CHAPTER XIX
THE CLOSING YEARS
Upon only one occasion in his life could a charge of Jingoism have been brought against Mr. Labouchere. The last long speech he made in the House of Commons was against the second reading of the Women's Enfranchisement Bill, in which he said that he objected to women being given the vote because they could not be soldiers; in short, because their physical limitations prevented them from being able to take a place in the battlefield. A member pointed out that the speaker himself was not a military man. With passion he replied that, whereas there was not a man alive who could not fight, and, if necessary, swim through seas of gore to protect his native land, the other sex were incapable of putting up with the hardships and privation involved in warfare.[1]
It was in the third session of Mr. Balfour's Parliament that Mr. Labouchere made his last speech in the House of Commons. He was nearly seventy-four years old, and had been hankering for some time after the delights of a reposeful old age in the retirement of the beautiful villa he had bought in the neighbourhood of Florence four years before. Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman had written to him in the previous December, when a rumour of his intended retirement had reached him: "I hope you are not really thinking of breaking off with Parliament, though I frankly say it is what {518} I should do if I could, who have the advantage of a year or two over you, but I think we old stagers with sound views are wanted to steady the new-century gentlemen by a little of our early Victorian wisdom." But Mr. Labouchere was wise enough to know how dull it would be to exist in a modern Parliament as almost the only survivor of the grand old Victorian Radical party, whose sympathies and ideals, the policy of the Labour members alone resembled, in the remotest degree. His mind was made up, but he kept his own counsel, except to his leader, because, as he wrote to Mr. Robert Bennett at the time of his retirement, a man who is known not to be going to stand again becomes a nonentity in Parliament.
In a letter to Mr. Edward Thornton, the month before his withdrawal from public life, he gave his view of the Parliamentary situation at that time:
Just now politics are dead. When Parliament meets, the Liberals will try to put the Government in a majority during the session, and Balfour will try to carry on to the end of it. There seems no reason why he should be beaten, provided that he can keep his men in the House. But this is also our difficulty. The individual M.P. never wants an election.... Campbell Bannerman is now absolutely certain to be the next Premier unless his health breaks down. All that you see about this or that man in the Cabinet is only intelligent anticipation. He is not _de jure_ on the succession to the Premiership, there are no consultations, and he has a wholesome distrust of his Front Bench friends who almost all have intrigued against him. I know him intimately, and he talks to me pretty freely, for I have expressed to him that I want nothing. At seventy-four a man is a fool to be a Minister.
The news of Mr. Labouchere's retirement came as a surprise to most of the world. The first intimation to the public was his letter to the Liberal electors of Northampton announcing his decision. It was written from Florence, and dated December 14, 1905. It ran as follows:
{519}
GENTLEMEN,--I have been elected by a majority of you to represent you in six Parliaments. I have received no intimation from any of the Radicals, to whose votes I have owed my having been your member for twenty-five years, that they disapprove of my Parliamentary action whilst serving them, or that they do not wish me to be one of their candidates at the next general election. Were I, therefore, to come forward again as a candidate there is little doubt that I should be one of your representatives in a seventh Parliament. But I am now seventy-four years old. At that age a man is neither so strong nor active as he once was, and any one who wishes to represent efficiently a large and important constituency like yours in Parliament should be strong in wind and limb. I feel therefore that I ought not to take advantage of your consideration towards me in a matter so vital to you in order to lag superfluous on the political stage.
I have delayed until now making this announcement because it was impossible to know when a general election would take place, and I thought that it would be more convenient to you for me to wait until the date of the election was settled and near at hand. I do not think that my withdrawal will affect the position of parties in Northampton. In Dr. Shipman you have a member whose Parliamentary action has been in accord with the pledges that have already secured his return, and on whose personal worth all are agreed. You will have no difficulty in finding a man to replace me, as eager to promote the cause of democracy as I am, and who will be better able to fight for the cause than one in the sere and yellow leaf.
Mr. Labouchere remarked once, that he had on one occasion only been asked by a constituent for a pledge with regard to his Parliamentary action. He had unhesitatingly given it, and been unflinchingly true to his word. The elector's injunction had been, "Now, mind, I say, and keep your hi on Joe." But whether the story is a slight exaggeration of the confidence his constituents had in him to faithfully represent their views at Westminster or not, it gives elliptically a description of his attitude during the twenty-five years he served the electors of Northampton. He became {520} their member as an anti-Imperialist, in Lord Beaconsfield's interpretation of the term, and he took his leave of them as an anti-Imperialist, in the more modern, and what may be called "Chamberlain" sense of the word.
I shall quote Mr. T. P. O'Connor's farewell on the occasion of his retirement, which he published under the title of "The Passing of Labby," for, apart from its literary merit, it is the fine appreciation of a friend of many years' standing, who knew the value of Mr. Labouchere from the social as well as the Parliamentary and journalistic points of view:
There is no old member of the House of Commons who will not feel a pang of personal regret at hearing that Labby is leaving that Assembly. No one has a right to criticise a man for giving up an active life at seventy-four years of age--he has done his work. But Labby had become an almost essential part of the House of Commons; and there never will be anybody who can quite take his place there. That extraordinary combination of strong party zeal, with a lurking desire to make mischief; the sardonic and satirical spirit, mingled with a certain fierce, though carefully concealed zeal for the public good; the mordant wit that was equally the delight of the House and of the smoking room; the world-wide and varied experience of all life in almost every country and in almost every form--these are the possessions of but one man, and his like we shall never see again. There are two Labbys. There is the Labby who almost corrodes with his bitter wit, and who seems to laugh at everything in life. There is the other Labby who has strong, stern purpose, who hates all shams, all cruelty, all imposture, all folly, and who has made war on all these things for more than a quarter of a century. There is even a third Labby--the man who hates to give pain even to a domestic, and who is laughingly said to have run out of a room rather than face the irritated looks of a maidservant whom he had summoned by too vigorous a pull at the bell. One of the reasons of the popularity Labby enjoyed in the House was his tolerant amiability. I have seen him in the smoking room in the most friendly converse with many a man whom in previous years he had most fiercely attacked; he bore no ill will, and treated all {521} those encounters as demanded by business, and as dismissable when the fight was over. Finally Labby was a far straighter, far more serious, far more effective politician than his own persiflage would allow people to think. With all his light wit, there was something stern and rigid in the man, as you could see from the powerful mouth, with the full compressed lips. He was perfectly honest in his hatred of extravagance, pretence, vainglory. He preferred riding in a tramcar to riding in a coach and four. He dressed so shabbily sometimes that his counsel used to have to remonstrate with him when he had to answer a charge of libel. He was an ascetic in eating. Once he dined quite comfortably, when he was electioneering, on ham sandwiches with sponge-cake for bread. He rarely, if ever, tasted wine; he smoked incessantly the poorest and cheapest cigarettes. As he was in private, so he was in public life. He derided all great Imperial designs as snobbery and extravagance; he hated ambition--in short, he was in both his personal habits and his public opinions, a true devotee of the simple life. He did immense service to his party in his time. During the heat of the Home Rule controversy he spoke in scores of towns; took journeys by night and by day, never spared himself exertion, never complained of discomfort; in his laughing air, with his assumed air of languor, he was a strenuous, manly, courageous fighter. And he never changed, he never concealed, he never explained away his opinion upon anything. And so I bid him with regret farewell from a scene where he was a model of honest good faith and courage.[2]
So Labby goes! [mourned the _Morning Post_]. What Parliament and public life will be without him, I hate to think. The letter of cheery regrets to his Northampton constituents subtracts the _sauce piquante_ from the Parliamentary dish. The House has long counted Labby as the last of its originals, has prized him as a refreshing relish, has looked to him for the unexpected flavour. All strangers would ask inevitably to have him pointed out, and the House would fill at once when the word went round the corridors and lobbies and smoking rooms that Labby was "up" and holding forth from his customary corner {522} seat below the gangway--the best of all positions from which to address the House. So too the smoking room became suddenly crowded when Labby was to be seen standing there with back to fireplace, the eternal cigarette between his lips, ready for talk. It gives a peculiar pang to realise that he will be seen there no more. But the pang is lessened when one finds Labby--Labby of all men--seriously pleading old age as a ground for his retirement. It sounds like one of his little jokes, or, perhaps, it is a genuine case of hallucination. Labby had possibly a touch of old age at twenty, but he had also the sense to outgrow it. Since then he has never relapsed, and now in the seventy-fifth year of his youth, and with a pen several years younger, it is a vain and commonplace and un-Labbyish thing to pretend that youth and he are no longer "housemates still." An unbelieving world will not accept that plea.... I daresay that, half a century ago, Labby was, not unlike the wise youth Adrian in Meredith's _Richard Feverel_, quite unnaturally cool and quizzical, long-headed and non-moral, but an Adrian humanised by something of the Bohemian spirit and a turn for careless pleasuring. And in those days, no doubt--his Eton and Cambridge days--he struck his contemporaries as really old. But no one, for fifty years, has ever accused him of not having overcome his early weakness; and it was the very last charge I ever expected to hear Labby prefer against himself.[3]
There was something about Mr. Labouchere's personality, apart from his deeds and thoughts, which appealed almost irresistibly to the affectionate sympathies of all mankind. To find an ill-natured comment in any of the articles that were published about him in the press when he left the House of Commons is so difficult that, were such a one to be recorded in this volume, it would give its author an almost unenviable position of distinction. But in order to be perfectly impartial, I shall merely quote the pleasant part of the only one I could find, so that its writer need not feel that he has been placed in an out-of-the-way corner with a fool's cap on his head:
{523}
On the whole Mr. Labouchere has done a great deal of good in his life, more good and less evil than many so-called statesmen. He has exposed swindlers and moneylenders and rotten companies. He has obtained for the public the right to ride, drive, and walk up and down Constitution Hill. No victim of cruelty or injustice ever appealed to him for a hearing in vain. Above all he wrote an English style of remarkable purity, logic, and humour.
Letters of regretful farewell poured in upon Labby in his Florentine home, and he possessed a kindly characteristic common to nearly all frankly unpretentious human beings. He loved his post. In his cosy armchair by the fire he read his letters and enjoyed them, and what was more--he proceeded to answer them. No pre-occupation, however diverting, ever prevented him from, at the first available moment sitting down to his writing-table, and, in the almost illegible hand which he vainly tried to improve, penning answers to his welcome correspondents.
"I have been very sorry, but not surprised," wrote Sir Henry Campbell Bannerman to him on Christmas Day, "to read in the newspapers of your retirement. It is not over kind of you to put it on the ground of age, for that hits some of the rest of us hard. For my part, I confess my sentiment when I read it was: _O si sic omnes_--and envy was the prevailing feeling. But, seriously, we shall miss you greatly as one always ready to hoist the flag of the old Liberalism, as distinguishable from the less stout and stalwart doctrine which passes for Liberalism with the moderns.
"But now as you are going would you care to have the House of Commons honour of Privy Councillor? If so it would be to me a genuine pleasure to be the channel of conveying it. You ought to have had it long ago. I may add that in the highest quarter gratification would be felt. I have taken soundings. I think we have done and are doing pretty well. The Government are pretty well the pick of the basket, though there are some good men left out, and I {524} think we can make it a change of policy and not a mere change of men. All seasonable wishes to you and yours.--Yours always,
"H. C. B."
"Knowing you to be a wise man," wrote Lord Selby, who had been Speaker of the House in three of the six Parliaments of which Mr. Labouchere had been a member, "I was not surprised to see that you had made up your mind to eschew Westminster, and enjoy Florence and its climate, but if I were still in the Chair I should miss you in the next Parliament, and I am sure the smoking-room will be a forlorn place without you; and I do not see how the loss is to be repaired, for it takes a good many years to grow a plant of the same kind. I wish you and Mrs. Labouchere long leisure and much pleasure in your Italian home, seasoned with occasional visits to England. The election may be said to have begun with Balfour's speech at Leeds, and Campbell Bannerman's at the Albert Hall...."
The leader of the Irish party wrote from Dublin:
"DEAR LABOUCHERE,--When writing the other day, I did not know that you had any idea of retiring from Parliament. I learned your intention with deep regret. You have been so long one of the truest friends of Ireland that you will be missed by us all, and at a time when we can badly spare a real friend. With heartiest good wishes, and many thanks for your advice and assistance on so many occasions, I remain very truly yours,
"J. E. REDMOND."
"I have just read your farewell to Northampton," wrote Sir Wilfrid Lawson, on December 17, "and it has troubled me. I am going to stand again for Cockermouth (I am older than you!) with a _fair_ chance of success, but, if I win and get back to the House, I shall feel that it is not exactly the same place without you. I therefore just write this to say how sorry I am to lose you. Certainly you have always held up bravely and ably the banner of the Radicalism in which {525} I believe, and it remains to be seen whether we shall get it as well held up in the Parliament which is to be. Any way those who believe in Government 'of, for, and by the people,' ought to be grateful to you for your persistent preaching and teaching of that doctrine.
"The new Government promises well, but I remember a story on which you trenchantly commented in _Truth_ some years ago. When Lord Dudley was married it was proposed in the Kidderminster Corporation that they should give him a wedding present, on which an old weaver rose and suggested that it should be postponed '_till we see how he goes on_.'
"Well, I hope that you will go on well and happily till the end of your days, and, meantime, not forget to give outside help to your old comrades, who for a bit longer are grinding in the Parliamentary mill."
Lord James of Hereford wrote:
"The announcement of your departure from the House of Commons seems almost to affect me personally. I recall a day in the end of August, 1868, when you and I and John Stamforth were sitting in front of the Kursaal at Homburg. You and I were discussing our relative chances in Middlesex and at Taunton, and then you asked Stamforth how he was getting on at Athlone. "I am member for Athlone," replied that unfortunate man, who afterwards, as you know, polled one vote.
"Well, the water has been flowing on since then. You and I have seen a good deal of political life, and taken a fair share in it. I hope we have not done much harm, but Heaven only knows. I am very sorry that you are not continuing in the fight....
"I know how little I can do, for I am three years older than you are--but the House of Lords offers some opportunities for easy going to an old one."
"DEAR LABOUCHERE," wrote Lord Edmond Fitzmaurice,--"We have enjoyed sweet converse together in the House of Commons and in the woods of Marienbad on 'men and {526} things.' We are both leaving the House of Commons at the same time, so I send you a word of greeting--or farewell, or by whatever other name it may be appropriate to describe these words.... A short Parliament generally follows a long Parliament, and I expect to see this canon once more illustrated."
"The _New York Herald_ of this morning announces your appointment as a P. C.," wrote Sir Edmund Monson from Paris. "I am very glad that you have received this distinction, which, in my own case, I have always regarded as the most acceptable of all that have been bestowed on me.... I can quite understand your relinquishing Parliament, and I hope you may long enjoy the _otium cum dignitate_ which no place better than Florence can supply.... Believe me, always your sincere old friend,
"EDMUND MONSON."
Lord Brampton wrote on the last day but one of the year: "I have just received your note. Your reasons for retirement from Parliament are unreasonable. But, as far as I am concerned, although I have not a word of objection to offer, still I remain _sorry_. With all my heart I rejoice in to-day's _Times_, and offer to you, my right honourable friend, my heartiest congratulations to you and all yours, and every good wish for the coming New Year. I wish I could avail myself of your invitation to Florence, but I fear I have no chance, as I am very weak still and can hardly hold a pen."
Only one other letter must be quoted from the friends of Labby's youth. Sir Henry Lucy wrote on Christmas Day:
"MY DEAR LABOUCHERE,--You will find in the forthcoming issue of _Punch_ some reflections on 'The Sage of Queen Anne's Gate,' from the Diary of Toby, M.P. I believe they echo the feeling of the whole House of Commons, irrespective of party, at the prospect of your withdrawal from the scene.
{527}
"But why cut Westminster altogether? There is still the House of Lords. If I might behold you walking out shoulder to shoulder with the Archbishop of Canterbury to vote 'content' or 'not content' as the case might be, I should feel I had not lived in vain.... With a warmth and friendship dating back nearly thirty years--Eheu! we were colleagues on the _World_ staff in 1875."
Toby, M.P., recalled in a pathetic little article in _Punch_ the way Mr. Gedge had tried to do Labby out of his corner seat below the gangway, where Sir Charles Dilke had sat beside him on one side of the House or the other ever since Mr. Gladstone's Parliament of 1892. In order to secure a seat in the House, members had to be present at the reading of prayers, during which any one could slip a card with his name upon it into the back of the place he wanted. Now Labby was never at prayers, and yet, Mr. Gedge noticed, he had always had the same seat secured to himself in the orthodox manner. Accordingly, one day he allowed his thoughts to wander whilst the House of Commons devotions were proceeding, and his eyes followed his thoughts. Between his fingers held devoutly before his face, he peeped, and noticed Sir Charles Dilke, buried in prayer as usual. Then he saw his devotion relax for a moment. Sir Charles was slipping a card into the back of the seat which he intended to secure for himself, and Mr. Gedge was horrified to see that he proceeded to slip a card with Labby's name upon it into the back of the next one--the coveted corner seat below the gangway. Mr. Gedge subsequently drew the attention of the House to this piece of underhand dealing, but honourable gentlemen did not choose to take any notice of what would clearly not have been observed, if Mr. Gedge had been paying proper attention to his prayers.
A propos to the seating accommodation in the House of Commons, it should be remembered that as far back as 1893, when the disgraceful scrimmage for seats took place at the introduction of Mr. Gladstone's Home Rule Bill, {528} Mr. Labouchere had begun to agitate for a new House of Commons with seats for every member. He explained to a journalist at the time his plan for an ameliorated House:
"At present," he said, "a man goes before a constituency and, after a lot of trouble and expense, wins a seat--so it is called. He then comes up here to Westminster, and finds he has gone through only half the preliminaries necessary for securing a seat. He has taken only the first steps, which are simply child's play to what he has yet to do. Getting elected is simply nothing comparatively. First I wanted an octagonal chamber," he proceeded, "but I find general opinion will retain the present form. So my idea is to have eight rows of seats on each side of the House, curving round at the end opposite to the Speaker. If each row will seat forty-two members, you will find that will provide a seat for the whole six hundred and seventy-two. Then every one could retain his seat throughout the session. The difficulty about the square shape of the House is that it gives you an equal number of seats for each party and the Government is generally in a majority. That is why I would run the seats round at one end--so that the supporters of the Government could have the whole of one side, and as far as the second gangway on the other. Having a broader House would necessarily mean enlarging the Press and Strangers' Galleries also. All the members are in favour of it, with the exception of the front benches. They have got their seats assured, so they say that the House is cosy, and to enlarge it would force them to pitch their voices higher." The journalist who was interviewing him commented on the extreme moderation of his designs for an ameliorated House of Commons. "Oh," remarked Mr. Labouchere, "these are just the alterations we shall probably make. What I personally should have liked would be to clear the Lords out of their House, which is bigger than the House of Commons, and install ourselves therein."[4] Eight years {529} later he went to Vienna, and poured forth in _Truth_ the story of his envy when he saw the Austrian House of Deputies:
I went to see the Parliament House, and, after inspecting it, I felt that I could with pleasure join a mob to disinter the remains of the eminent architect who built the Palace at Westminster and hang his bones on a gibbet. The Vienna architect has erected a building which is Parliament Architecture. Everything is adapted to the wants and requirements of those who want to use it. The members of each of the two Chambers sit in a semi-circular room, and each member has an armchair and a desk before him. The general objection made to this plan of a deliberative room is that it obliges members to speak from a tribune. But at Vienna they speak from their places, and, owing to the excellent acoustic properties of the Chamber, they can be perfectly heard. I went over the place in the company of a priest who was visiting it at the same time. He perceived that I was an Englishman, and asked me how the place compared with the English Parliament House. "The members in England," I said, "sit in an oblong room, in which there are only places for half their number." "But what do the others do?" he asked. "They do not listen to the debates," I replied; "they seldom know what is under discussion. A bell rings and they come in, and are told to vote as their leader orders them." As a good Radical I felt it necessary to give a further explanation, so I continued: "The majority of the members are the supporters of the Government; it is one of the worst Governments with which a country was ever cursed; it is called the 'stupid party,' and it is composed of Junkers and men who have made much money. They want the laws to be made for their benefit, and not for the benefit of the poor." "But why," he said, "do they have a majority, for I suppose that the poor have votes as well as the rich, and there must be more poor than rich in England?" "They gained their election by corruption and falsehood," I answered. "Their wives and their daughters went about giving the electors feasts, and they went about saying everywhere that the Radicals wanted to destroy the Empire. In this way they {530} bought some with gifts, and others they deceived with falsehoods. Soon the electors discovered how they had been fooled, and for five years they have wanted to take away the Government from the 'stupids,' but, by our laws, a Parliament is elected for seven years, and the country is still obliged to submit to the disgrace of having such a Government for one or perhaps two more years. Then there will be another election, and the 'stupids' will be in a minority, and the Radicals who represent the sense and intelligence of the country will become the Government." "And the Radicals," he said, "will, I suppose, make a Chamber large enough to hold all the members." "I am not sure of that," I answered. This seemed to surprise him, but he thanked me for having made clear to him the party differences in England.[5]
But my story is wandering backwards instead of forwards. And so stories usually do in the City of Flowers, where the present is so full of ease and pleasure that a man's mind is free to linger where it will, either lazily in the middle ages, or to stray with graceful discrimination in the bye paths of memory to find the savour again of some of the deeds of a gallant past. He may choose, perhaps, to grasp contentedly and almost without effort, the gifts of the gods that lie about in profusion, but he must always remember that care and earnestness, strenuousness and ambition have no place in Florence. It was of course a home after Mr. Labouchere's own heart. He went to London in the January of 1906 to be sworn in as a Privy Councillor, and, in February, he came back with delight to his villa to enjoy the merry continental _train de vie_ he had always loved.
Whilst in London, he wrote to Mr. Edward Thornton, who was then in India:
I did not, as you see, stand. At seventy-four one gets bored even with politics. I am only over here for a fortnight, as I have to get sworn into the Privy Council. The Unionists have been {531} beaten badly, because they seem to have gone out of their way to court defeat. One never knows what may happen, but they will remain in a minority for the next twenty years, if they run on Protectionist lines. Joe swaggers and has captured the machine, and Balfour would do well to fight him instead of knocking under to him. The Chinese labour helped us greatly. They ought to have known that the old anti-slavery feeling is still strong, but they seem to imagine that every one has Rand shares.... The really important thing connected with the election is the rise of a Labour Party. I do not think, however, that there are above six M.P.'s returned who are _bona fide_ and Socialists, they are all jealous of each other.
He wrote to Mr. Thornton again on March 10:
I had had enough of Parliament, for one gets bored with everything.... I have not the slightest notion what a Privy Councillor is, except that I had to take half a dozen oaths at a Council, which were mumbled out by some dignitary, and then Fletcher Moulton, who was also being sworn in, and I performed a sort of cake walk backwards. I don't precisely know whither we shall go in the summer--for it is such a relief to let the day take care of the day. It is lucky C. B. has so large a majority, otherwise things would have been difficult with the Labour lot--far more difficult than with the Irish.
Mr. Labouchere's most regular correspondent up till the time of his death in January, 1911, was Sir Charles Dilke. The friendship between them had continued uninterruptedly since 1880. Two letters that Mr. Labouchere wrote to Sir Charles Dilke in 1910 have an especial interest, bearing as they do upon the problem that had always interested Mr. Labouchere so keenly throughout the whole of his political career, and which, in the first twentieth century Liberal Parliament, had assumed a new aspect. The first of these letters was written on February 11:
MY DEAR DILKE,--What is the Government going to do in regard to the Lords? I can understand a one-Chamber man, in {532} default of getting directly what he wants, trying to get it indirectly, by having a sham Upper Chamber. But if the Government has to appeal to the country on a suspensory veto, I doubt this creating much enthusiasm. If it be carried, this suspensory vote would, of course, be used by the Peers for all that it is worth when a Liberal Government is in to throw _batons dans leurs roues_. I should have thought, with the experience of the last Parliament, that it would be realised that Peer obstruction, cleverly managed, could reduce any Liberal Government to ridicule and contempt. So long as a Reform is hung up by the Lords, the electors have no heart in further Liberal legislation, which, in its turn, would also be hung up. A Party with a H. of C. majority at its back cannot afford to be unable to carry through its measures. Why not go at once for the abolition of the H. of Peers, and its being replaced by some sort of an elected Upper Chamber? Nothing is easier than to contrive one. The basis would be the constitution of the U.S. Senate _mutatis mutandis_. It should have only one half of the membership of the H. of C., and if the two Houses cannot agree, then they should sit and vote together on the issue. Notwithstanding the curious way in which Senators are elected in the Senate of the U.S., I never heard of any serious proposal to alter this. Its main strength is due to its executive powers, and this we need not provide for in our Senate. With any reasonable plan of election, and the members reduced to about 300, it is odds against there ever being a majority of one Party of above 40 or 50. No Government at present can get on long without a certain majority of slaves of more than this in the Commons, so the Commons would always get their way. I have been at times a President of and a member of several Abolition of Lords Associations, and have advocated abolition in thousands of speeches in the country. The feeling was generally against hereditary Legislators, for this comes home to all as an absurd abuse. If I were in the House I would move an amendment on the Address against hereditary Legislators, and the vast majority of the Government supporters would vote for it, as they would most of them be afraid of their electors. What surprises me is that the Unionists do not counter the plans of the Government by many such an amendment. They are sacrificing what is their interest to a lot of obscure Peers, who are of no {533} importance. As for the House of Lords, with only a suspensory veto, it is worthless to them, except for tactical obstruction in order to discredit a Liberal Government.
It is rather curious that if the H. of C. reflects the opinions of the country there is a majority for Tariff Reform, as all the National M.P.'s are Protectionists. As it is, they will find it difficult to vote for the Budget, with O'Brien painting Ireland red against it. He is a power in Ireland, and Redmond is perfectly aware of it. Anyhow the manœuvring in the H. of C. and the Debates will be amusing. There will be difficulties with the Labour men, headed by Keir Hardie. If I were the Unionists I would buy him.--Yours truly,
H. LABOUCHERE.
The second was written on November 17, and ran as follows:
MY DEAR DILKE,--... It is a curious thing that in the discussions about Home Rule all round, no one has pointed out that in the German Empire Bavaria occupies a peculiar position. It has far more independent rights than any other State. It was only on these terms that it came into the Empire, for there is no great love lost between the Prussians and the Bavarians. Yet it sends its quota of representatives to the Reichsrath. Therefore there seems to me no particular reason why, if there be Home Rule all round, the position of Ireland should not be that of Bavaria.
I confess that I do not think much of the Government proposal in regard to the veto. It seems to me a stupid arrangement. The Upper Chamber is a fifth wheel on the coach which only can make itself a nuisance by persistent obstruction, which in two years is swept aside automatically. My experience in going to lots of anti-Lords Meetings led me to the conclusion that the country hates an Upper Chamber on hereditary lines, but does not quite believe in a Single Chamber which is absolute master. Why does no one propose to "scrap" the H. of L. and to have an elected Upper House, one-third of whose members are renewed by election every two years, or some such period? This would be on the lines of the U.S. Senate, only with a popular franchise, {534} instead of the strangely illogical one of the U.S. Such an Upper Chamber would probably be conservative in the real, and not the party sense of the word, and yet command respect. It would rarely act except when the decision of the H. of C. was influenced by a small minority, threatening to turn the Government out if it did not knock under to it. Were the Unionists to come forward with such a scheme, they might very probably get a majority.--Yours truly,
H. LABOUCHERE.
After Sir Charles Dilke's death, Mr. Labouchere wrote the following interesting letter to Lord Channing, dated Feb. 18:
DEAR CHANNING,--No, I am not writing any memoirs. I shall find it more agreeable to read yours than to do so.... I knew him (Dilke) very well since his start in politics. When in the House, he was the only man well up, particularly in domestic legislature, and, really, it is thanks to him that many useful measures were passed. In explaining them, however, he was too apt to lose himself in minor details. In foreign politics he never clearly knew what he wanted, and he was given to believe in mares' nests which he thought he had picked up abroad.... He fancied that he would be able to become the leader of the Labour M.P.'s. They were ready to profit by his speeches, but it soon became clear that they would only have a Labour M.P. for their leader. We started a sort of Labour Party with a Whip. But they came to me and said that it must be understood that he was not to be either President or Chairman. In the main this was due to jealousy of him.... I did all that I could with Campbell Bannerman for him to be in the Cabinet. Campbell Bannerman hesitated. Then Morley made a speech asserting that the Liberals would not be satisfied unless he was included. At once the Bishop of Rochester and a head dissenter (I think it was Clifford) published letters protesting. Campbell Bannerman then pointed to these letters, and said that we should have a split in the party if he were in the Cabinet. Personally, I quite agree with you as to his ostracism from office, but you know what the English are, and particularly the dissenters....
{535}
Why did you resign your seat? It was a perfectly safe one. I resigned because I had got to an age, when I got tired out at a long sitting. It is curious I was with Campbell Bannerman and his wife and mine. She wanted him to give it up, as his doctor had told him that he ought to. I urged him to go on. He said that this was odd advice, when I had said that I should do so, and he was younger than I was. I replied that it was worth taking risks to be Prime Minister, but not for anything else. And he is dead and I alive....
If ever you want to rest calmly you must come down here and see me. I have a big villa close to Florence, and live a vegetable existence.--Yours truly,
H. LABOUCHERE.
A great grief befell Mr. Labouchere in 1910. He and Mrs. Labouchere had been spending the summer as usual at Villa d'Este and Cadenabbia, and had returned to Florence in the early days of October. Never had Mrs. Labouchere appeared to be in better health and spirits. On the evening of the 30th October, she had delighted every one with her inimitable reading aloud of _David Copperfield_, and life at Villa Cristina, on that day, had seemed, if possible, more joyous and serene than usual. The next morning the blow fell, but so gently as to be almost imperceptible. Mrs. Labouchere, feeling a little giddy on rising, had returned to her bed to allow the temporary sickness to pass off. By the afternoon she was beginning to slip away into unconsciousness, and before the bells in the neighbouring convent had begun to welcome the dawn of the Tutti Santi, she had gone forth alone on her last long journey.
The winter of 1910 and 1911 passed quietly away for Mr. Labouchere. His days were cheered by the constant presence of his daughter, who had married Marchesa Carlo di Rudini, the son of the former Prime Minister of Italy, and Mr. Thomas Hart Davies stayed with him till Christmas Day, returning to Florence again in the early spring. A succession of visitors from England and Rome kept the house {536} gay and lively as he loved to have it, always provided that he had to take upon himself none of the activities or responsibility of entertaining. "I am merely a passenger on the ship," he would say, when he wanted to wriggle out of any active participation in the organisation of whatever might be going on. But it always happened to be towards the corner of the ship where that particular passenger was resting that the pleasure and interest of every one converged. It was not so much the charm of his talk, that was, perhaps, more entertaining in his old age than it had ever been, as the extraordinarily youthful and never failing interest that he continued to take in the affairs of every one else that made him the best conversationalist in the world. No little event of the smallest human interest was too trivial to amuse him, and to awake the never failing source of his mother wit. He passed the summer at Villa Cristina and went to Villa d'Este in September. Though his spirits were as gay and unflagging as ever throughout the winter, it was easy to see that his physical strength was beginning to weaken. The walk which he took daily round his garden fatigued him so much that, by Christmas, he had given up even that mild form of exercise.
He experienced another bereavement during the winter in the death of his oldest and most intimately associated friend, Sir George Lewis. He felt his loss very deeply, and I remember that when he told me the news his voice was full of emotion. He related that Sir George Lewis had always looked upon him as his _mascotte_. "As long as you're alive and flourishing, Labby," he used to say, "I shall be all right too, so mind you take care of yourself." "Just shows what nonsense all those things are," continued Mr. Labouchere, "for here am I as well and strong as ever, and there is poor Lewis dead and gone." The return of Mr. Hart Davies to the Villa early in December cheered him up immensely, and his devoted friend did not leave his side {537} again, until the last sad morning when he bade farewell to him on the hill of San Miniato.
It was fitting perhaps that almost the last letter that Mr. Labouchere should have written, should have been to one of his old theatrical friends. Mr. Charles James Sugden, the actor, wrote to him and asked him to write a preface to his (Sugden's) forthcoming volume of Reminiscences. Here is Mr. Labouchere's reply:
VILLA CRISTINA, Jan. 4, 1912.
MY DEAR SUGDEN--You ask me to write a preface to your forthcoming book. I don't think that I ever read one in my life, for they always seem to be platitudes, impertinently thrust forward by some person who has an exaggerated idea of his own importance, in order to hinder me from getting at what I really do want to read. Good wine needs no bush, and I shall be greatly disappointed if I do not derive great pleasure from reading yours, for you have been brought into close contact with so many persons of note in their day, and some of whom are still in this world, and can throw many sidelights on them, and know many anecdotes about them. Pray bring it out as soon as possible. I am now over eighty, and at about that age senile imbecility commences, so I do not want it to make progress before I have had the opportunity to read the book and can appreciate it.[6]--Yours truly,
H. LABOUCHERE.
But it was not until the beginning of the second week in January that we all felt certain that he would never be well again. He was sauntering along so gently and carelessly, as only Labby knew how to saunter, towards the brink of the dark river. When the little heaps of cigarettes, that were arranged about his library so as to be always ready to his hand, ceased to dwindle as usual, it became clear to each and all that he must be very ill indeed. As simply as a child, tired with play, he took to his bed on the 11th of January, {538} and did not get up again. He died peacefully at midnight on January 15, 1912.
The earliest remark of Mr. Labouchere's that I have recorded in this book was a jest, and so was the last I heard him utter. On the afternoon of the day before he died, as I was sitting at his bedside, the spirit lamp that kept the fumes of eucalyptus in constant movement about his room, through some awkwardness of mine, was overturned. Mr. Labouchere, who was dozing, opened his eyes at the sound of the little commotion caused by the accident, and perceived the flare-up. "Flames?" he murmured interrogatively, "not yet, I think." He laughed quizzically, and went off to sleep again.
* * * * * * *
The words in which Mr. Hart Davies conveyed the news of his end to Carteret Street are so beautiful in their simple directness that no others can fitly replace them in this biography:
"His mind always remained perfectly clear. He took a lively interest in the German elections, the political crisis in France, and the events of the Italian-Turkish War. He was ever one for whom nothing that concerned the human race (_nihil humani_) was alien to his vivid intelligence. But his bodily powers were constantly declining, and on Monday, January 15, just before midnight, the end came, peacefully and painlessly, a fitting termination to the career of one who had ever been a fighter and ever in the forefront of the battle.
"He was buried on Wednesday morning, under the cold drizzling rain of the Florentine winter, at San Miniato, in the same grave with his wife, who died some fifteen months before him. There, his tomb, at the edge of the western battlement of San Miniato, looks over the Tower of Galileo and the dark cypresses of Arcetri. It may be said of him, as Heine said of himself, that on his grave should be placed 'not a wreath, but a sword, for he was a brave soldier in the war for the liberation of humanity.'"
{539}
Before his death, he had expressed a strong wish as to the place of his burial. He wanted to rest beside his wife at San Miniato. But, when the arrangements for the funeral were about to be made, it was remembered that only Catholics were permitted to lie in the beautiful cemetery of the Florentines. The difficulty seemed insuperable, and the preliminary steps had already been taken to bury him in the Protestant graveyard. His daughter, however, determined to leave no stone unturned so that she might carry out her father's dying wishes. An appeal was made to some municipal authority, and, by an extraordinary coincidence, that seemed to make Labby's funeral fit in with all the rest of his strange paradoxical career, it was ascertained that, just at that moment, the possession of the cemetery was passing out of the hands of the religious body to whom it had hitherto belonged, and was becoming the property of the lay ecclesiastical authority of the city, and there had been no time for new regulations or restrictions to be formulated. There were, therefore, from a legal point of view, none in existence, and so it turned out that Mr. Labouchere was permitted to lie in the spot that he had himself chosen.
For many days after his death, the letters of condolence and sympathy from all quarters of the globe continued to pour into the deserted home. Of these one must assuredly be published, for it bears witness to the loyalty and affection that was unfailingly manifested to him by the borough he had represented for twenty-five years in Parliament. It was addressed to Marchesa di Rudini, by Mr. Edwin Barnes, the Secretary of the Northampton Liberal and Radical Association, and ran as follows:
At a special meeting of the Executive Committee of the above Association, held last night, the following resolution was unanimously passed, which I was directed to send to you: "The Liberals and Radicals of Northampton have heard with the deepest regret of the death of the Right Hon. Henry Labouchere, {540} who, for more than a quarter of a century, faithfully represented the Borough in the House of Commons. The members of the Executive of the Northampton Liberal and Radical Association hereby place on record the profound gratitude of all its members for the loyal service which Mr. Labouchere rendered to the cause of Democracy during so many years. Whoever faltered, he stood firm, and it will always be a proud remembrance that Northampton also stood firm, and that there was no break in the mutual confidence of member and constituents. To his daughter, the Marchesa di Rudini, and other members of Mr. Labouchere's family, we offer our sincerest sympathy in the irreparable loss that they have sustained, and trust they may find some consolation in the warm tributes that have been paid by men of all parties to his life, character, and work." Having known Mr. Labouchere for many years, and being his agent in the important election of 1900 (during the Boer War), allow me to add my own personal sympathy and condolence with you.
[1] May 12, 1905.
[2] _M.A.P._, Dec. 30, 1905.
[3] _Morning Post_, Dec. 23, 1905.
[4] _Penny Illustrated Paper_, Feb. 25, 1893.
[5] _Truth_, Sept. 21, 1900.
[6] _The Referee_, Jan. 21, 1912.
{541}
INDEX
Abbeville, Labouchere at, 141
Abbot, Labouchere's action against, 108, 109
Abdulal Pasha, exile of, 221
Abercorn, Duke of, 85
Aberdeen, Earl of, 262; Col. Turner as _aide_ to, 361
Adelphi Theatre, Green at the, 29
Affirmation Act, passing of the, 160
Afghan War, the, 143
Afrikanders, National League of, 437
Aix, Provence, Fouché exiled to, 12
Albert, Prince, 67
Albret, Jeanne d', founder of the Protestant University at Orthez, 1
Alexander II., Emperor of Russia, watches Labouchere at écarté, 57
Alexandria, bombardment of, 71, 194, 195, 196, 218
Aliens Bill, 170
Alison on Mexico, 33
Alison, Sir Archibald, his command in Egypt, 209
Alliance Loan, the, 13
Allsopp, Labouchere on, 239
America, Bradlaugh in, 161-64; Fenianism in, 81, 170, 288, 309-10, 385; its constitution an example for England and Ireland, 237-8, 293, 294, 298, 531-33; its diplomats in Paris during the siege, 43; its interest in Labouchere's Paris letters, 96; its labour system compared with English, 461, 471, 479; its surgery and its girls in the Franco-Prussian War, 44, 45; its system of education, 42; Labouchere's prediction for, 14, 41, 44, 226; Lord Taunton travels in, 14-15; unpopularity of Parnell in, 378
Amiens, Labouchere at, 140
Amsterdam, house of Hope at, 2, 10
Anarchist party, the, 418
Anglo-American War, 9
Anne, Queen, Labouchere on, 245
Antwerp, 7, 10
Appeals in the House of Lords, Labouchere on, 83
Appropriation Act, the, 354
Arabi Pasha, exile of, 203-9, 219-24; rebellion of, 70-1, 195-98, 202, 215
Arago, Mayor of Paris, 127
Arklow, Parnell at, 258
Armenian persecutions, the, 435
Arms Bill, the, 172
Army, Labouchere on the, 478
Arrears Bill, the passing of, 176, 179, 181, 183, 187, 252, 361
Ascot, Labouchere at, 106
Ashbourne, his Irish policy, 279
Asquith, Rt. Hon. H. H., counsel for Parnell _v._ Walter, 374 _n._, 407
Assouan, 209
Athlone, Stamforth contests, 525
Atkinson, American statist, 468
Atkinson, counsel for the _Times_, 374 _n._
Audiffret-Pasquier, Duc d', _Histoire de Mon Temps_, 13 _n._
Austen, Charles, correspondent in Paris during the siege, 141 _n._
Australia, J. R. Cox in, 223
Austria, customs union with, 418
Austrian chargé d'affaires, in Stockholm, Labouchere's duel with, 50
Austro-Prussian War, the, 97
Avebury, Lord, at Eton, 18
Aztecs, the, in Mexico, 34
Bacon, Lord, quoted, 20, 515
Baden-Baden, Labouchere at, 54, 65
Baggallay, Lord Justice, his judgment against Bradlaugh, 157; on Labouchere in Hyde Park, 364
Baker, his army in Egypt, 199
Balfour, Rt. Hon. A. J., administration of, 438, 517, 518, 524, 531; Bannerman on, 455; Gladstone's letters to, _re_ Home Rule, 289, 298; his coercive measures as Irish Secretary, 357-60; Labouchere on his philosophy, 369
Ballantine, Serjeant, acts as counsel for Labouchere, 76 _n._, 77; at Evans', 29; dines with Labouchere and Orton, 116
Balloons, as letter carriers, during the siege of Paris, 128-35
Ballot Act, amendments of the, 272
Balston, Edward, Labouchere's house master at Eton, 18
Bannerman, Sir Henry Campbell, his letters to Labouchere, _re_ retirement, 517, 523; his premiership, 518, 524, 531; on Chamberlain's South African policy, 427, 448, 449, 454, 455
Baring, Alexander, partner in the house of Hope, 2
Baring, Rev. Alexander, his story of P.-C. Labouchère, 2
Baring Brothers, restore French credit, 12, 13; their crisis in 1890, 489
Baring, Dorothy, her marriage to P.-C. Labouchère, 2
Baring, Emily, marriage of, 14 _n._
Baring, Sir Evelyn. See Lord Cromer
Baring, Hon. Francis Henry, 3 _n._
Baring, Sir Francis, consents to his daughter's marriage, 3; his friendship with Wellesley, 5, 7, 8
Baring, Lucy, daughter of Charles, 13 _n._
Baring, Sir Thomas, his daughters' marriages, 14
Baring, M.P., Thomas Charles, 3 _n._
Baring. See Lord Revelstoke
Barnes, Edwin, Secretary of Northampton Liberal and Radical Association, 539
Barrère, Camille, on the staff of the _World_, 107
Barrier, Jean Guyon, 2
Barrow, Cavendish influence at, 350
Barton fights Labouchere at Eton, 18
Bass, Labouchere on, 239
Bathurst, Lord, as Foreign Secretary, 6
Bavaria, an example for Ireland, 533
Bayonne, 1
Bazaine, Marshal, at Metz, 123, 124
Beaconsfield, Earl of, advises Northcote in the Bradlaugh case, 154; arranges an Egyptian loan with Rothschilds, 190, 191; attends the Berlin Congress, 191, 192; defeated at Taunton, 13, 14; his administration, 85, 86, 235, 520; his Imperialism, 143
Bedford, Duke of, Burke's letter to, 231
Beefsteak Club, the, Labouchere's expulsion from, 117
Beit, Alfred, his complicity in the Jameson Raid, 426, 428, 431
Belfast, manufacturers of, 276, 319
Belgium, Egypt compared with, 203, 206
Bell, Moberley, manager of the _Times_, 436
Bellew, Kyrle, début of, 111, 496
Bellew, Montesquieu, Labouchere travels to Palestine with, 111-13, 496
Belloc, Hilaire, as a conversationalist, 73
Bennett, Robert, editor of _Truth_, 518; on Labouchere as a journalist, 491-516
Berlin Congress, the, Disraeli and Salisbury attend, 191, 192
---- Decree of, 9
Beza, Theodore, professor at Orthez, 1
Bigham, 427. See Lord Mersey
Bingham, Captain Hon. D., in Paris during the siege, 138 _n._, 141 _n._
Birmingham, Chamberlain, M.P. for, 167, 241, 322, 323; death-rate of, 463
_Birmingham Post_, 455
Biron, Mr., counsel for Labouchere, 76 _n._
Bishop Auckland, Labouchere at, 118
Bishops, Labouchere on, 241
Bismarck, 96 _n._; as Ambassador at St. Petersburg, 62; at the Berlin Congress, 192; his _Memoirs_, 70; threatens intervention in Egypt, 194
Blackwood, Sir Arthur, at Eton, 18
Blake, his support of Labouchere, 427
Blanc, Louis, Labouchere protected by, 132
Blaquières, M. de, French controller in Egypt, 195
Bloemfontein, capture of, 454
---- Conference, the, 455
Blücher, General, 57
Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen, _Gordon and Khartoum_, quoted, 214; his reminiscences of Labouchere, 69-73; his support of Arabi Pasha, 204, 222; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ Arabi in exile, 220, 224; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ the Soudan War, 216-19; on the death of Gordon, 212; on Disraeli and Salisbury, 174; on the English policy in Egypt, 193, 204, 214-15; on Labouchere as a politician, 198, 214; _Secret History of the English Occupation of Egypt_, quoted, 190 _n._, 192 _n._
Boadicea, 244
Boer War, the history of the, 436-57; Labouchere's protests against, 436, 438-39, 540
Boers, the, their resentment against England, 437. _See also under_ Transvaal
Bologna, 61
Bonn, 32
Bonner, Mrs. Bradlaugh, _Life of Mr. Bradlaugh_, 142 _n._
Booth, Charles, statist, 460
Booth, Sclater, Labouchere on, 239
Boston, Labouchere mistaken for an Irish patriot, in, 47, 48
Boulogne, Labouchere at, 500
Bourbon, the House of, 8
Bowen, Lord Justice, 501
Bower, Sir Graham, censure of, 428
Bowles, Thomas Gibson, correspondent in Paris during the siege, 141 _n._
Boycott, Captain, English agent of Lord Mayo, 165
Boycotting, practice of, 165, 176, 185
Boyd, Charles, his interview with Labouchere, 435, 436
Bradford, election of 1886 at, 326
---- Forster, M.P. for, 176
Bradlaugh, Charles, Gladstone's tribute to, 160-61; his imprisonment, 154; his struggle for the right to affirm, 145-64; Labouchere's defence of, 148, 151, 156-64; returned for Northampton, 142-45, 158
Brampton, Henry, Lord, his letter to Labouchere, _re_ retirement, 526
Bramwell, Lord Justice, his decision against Bradlaugh, 157
Brand, M.P. for Stroud, 334
Brand, Sir Henry, 238; his rulings in the Bradlaugh struggle, 146, 151-2, 160
Brassey, Lord, Labouchere on, 239
Brennan, his imprisonment, 172, 174
Brentford, election scenes at, in 1868, 86, 90-2
Breslin, John, American Fenian, 385, 396
Breteuil, Labouchere at, 140
Brett, 280, 289
Bridges, Sir Henry, his ditty, 117. _See_ Appendix
Brielle, 6
Bright, John, his defence of Bradlaugh, 146, 149-51; Labouchere's admiration of, 171, 228; opposes coercive measures in Ireland, 166, 181, 187; opposes the Egyptian policy, 220
Brighton, Labouchere at, 269, 273; Voules at, 507
Bristol, Lord, Labouchere's fag at Eton, 19 _n._
British South Africa Company, its complicity in the Jameson Raid, 426-37, 438, 452, 454; its evacuation of Uganda, 420
British virtue, Labouchere's indictments of, 105
Broadley, A. M., _How We Defended Arabi and His Friends_, quoted by Arabi, 222
Broome Hall, Surrey, John Peter Labouchere at, 16, 31, 73
Broue, Catherine de la, 2
Brough, Lionel, at New Queen's Theatre, 99; bluffs Labouchere, 94
Brousson, L., on the staff of _Truth_, 505, 509
Brownrigg, Inspector, Labouchere on his conduct at Michelstown, 368-71
Bruce, Campbell, counsel, 76 _n._
Brunner, Mr., at Michelstown, 365, 367
Brunswick, House of, Bradlaugh's impeachment of, 148
Bryce, James, on the Coercion Bill, 182
Buckenbrock, Labouchere's friendship with, 52
Budget Bill of 1885, the, 251
Buenos Ayres, Labouchere's appointment in, 65
Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show, Indians in, 40
Buffon quoted, 133
Bulgaria, Turks in, 200
Buller, his policy in Ireland, 361
Buller, Sir Henry, as Ambassador at Constantinople, 54, 63, 64. _See_ Lord Dalling
Buller, Sir Redvers, in Pretoria, 440
Bunsen, Labouchere on, 308
Buonaparte, Jerome, 9
Buonaparte, Joseph, in Spain, 8, 9
Buonaparte, Louis, as king of Holland, 5-9
Bureaucracy, Labouchere on, 122
Burke, Under-Secretary for Ireland, murder of, 174, 175, 359, 372
Burke, Edmund, his letter to the Duke of Bedford, 231
Burmah as a political pawn, 310-12
Burnaby, Captain Fred, his reminiscence of Labouchere, 242
Busch, _Our Chancellor_, 53 _n._
Butler, General Sir William, his command in South Africa, 437
Buxton, Sidney, 427
Byrne, Frank, 386
Byron, H. J., _Dearer than Life_, 99
Cadenabbia, Labouchere at, 418-21, 423, 515, 535
Caine, M.P., Labouchere on, 350
Cairnes, quoted by Hyndman, 481, 482
Cairo, Arabi at, 70, 204; General Gordon in, 212; Lord Wolseley in, 208; Prefect of Police at, 216
Calais, Labouchere at, 127
Calcraft, hangman, 115
Caldwell's dancing rooms, 105
Callan, M.P., Mr., on Bright and Bradlaugh, 150
Cambridge, St. Peter's College, 23; Trinity College, Labouchere at, 22-7, 251, 491, 522
Cambridge, Duchess of, her friendship with Labouchere, 54
Campbell, secretary to Parnell, 375, 396
Campbell, Sir George, 208
Canada, Dominion of, Labouchere on, 301, 304
Canning, George, his duel with Castlereagh, 6
Canrobert, Marshal, his corps, 123 _n._
Cape Colony, Lord Milner as Governor of, 437; Rhodes as Premier of, 427, 430; war spirit in, 437
Capital _v._ Labour, discussed by Hyndman and Labouchere at Northampton, 458-90
Cardwell, Mr., 136
Carey, James, informer, forged letters to, 372, 374, 375, 384
Carlisle, Earl of, 14
Carnarvon, Lord, as Viceroy of Ireland, 251-56, 279, 282, 286
Carrington, Lord, assaults Grenville Murray, 110 _n._
Caspian Sea, the, 135
Cassell, Petter, and Galpin, firm of, 493
Castlereagh, his duel with Canning, 6
Catholic Emancipation, question of, 6
Cattle-maiming in Ireland, 165, 169
Cavendish family, the, their influence at Barrow, 350
Cavendish, Lord E., Chamberlain on, 271
Cavendish, Lord Frederick, 146; murder of, 174, 175, 188, 358, 359, 372
Cavour, Gladstone on, 419; Labouchere's reminiscences of, 62
Ceylon, Arabi's exile in, 204-9, 220-24
Châlons, French camp at, 122-23 _n._
Chamberlain, Joseph, as President of the Local Government Board, 317 _n._; Churchill on, 209; Healy on, 303, 363; his alleged complicity in the Jameson Raid, 427, 431, 446, 452; his correspondence with Labouchere _re_ the Boer War, 446-54; his correspondence with Labouchere on Home Rule, 261-356; his Egyptian policy, 70, 211, 212; his Irish policy prior to the Home Rule Bill, 256-303; his probable Premiership, 226, 227, 249, 280, 319, 320, 349; his responsibility, as Colonial Secretary, for the Boer War, 437-38, 442-57; his scheme of Home Rule, 255, 326; his secession from the Liberal party over Home Rule, 226-28, 318-355; Labouchere's admiration of, 259; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ Bradlaugh, 159; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ the Egyptian policy, 205-6, 210, 211; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ the Irish Coercion Bill, 177-187; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ Radicalism, 41-2, 226-27; Labouchere's opposition to, 519, 531; on Gladstone's Irish policy, 167, 189, 226, 263, 266, 271, 306; on Herbert Gladstone, 265; on the House of Lords, 241; on the Land Question, 276, 292; on the Parnell Commission, 383; on Salisbury's Irish policy, 251; opposes the use of coercion in Ireland, 165, 173, 189
Chaplin, M.P., Henry, 146, 150; on the Coercion Bill, 187
Chartered Company. _See_ British South Africa.
Chatham, Earl of, his death, 6
Chaumes, Prussian army at, 127
Chelmsford, Morley at, 322
Chesterfield, Philip, Earl of, his _Letters to His Son_, 29; quoted, 88
Chevreau, M., 126
Chiala, Signor, on the relations between England and Italy, 410
Chicago, Healy in, 310
Childers, M.P., his Irish sympathies, 150, 260, 347
China, industrialism of, 468, 479, 487
Chinese Labour question, the, Labouchere on, 531
Chippeway Indians, Labouchere's life among the, 40-41
Christina of Sweden, Queen, Labouchere on, 245
Church of England, Disestablishment of the. See Disestablishment.
Church Patronage Bill, the, Labouchere on, 243
---- Rates Abolition Act, 81
Churchill, Lord Randolph, at Brighton, 269; at Twickenham, 356; Chamberlain on, 253, 264, 271, 285-86, 288, 313; Hartington's quarrel with, 278, 282; Healy on, 274, 283, 285, 303, 313, 362, 363; his comment on Labouchere's Michelstown speech, 368, 397; his friendship with Labouchere, 250; his illness, 262; his letters to Labouchere _re_ Home Rule, 285, 289, 298 ff., 307; his letter to Salisbury _re_ Home Rule, 279; in Ireland, 282; in opposition, 409; Labouchere on, 315, 319, 344; negotiates with the Irish party, 254-303, 315; on Chamberlain, 298, 308; on the Conservative party, 248; refers to Labouchere as "the religious member," 142
Churchill, Winston Spencer, _Lord Randolph Churchill_, quoted, 280 _n._
Civil List, the, Labouchere's attacks on, 233, 234, 239-40, 246, 409, 413, 465-66, 478
Clan-na-Gael, the, takes possession of Parnell letters, 386
Clarendon, Earl of, 67; Viceroy of Ireland, 251
Clarke _v._ Bradlaugh, action of, 157
Clayton, John, at New Queen's Theatre, 99
Cleave, Mr., 76
Clongowes, school at, 404
Clonmel, Mayor of, at Michelstown, 366
Coalition Ministry, the, 6; of 1885-86 proposed, 268, 270, 295, 304
Cobden, Richard, on landlordism, 235
Cockermouth, Lawson M.P. for, 524
Coercion Bills, passing of the, 171-179, 238, 251, 256, 263, 313, 357-61, 363
Colenso, 440
Collectivism _v._ Individualism discussed by Labouchere and Hyndman, 463, 464, 479
Collings, Jes, 333; his amendment, 315, 316
Communism, Hyndman on, 485
Condé, Prince de, his army, 7
Condorcet, his gambling system, 66
Connaught, Duke of, his allowance, 233
Conservative party, the, Labouchere on, 247-48, 458; their advances to the Irish, 251, 308
Constantinople, Labouchere as secretary of Embassy at, 54, 62-5; Lord Stratford Ambassador at, 62, 63
Constitutional monarchy, Labouchere on, 230, 233, 242, 246
Cooke, Q.C., W. H., 76 _n._
Coombe, Gladstone at, 214
Cooper, Labouchere's tutor at Cambridge, 22
Co-operation, principle of, 472
Cork, Mayor of, at Michelstown, 366, 367; Parnell M.P. for, 174, 378
Cortes in Mexico, 34
Corti, Count, on the Berlin Congress, 192 _n._
County Councils, establishment of, 302
Covent Garden, Labouchere's life in, 28-30, 70
Covington, Frederick, 418 _n._
Cowper, Lord, Viceroy of Ireland, his resignation, 174; urges coercion, 165, 166, 173, 175
Cox, M.P., J. R., his visit to Arabi, 223
Crampton, Mr., British Minister at Washington, 46, 47
Crawford, George Morland, leaves Paris before the siege, 119-120
Crawford, Mrs., on Labouchere as a diplomatist, 66, 67-8; on Labouchere in Paris before the siege, 119-120
Cremorne, Labouchere at, 105, 129
Crimean War, instigated by Lord Stratford, 63; recruiting in America for, 45
Crimes Bill. _See_ Prevention of.
Crimping, practice of, in America, 45
Cripps, Sir Alfred, on the Select Committee on British South Africa, 427
Cromer, Lord, as English Controller in Egypt, 195, 212; in India, 210; on General Gordon, 212
Cross, Sir R. Assheton, 150; Labouchere on, 239
Crown and Country, financial relations between, 42, 230, 232, 242, 246, 413
Cuernava, Labouchere at, 36
Cumming, Dr., impersonation of, 82
Cunynghame, Sir Henry, member of the Parnell Commission, 373-74, 395
Cyprus, England's lease of, 191, 192, 197, 222
_Daily Chronicle_, Spender of, 448
_Daily News_, affected by Birmingham imperialism, 96 _n._; Churchill on, 279, 286; Labouchere as a correspondent of, 43-44, 96, 114, 119-41; Labouchere's financial connection with, 95, 96, 492; on Home Rule, 257, 274, 279, 299, 326; on the Parnell Commission, 383-84, 393; on the Triple Alliance, 411
_Daily Telegraph_, its action against Labouchere, 500; Lawley, correspondent in Paris, 141 _n._; on Home Rule, 256
Dalglish, Robert, 76 _n._
Dallas, correspondent in Paris during the siege, 141 _n._
Dalling, Henry Bulwer, Lord, as Ambassador at Constantinople, 54, 63, 64
Damascus, Labouchere at, 72
Darmstadt, Court of, plays at whist, 55
Darvill, Mr., town-clerk of Windsor, 75
Darwin, Charles, Gladstone on, 267
Daunt, O'Neill, 302
Davitt, Michael, Healy on, 254; his scheme for the nationalisation of land, 179, 182-83; his letter to Labouchere _re_ Home Rule, 257-58; Pigott forgeries of, 395, 396; speaks against the Coercion Bill, 363
Davy on the Coercion Bill, 182, 185
Day, Sir Charles, member of the Parnell Commission, 373, 393
Deacon, banker, 16
Dead Sea, Labouchere at the, 112
_Dearer than Life_, produced at New Queen's Theatre, 99
De Beers Consolidated Mines, the, 427
_Defence of Philosophic Doubt_, Balfour's, 369
Delaney, his evidence in the Parnell Commission, 384
Democracy, English government by the, Labouchere on, 238-39, 248, 413, 418, 481, 540
Derby, Lord, anecdotal photograph of, 68; Grenville Murray's attacks on, 109; his ministry, 85; retires on the Egyptian loan, 190, 191, 193; signs the Convention of 1884, 451; travels in America, 14
De Sartines, chief of police, wit of, 4
Devonshire, seventh Duke of, his death, 363
Devonshire, eighth Duke of, on the House of Lords, 363. _See_ Lord Hartington.
Devonshire House, anti-Home Rule meeting at, 344 _n._
Devoy, American Fenian, 170
Dhakool, capture of, 219, 220
Dickens, Charles, _David Copperfield_, 535; _Household Words_, 32, 68
_Dictionary of National Biography_, 46 _n._
Diet of Frankfort, the, Bismarck Prussian representative at, 52, 54, 55
Digby, Sir Kenelm, 28
Dilke, Sir Charles, 436; as a member of Gladstone's Government, 196, 200, 204, 228, 233; his acquaintance with foreign affairs, 71; his Egyptian policy, 71, 196, 200, 204; his return to Parliament, 418; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ the abolition of the House of Lords, 532-34; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ the Egyptian policy, 198-200; letters to and from Labouchere _re_ Home Rule, 325, 327-28; secures Labouchere's seat in the House, 527
Dillon, Charles, at Michelstown, 365-67; Healy on, 276, 362; imprisonment of, 172, 174; his speeches _re_ South Africa, 438
Diplomacy, Bismarck on German, 52; Labouchere on English and American, 44, 53, 411, 452
Disestablishment of the Church of England advocated by Labouchere, 43, 226, 234, 243, 244, 248, 417
Disraeli, Benjamin. _See_ Beaconsfield.
Dongola, 434
Donkey as a diet, 139
Donleath, Stuart, case of, 187
Dorking, Mrs. Labouchere at Oakdene, near, 130 _n._, 138 _n._
Douay, Abel, death of, 123
Douglas, Akers, 352
Dramatic, artists, Labouchere on, 101-102
---- critic, Labouchere as a, 496, 503
Dresden, Labouchere as attaché at, 59
Drink bill, national, 466
Dublin, headquarters of the Land League, 181, 183; Healy in, 239, 271, 273, 283, 289, 303; Liberal Unionists of, their responsibility for the Pigott children, 404; Parliament in, 422; Parnell at, 256; Phœnix Park, 174, 175; proposed Irish Parliament in, 252, 306, 321, 327, 339; Redmond in, 524; trial of the Land League in, 166
_Dublin Daily Express_, 279, 309
Duclos, Maître, notary to Trochu, 136
Ducrot, General, in Paris, 136
Dudley, Lord, marriage of, 525
Duelling, Labouchere's experience of, 50
Dufferin, Lord, his Egyptian policy, 207, 208, 223
Dumas, Alexandre, _père_, Labouchere meets, at Genoa, 113, 114
Dumas, Mlle. Maria, Labouchere at the wedding of, 114
Dunn, Parliamentary agent at Windsor, 75
Du Pre, Caroline, her marriage, 14 _n._
Du Pre, James, banker, 16
Du Pre, Rev. William Maxwell, his marriage, 14 _n._
Durand's, Paris, 120
Durham, Bishop of, 3 _n._
Durrant, Mr., solicitor to Sir Henry Hoare, 76, 78-81
Dyke, Sir W. Hart, 427
Dynamite Concession, the, 449
_Echo_, Voules as manager of, 493
Economy, Labouchere's political, 409, 410
Eden, Frederick Morton, his reminiscence of Labouchere at Eton, 19
Edict of Nantes, revocation of the, 2
Edinburgh, Chamberlain at, 323; represented by Goschen, 264, 297
Education, English national, Carnarvon on, 282; Chamberlain on, 270; Conservative support of denominational, 258; Labouchere on, 42-43, 84, 234, 235, 248; Mundella as Minister of, 286
Edward VII., accession of, 148; as Prince of Wales, defends Grenville Murray, 67
Edwards, Passmore, acquires the _Echo_, 493
Egan, Patrick, his forged correspondence with Parnell, 358, 372-405; treasurer of the Land League in Paris, 172, 181, 182, 186, 358, 372
Egypt, as a political pawn, 310-13; English occupation of, 70-71, 72, 190-224, 248, 259, 434; French interest in, 191, 192, 197, 203, 210; its occupation of the Soudan, 209; its Soudanese frontier established, 215, 216; national movement under the Arabi in, 195-98, 205; rule of Khedives in, 190-97, 205, 207-8
Elandslaagte, battle of, 440
Electoral districts, Labouchere on, 229
Elephant as a diet, 138
Elgin, Lord, Governor of Canada, at Washington, 45
Elizabeth, Queen, Labouchere on, 245
Ellenborough, Lady, in Palestine, 72
Ellis, John, 427, 455
Ellis, T. E., at Michelstown, 365, 367
El Obeid, the Mahdi at, 209, 210
Enfield, Lord, his quarrel with Labouchere during the Middlesex election, 85-93
England, house of Hope transferred to, 4; its relations with America, 81; its relations with Turkey, 196-7, 199
English, abroad, Labouchere on, 95
---- diplomatists in Paris during the siege, 43-44
---- institutions contrasted with the American, 41
---- system of education contrasted with the American, 42-43
Ephesus, Council of, 150
Escott, T. H. S., contribution to the _World_, 107
Established Church of England, _See_ Disestablishment
Eton, education at, 42; Labouchere at, 18-21, 251, 491, 522
Eugenie, Empress, in Paris, 124, 126, 134; her letter derided, 134
Evans', Convent Garden, _habitués_ of 28, 29; Labouchere in residence at, 28-31, 70
Eversley, Lord, _Gladstone and Ireland_, quoted, 358 _n._; on the Land League, 172
Evidence Amendment Act, the, 145
Expenses of Voters, Labouchere on, 83
Fagan, Captain, received by Wellesley, 7, 12
Fagging, Labouchere's views on, 20
Fairfield, Mr., 431
Fakenham, Rev. John Labouchere of, 21 _n._
Farnham Castle, 2 _n._
Fatherland, production of, 103
Favre, Jules, member of the Provisional Government, 127, 128
Fawcett, Professor, 136
Fenianism in America, 81, 170, 288, 310-11; in Ireland, 171, 183, 186, 275, 276; Labouchere on, 276, 278, 282, 292, 316
Fenwick, Mr., directs the case against Labouchere for cribbing, 24-25
Ferdinand VII. of Spain, Napoleon's treatment of, 8, 10
Ferguson, Sir James, 410, 412
Fermoy, Labouchere at, 365
Ferry, Jules, member of the Provisional Government, 127
Feudalism, Labouchere on, 241. _See also_ Land System
Finance, economical, Labouchere's efforts on behalf of, 246, 494-95, 505
Financial Reform Almanack, the, quoted, 232
Fitzgibbon, Churchill visits, 282, 289
Fitzmaurice, Lord Edmond, his letter to Labouchere _re_ retirement, 525-26
Fletcher Moulton, Privy Councillor, 531
Florence, flight of the Grand Duke from, 61; Labouchere in, 60-62, 72, 95, 513, 517-23, 530-39; Unione Club, 61; _Florence Herald_, quoted, 62 _n._
Flower, Mr., retires from the candidature of Windsor, 75-80
Foljambe, Chamberlain on, 271
Fond du Lac, Labouchere at, 41
Forbes, Archibald, on the staff of the _World_, 107; war correspondent to the _Daily News_, 96, 127
Foreign Office, Archives, examples of telegrams in, 53, 54
---- ---- messengers, their expense, 54
Forster, M.P., R. N., seconds Sir H. D. Wolff, 148
Forster, W. E., Chief Secretary for Ireland, allusions to, in Parnell's supposed letters, 372; blackmailed by Pigott, 393; Healy on, 303; his arrest of Parnell, 172, 254; his resignation, 174, 188, 267, 276; Labouchere on, 282, 297; urges coercive measures in Ireland, 165-73, 176, 182
_Fortnightly Review_, Chamberlain on Home Rule, in the, 255; "Radicals and Whigs" quoted, 41, 42, 228-29
Fottrell, 302
Foucault threatens the Protestants of Orthez, 1
Fouché negotiates his own downfall, 5-12
Fowler, Sir Henry, his speech inspired by Labouchere, 350
France, financial situation of, in 1817, 12, 13; Guizot on, 480; inauguration of the Third Republic, 126, 127, 191; its interests in Egypt, 190, 192, 197, 203, 210
Franchise, Act of, 1884, the, 256
---- extension of the, Labouchere on, 229, 244-46, 248. _See also_ Suffrage
---- Law for the Transvaal, 442, 448-49
Franckfort, Bismarck in, 52, 53; Labouchere as attaché in, 52, 54, 60, 69, 119
Franco-Prussian War, 116, 191; Labouchere's correspondence during, 43-44, 96, 119-41
Freehold Land Society, its work in Northampton, 143
_Freeman's Journal_, the correspondence between Egan and Pigott in, 375
Free Trade for Ireland, Davitt on, 256-57
French, journalism during the siege of Paris, Labouchere on, 133-36
---- wars, allusions to, 287, 296
Froisard, General, defeat of his Army Corps, 124
Galveston, Healy in, 310
Gambetta, member of the Republican Government, 127
Gambling, Labouchere's system in, 65-66
Garter, Order of the, 241
_Gaulois_, its address to the Prussians, 134
Gave, the river, 1
Gedge, Mr., tries to do Labouchere out of his seat in the House, 527
_Genealogist, The_, the Labouchere pedigree, 14 _n._
Genoa, Labouchere and Dumas at, 113
George III., 296; at Kew, 409
George V., his installation as K.G., 246
George, Mr., his scheme for the nationalisation of land, 235
German, Empire, its proposed intervention in Egypt, 194; position of Bavaria in, 488; Socialism in, 487
---- people, Labouchere's dislike of, 51, 52
---- Zollverein, principle of the, 294
Gibbon, Edward, 88, 151
Gibraltar, English tenure of, 199
Gibson, M.P., Mr., 150
Giffen, Mr., quoted, 470, 485
Girondists, the, compared with the Irish Nationalists, 293
Gladstone, Mrs., 282
Gladstone, Herbert, Lord, Chamberlain on, 265; negotiates between his father and Labouchere, 214-17, 261-303, 312-55
Gladstone, William Ewart, 407; his Egyptian policy, 71, 189, 190, 194-219; his first administration, 85, 86, 136 _n._; his position in the Bradlaugh case, 148, 151-55, 158, 160; his tribute to Bradlaugh, 160-61; Labouchere dubs him "Grand Old Man," 158; opposes coercive measures in Ireland, 165, 166, 173-75, 225, 236, 238; Labouchere's admiration of, 171, 176; adopts coercive measures in Ireland, 175-189; his second administration, 194, 297; rebukes Labouchere, 219; Chamberlain regarded as the successor of, 225, 227, 249, 281, 318, 321, 348; his resignation in 1885, 251; his Irish policy prior to the Home Rule Bill, 252-320, 361; in Norway, 257; Labouchere on his motives in the Irish question, 262, 281, 288, 298, 304, 308, 313, 318, 326, 329, 419; his capacity for mystification, 265, 278, 283, 335, 347, 350; his third administration, 269 _n._, 283, 315, 317 _n._, 357; submits Home Rule scheme to the Queen, 270, 287 _n._, 288; Healy on, 272, 274, 283-86, 290, 303, 314, 315, 361-63; Parnell on, 278; his desire for office, 281-82, 288; his letters to Balfour _re_ Home Rule, 289, 298; Chamberlain on, 298-300, 326, 334-35, 340, 342, 346; his popularity, 305, 351; Chamberlain secedes from, 318-355; introduces the Land Bill, 321; his first Home Rule Bill, 319-357, 413, 416, 419, 420; his letters to Labouchere _re_ the Triple Alliance, 411; his fourth administration, 412, 420, 423; his letters to Labouchere _re_ his exclusion from his Cabinet, 412-18; his second Home Rule Bill, 421, 422, 528; his final view of the House of Lords, 422-23; his retirement, 96 _n._, 274, 315, 354
Glasgow, Chamberlain at, 323
---- Home Government Association of, 156
_Globe_, its interview with Labouchere on the fall of Rosebery's Ministry, 424; publishes the Cyprus Convention, 192
Godin, Stephen Peter, 14 _n._
Gold fields of South Africa, 427
Goldney, M.P., Sir Gabriel, 146, 150
Gonesse, 140
Goodenough, Sir William, death of, 437
Gordon, Colonel Bill, his conversation on Egypt, 72
Gordon, General, 72; Arabi on, 222; as Governor-General of the Soudan, 209; his death at Khartoum, 212-15
Gordon, Sir Arthur, 222
Gorst, Sir John, Healy on, 284; opposes Gladstone's motion in favour of Bradlaugh, 155
Gortschakoff, Prince, at the Berlin Congress, 192
Goschen, Viscount, negotiates with Hartington, 281, 282, 297, 348; on the Coercion Bill, 185; returned for Edinburgh, 265; unpopularity of, 262
Goschen-Joubert arrangement with Egypt, the, 191, 206
Gosling, Sir Audley, his reminiscences of Labouchere, 39, 65, 65 _n._
Got, of the Comédie Française, 120
Graduated Income Tax, the, Labouchere on, 246, 247
Graham, General, his command in the Soudanese War, 213, 219
Graham, W., counsel for the _Times_, 374 _n._
Grant, Parliamentary agent at Windsor, 75
Grantham, M.P., Mr., 146, 150
Granville, Lord, 121; consulted by Gladstone _re_ Arabi, 204; denies responsibility for the defeat of Hicks Pasha, 209
Grattan, his Parliament, 254, 258, 306
Gravelotte, battle of, 124
Greeks, Labouchere on the, 191, 496
Green, Paddy, waiter at Evans', 29, 70
Greene, Conynghame, British agent at Pretoria, 442-43, 444
Gregory, Sir William, his interest in Arabi, 221
Grenville, Lord, ministry of, 6-7
Grey, Albert, his amendment of the Church Patronage Bill, 243
Grey, Lord, director of the British South Africa Company, 428; ministry of, 6-7
Griffiths, his valuations in the Land Court, 181
Grosvenor, Captain, M.P., for Westminster, 80
Grosvenor, Lord Richard, Government Whip, 146; Healy on, 314; Labouchere on, 305, 315, 316; on the Coercion Bill, 179, 180
Guinness, Lord, Labouchere on, 239-40
Guizot, M., on France, 292, 480
Haag, Frères, _La France Protestante_, 1
Habeas Corpus Act, question of its suspension in Ireland, 165-70
Hague, The, birth of P.-C. Labouchère at, 2
Halliday, dramatic author, 99
Hame, General, surrenders Laon, 127
Hamilton, Lord George, his election for Middlesex in 1868, 85-92
Hammond, Anthony, 19 _n._
Hanbury, M.P., Robert, death of, 83
Hannen, Sir James, President of the Parnell Commission, 373
Hanover, Crampton, envoy at, 45; Napoleon's plans for, 9
_Hansard_, speeches of Labouchere in, 197
Harcourt, Sir William, 407; at his best in Opposition, 409, 424; Healy on, 260, 274, 289; his Coercion Bill, 170, 175, 180, 181, 184, 188; Labouchere on, 287, 313, 323, 334, 344; moves a new Address, 425 _n._; on the Michelstown meeting, 365; sits on the Committee on British South Africa, 427
Hardie, Keir, Labouchere on, 533
Harold, Canon, 404
_Harper's Magazine_, biographical sketch of Labouchere in, 38
Harrington, 312; Healy on, 276
Harris, Rutherford, director of the South Africa Company, 426
Harrison, Morley on his Irish scheme, 309
Harrow, education at, 42
Hart Davies, Thomas, visits Labouchere in Florence, 535-37
Hartington, Lord, as Secretary for War questioned on the Egyptian policy, 213, 214, 219, 220; Chamberlain on, 264, 270, 271, 286, 329; Churchill on, 269, 281; Goschen negotiates with, 348; Healy on, 260, 283, 363; his Irish policy prior to the Home Rule Bill, 257-98; his meeting _re_ Home Rule, 344 _n._; his quarrel with Churchill, 278, 282; Labouchere on his position in the Home Rule split, 268, 278, 282, 287, 297, 304, 315, 318, 324, 329, 344, 351; Parnell forgeries shown to, 375, 406; secedes from the Liberal party, 228, 249
Hastings, Labouchere at, 338, 339
Hatfield, Lord R. Churchill at, 286, 287
Hatton, Joseph, his biographical sketch of Labouchere, 38, 40, 103
Haussman, M., 126
Havana, 31
Hawarden Castle, Gladstone at, 301, 415
---- Manifesto, issue of the, 257
Hawkesley, Mr., solicitor, his correspondence with Chamberlain, 429 _n._, 452-53
Hawtrey, Dr., headmaster of Eton, 18; Labouchere on, 20-21
Healy, Timothy Michael, agitates for Home Rule, 254-303; Davitt on, 258; his amendments of the Coercion Bill, 177, 179, 181, 185, 186; his attack on Chamberlain's article, 255 _n._; his letters to Labouchere _re_ coercive measures in Ireland, 361-64; his letters to Labouchere _re_ Home Rule, 252, 256, 259-60, 271-72, 273-74, 283-85, 289-90, 301-3, 309-15; on Parnell, 253-54, 266, 280
Heath, Labour candidate for Nottingham, 93
Heim, Van Der, Dutch statesman, 6
Heine, Heinrich, 538
Herbert, Dr. Alan, in Paris during the siege, 120
Herbert, Edward, at Constantinople, 63
Herschell, Farrer, his mediation views on the Home Rule question, 338, 340-43, 347; Solicitor-General, 146, 150, 186
Hesse family, the, 54
Hibbert, John Tomlinson, 76 _n._
Hicks Beach, Sir Michael, as Chief Secretary for Ireland, 357; Bannerman on, 455; Churchill's scheme for, 270; his Amendment of the Budget Bill, 251; on the Select Committee on British South Africa, 427
Hicks Pasha, defeat and death of, 210-11, 213, 214
Hill, Dr. Birkbeck, contributes to the _World_, 107
Hill, Frank, editor of the _Daily News_, 96, 286
Hill, M.P., Staveley, 146, 150
Hillyer, Mrs., sister of Henry Labouchere, 17 _n._
Hoare, Sir Henry, contests Windsor and is unseated, 75-82
Hodson, Henrietta, appears at the New Queen's Theatre, 99; Labouchere's letters from Paris to, 129. _See_ Mrs. Labouchere.
Holborn Casino, the, 105
Holker, M.P., Sir John, 146, 150
Holland, invasion of, 4; Louis Buonaparte as king of, 4-9
Homburg, Labouchere at, 54, 65, 69, 72, 95, 119, 242, 419, 525
Home Rule Bill, introduction of, 527; Labouchere on, 167, 189, 225, 236-39, 508, 521. See also Ireland.
Home Rule Split, the, its effect on Labouchere, 227
Hope, M.P., Beresford, 146, 150
Hope, house of, its dealings with America, 15; John Peter Labouchere as a partner in, 16; P.-C. Labouchère as a partner in, 2-5
Hope, John, takes P.-C. Labouchère into partnership, 2
Hopwood, M.P., Mr., member of Select Committee on Bradlaugh case, 146, 150
House of Lords, abolition of the, advocated by Labouchere, 226, 230-33, 238-42
Household Suffrage Act, the, its effect in Northampton, 143
Houston, E. C., his purchase of letters from Pigott, 375, 380, 385, 386, 389, 396, 405
Howard, Lady Mary, her marriage, 14
Hudson, Sir James, English Minister at Turin, 61
Hugessen, Mr. Knatchbull-, Labouchere on, 239
Hungarians, English enthusiasm for, 284
Hunter, Mr., in Hyde Park, 363
Hyde Park, demonstration against the Coercion Bill in, 363; Labouchere on, 84
Hylands, P.-C. Labouchère settles at, 13
Hyndman, Mr., defends Socialism against Labouchere at Northampton, 459-90
Iddesleigh, Lord. _See_ Northcote, Sir Stafford.
Illingworth, Radical M.P., 345
Illinois, educational system of, 42
Imperial Parliament, Labouchere on an, 293, 299-301, 304, 336, 422
---- South African Association, the, 436
Income Tax, the, Labouchere on, 207, 246, 249, 466
_Independence Belge_, 429 _n._
India, English rule in, 135; Labouchere on, 197, 201, 204
Individualism _v._ Collectivism, discussed by Labouchere and Hyndman, 464, 465, 480, 487
Industrial Commission of South Africa, 447
International Law, studied by Labouchere, 81
Ipswich, Labouchere at, 333
Ireland, agriculture in, 292; Churchill in, 283, 289; disestablishment of the Anglican Church in, 86, 88; Labouchere's political sympathy for, 72, 225, 247, 248, 508, 521, 523; landlordism in, 261, 264-65, 276, 292, 361-62; Protection in, 258, 261, 276-77; question of coercive measures in, 165-89, 225, 251-52,313, 318-19, 329, 358-72; question of Home Rule for, 167, 189, 225, 236-39, 416-17, 419, 421-22, 508, 521, 523; correspondence on, 250-356; secret societies in, 171, 177
Irish Nationalist party, the, 266, 293; Conservative advances to, 251, 252; English feeling against, 165-66, 175, 240-41, 258, 285-86
---- patriots in Boston, Labouchere among, 47, 48
---- police force, Labouchere on, 276, 292, 316
---- Privy Council, Labouchere on, 276, 277, 282, 294
_Irish World, The_, 310
_Irishman_, Parnell's purchase of the, 374
Irving, Sir Henry, appears at the New Queen's Theatre, 99, 102; mistaken for the defeated candidate at Brentford, 92
Irwin, District Police Inspector, 370
Ismail, Khedive, his claim on the Soudan, 209; his rule in Egypt, 190-95, 209
Ismail Bey Jowdat, W. S. Blunt on, 215, 216
Ismail Sadyk, murder of, 193
Ismailia, Lord Wolseley at, 208
Italian-Turkish War, the, 538
Italian unity, England's support of, 284
Italy, England's relations with, in the Triple Alliance, 410, 411
Jackson, Mr., 427
Jackson, M.P., Sir Henry, 146, 150
Jacobin party, the, 293
Jamal-ed Din, Sezzed, W. S. Blunt on, 216
James, of Hereford, Henry, Lord, 351; Attorney-General, 146, 148, 150; counsel for the _Times_, 374 _n._; his letter to Labouchere _re_ retirement, 525
Jameson, Dr., history of his Raid, 426-36, 438, 452, 454
Jerrold, Douglas, at Evans', 29
Jerusalem, Labouchere at, 111, 112
Jeyes, S. H., _Mr. Chamberlain_, 189
Joan of Arc, 244
Johannesburg, capture of, 454; grievances of Englishmen in, 426, 427, 431-34, 442, 443, 451
Johnson, Dr. Samuel, _Life of_, 29; quoted, 108
Jordan, the, Labouchere at the source of, 112
Joubert, his arrangement with Goschen,191
_Journalistic London_, by Joseph Hatton, 38, 104 _n._
Jowdat, Ismail Bey, W. S. Blunt on, 216
Justice, 474
Kensit, John, his action against Labouchere, 500
Kératry, Prefect of Police, 127
Kerry, Buller in, 361, 362
Kew Bridge, Labouchere at, 91
---- Palace, Labouchere on, 409
Khalil Pasha, outwitted at whist, 58
Khartoum, 72; Gordon at, 212-14; the Mahdi at, 216
Khedival Domains Loan, the, 193
Khedives, rule of the, 193-200, 205, 207-8, 224
Kidderminster, 525
Kilkenny, 265
Kilmainham Gaol, Parnell's imprisonment in, 172-74, 187, 276, 372
Kimberley, relief of, 441
Kinglake, W., his history of the Crimean War, 62
Kingstown, Pigott's home at, 376, 402
Kipling, Rudyard, his _Lest We Forget_ parodied, 448
Kirkcaldy, Campbell M.P. for, 208
Kitawber, Labouchere joins a circus at, 39
Kolli, Baron, police agent, 10
Kordofan, the Mahdi at, 209
Kruger, President of the Transvaal, 435, 442, 446, 448, 453
Labouchere, Henry, his inheritance from his uncle, 14, 250; his recollections of Talleyrand, 14; mistaken for a son of Lord Taunton, 15; his love for America, 14-15, 41-42, 44, 225; his birth and education, 16-22, 491; his alleged cribbing at Cambridge, 22-27; his propensity for gambling, 22, 29, 30, 35, 47, 55, 65-66, 70, 491, 514; his life at Evans', 28-31, 70; at Wiesbaden, 30; travels in South America, 31-38, 496; follows a circus, 39, 40, 491; lives with the Chippeway Indians, 40-41, 45; imbibes Radicalism in America, 41, 226; as attaché at various embassies, 53-60, 66, 69, 412, 491; lives in Florence during his appointment to Parana, 60-62; as Secretary in Constantinople, 62; elected for Windsor and unseated, 75-83; as M.P. for Middlesex, 83-93; his protests against extravagant finance, 84, 246-47, 409; contests Nottingham, 93; his proprietorship of the _Daily News_, 95, 492; his managership of the New Queen's Theatre, 98-104, 491, 496; as financial editor of the _World_, 106, 491, 492; his editorship of _Truth_, 110, 117, 492-512; visits the Holy Land with Bellew, 11-12, 496; his reminiscences of Dumas, 113-14; his curiosity as a journalist, 114-18; his lawsuits, 117, 500-2; his experiences in Paris during the siege, 43, 96, 106, 119-41; as member for Northampton, 142 _et seq._; his support of Bradlaugh, 144-64; opposes coercion in Ireland, 166-90, 225, 363-64; his Egyptian policy, 196-204, 205-20; his defence of Arabi, 203, 204-5, 207, 220-26; his conception of Radical government, 225-49, 530-34; his admiration for Chamberlain, 225-26; his Parliamentary influence, 250, 520, 521; negotiates between the Irish party and the Liberals, 252-356, 421-22; _see also under_ Chamberlain, Gladstone, Hartington, Parnell, etc.; at Twickenham, 356; at Michelstown, 365-71; discovers Pigott's forgeries, 360, 371-406; hoaxes practised on, 406-8; at his best in Opposition, 409, 423; on the Triple Alliance, 410, 418; his exclusion from the Cabinet in 1892, 412-18, 527; at Cadenabbia, 418-21, 423, 515, 533-34; his desire to become Minister at Washington, 423; his opposition to Lord Rosebery's administration, 423, 424; his report on the Jameson Raid, 426-32; on the Chartered Company of British South Africa, 431-34; opposes the Boer War, 438-457; discusses Socialism with Hyndman at Northampton, 459-90; his chief characteristics, 496-499, 512-15; his retirement and home at Florence, 517-36; his appointment as Privy Councillor, 523, 526, 530-31; on the seating of the House of Commons, 527-30; his death and burial, 536-40
Labouchere, Henry, son of Pierre-César, his political career, 13-15. _See_ Taunton, Baron
Labouchere, John Peter, father of Henry, 14, 16; his death, 130 _n._; visits his son at Cambridge, 27
Labouchere, Rev. John, 21 _n._
Labouchere, Matthieu, 2
Labouchere, Mrs., mother of Henry, letters from Paris to, 128 _n._, 130, 138
Labouchere, Mrs., wife of Henry, at the New Queen's Theatre, 99; death of, 535
Labouchère, Pierre-César, grandfather of Henry, his partnership in the house of Hope, 2-5; his portrait, 2 _n._; his two sons, 13, 16; negotiates for peace between England and France, 4-12; restores French credit, 12, 13
Labour party, rise of the, 518, 531
Labour _v._ Capital, discussed by Hyndman and Labouchere at Northampton, 460-90
La Bruyère, on married life, 93
Ladies' Land League, work of the, 173, 186
Ladysmith, relief of, 440-41
Lambri Pasha, 150
Lancashire opposes Home Rule, 280
Land Bill, the, 159, 421-22; amendments of, 187; Chamberlain on, 329; Labouchere on, 292, 318, 320, 332; Healy on, 309; rejection of, 357
Land League, the, establishes Boycotting, 165; its "no Rent" manifesto, 172; its suppression, 172-75; its useful functions, 171, 358 _n._; prosecution of, 166; the _Times_ on, 360, 382; two sections of, 182, 186
Land system, English, Labouchere on the, 231, 234, 235, 241
Landlordism in Ireland, Labouchere on, 276, 292, 295, 318
Laon, Prussian army at, 127
Lascelles, Sir Frank, announces the deposition of Ismail, 194
Last, Parliamentary agent at Windsor, 76, 81
_Last Days of Pompeii_, produced at the New Queen's Theatre, 100
Latham, examiner at Cambridge, 24
Lausanne, Pigott at, 385
Lawley, Frank, correspondent in Paris during the siege, 120, 138 _n._, 140
Lawson, Lionel, at Evans', 29
Lawson, Mr. Justice, 277
Lawson, Sir Wilfrid, his amendment seconded by Labouchere, 205, 213; his letter to Labouchere, _re_ retirement, 524-25; seconds Labouchere's resolution against the House of Lords, 241
Laycock, contests Nottingham, 93
Leech, John, at Evans', 29
Leeds, Balfour at, 524; Herbert Gladstone at, 263
_Leeds Mercury_ on Home Rule, 256; publishes Gladstone's Home Rule scheme, 277 _n._
Lefevre, Shaw, 266; Labouchere on, 200-1
Legislation, the technique of, Labouchere on, 229
Leicester, Chamberlain at, 270
Lennox, Lord Henry, his opposition to Bradlaugh, 146, 150, 156
Levi, Leone, quoted by Labouchere, 470, 484
Lewis, Sir George, as solicitor to Labouchere, 108, 501, 510; as solicitor to Parnell, 375-79, 386-89, 393-98; his death, 536
Liberal, party, its breach with the Irish, 172, 179, 187, 252-53; its policy in Egypt, 190, 194-224; its treatment of Gladstone, 284
---- Unionist party, the, 422; Chamberlain joins, 228
Licences, Brewers', Labouchere on, 83
_Life of Parnell_, O'Brien's, 174
Limited Liability Companies, Labouchere on, 465-67
Lincoln, Mass., Egan at, 381
Linton, Mrs. Lynn, on the staff of the _World_, 107
Lobengula, raid on King, 433
Local Government, Chamberlain on, 264, 265, 311; Labouchere on, 167, 265
Lockwood, Mark, 455
London, death-rate of, 463, 482-83; Ismail Bey Jowdat in, 216; Labouchere's homes in: Albany, 78; Bolton Street, 110, 116; Hamilton Place, 13-14; Old Palace Yard, 39, 224; Portland Place, 16; Queen Anne's Gate, 71, 158, 177; Labouchere's knowledge of, 104, 105; P.-C. Labouchère's mission in, 4
Londonderry, Lord, as Viceroy of Ireland, 357
Long, quoted by Hyndman, 481
Louis XIV., religious persecutions of, 1
Louis XVIII., his ministers, 12
Louis of Bavaria, King, in Munich, 49
Lowe, Mr., his clause in the Public Schools Bill, 84
Lowther, James, his Irish policy, 176, 178
Lucy, Sir Henry, _More Passages by the Way_, 3 _n._; on Labouchere's political influence, 250; on Labouchere's retirement, 526, 527; on the staff of the _World_, 107, 527; _The Balfourian Parliament_, 440
Lugard, Captain, in Uganda, 421
Lumley, Augustus, cotillon leader in St. Petersburg, 57
Lush, Lord Justice, his judgment against Bradlaugh, 157
Lydon, John and Margaret, 168, 169
Lying Clubs, Labouchere on, 117-18
Lynch, Quested, in Paris, during the siege, 138 _n._
Lyons, Lord, in Paris and Tours, 121
Lyons, M.P., Dr., on the membership for Northampton, 149
_Lyre, The_, proposed title for _Truth_, 493
Lytton, Lord, his information _re_ the Berlin Congress, 192 _n._
Maamtrasna, affair of, 263
M'Carthy, Justin, Churchill on, 279, 286; _Daily News Jubilee_, 128 _n._; Healy on, 276; his defence of Arabi, 196; on the staff of the _Daily News_, 279
M'Carthy, Rev. Mr., at Michelstown 366
McCulloch, Mr., quoted, 408
McCurdy, C. A., on Labouchere and Bradlaugh, 162-63
Macdonald, _Diary of the Parnell Commission_, quoted, 383 _n._, 384 _n._, 393 _n._, 402
McKinley, President, 439
Macmahon, Marshal, at Metz, 123-24
Madelin, Louis, _Fouché_, 10 _n._
Madras, 221
Madrid, British Embassy in, 83; Pigott's suicide in, 401, 405
Magersfontein, 445
Maguire, Mr., 428
Mahdi, the, rebellion of, 208-20
Malet, Sir Alexander, British representative at the Diet of Frankfort, 55,69
Malet, Sir Edward, 69; as Consul-General in Egypt, 209
Mallet, T. L.; his journal, 13 _n._
Malta, negotiations for the possession of; 8; reinforcement of its garrison, 197
Malthusianism, Bradlaugh's views on, 144; Hyndman on, 460
Manchester, 97; Chamberlain at, 323; death-rate of, 463
_Manchester Guardian_ on Home Rule, 256
Manning, Cardinal, supports Bradlaugh, 156
_M.A.P._, 117; on Labouchere's retirement, 521 _n._
Marburg, Labouchere in, 59, 60
Marcy, Mr., American Secretary of State, his love of whist, 49
Marie Louise, Empress, her marriage, 4, 5
Marienbad, Campbell Bannerman at, 455; Labouchere at, 526
_Marseillaise_, the, 127 _n._
Marshall, Alfred, _Principles of Economics_, quoted, 482
Marvin, translator of the Cyprus Convention, 192
Marx, Carl, quoted by Hyndman, 481
Maryborough prison, 384
Mashonaland, occupation of, 433
Massey, W. H., M.P., 146, 150
Matabele War, the, 433, 434
Matthew, Mr. Justice, his judgment against Bradlaugh, 157
Matthews, Mr., counsel, 76 _n._
Maxau, 122 _n._
Maxwell, Sir Benson, superintends Egyptian tribunals, 209
Maxwell, Sir William of Monteith, 16
May, Sir Thomas Erskine, Clerk of the House, 145
Mayo, Lord his English agent, 165
Meagher, Irish patriot, Labouchere mistaken for, 48
Medicine, Labouchere's interest in the science of, 60, 507
Melbourne, Lord, his _laissez-faire_ policy, 229; ministry of, 13; on the Garter, 241
Meredith, George, _Richard Feverel_, 522
Merewether, lawyer, contests Northampton, 144
Merivale, Herman, his anecdote of Labouchere and his uncle, 82; his _Time and the Hour_ produced at the New Queen's Theatre, 98, 99
Mersey, Lord, 428
Metz, Napoleon III. at, 122 _n._, 123
Mexico, Labouchere in, 32-38, 72, 100, 496
Michael Angelo, Labouchere modernises the villa of, 72
Michelstown, police charge at, 365-70
Middlesex, Labouchere as member for in 1867, 83-86, 99, 143; Labouchere contests unsuccessfully in 1868, 85-93, 525
Middlesex Coal Dues, the, Labouchere on, 85
Mijwel el Mizrab, Sheykh, 72
Milan, decree of, 9
Military Knights of Windsor, Labouchere on, 83
Mill, John Stuart, quoted, 247, 481, 482
Miller, Joaquin, 40
Milner, Alfred, Lord, as Commissioner for South Africa, 435, 442; as Governor of Cape Colony, 437, 442, 445, 448, 456; his _England in Egypt_ quoted, 210
Minneapolis, Labouchere at, 41
Mississippi steamboats, the, 106
_Modern Egypt_, Lord Cramer's, 213
Mohamed Ahmed. _See_ Mahdi
Molière, Marie-Madeleine, 2
Mollerus, Dutch statesman, 6
Moltke, rumour of his death, 134
Monarchy, English, Labouchere on, 230-31, 233, 242-43
Moncrieff, Colonel Scott-, directs the irrigation of Egypt, 209
Monson, Sir Edmund, his letter to Labouchere _re_ retirement, 526
Mont Blanc, 44
Monteith, Maxwell of, 16
Montes, Lola, 49
Montreal, Healy at, 310
Moonlighting in Ireland, 173
Moore, Messrs. Telbin and, 98
More's _Utopia_, 489
Morgan, Osborne, his speeches on Ireland, 260
Morley, Arnold, his mediation on the Home Rule question, 322, 334, 338-43. 347; part proprietor of the _Daily News_, 95
Morley of Blackburn, John, Earl, Chamberlain on, 299, 302, 326; Davitt on, 257-58; his letters to Labouchere _re_ Home Rule, 317, 327, 331; his _Life of Gladstone_ quoted, 365 _n._, 371, 382, 422; his resignation, 325; his views on Home Rule, 309, 322, 329, 332, 333; Labouchere on, 282, 324, 327; on Gladstone's Egyptian policy, 190; opposes coercion in Ireland, 173
_Morning Post_, Bowles correspondent in Paris of the, 141 _n._; Grenville Murray as correspondent of, 67; on Labouchere's retirement, 521-22
"Moss, Moses," 505
Mott's Foley Street rooms, 105
Moulton, Mr. Gladstone's letter to, 353
Mountmorres, Lord, murder of, 165
Mudford, journalist, 278
Mulgrave, Lord, Viceroy of Ireland, 251
Mulhall, Mr., statistician, 485
Mundella, Minister for Education, 285
Munich, Labouchere as attaché in, 49, 50
Murat, Joachim, as King of Naples, 8, 9
Murphy, David, cashier, 396
Murphy, Serjeant, at Evans', 29; counsel for the _Times_, 374 _n._
Murray, Grenville, betrays official secrets in the _Morning Post_, 67-68; his action against Lord Carrington, 110 _n._; on the staff of the _World_, 109
Nantes, P.-C. Labouchère at, 2
Napier, Mr., his defence of Arabi, 222
Naples, kingdom of, 8
Napoleon I., his ideal woman, 246; Labouchere on, 480; negotiates for peace with England, 5-12
Napoleon III. at Metz, 122 _n._, 123-24; his imprisonment, 122, 124-25, 126; his plan of campaign, 122 _n._, 123
Natal, war spirit in, 437, 438, 449
National, debt, Labouchere on the, 475, 477
---- income, the, Labouchere on, 465
_National Reformer_, Bradlaugh's statement of his case in the, 146-47
Nationalisation, of land, Labouchere on the, 235
---- of railways, Labouchere on, 486, 487
Navy, Labouchere on the, 478
Neutrality Law, Labouchere on the inadequacy of the English, 81
Newcastle, 478
Newgate, Labouchere's description of, 114-15
Newman, Cardinal, his position in regard to Bradlaugh, 156
Newmarket, Labouchere at, 22
New Mexico, Pueblas of, 486
New Queen's Theatre, Labouchere as manager of, 98-104
Newton, Mr., censure of, 428
New Windsor, Labouchere's election for, 75-82
New York, 106; Healy in, 310; Labouchere in, 41
_New York Herald_, 382, 526
Nice, Labouchere at, 95, 97
Nicholas, Emperor, Lord Stratford's hatred of, 63
Nicholson's Nek, 440
_Nineteenth Century_, Cardinal Manning's article in the, 156
Nolan, M.P., Colonel, 146, 150; his returns, 302
Nolte, Vincent, his reminiscences of P.-C. Labouchère, 3, 4 _n._
Nonconformists, their anti-Irish feeling, 306
Norfolk, Labouchere in, 22
Norman, Henry, 278
_North Briton_, 164
North Camberwell, Labouchere at, 247
Northampton, Bradlaugh returned for, 142-45, 149, 151-52, 157; Hyndman at, 459; industrialism of, 462, 467; Labouchere, M.P. for, 14, 105, 106, 116, 142-45, 148-49, 158, 159, 161, 167, 225, 410, 415-18, 459, 465, 503; Labouchere's retirement from, 518-527; Liberal and Radical Association, its tribute to Labouchere, 539-40
_Northampton Echo_ quoted, 162
_Northampton Mercury_ quoted, 143, 144 _n._
Northbrook, Lord, 13 _n._
Northcote, Sir Stafford, his motion against Bradlaugh, 146, 152-55; his motion on the Egyptian policy, 213
Norway, Gladstone in, 257
Nottingham, contested by Labouchere, 93
Nubar, his Premiership, 193-94
O'Brien, R., Barry, his articles on the Irish question, 257; his _Life of Lord Russell of Killowen_, 391 _n._; his _Life of Parnell_ quoted, 252 _n._, 257 _n._; on the murder of Lord F. Cavendish, 174-75
O'Brien, Smith, his Irish rising, 48
O'Brien, W., 312; Healy on, 276, 363; his influence in Ireland, 533; his Irish policy, 256
O'Connor, John, at Michelstown, 365
O'Connor, Mrs. T. P., her reminiscence of Labouchere among the Indians, 40-41
O'Connor, T. P., on the Coercion Bill, 178; on Labouchere's retirement, 520-21; supports the Tories _re_ Home Rule, 261, 266
Odessa, Grenville Murray as Consul at, 68, no
O'Donnell, F. H., his case against the _Times_, 372-74, 392
O'Donoghue, The, on Labouchere, 169
O'Kelly, James, Pigott forgeries of his letters, 386, 394, 396
Ollivier, French Premier, resignation of, 124
Onslow, M.P., David, 146
Oppenheim, Henry, 287; part proprietor of the _Daily News_, 95
Orange Free State, annexation of the, 445, 449, 454, 456
Orangemen oppose Home Rule, 291, 294, 345
_Orinoco_, s.s., 31
Orthez, home of the Labouchere family, 1
Orton, Arthur, dines with Labouchere, 116
O'Shea, Captain, Healy on, 276; his supposed share in the forged letters, 373, 381; negotiates between Parnell and Gladstone, 173
O'Shea, J. Augustus, correspondent in Paris during the siege, 141 _n._
Osman Digna captures Tokar, 213
Ostrogotha, Duchess of, her baby's birth, 53
Otrante, Duc d'. _See_ Fouché.
Ouvrard, tool of Fouché, 10-12
Oxford, Henry Labouchere the elder at, 13
Palikao, Count, French Premier, 124
_Pall Mall Gazette_, Bingham correspondent in Paris for, 141 _n._; inspired by Gladstone, 278; Morley's editorship of, 173; refuses Pigott forgeries, 375, 406; Stead's letter in, 411; W. S. Blunt's defence of Arabi in, 222
Palmerston, Lord, 46 _n._; his agreement with Murray, 67-68
Palmyra, Labouchere at, 72
Palto at Twickenham, 356
Parana, Republic of, Labouchere's appointment to, 60
Paris, British Embassy in, 83, 120; death of Grenville Murray in, 110 _n._; headquarters of the Land League in, 172, 181, 182, 186; Labouchere in, 30, 31; Labouchere's letters to London during the siege of, 43, 44, 96, 106, 119, 124-41; Louis Buonaparte in, 8; Parnell letters in, 385, 386, 389; P.-C. Labouchère summoned by Napoleon to, 11-12; Pigott in, 394-95, 396, 401; public parks of, 84; Queen Christina in, 245
Parish Councils Bill, the, 422, 479
Parliament, House of Commons, extravagance of, 410; payment of members of, 229, 230; reasons for entering, 74; seating accommodation of, 527-30; triennial election of, 229, 248
Parliament, House of Lords, abolition of, 226, 230-33, 238-42, 248, 417, 422, 425 _n._, 527, 531-34; its obstruction of the Home Rule Bill, 290
Parliamentary, journalist, Labouchere as, 504
---- Oaths Act, the, its bearing in the case of Bradlaugh, 145, 151, 155, 157, 160
Parnell, Charles Stewart, speaks in favour of Bradlaugh, 153; as president of the Land League, 165, 166, 177, 182, 358 _n._; his imprisonment and release, 172-74, 252, 254; his position as Irish leader during the Home Rule struggle, 173-189, 236, 237, 252-356; his confidence in Labouchere, 250; Lord Carnarvon treats with, 252; his motives discussed by Healy, 254, 266, 271, 274, 276, 285, 290, 362; Davitt on, 257-58; Chamberlain on, 266-67, 317; Labouchere on, 273, 280, 312, 314-17, 332, 337: his letters to Labouchere _re_ Home Rule, 275-76; on Gladstone, 278; introduces the Land Bill, 357; publication of his supposed letters in the _Times_, 359-60, 361, 371; his amendment to the Speech from the Throne, 369; denies the authorship of his supposed letters, 372-73, 397; his defence by Sir C. Russell, 374 _n._, 375, 392-98; his unpopularity in America, 378; his letters to Labouchere _re_ the Pigott forgeries, 383-84
Parnell Commission, the, history of, 360, 373-97
Parnell, Miss, president of the Ladies Land League, 173
Paul, Herbert, _A History of Modern England_, quoted, 195 _n._, 209 _n._; on Arabi, 195-96
Peace Preservation Bill, the, 172
Pearl, Cora, in the siege of Paris, 43
Pease, Maker, 353
Peel, Arthur Wellesley, 76 _n._, 270
Pelletan, M., member of the Provisional Government, 127
Pemberton, M.P., Mr., 146, 150
Peninsular War, the, 5-8
_Penny Illustrated Paper_, interview with Labouchere in, 529 _n._
Perceval, Mr., ministry of, 6-7
Percy, Lord, his attitude to Bradlaugh, 146, 149
Persia, despotism of, 469
Peruvian bondholders, 212
Peter the Hermit, 217
Petty Bag, office of, Clerk of the, 246
Phillips, Lionel, director of the South Africa Company, 426
Phipps, brewer, contests Northampton, 144
Picard, Ernest, member of the Republican Government, 117
Piccadilly Saloon, the, 105
Pichegru invades Holland, 4
Pigott, Richard, Healy on, 309-10; his sale of the _Irishman_ to Parnell, 374; his forgery of the Parnell-Egan correspondence, 373-406; his confession to Labouchere, 394, 402; his flight and suicide, 394, 402-406
Pisani, Alexander, as head of the Diplomatic Chancellerie, Constantinople, 64
Pitt, William, 287; his graduated income-tax, 247
Plato, 489
Plunkett, Mr., 410
Poland, English sympathy with, 284; Ireland compared with, 189
Polynesia, industrialism of, 486
Ponsonby, Sir H., 319
Pope, Alexander, his villa at Twickenham, 40
Portland, Duke of, ministry of, 6
Port Said, occupation of, 201, 267
Portugal, destiny of, 9
Post Office, Labouchere on the, 478; nomination of Labouchere for, 412
---- ---- Savings Bank, Labouchere on the, 477
Pretoria, British agent in, 442; capture of, 440, 445-46, 454; Jameson's imprisonment in, 434
Prevention of Crimes in Ireland Bill, passing of the, 175, 185-190, 248
Primrose League, the, its misstatements _re_ Pigott, 404
Privy Council, the, Labouchere becomes a member of, 523, 526, 530, 531
Procedure Resolutions, the, 187
Promissory Oaths Act, the, 155
Protection, Labouchere on, 531, 533; Parnell's attitude to, 258, 261, 276-77
---- of Life and Property in Ireland, Forster's Bill for, 166-74
Prussia, Crown Prince of, advances on Paris, 123, 127
Public Schools Bill, the, Labouchere on, 84
Puebla di los Angelos, Labouchere at, 34
_Punch_, reminiscences of Labouchere in, 526, 527
Pursebearer, office of, 246
Pythagoras, Labouchere on, 515, 516
_Queen's Messenger_, Labouchere's proprietorship of the, denied, 110
Queensberry, Sybil, Lady, 72
Quotla di Amalpas, Labouchere at, 36, 38, 62
Radical Party, the, Chamberlain's secession regarded as its fall, 228, 250, 318, 319, 352, 354; its attitude to the Egyptian policy, 196, 198-200, 212, 215, 217-19, 249; its attitude to Socialism, 462-89; its sympathy with Ireland, 72, 225, 248, 252, 318; its treatment by the Irish, 252; Labouchere as unofficial leader of, 196, 198, 525; Labouchere's ideals for, 225-48, 259, 304, 318, 319, 525
Radical principles, Labouchere's, their divergence from Whig principles, 42
Rawson, Henry, part proprietor of the _Daily News_, 97
Reade, Charles, as a dramatic author, 101-2
Recruiting, system of, in America for the Crimean War, 45
Redmond, J. E., as leader of the Irish party, 524, 533
Redpath, American Fenian, 170
Reed, correspondent of the _Leeds Mercury_, 272
_Referee, The_, 537 _n._
Reform Club, the, Labouchere at, 75, 89, 182, 198, 228, 318
Registration Laws, the English, 448
Reid, Wemyss, 393
Reitz, Dr., Secretary of State for the Transvaal, 444, 447, 451
Religious Disabilities Removal Bill, the, 160, 163-4
Rent Act, 421
_Reporter_, interview with Labouchere in, 477
Representation of the People Bill, the, Labouchere on, 244
Revelstoke, Lord, as a politician, 240
Reynolds's newspaper, 471
Rhodes, Cecil, his complicity in the Jameson Raid, 426-30, 452, 453; his Imperialism, 435; Labouchere's personal admiration of, 430, 435, 436; Labouchere's public condemnation of, 430-1
Rhodesia, 435
Riaz Pasha, administration of, 195, 221
Ripon, Lord, his government in India, 210
Roberts, Earl, at Eton, 18; his command in South Africa, 441, 445
Robertson, manager of the Royal Aquarium, his libel action against Labouchere, 501
Robertson, M.P., J. M., his account of Bradlaugh's parliamentary struggle, 142 _n._
Robinson, Lionel, on Labouchere's financial interest in the _Daily News_, 96
Robinson, Sir John, _Fifty Years of Fleet Street_, quoted, 133 _n._; manager of the _Daily News_, 96, 120, 128 _n._; on the syndicate of the _Daily News_, 95
Rochdale, 484; Chamberlain at, 322
Rochefort, Henri, release and triumph of, 127, 130
Roell, Dutch statesman, 6
Roman Catholicism in Ireland, Labouchere on, 86
Roman Catholics delighted by Gladstone's article against Darwin, 267; support Bradlaugh, 156
Rome, 535; Fouché, Governor of, 11, 12
Ronan, counsel for the _Times_, 374 _n._
Rosebery, Earl of, as Foreign Secretary, 420, 423; Chamberlain on his Home Rule policy, 298; his letters to Labouchere _re_ Home Rule, 268, 277, 283, 287, 307; his Premiership, 423, 424; Labouchere on, 224
Rosmead, Lord, his work as Commissioner in South Africa, 428, 429
Rossa, O'Donovan, 284, 310
Rothschild, Baron, as a politician, 240; his Egyptian loans, 190, 191, 193, 194, 206; procures Labouchere a pass, 140
Rouen, Labouchere at, 120
Rouher, M., on the French army, 123
Rousby, Mrs. Wybert, appears at the New Queen's Theatre, 99, 102
Rousseau, J.-J., on his own education, 21
Rovigo, Duc de, Napoleon's aide-de-camp, 11
Royal Aquarium, Westminster, Robinson manager of, 501
Royal Parks and Pleasure Grounds, Labouchere on the upkeep of, 84, 409
Rudini, Marchesa di, daughter of Labouchere, 535, 539~40
Rumbold, Sir Horace, meets Labouchere at Constantinople, 63
Ruppenheim, Schloss of, Labouchere at, 54
Russell, Charles (Lord Russell of Killowen), his defence of Labouchere, 501; his defence of Parnell, 374 _n._, 375, 378, 384, 389-98, 402; on the Coercion Bill, 182
Russell, Lord John, Foreign Secretary, appoints Labouchere to Buenos Ayres, 65; checks Labouchere's information from St. Petersburg, 59
Russell, Odo, in Paris during the siege, 120
Russians, the, Labouchere's opinion of, 56, 57; their method of playing cards, 58
Ryder, Mr., in _The Last Days of Pompeii_, 100-1
Saarbrück, French Army Corps at, 124
St. Anthony's Falls, 41
St. Augustine, _Confessions of_, 21
St. Cloud, Napoleon at, 10
St. James's Club, Labouchere's membership of, 70
St. James's Hall, Home Rule meeting at, 324, 327
St. Martin's Hall, 98
St. Patrick, Order of, 241
St. Paul, Labouchere at, 40
St. Petersburg, Crampton Ambassador at, 46 _n._; Labouchere as attaché in, 52, 55-60
St. Thomas, Labouchere at, 32
Sala, George Augustus, at Evans', 29; his reminiscences of Labouchere, 99, 116; witnesses Pigott's confession, 394, 398-401
Sale of Liquor on Sundays Bill, the, 83
Salisbury, Marquis of, attends the Berlin Congress, 191, 192; his Egyptian policy as Foreign Secretary, 191-4, 221, 223; Irish policy of his first administration, 251, 257, 270, 271, 274, 286 _n._, 288, 305; Churchill's letter to, _re_ Home Rule, 279-80, 298; his defeat and resignation, 317 _n._; as leader of the Opposition, 319, 344, 347; his second administration, 357, 406, 409, 411; his third administration, 438; on the Transvaal, 441, 450, 451
Sampson, city editor of the _Times_, Labouchere's attacks on, 107
San Francisco, Healy in, 310
Sardinia, kingdom of, 61
Sardou, _La Patrie_, 103
_Saturday Review_ on Labouchere, 513
Saunders, Labouchere on, 352
Sazary, Napoleon's aide-de-camp, 11
Schalk, Burger, President, 456
Scholl, Aurélien, 120
Schreiner, Mr., 449
Schwarzenberg, Prince, Premier of Austria, Palmerston's grudge against, 67
Scudamore, F. I., on the staff of the _World_, 107
Sculthorpe Rectory, Fakenham, 21 _n._
Seagrove, Captain, at Michelstown, 368, 369, 372
Secret Societies in Ireland, 171, 177
Sedan, battle of, 125, 127
Selby, Lord, his letter to Labouchere _re_ retirement, 524
Sexton, his imprisonment, 172, 174; his services in the Irish party, 260, 261, 315, 363; on the Coercion Bill, 178, 187
Sezzed Jamal ed Din, 216
Shakespearian revivals announced by Labouchere, 104
Shannon, solicitor, Pigott's letter to, 395, 401
Shaw, George Bernard, 496
Sheffield, attaché in Paris, 120
_Sheffield Telegraph_ on Bradlaugh, 145
Shekan, battle of, 210, 212
Sheppard, Jack, relics of, in Newgate, 115
Sherif Pasha, administration of, 209
Shipman, Dr., M.P. for Northampton, 519
Sicily, kingdom of, 8, 9
Simla, Lord Lytton at, 192 _n._
Simon, Jules, member of the Provisional Government, 127
Simon, M.P., Serjeant, 146, 150; defends Forster's Irish Bill, 169
Simpson, Palgrave, part author of _Time and the Hour_, 98 _n._
_Sixty Years in the Wilderness_, by Sir H. Lucy, quoted, 250 _n._
Smith, Barnard, his complaint against Labouchere for cribbing, 23-26
Smith, J. G., at Northampton, 489
Smith, Librarian in the House of Commons, 301
Smith, Sir Archibald Levin, member of the Parnell Commission, 373
Smith, W. H., on the Coercion Bill, 187
Soames, Mr., solicitor, concerned in the Parnell forgery case, 360, 385, 389, 395, 401, 405
Social Democratic Federation, programme of the, 474-76
Socialism, Labouchere's attitude to, 418, 458-89
Socrates, Labouchere on, 516
Soissons, 123 _n._
Soudan, the, Gordon as Governor-General of, 209
---- War, the, 209-18, 434
South Africa, Labouchere's sympathy with, 259
South African Republic. _See_ Transvaal.
South America, Labouchere's visit to, 31-8
Southampton, 441
Southwark, representation of, 93
Spain, kingdom of, 8, 199
Spencer, Lord, as Viceroy of Ireland, 174, 178, 181, 184, 186, 267, 317, 320
Spender, James, Montagu White on, 447, 448
Spezia, Labouchere at, 109
Spion Kop, 441
Stael, Madame de, questions Napoleon on his ideal woman, 246
Stamforth, John, contests Athlone, 525
_Standard, The_, on Home Rule, 256; O'Shea correspondent in Paris for, 141 _n._; publishes Gladstone's Home Rule scheme, 277 _n._, 286 _n._
Stanley, Hon. Frederick, 76 _n._
Stansfield, 338
Stead, William, his letter in the _Pall Mall Gazette_, 411
Stewart, Colonel, his information _re_ Hicks Pasha, 210
Stewart, Patrick, 170
Stockholm, Labouchere's duel while attaché in, 50, 51, 72
Stormberg, 440
Strassburg, French army at, 122 _n._
Stratford de Redcliffe, Lord, as Ambassador at Constantinople, 62, 63, 68
Stratford-on-Avon, Mr. Flower of, 75
Stroud, Labouchere at, 332
Stuart, Professor James, speaks against the Coercion Bill, 363
Suakim, political importance of, 214-18
Suez Canal, the, political importance of, 199, 201, 204, 206
Suffrage, Adult Manhood, Labouchere on, 229-48
---- Woman, Labouchere's opposition to, 244-46
Sugden, Charles James, Labouchere's letter to, _re_ prefaces, 537
Swansea, Chamberlain at, 189
Sweating Committee, the, 471
---- in Government offices, 478-79
Sweden, Queen of, 53
Swift, Dean, on cattle-maiming, 169
Sydney, N.S.W., 393
Talana, battle of, 440
Talavera, battle of, 7
Talleyrand, Prince, presents Labouchere with a box of dominoes, 14
Tariff Reform, Labouchere on, 532
Taunton, Henry Labouchere the elder M.P. for, 13, 14-15; Sir Henry James M.P. for, 525
Taunton, Henry, Baron, differentiates between himself and his brother, 16; is invited to assist his nephew at Windsor, 82; Labouchere declines to inherit his title, 251; political career of, 13-15, 67
Taxation on food and drink, Labouchere on, 236
Taylor, Tom, _Joan of Arc_, 102; _Twixt Axe and Crown_, 99
Telbin and Moore, Messrs., 98
Tel-el-Kebir, battle of, 70, 198, 218
_Temple Bar_, "Over Babylon to Baalbek," 113
_Temps, Le_, on Lord Rosebery, 420
Terry, Ellen, at Twickenham, 356; in the _Double Marriage_, 99
Tewfik, Khedive, his rule in Egypt, 194, 211
Thackeray, W. M., 497; at Evans', 29
Theatre-goers, Labouchere on, 101, 102
Therapia, British Embassy in, 83
_Thérèse Raquin_, 338
Thesiger, Q.C., acts as counsel for Abbot _v._ Labouchere, 108, 109
Thiers, _Histoire du Consulat et de l'Empire_, 10 _n._
Thistle, Order of the, 241
Thornton, banker, 16
Thornton, Edward, Labouchere's letters to, 518, 530-31
Thornton, Godfrey, 14 _n._
Thornton, Rev. Spenser, 14 _n._
Tichborne case, the, Labouchere's reminiscences of, 116
_Time and the Hour_, production of, 98-99
_Times, The_ Arabi's letter to, 222; Bell manager of, 436; denunciations of its city edition by Labouchere, 108; its case against O'Donnell, 371-74, 392; its case against Parnell, 377-94; its correspondents in Paris during the siege, 141 _n._; Labouchere denies proprietorship of _Queen's Messenger_ in, 110; Labouchere's letters in, _re_ his exclusion from the Cabinet, 415; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ Home Rule, 291-98, 304, 309, 356; Labouchere's letters to, _re_ the Income Tax, 246; on Home Rule, 256, 293; on Labouchere's letters from Paris, 119; on the Middlesex election of 1868, 87-89, 92; on "Parnellism and Crime," 358-60, 364-65, 367, 371; on the Windsor election petition, 78-80; publishes Gladstone's Home Rule scheme, 277 _n._; publishes supposed letters from Parnell, 359, 371-75, 405; quoted, 438; report of Soudanese War in, 219
_Times' History of the War in South Africa, The_, quoted, 429 _n._, 437 _n._, 456 _n._
Tipperary, 135
Tokar, conquest of, 213
Tonsley, Mr., 415
Toole, J. L., plays at New Queen's Theatre, 99
Tory democrats, Labouchere on, 248
Toulba Pasha, exile of, 221
Tours, Crawford correspondent at, 120, 121
Trades Unionism, Labouchere on, 471
Trainbearer, office of, 246
Transvaal, English population of, 426, 428, 436, 437; its invasion by Dr. Jameson, 426-37
Trevelyan, Sir George, 150, 407; Healy on, 267, 303; on the Coercion Bill, 180, 188
Triple Alliance, the, Labouchere's opinions on, 410, 418
Trochu, General, Commander-in-chief in Paris, 125, 129; Labouchere's estimate of, 136, 137
_Truth_, Grenville Murray's "Queer Stories," 109; Horace Voules as manager and editor of, 493-512; Labouchere's editorship of, 14, 106, 109, 110, 117, 493-511; Labouchere's reminiscences of youth in, 17 _n._, 20 _n._, 30-46, 53 _n._, 91; libel actions against, 472, 499-502; on the Boer War, 445 _n._, 446, 455, 457; on Bradlaugh, 161; on Chamberlain, 228; on the Chartered Company of B.S.A., 431-34; on the Egyptian policy, 200, 202, 204-5; on his exclusion from the Cabinet, 415; on hoaxes, 405-8; on Home Rule, 287, 315; on the House of Commons, 529-30; on India, 200; on the Irish question, 187-89; on Lord Dudley, 525; on the Michelstown murders, 369, 370; on the Pigott forgeries, 375, 404, 405; on owning a dog, 419; parody of _Lest We Forget_, in, 448; Queen Victoria's dislike to Labouchere's proprietorship of, 414; "The Ghastly Gaymarket," 105 _n._
Tryon, Sir George, at Eton, 18
Tunis, French occupation of, 192
Turin, Nationalist sympathies in, 61
Turkey, its intervention in Egypt, 194-202; its relations with England, 196-97, 199; leases Cyprus to England, 191, 192
Turner, Colonel, in Ireland, Healy on, 361
Tuscany, deposition of the Grand Duke of, 61, 62
Twickenham, Labouchere at, 40, 323-28, 333, 354, 356, 408
_Twixt Axe and Crown_, produced at New Queen's Theatre, 99
Uganda, English policy in, Labouchere on, 421
Uitlanders, grievances of the, 426, 427, 437, 442, 451
Ulster, opposition to Home Rule in, 280, 284, 291, 299, 345
_United Ireland_, 255 _n._, 257, 309
United States of America, salary of the President, 42
Usedom, Countess d', caricature of, 70
Valencay, Kolli at, 10
Vandort, Dr., physician to Arabi Pasha,220
_Vanity Fair_, 492
Vansittart, Mr., contests Windsor, 76, 77
Venezuela, 434
Venice, Labouchere at, 111
Vera Cruz, Labouchere at, 32-35, 38
Verdun, Bazaine at, 124
Versailles, Labouchere at, 139, 140; Prussian army at, 127, 128, 139, 140
Victor Emmanuel II., Labouchere's reminiscences of, 62
Victoria, Queen, 85; Gladstone submits scheme for Home Rule to, 270, 277, 286 _n._, 288; her Civil List, 234; her objection to Labouchere's inclusion in the Ministry, 67, 413-15; King Louis of Bavaria inquires for, 49
Vienna, Grenville Murray attaché in, 68; Labouchere in, 529; public parks of, 84
Villa d'Este, Labouchere at, 535, 536
Vinoy, General, in Paris, 128 _n._, 136
Vivian, Lord, as Consul-General in Egypt, 194
Voisin's, Paris, 139
Voltaire, Labouchere's neutrality compared with, 220, 513
_Voltaire_ on Labouchere, 412
Voters' Bill, a, Healy on, 273
Voules, Horace, his editorship of _Truth_, 493-512
Vulpera Tarasp, Labouchere at, 45, 454
Vyse, Colonel, contests Windsor, 76
Waddington, M., at the Berlin Congress, 192 _n._
Wady Halfa, 217
Wagner, F.S.A., Henry, his "Labouchere Pedigree," 14 _n._
"Wait and See" policy, the, Chamberlain on, 300
Walcheren, expedition to, 6
Walker, John F., 106-7
Walpole, Sir Robert, declines a decoration, 241
Walpole, M.P., Spencer, chairman of Select Committee on Bradlaugh case, 146, 150
Walsh, Archbishop of Dublin, Churchill on, 282; his relations with Pigott, 381, 392, 404
Walter, case of O'Donnell _v._, 372, 373-74
War Loan Bill, the, 441
Warr, Lord de la, his interest in Arabi, 221, 223
Warrington, Chamberlain at, 257, 258
Wars of Religion, the, 1
Warton, M.P., Mr., on Bradlaugh, 149, 163
Washburne, Elihu, American Ambassador in Paris during the siege, 43
Washington, Labouchere as attaché at, 39, 45-46, 72; Labouchere's ambition to become Ambassador at, 71, 423
Waterhouse, Major, 76 _n._
Waterloo, battle of, 42, 57
Webster, Sir Richard, Attorney-General, on Parnell's supposed letters, 372-73, 386, 395, 397, 406; his examination of Pigott, 386-89
Weissenburg, battle of, 123
Welby, Lord, on Labouchere at Eton, 18
Wellesley, Lord, English Foreign Secretary, P.-C. Labouchère's mission to, 5-10
Wellington, Arthur, first Duke of, in the Peninsula, 7; on the battle of Waterloo, 42, 57
West, Sir Algernon, at Eton, 18
Westminster, Duke of, on the Irish party, 315
---- Hall, Women's Suffrage Petition in, 246
Westmoreland, Earl of, as Ambassador in Vienna, 68
Whalem, Bridget and Patrick, 168-69
Wharton, Mr., 427
Whewell, Master of Trinity, encounters Labouchere, 27-28
Whig party, the, Labouchere on, 229, 248, 305
Whig principles, their divergence from Radical principles, 42
Whist as a diplomatist's game, 49, 55, 58
Whitbread, M.P., Mr., 146, 150
White, Mr., on the Triple Alliance, 411
White, Montagu, Labouchere's correspondence with, 446-49, 451, 455
Wicklow, Parnell at, 258
Wiesbaden, Labouchere at, 30, 54
Wigan, Alfred, comedian, part manager of the New Queen's Theatre, 98
Wilkes, John, his struggle for political liberty, 163, 164
Williams, M.P., Watkin, 146, 150
Williams, Deacon, Thornton and Labouchere, bank of, 16
Willoughby, Captain, his part in the Jameson Raid, 426
Wilson, Sir Rivers, as English Commissioner and Finance Minister in Egypt, 193, 194, 206
Wilton Park, Bucks, 16
Winchilsea, Lord, on the staff of the _World_, 107
Winchester, Thorold, Bishop of, 2 _n._
Windsor, Labouchere elected for, and unseated, 70, 74-83, 95, 493
Wingfield, Lewis, in Paris during the siege, 138 _n._
Winterbotham, chairman at Stroud, 332
Wodehouse, English Ambassador in Paris during the siege, 43
Woking, Dilke at, 327
Wolff, Sir Henry Drummond, his motion against Bradlaugh, 146, 147, 150, 163
Wolseley, Garnet, Viscount, his mission in Egypt, 197, 208
Wolverhampton, Lord. _See_ Fowler, Sir H.
Wolverton, Lord, on Chamberlain and the Irish party, 337
Women, votes for, Labouchere's opposition to, 244-47, 517
Wood, Sir Evelyn, his command in Egypt, 209
Woollaston, examiner at Cambridge, 24
Woolwich, Chamberlain at, 323
_World, The_, Labouchere's connection with, 94, 106-11, 492, 495, 527
Wörth, battle of, 124, 127
Wyndham, Charles, at New Queen's Theatre, 99
Wyndham, George, member of the South Africa Commission, 427, 435, 436
Yarmouth, 6
Yates, Edmund, at Evans', 29; editor of the _World_, 492, 502; on Labouchere as a contributor, 106-11
Zanzibaris, troop of, in Uganda, 421
[Transcriber's Notes:
Unusual and incorrect spellings have been left as printed.
Page numbers are surrounded by curly braces, e.g. {123}, footnotes by square brackets, e.g. [4].