 95
Baring, Mr. Alexander, 99
Barrow Green House, 55
Bayonne, 57
Bazard, the St. Simonian, 166
Beales, Mr., 290
Beattie, 16
Beauchamp, Philip, pseudonyme of a writer whose work on religion greatly influenced the Author's mind, 69
Beaver's African Memoranda, 8
Belper, Lord, 77, 103, 118, 194
Bentham, Mr., his close intimacy with James Mill and the Author, 8, 54, 91; leading doctrines of, 64; sets up the Westminster Review, 91; his supposed school, 100; some of his followers, 63, 89, 91, 95; his editors, M. Dumont, Bingham, and the Author, 114; his estimate of poetry, 112; his earlier and later style, 1 16; his services to mankind, 204, 265; points on which his views need qualification or extension, 157, 198, 214, 230; the Author's published estimate of his philosophy, 218
Bentham, Sir Samuel, 56
Benthamism, 64, 105-113
Berkeley, 69
Bible, 39
Bigorre, hills of, 57
Bingham, Mr., writes for the Westminster Review, 95, 112; edits the "Book of Fallacies," 114; edits and writes for the "Parliamentary History and Review," 118
Birth, 2
Black, Mr. John, editor of the Morning Chronicle, 89, 103.
Blackstone, 64
Books, read by the Author in early life, 5-28, 47, 62-71, 113; afterwards noted, 120, 140, 160, 175, 191, 208; reviewed, 214-20, 260, 271; edited, 114, 307; written by him (see Mill)
Bowring, Sir John, 91-7, 130
Bradlaugh, Mr., 311
Bribery, indifference to legislation on, 300
Bright, Mr., 270, 287, 292 304
British public, their dread of change, 294
Brooke's Fool of Quality, 9
Brougham, Lord, 91, 195, 262
Brown's Lectures, 69
Brown, John, the voluntary martyr, 268
Buller, Charles, 103; joins the Debating Society, 128; in Parliament, 194-7; writes Lord Durham's report, 216
Bullion controversy, 28
Bulwer, 126, 198
Burdetts, 98
Burnet's History, 7
Burns, 16
Butler's Analogy, 38
Buxton, Mr. Charles, 297
Byron, 146; relative merits of his writings and Wordsworth's debated between Roebuck and the Author, 150
CAIRNES, PROFESSOR, his admirable work, "The Slave Power," 267; reviewed, 271
Cambridge, Benthamites at, 76, 103, 128; speakers of the Union, 126
Campbell's poems, 17 Caen, 61
Canada, Coercion Bill for, 194; events in, 215
Canning, 99, 119
Capital Punishment, speech against abolishing, 286
Capitol, 250
Carlile, Richard, prosecuted, 88
Carlyle, Thomas, his relations with the Author, 142, 161, 164, 174-6, 243; and Sterling, 152, 155; writes for the Westminster Review, 206; his "Sartor Resartus," 175; his "French Revolution," 131, 217
Castres, 57
Catholic Disabilities, article on, 118
Cattle Plague Bill, 288
Cause of human actions, 169
Cazotte's Arabian Tales, 9
Centralization, 192
Chadwick, Mr., 300
Character, how related to circumstances, 108, 169
Chemistry, treatises on, devoured in childhood, 17; attend lectures on, 57; contrasted with dynamics, 160
Choice of Hercules, 47
Christianity, 39, 164
Christie, Mr. W. D., 300
Church Question, 182; James Mill on the, 107; Maurice on the, 153; settled in Ireland, 292
Cicero, 11
Civilization, essay on, 202; some essentials of, 106, 230-4
Clarendon, Earl of, 126
Classification, early training in, 65; treated of, in "System of Logic," 221
Cobbetts, 98
Cockburn, Sir Alexander, 128, 298
Coercion measures in Canada and Ireland, 194
Coleridge, 75; lines from, fitting the Author's case, 134, 140; the teacher of Maurice and Sterling, 154; his influence on the Author's mind, 153, 161-3; essay on, 218
Coleridgians, 128, 152, 161, 243
Collins, 8
Colonial policy, 216
Commercial crisis, 118
Commons, House of, 93, 99, 194, 279-312
Communities, 256
Composition, the Author's mode of, 222, 241, 250
Comte, Auguste, a pupil of St. Simon, 165; his latest views, 213; obligations to, 209, 223, 245; correspondence with, 211; the Author's essay on his doctrines, 277
Condillac's writings, 62, 68
Condorcet's Life of Turgot, 113
Conservatives, 126; rally, 215; the stupid party, 289; their inadequate Bribery "Bill, 301; mistake the Author's views, 309
Constantine Paleologus, 15
Continent, first visit to the, 56; later journeys on the, 84, 250; the Author's final residence on the, 251,262
Continental society and opinions, 58, 227, 269
Co-operation Society of Owenites, 123
Co-operative Societies, socialistic experiments, 234
Corporations, 182
Correspondence, 237, 305; with Comte, 211
Corrupter-general, 107
Coulson, Walter, 87, 118
Courier, 117
Cowper's Works, 16
Crime and Punishment, amenable to Classification, 65
Crisis in the Author's mental life, 132; commercial, 118; in colonial affairs, 216; in England, 290; in Ireland, 288, 293
Cumulative Vote, 257, 303
Currency, 28, 118; Juggle, 182; absurd letters touching the, 305
Cynical element in James Mill, 47
DEATH, of Sterling, 156; of James Mill, 203; of the Author's wife, 250
Debating Society, 125, 150, 156
Deductive method, 159, 180; in ethics, history, and politics, 157, 210, 245; its early use, the best mental discipline, 19
Deficiencies in the Author's education, 35, 143, 189
Deism, 39, 69
Dejection, period of, 133, 145
Democracy, of James Mill, 25, 106; of the Author, 170, 191, 231, 253, 309; the safeguard of, 177
Demonstrative Science, 209, 225
Demosthenes, 11, 20, 23
Derby, Lord, 257, 292
Dickson, Colonel, 290
Disabilities of Catholics, 118; of minorities, 257,302; of unbelievers, 88; of women, 104, 167, 265, 304, 313; of working classes, 245
Disraeli, Mr., 257, 289, 300-2-10
Dissertations and Discussions, by the Author, 260, 306
Dorking, 69
Dryden's Poems, 16
Duffy, Mr., 279
Dumont, M., the editor of Bentham, 64, 114
Durham, Lord, his conduct praised by the Author, 215
Du Trieu, the Jesuit, his work on Logic, 122
Dynamics, 159
EAST INDIA COMPANY, 25; and James Mill, 26; and the Author, 81, 249
Economy, Political, early instruction in, aided by James Mill and Ricardo, 27, 54, 62; discussions on, 120: the Author's works on, 180, 234, 244, 279
Edgeworth, Miss, her Popular Tales, 9
Edinburgh Review, the, criticized by James Mill, 92; M'Culloch's writings in, 96, 99; the Author's writings in, 220, 306
Education, of the Author in early life, 1-70, later, 71,143, 184; James Mill's views on, 30, 52; endowments necessary for, 183; of the people, needed, 172, 231, 255; the Author's discourse on, 307
d'Eichthal, M. Gustave, 166
Election to Parliament, 279
Elections, legislation concerning, 300
Elements of Political Economy, by James Mill, 28, 62, 120, 205
Ellis, William, his intimacy with the Author, 81, 96, 121-5
Emigration, an aid to Irish depopulation, 236
Emotions, their place in the mental life, of James Mill, 49; of the Author, 143; of the Author's wife, 187; of Roebuck, 151; of most Englishmen, 59, 177, 228
Enfantin, the St. Simonian, 166
England and Ireland, the Author's pamphlet on, 293
English Society, 58, 177, 227, 238
Epicurean element in James Mill, 48
Essays on Political Economy, by the Author, 121, 180
Eternal punishment, 41
Evidence, Bentham's papers on, edited by the Author, 114. See Logic
Evil, existence of, 39, 70, 186 Examination of Hamilton, the Author's, 271
Excursions to the Continent, 56, 84, 248
Experience Metaphysics, 273, 308. See Association
Extradition, legislation on, 299
Eyre, Governor, conduct of, 296, 311
FAIRIE QUEENE, 16
Fallacies, Bentham's Book of, 114, 118; discussed in the Author's System of Logic, 222
Famine in Ireland, 235
Fatalism, a wrong doctrine, 170
Father. See Mill, James
Fawcett, Mr., 301
Feelings. See Emotions
Ferguson, 12
Fichte, 164, 255
Fielding, 117
Findlater, Dr. Andrew, his philological notes to James Mill's "Analysis," 308
Fonblanque, 103, 126; contributes to the Westminster Review, 96; his other writings, 89, 172, 197
Ford Abbey, Mr. Bentham's house, 55
Fordyce, Dr., 56
Fortescue, Mr., Bill of, 295
Fourier, 168
Fox, quoted, 169
Fox, Mr., editor of the Monthly Repository, 197
Fragment on Government, by Bentham, 117; Fragment on Mackintosh, by James Mill, 101, 201
France, the Author's visits to, 56, 84, 172, 250
Franchise, extension of, 289, 304
Eraser's Magazine, 261, 266, 270
French Revolution, of 1789, 62, 131, 217; of July 1830, 172; of 1848, 234, 262
Friendship, the most valuable of the Author's life, 184
GALE JONES, 125
Gallatin, 119
Gait, his novel suggests the word Utilitarian, 79
Garrison, the Abolitionist, 268
Gergonne, M., his lectures on Logic, 58
German, when and how learnt by the Author, 119
Germany visited, 84
Gertrude of Wyoming, 17
Gibbon, 7
Gladstone, Mr., 99, 292; his Reform Bill, 285; his Irish Land Bill, 294
Globe newspaper, 87
God, 39, 274
Goethe, 153-6, 161-3, 255
Goldsmith, 16, 117
Government, theory of, 104-7, 157, 170-7, 252, 264
Graham, George, intimacy with, 81, 97, 122; his share in the Author's earlier economical theories, 121
Gray's "Bard" and "Elegy," 16
Greece, its history studied, 7, 12; visited, 249
Greek, when learnt by the Author, 5
Grey, Lord, 172
Grote, Mr., intimacy with, 72, 90; writes for the Westminster Review, 96; original discussions at his house, 119; enters Parliament, 194; an annotator of James Mill's "Analysis," 308
HABEAS CORPUS, suspension of the, in Ireland, 288
Hadfield, Mr., 288
Hamilton, Sir William, examination of his Philosophy, 271 Hamiltonian method, the Author begins German on the, 119
Hare, Mr., his admirable system of Personal Representation, 258
Hartley, 68, 123, 201
Hawkesworth's Voyages, 9
Hayward, 128
Hell, 41
Helvetius, 68
Heineccius, 64
Hercules, choice of, 47
Herodotus, 5
Herschel's "Discourse," 208
Hickson, Mr., 220
History, how amenable to logic, 210
History of India, by James Mill, 4, 6, 24
Hobbes, 18, 122, 158
Holy Alliance, 98
Homer, 10, 14
Hooke, 7, 12
Horace, 11, 15; precept of, 237
Howick, Lord, 126
Hughes, Mr., 270
Humbolt, Wilhelm von, on freedom of education, 255
Hume, 7, 69
Hume, Mr., 54, 90, 99
Huskisson, 99
Hyde Park, special reminiscence of, 34; threatened riot in, 290
IGNATIUS LOYOLA, 213
Imagination, cultivation of the, 49, 112, 143
India, James Mill's History of, 4, 6, 24
Indian Government, 25, 81, 249
Individual, Sovereignty of the, 256
Induction, theory of, 182, 207, 224
International morality, 261
International Values, theories of, 121
Intervention, the Author's essay on, 261
Intuition, the school of, 226, 273
Ireland, the Author's pamphlet on, 293
Irish affairs, 118, 235, 287, 292
Isocrates, 5
Italy visited, 84, 249
JAMAICA, events in, 296
Joyce's Scientific Dialogues, 17
Judicial Evidence, Bentham's work on, edited, 116
Juggle, currency, the Author's article on the, 182
Jurist, article in the, 182
KINDS, the Author's theory of, 181, 221
LAFAYETTE, introduced to, 172
Land question, in Ireland, 235, 292
Langhorne's Plutarch, 7
Language, treated of, in System of Logic, 220
Latin authors, read, 5, 9, 20
Law, studies in, 63
Legislation, Bentham's works on, 64, 114
Legislative Commission, need of a, 264
Lenthéric, M., private tuition of, in higher mathematics, 58
Lessons taught and given in childhood, 5, 9, 17
Liberalism, 61, 98, 286
Liberal party, shortcomings of the, 194, 269, 301
Liberty, the Author's work on, 250
Livy, 11, 13
Locke's Essay, 68, 201
Logic, lessons in, 17; discussions on, 122; the Author's System of, 158, 180, 207, 221, 244 Longman, Messrs., 95, 279
Lorimer, Mr., 260
Loyola, Ignatius, 213
Lucas, Mr., 279
Lucretius, 11, 40
Ludlow, Mr., 270
MACAULAY, LORD, 77, 126, 157
Maccall, Mr. William, 255
McCrie's Life of Knox, 8
M'Culloch, 96, 99, 125-6
Mackintosh, Sir James, criticized by Grote, 72; James Mill on, 101, 201
M'Laren, Mr., 288
Malthus, principle of, 105, 231, 311
Manichsean theory, 40
Marginal analysis, 62, 70
Marmontel's Mémoires, 140
Marriage, 240
Marshall, Mr., 117
Marshall, Mr. Garth, 257
Mathematics, learnt, 6, 12, 58
Matter and Mind, theory of, 276
Maurice, joins the Debating Society, 128; his fine but wasted mental gifts, 152
Mill, James, the Author's father, his parentage and early life, 2; his friends and followers, 17, 27, 54, 72, 102; his religious history, 38; his employment in the India House, 3, 26; writes for the Westminster Review, 92, 96, 199; his History of British India, 24; his Elements of Political Economy, 28, 62; his article on Jurisprudence, 66; his Analysis of the Mind, 68, 123, 307; his Fragment on Mackintosh, 101, 201; his illness and death, 203; his character, opinions, and services, 46, 101, 157, 2015; his mode of educating the Author, 30
Mill, John Stuart, birth and early life of, 2; religious views of, 38; mental history of, 64, 133, 184; official life of, 81, 249; married life of, 240-250; later occupations of, 251; continental life of, 56, 84, 172, 249, 250-1, 313; connection of, with the Westminster Review, 97, 131, 199, 206, 220; parliamentary life of, 279; chief personal friends of, 54, 72-81, 149-156, 174-9, 184, 263; books written by, 180, 223, 234, 250, 260-4-5, 271, 306, 313; other writings of, 88, 118, 172, 182, 197, 220, 235, 256, 261-6, 270-1-8, 293, 313
Millar's "English Government," 8
Milton's Poems, 16
Mind, philosophy of, 68, 273, 307
Mingault, 11
Minorities, representation of, 258
Mitford's "Greece," read by the Author, 12; reviewed by Grote, 96
Modulation of the voice, 23
Molesworth, Sir William, in Parliament, 194; influence with, 197 establishes the London and Westminster Review, 199, 20?
Monarchy, 107, 177
Money, 28, 121, 182
Montauban, 57
Monthly Repository, the Author's articles in the, 197
Montpellier, 57, 250
Moore, the poet, 112
Moral authority, 107, 213
Moral Sciences, 161, 245
Morality, its relations to the two schools of philosophy, 225, 273
Morley, Mr., 313
Morning Chronicle, articles in the, by the Author, 88, 235
Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History, 8
Motives, true theory of, 169 Mozart, 145
Municipal Government for London, urged by the Author in Parliament, 286
Murray refuses to publish the Author's work on Logic, 223
Music, effect of, on the Author, 144
Mystic, 174
NATIONAL DEBT, 288
National Education, 257
Natural Method, 65. See Kinds.
Natural Religion, 69
Necessity, a misleading word, 169
Negroes, how treated in Jamaica, 297
Neutral vessels, the Author's Speech on, 286
Newington Green, 6, 184
Non-intervention, the Author's essay on, 261
Northwater Bridge, 2
Notes on the Newspapers, by the Author, 197
ODGER, MR., 284
Official life, the Author's, 81, 249
Operatic music, 145
Orators of antiquity, studied, 11, 20, 72
Organon, read, 17
Owenites, their Co-operation Society, 123; opinions of the, 167, 172
Oxford, debaters from, 126
PALEY, attack on, by Professor Sedgwick, 200
Palmerston,Lord, conduct of, 249, 261
Pamphlets by the Author, on Reform, 256, 283; on Ireland, 293
Pandects, 64
Paoli, the Corsican patriot, 8
Parker, Mr., publishes the Author's System of Logic, 223
Parliament, the Author's Election to, 279
"Parliamentary History and Review," 118
Parliamentary Reform, the Author's pamphlet on, 256
Pascal, 117
Pau, 57
Peel, 99
Pericles, imaginary case of, 72
Periods, three, in the Author's mental history, 64, 133, 230
Perry, Mr., 89
Personal Representation, Mr. Hare's system of, 258; advocated by the Author, 257, 302; disliked by spurious democrats, 311
Pestalozzi, 255
Phillips, Wendell, the orator of the Abolitionists, 268
Philosophes, 108
Philosophical Necessity, 168
Philosophical Radicalism, 94, 98, 105, 200, 287
Philosophic Positive, 209, 277
Philosophy. See Analysis, Hamilton, and Logic
Physical education of the Author, 35, 57
Plato's dialogues, begun by the Author, 5; their good influence on his later culture, 21, 47, 65, 113; his writings on, 198, 306
Plurality of votes, advocated by the Author, 257; mistake of Tories as to, 310. See Hare
Plutarch, Langhorne's translation of, 7
Poetry, early readings in, 16; undervaluing of, 112: later appreciation of, 146, article on the theory of, 197
Political Economy, 120, 180, 234, 244, 279
Poor Law, 193, 236 Pope, 10, 14, 113
Population, voluntary restraint of, 105, 231, 311
Positivism, 209, 277
Potter, Mr. T. B., 288
Praed, 126
Prescott, Grote's partner, 120
Priests, evil influence of, 43, 107, 212
Priestley's edition of Hartley, 123
Primogeniture attacked, by Austin, 96; by the Author, 231
Production of Wealth, laws of the, first distinguished from those of Distribution in the Author's Political Economy, 246
Profits, theory of, discussed, 121
Propagandism, utilitarian, of the Author's youth, 102
Property, equitable distribution of, 230
Propositions, 122, 159
Protestantism, 43, 165
Provencal, M., his lectures on zoology, 57
Pulling, Sergeant, 300
Punishable Acts, 65
Pyrenees, 57, 147
QUAKERS, histories of the, read in boyhood, 8
Quarterly Review, exposed by James Mill, 96
Queen's Square, 55
RADICALISM, 94, 98
Radicals, 98, 191-8, 287, 300
Reasoning, treatment of, in the Author's System of Logic, 159, 180, 209
Reciprocity principle, 119
Reform, 256, 264, 302
Reform Bill, 257, 285
Reform League, 290
Reformation, 43, 164
Reid, 69, 272
Religion, the Author's, 38, 70, 251
Representation, Personal, 258, 286, 302, 311
Representative Government, the Author's work on, 264
Restinclière, 57
Revelation, 39
Rhetoric, Aristotle's, carefully studied in boyhood, 11
Ricardo, David, James Mill's dearest friend, 27, 54, 72, 90, 99
Robertson, 206
Robertson, the historian, read, 7
Robinson Crusoe, the Author's favourite book during childhood, 9
Roebuck, John Arthur, the Author's intimacy with, 81; writes for the Westminster Review, 97; a member of the second Utilitarian Society, 121; a founder of the Debating Society, 123-5-8; his discussion with the Author on poetry and the emotions, 150; his services in Parliament, 195
Rollin's Ancient History, 7
Roman History, early studies in, 7, 12
Romilly, Lord, 77, 103, 118, 126-8, 194
Russell, Lord, Government of, 289, 293
Rutty's History of the Quakers, 8
SABÆAN THEORY, 40
St. Loup, 57
St. Pons, 57
Saint Simon, 61, 165
St. Simonian School, 163, 247
Sartor Resartus, Carlyle's best work, 175
Say, M., the Author's visits to, 60
Schiller, 156
Science, method of, 159. See Logic Scott, Sir Walter, 16, 131, 147
Sectarianism, 114
Sedgwick's Discourse, criticized, 200
Sentimentality, 111
Sewell's History of the Quakers, 8
Shakspeare, 16
Shee, Sergeant, 128
Shelley, 186
Sicily visited, 249
Slavery quarrel in America, 266
Smith, Adam, 28
Socialism, 163, 231, 256
Social Science, Comte on, 210
Societies, Co-operative, 234
Society, Continental, 58, 177, 227; Debating, 126; English, 227, 238; Owenian, 123; Utilitarian, 79
Socrates, 5. 21, 47, 113
Socratici viri, 47
Southern, Mr. Henry, 94, 129
Southey's Book of the Church, 96
Speeches in Parliament, 288-9, 293-7-8, 302-3
Spenser's Fairie Queene, 16
Spirit of the Age, the Author's articles on the, 173
Stanley, Lord, offers the Author a seat on the Indian Council, 249
Statistics, method of, 210
Sterling, John, joins the Debating Society, 328; his friendship with the Author, fine qualities, and early death, 154; writes for the Westminster Review, 206
Stewart, Dugald, 69, 181
Stoicism of James Mill, 47
Strutt (Lord Belper), 77, 103, 118, 194
Stuart, Sir John and Lady Jane, 2
Stupidity of the Conservatives, 289
Subjection of Women, the Author's work on the, 244, 265, 313
Suez Canal, opposed by Lord Paltnerston, 261
Suffrage, extension of the, to the working classes, 289; claimed by the Author for women, 304
Sundays, how passed, 84
Surrey Hills, Mr. Bentham's house in the, 55
Switzerland visited, 84
Syllogism, true theory of the, first explained by the Author, 180
TAIT'S MAGAZINE, articles in, 182
Taylor, Mr. 185, 229
Taylor, Miss, 229, 251, 263
Telling sentences, 129
Temperance, James Mill on, 47-8
Theory, incorrect definition of, 32
Thirlwall, Bishop, the best speaker ever heard by the Author, 125
Thirty-nine Articles, 153
Thompson, General, and the Westminster Review, 130, 199
Thompson, Mr. William, 125
Thomson, Charles Poulett (Lord Sydenham), 126
Thomson, Dr., his "Chemistry," useful to the Author, 17, 160
Thomson's "Winter," 15
Threadneedle Street, Mr, Grote's house in, 120
Tocqueville, M. de, the Author's obligations to his "Democracy in America," 191
Tooke, Mr., 99
Tooke, William Eyton, intimacy with, 81, 97, 103, 152
Tories, 215, 289, 309; mistake the Author's views, 310; stupidity of the, 289
Torrens, Colonel, 87
Toulouse, 57
Tragedies, written by the Author when a child, 15
"Traité de Législation," Dumont's rédaction of, from Bentham, of great use to the Author, 64 Traveller newspaper, the, contains the Author's first published writings, 87
Turgot's Life, by Condorcet, 113
Tweeddale, Marquis of, 3
Tyrol visited, 84
UNBELIEVERS, 45
Utilitarians, source of the word, 79, Society of, 79, 120; opinions of, 106-201
VALUES, International, the Author's theories of, 121
Village Community, of Warrenites, 256
Villiers, Hyde, Charles and George, 77, 125-6-8
Voltaire, 57, 117, 205
Vote, Cumulative, in School Board elections, 303
WAKEFIELD, 216
Wallace, Mr., 18
Walpole, Mr., 291
Warburton, 194
Warren, Mr., 256
Watson's Philip the Second, 7, 13
Wealth, Production and Distribution of, 246
Weber's Oberon, 144
Westminster Review, 91, 129, 199, 220, 271-8
Whately, Archbishop, Logic of, 122, 181, 223
Whewell's "Inductive Sciences," 208, 223-4
Whig party, exposure of, by James Mill, 94; swamp the Radicals, 196; will not legislate against corrupt practices, 301
Wilberforce, Bishop, 126
Wickliffe, assumed signature of, 88
Wife, the Author's, first marriage of, 185, 229; second marriage of, 240; rare and noble qualities of, 186; value of her friendship and assistance, 188, 241; her death an inexpressible loss, 241, 250
Will, true theory of the, 169
Women, disabilities of, 104, 167, 304. See Subjection.
Wordsworth, peculiar influence of his poetry on the Author, and consequent discussion with Roebuck, 146-150
Working classes, 245, 289
XENOPHON, 5, 11; value of his Memorabilia to the Author, 47
YOUTHFUL propagandism, 79, 102
ZOOLOGY, lectures of M. Provençal on, 57