263;
attacks Government on American “piracy proclamation” at end of the war,
267-8;
attitude to expansion of the franchise, i. 77;
ii. 276, 303 and note[1]
Otherwise mentioned, i. 292, 295; ii. 51 note[2], 166, 210, 214
Dial, The, i. 70 note[1]
Disraeli, Benjamin (Tory leader in the Commons), i. 79;
on Trent affair, 241;
connection with Lindsay’s motion, 292, 295, 296, 306;
ii. 213 and note[1];
approval of neutrality, ii. 77, 174 note[1];
in Roebuck’s motion, 153, 171, 174;
attitude to stoppage of Southern shipbuilding, 197;
speech, of, on the motion for the
Address to the Crown on Lincoln’s assassination, 263-4;
Reform Bill of (1867) ... 3 03 and note[1]
Mentioned, ii. 270 note[3]
Donoughmore, Earl of, ii. 204 and note[2];
reply to Mason, 250-1
D’Oubril, ii. 59 note[4], 62 note[5]
Doyle, Percy, i. 218 note[1]
Dublin News, quoted, i. 45, 46 note[1]
Dubuque Sun, The, ii. 22 note
Dudley, U.S. Consul at Liverpool,
ii. 118, 130 note[2], 144, 145 note[2]
Dufferin, Lord, i. 240
Duffus, R. L., “Contemporary English Popular Opinion on the American Civil
War,” i. 41 note[1]; quoted, 41, 48;
cited, 70 note[1]; ii. 112 note[1]
Dumfermline, Lady, i. 224 note[3]
Dumping of British goods:
effect on American feeling, i. 19, 21
Economist, The:
attitude in the struggle, i. 41, 54, 57,
173-4;
ii. 15, 173, 231 note;
cited or quoted:
on Lincoln’s election,
i. 39 and note[1];
on impossibility of Northern
reconquest, 57;
on secession an accomplished
fact, 174; ii. 79;
on Bull Run, i. 179;
on cotton shortage, i. 55;
ii. 14, 15;
on servile insurrection, 79;
on Cotton Loan, 160, 162;
on Roebuck’s motion,
173;
on extension of the franchise,
277;
on American institutions and
statesmen, 279-80
Edinburgh Review, The:
attitude to slavery, i. 33, 45; ii. 281;
attitude in the conflict, i. 42; ii. 50
note[2], 68;
on recognition, 46 note[3];
on the Emancipation Proclamation, 103;
on the causes of the war, 281
Elliot, charge, i. 14
Elliott, E.N., editor of Cotton is King and Pro-Slavery
Arguments,
ii. 3 note[2]
Emancipation, Proclamation of: ii. 74, 78, 80,
86 and note[1], 91;
idea of military necessity for, 81, 82,
85, 87;
Lincoln’s alleged purpose in, 87;
purpose of, according to Seward, 99-100;
viewed as an incitement to servile insurrection,
49, 74, 98, 101, 103
note[6]
American reception of, ii. 101, 105
British attitude to, ii. 101 et seq.;