M.
_Manners_ and Character of the Age, vol. ii., p. 564.
_Marten_, Henry: inscription for his apartment in Chepstow Castle, vol. i., p. 35.
_Macfungus_, Mr.: his speech at the meeting of the Friends of Freedom, vol. i., p. 131.
_Meeting_ of the Friends of Freedom, vol. i., pp. 91, 125.
_Misrepresentations_, vol. i., pp. 19, 47, 117, 157, 180, 218, 252, 293, 324, 347, 396, 436, 470, 501, 541, 577, 615; vol. ii., pp. 8, 46, 79, 121, 154, 195, 231, 307, 333, 441, 484, 515 597.
_Mistakes_, vol. i., pp. 56, 124, 159, 188, 221, 257, 351, 397, 439, 473, 504, 543, 581, 620; vol. ii., pp. 12, 48, 84, 126, 154, 199, 235, 308, 338, 385, 443, 484, 519.
_Misapprehension_ on the subject of the proposed Increase of the Assessed Taxes, vol. i., p. 190.
_Moira_, Lord: the singularity of his conduct, vol. i., p. 58—his story of the Child and the Rush Light contradicted, p. 188—his weakness, p. 252—lays it down as a general principle, that the liberty of the press is destroyed in Ireland, p. 274—is referred to the Press and the Dublin Evening Post, p. 275—famous for acting a bull, vol. ii., p. 14—duped to an extraordinary degree, p. 86—a great physiognomist, p. 517—a great dupe, p. 518, &c., &c., &c.
_Moira_, Lord: Letter to, on the State of Ireland, vol. i., pp. 77, 109, 161.
_Moira_, Lord: Ode to, vol. i., p. 380.
_Moira_, the late Earl of: his account of the celebrated enchantress, Moll Coggin, vol. i., p. 299.
_Moll Coggin_: the late Earl of Moira’s account of her, vol. i., p. 299.
_Morning Chronicle_, calls the Thanksgiving for Lord Duncan’s Victory a _Frenchified Farce_, vol. i., p. 157—insults the King—maligns the Parliament—belies the Resources—ridicules and reviles the spirit of the Nation—advises unconditional submission to France—declares that our arms are without energy, our hearts without courage, and our sword at the service of every puny whipster, vol. ii., p. 85, &c.
_Morning Chronicle_: its impiety—its blasphemy—its falsehood—its historical, geographical, and political ignorance—its insolence, baseness, and stupidity—_passim_, _passim_.
_Morning Chronicle_, the editor of: why called the Père du Chène, vol. ii., p. 471.
_Muskein_, Citizen: his Consolatory Address to his Gun-boats, vol. ii., p. 312—his Affectionate Address to Hâvre de Grace, vol. ii., p. 498.
N.
_Narrative_ of the Riot at Tranent, vol. i., p. 59.
_Naval History_, vol. i., p. 222.
_Neutral_ Navigation, vol. i., pp. 398, 505.
_New Morality_, a Poem, vol. ii., p. 623.
_New_ and approved method of conveying abuse, vol. i., p. 502.
_Neat_ Speech—see _Lord John Russell_.
_Nicholls_, Mr. John: his faculties confounded by Mr. Pitt’s speech, vol. i., p. 47—treated very unkindly by his associates, vol. i., p. 186—has his pockets picked by Mr. Jekyl of his _genuine_ speech at the Crown and Anchor—offers seventeen of the _spurious_ ones in payment for his dinner at _ditto_—is refused admittance, vol. i., p. 410.
_Nicholls_, Mr. John: a great Parliament man, but thought to be very tart and sour by Mrs. Deborah Wigmore, Mr. Wright’s housekeeper, vol. i., p. 553.
_Norfolk_, Duke of: his speech at the Crown and Anchor, vol. i., pp. 412, 418—his dismissal, vol. i., p. 429—observations on his toast, by a Freemason, vol. i., p. 587—defended by a Symposiast, vol. i., p. 589—curious account of his dismissal from the French Papers, vol. i., p. 614; vol. ii., p. 16.
O.
_Ode_ to Anarchy, by a Jacobin, vol. i., p. 301.
_Ode_ to Lord Moira, vol. i., p. 380.
_Ode_, a bit of an, to Mr. Fox, vol. i., p. 422.
_Ode_ to Jacobinism, vol. ii., p. 53.
_Ode_ to my Country, 1798, vol. ii., p. 342.
_Ode_ to the Director Merlin, vol. ii., p. 388.
_Ode_ to a Jacobin, vol. ii., p. 576.
_Origin_ and Progress of the French Revolution, vol. i., p. 22.
P.
_Pavia_, Treaty of, proved to be a Jacobin forgery, vol. i., p. 474.
_Père du Chène_, appellation of: why given to the editor of _The Morning Chronicle_, vol. ii., p. 471.
_Pilnitz_, Treaty of, proved to be a Jacobin forgery, vol. ii., p. 37.
_Poetry_, vol. i., pp. 31, 69, 103, 168, 199, 236, 263, 301, 329, 371, 421, 452, 486, 524, 556, 597, 620; vol. ii., pp. 21, 53, 95, 133, 162, 200, 236, 274, 312, 339, 387, 415, 446, 497, 528, 576, 603.
_Porcupine_, Peter, a spirited and instructive writer, vol. i., p. 332.
_Prisoners of War_, vol. i., pp. 234, 277, 326; vol. ii., p. 310.
_Prize of Dullness_, vol. i., pp. 421, 448, 522; awarded, vol. i., p. 552.
_Progress of Man_, a Didactic Poem, vol. i., pp. 524, 558; vol. ii., p. 97.
_Proceedings_ of the Whig Club, vol. ii., p. 260.
_Prologue_ to the Rovers; or, the Double Arrangement, vol. ii., p. 420.
R.
_Ram_—see _Sir John Sinclair_.
_Review_ of the proposed plan of Finance, vol. i., p. 143.
_Review_ of the Session, vol. ii., p. 583.
_Rovers_, the; or, the Double Arrangement, vol. ii., pp. 420, 446.
_Russell_, Lord John, makes a very neat Speech, vol. i., p. 126.
_Russell_, Lord William, makes a very appropriate Speech, vol. i., p. 126.
S.
_Sale_ of the Land Tax, vol. ii., p. 1, 269.
_Secession_ of the Opposition, observations on, vol. i., p. 36.
_Secret_ Expedition of British _Savans_, vol. ii., p. 529.
_Sinclair_, Sir John, embarks with his Ram in the Capricorn on a secret expedition, vol. ii., p. 532.
_Soldier’s Friend_: an Ode, vol. i., p. 169.
_Song_: a new one, appointed to be sung at all _Convivial_ Meetings convened for the purpose of opposing the Assessed Tax Bill, vol. i., p. 303.
_Sonnet_ to Liberty, vol. i., p. 169.
_Sourby_, Letitia: her letter, vol. i., p. 195.
_Speculator_: his observations on Cardinal Antici’s letter to Buonaparte, vol. i., p. 586.
_Symposiast’s_, A, defence of the Duke of Norfolk’s celebrated toast, vol. i., p. 589.
T.
_Tate_, Colonel; his instructions, vol. i., pp. 480, 498.
_Tooke_, Horne: his speech at the Crown and Anchor, vol. i., p. 417.
_Translation_ of the Latin verses written after the Revolution of the fourth of September, vol. i., p. 201.
_Translation_ of the new song of the “Army of England,” vol. i., p. 331.
_Translation_ of a letter from _Bawba-dara-adul-phoola_ to _Neek-awl-aretchid-kooez_, vol. ii., p. 532.
_Treaty of Pavia_, proved to be a Jacobin forgery, vol. i., p. 474.
_Treaty of Pilnitz_, proved to be a Jacobin forgery, vol. ii., p. 37.
U.
_Unattached_ Officers, vol. i., p. 362.
_Unjust_ Aggressions, vol. i., pp. 420, 440, 549; vol. ii., pp. 522, 600.
_Union Star_: extracts from, vol. i., p. 352.