Revolution, a History of England, Volume 4

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Revolution, a History of England, Volume 4 Page 47

by Peter Ackroyd


  servants ref1

  Seven Years War (1756–63) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Seward, Anna ref1

  Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd earl of: Characteristics ref1

  Shakespeare, William: characters sing ref1; Pitt the elder’s love of ref1; Jubilee (1769) ref1; performed ref1; King Lear ref1

  sheep ref1, ref2

  Sheffield Society for Constitutional Information ref1

  Shelburne, William Petty, 2nd earl of (later ref1st marquess of Lansdowne) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Shelley, Percy Bysshe ref1

  Sheppard, Jack ref1

  Sheridan, Richard Brinsley: content of plays ref1, ref2; reputation ref1; on impeachment of Warren Hastings ref1; welcomes French Revolution ref1; loses party support ref1; on end of Jacobinism ref1; The Critic ref1, ref2; The School for Scandal ref1

  shops and shopping ref1

  Shrewsbury, Charles Talbot, duke of ref1

  Siddons, Sarah ref1

  silk mills ref1, ref2, ref3

  silver coinage ref1

  Simond, Louis ref1

  slaves and slavery: and asiento ref1; and sugar consumption ref1; West African ref1; conditions in West Indies ref1; abolition movement ref1; trade ref1; trade abolished (1807) ref1

  Sloane, Sir Hans ref1

  Smart, Christopher ref1

  Smiles, Samuel ref1

  Smith, Adam: on union of Scotland and England ref1; on war against Spain ref1; on inventing class ref1; on pin-making ref1; The Wealth of Nations ref1, ref2, ref3

  Smollett, Tobias: on South Sea Bubble ref1; plays ref1; The Adventures of Ferdinand, Count Fathom ref1; The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle ref1, ref2; The Adventures of Roderick Random ref1, ref2; The Expedition of Humphry Clinker ref1, ref2

  societies for the reformation of manners ref1

  Society for the Abolition of the Slave Trade ref1

  Society of Brothers ref1, ref2

  Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce ref1

  society, polite ref1

  Sons of Liberty (North America) ref1

  Sophia, electress of Hanover ref1, ref2

  Sophia, queen of George I ref1

  South Sea Bubble ref1, ref2

  South Sea Company: established (1711) ref1; early success ref1; collapse and rescue by Walpole ref1, ref2

  Southey, Robert ref1

  Southwell, Sir Robert ref1

  Southwell, Robert (artist): ‘The Burning Babe’ (painting) ref1

  Spain: in William III’s coalition against France ref1; succession question ref1; and War of Austrian Succession (1739–48) ref1, ref2; Pitt the elder calls for war against ref1; Britain declares war on (1762) ref1; joins alliance against Britain (1778) ref1; attempts to seize British ships ref1; changes sides in Napoleonic wars ref1, ref2; in alliance with Napoleon ref1; treasure ships captured ref1; in Peninsular War ref1, ref2

  Spanish Netherlands ref1

  Spanish Succession, War of (1701–14) ref1, ref2, ref3

  spas ref1, ref2, ref3

  Spectator, The (journal) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Speenhamland system ref1

  Spithead mutiny (1797) ref1

  Sprat, William ref1

  Stair, John Dalrymple, 2nd earl of ref1

  Stamp Act (1765) ref1, ref2

  Stamp Act Congress (North America) ref1, ref2

  Stanhope, James, 1st earl ref1

  Staverton Mill, Totnes ref1

  Stead, William Thomas: The Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon ref1

  steam engines ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  steel manufacture ref1

  Steele, Richard (‘Isaac Bickerstaff’): political writings ref1; opposes Scriblerus ref1; in Kit–Kat Club ref1; The Tender Husband ref1

  Steenkerque, battle of (1692) ref1

  Stephenson, George ref1

  Sterne, Laurence: individuality ref1; The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman ref1, ref2, ref3

  Stock-jobbing ref1

  Strutt, Jedediah ref1, ref2, ref3

  Stuart dynasty: barred from throne under Act of Settlement ref1; continuing hopes of restoration ref1, ref2; see also Jacobites; James II

  Stuart, Prince Charles Edward Stuart (‘The Young Pretender’; ‘Bonny Prince Charlie’) ref1

  Stuart, Prince James Francis Edward (‘the Old Pretender’): claim to English throne ref1; failed landing in Scotland (1708) ref1; hopes of succession to Anne ref1, ref2; popular support in England ref1; lands in Scotland in 1715 rising ref1; and South Sea Bubble ref1; Atterbury supports ref1

  Stubs, Pete ref1

  sugar ref1, ref2

  Sunday Monitor ref1

  superstitions ref1

  Sweden: in coalition against Napoleon ref1

  Swift, Jonathan: on Queen Anne ref1; on union with Scotland ref1; political writings ref1, ref2; on Marlborough ref1; and Scriblerus Club ref1; literary style ref1; satirizes Walpole ref1; and Gay’s The Beggar’s Opera ref1; satirizes scientific societies ref1; The Conduct of the Allies ref1, ref2; Gulliver’s Travels ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8; The Tale of a Tub ref1

  Talavera, battle of (1809) ref1

  Talleyrand, Charles-Maurice de ref1

  Tate, Nahum ref1

  Tatler (magazine) ref1

  taxation ref1

  Taylor, Jasper ref1

  tea ref1

  Tea Act (1773) ref1, ref2

  technology: development ref1

  Teignmouth ref1

  Telford, Thomas ref1

  Temple of Nature, The (anonymous poem) ref1

  Temple, Sir William ref1

  textile industry ref1

  Thackeray, William Makepeace ref1

  Theatre Royal, Covent Garden ref1, ref2

  Theatre Royal, Drury Lane ref1

  theatres: in provinces ref1; restrictions imposed ref1, ref2; popularity and influence ref1; and acting ref1

  Thelwall, John ref1

  Thiébault, Paul ref1

  ‘Thing, The’ (or ‘Old Corruption’) ref1

  Thurlow, Edward, 1st baron ref1

  Tilsit, treaty of (1807) ref1

  Times, The (newspaper) ref1

  Tofts, Mary ref1

  Toleration Act (1689) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Tooke, John Horne ref1, ref2

  Tories: differences with Whigs ref1, ref2, ref3; as ‘country party’ ref1; scorn Bank of England ref1; dislike moneyed interests ref1; favour restoration of Stuarts ref1, ref2; gain majority (1702) ref1; oppose Marlborough’s wars ref1, ref2; election victory and government (1710) ref1, ref2; and succession to Anne ref1; George I dislikes and persecutes ref1; view of Walpole ref1

  Torrington, Arthur Herbert, 1st earl of ref1

  Toulon ref1, ref2

  towns ref1, ref2, ref3

  Townshend, Charles, 2nd Viscount (‘Turnip’) ref1

  Townshend, Charles (chancellor of exchequer) ref1

  Toynbee, Arnold ref1, ref2

  trade: importance ref1; and the market ref1; at end of Seven Years War ref1; and British Empire ref1; under Pitt ref1

  trade unions ref1

  Trafalgar, battle of (1805) ref1

  transport: improvements ref1

  Triple Assessment (tax) ref1

  Tucker, Josiah, dean of Gloucester ref1

  Tull, Jethro ref1

  Turner, Thomas ref1

  Turner, James Mallord William: studies at Royal Academy ref1; Limekiln at Coalbrookdale (painting) ref1

  Turnham Green ref1

  ‘Two Acts’ (‘Gagging Acts’, 1795) ref1

  United Irishmen ref1, ref2

  Ure, Andrew: The Philosophy of Manufactures ref1

  Utrecht, treaty of (1713) ref1, ref2

  Valmy, battle of (1792) ref1

  Vanbrugh, Sir John ref1, ref2, ref3

  Vauxhall Gardens, London ref1

  Venice ref1

  Vernon, Admiral Edward ref1

  Vienna: Napoleon captures ref1

  Vil
lars, Marshal Claude Louis Hector, duc de ref1, ref2

  Vimeiro, battle of (1808) ref1

  Virginia: tobacco from ref1; protests against British rule ref1, ref2

  Voltaire, François Marie Arouet: on execution of Admiral Byng ref1; on war in Canada ref1; Letters Concerning the English Nation ref1, ref2

  wages and prices ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Wagram, battle of (1809) ref1

  Walcheren expedition (1809) ref1

  Waldegrave, James, 2nd earl ref1, ref2

  walks (leisure) ref1

  Wallis, Henry ref1

  Walpole, Horace: on Frau von Kielmannsegge ref1; on gambling ref1; encounter with highwayman ref1; on elder Pitt’s eloquence ref1; on crime and violence ref1; on earthquake fears ref1; congratulates elder Pitt on victories ref1; on death of George II ref1; praises George III ref1; on general election (1761) ref1; on elder Pitt’s resignation and pension ref1; on Britain at end of Seven Years War ref1; on Lord North ref1; on natural sciences ref1; on ballooning ref1

  Walpole, Sir Robert: qualities ref1; rescues South Sea Company ref1, ref2; political career and dominance ref1, ref2, ref3; and death of George I ref1; marriage ref1; club membership ref1; good relations with Caroline ref1; reports George I’s death to George II ref1; opinion of George II ref1; opponents ref1, ref2; satirized in The Beggar’s Opera ref1; imposes restrictions on theatre ref1; and parliamentary corruption ref1; attempts to introduce excise duties ref1; anti-war policy ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4; resigns (1742) ref1; created earl of Orford ref1

  Walsingham, Francis ref1

  War of Jenkins’ Ear (1739–48) ref1

  Ward, Edward: Five Travel Scripts ref1

  Washington, George ref1, ref2, ref3

  Waterloo, battle of (1815) ref1, ref2

  Watkinson (master cutler) ref1

  Watt, James ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  Wedgwood, Josiah ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Weekly Journal, The ref1

  weeping ref1, ref2

  Wellesley, Henry, 1st baron Cowley ref1

  Wellington, Arthur Wellesley, 1st duke of ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Wentworth, Isabella, Lady ref1

  Wesley, Charles ref1, ref2

  Wesley, John ref1, ref2, ref3

  West, Benjamin ref1, ref2

  West Indies: trade ref1; British possessions in ref1; slaves ref1; in French revolutionary wars ref1

  Whaley, Thomas ref1

  wheat: prices ref1

  Whigs: differences with Tories ref1, ref2, ref3; William favours ref1; policies ref1; support Marlborough ref1, ref2; attacked by Sacheverell ref1; criticized for financial management ref1; and succession to Anne ref1; favoured by George I ref1; internal divisions ref1; government under George I ref1; encourage trade ref1; hostility to Walpole ref1; and Walpole’s retirement ref1; advocate peace with America ref1; support Burke ref1; and 1793 war with France ref1; join Pitt’s administration (1794) ref1; secessionists in war with France ref1

  Whitbread’s brewery ref1

  Whitechapel: theatre ref1

  Whitefield, George ref1, ref2

  Whitworth, Charles, baron ref1

  Wilberforce, William ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Wild, Jonathan ref1

  Wilkes, John: protests and career ref1, ref2, ref3; An Essay on Woman ref1

  William III (of Orange), king of England: installed as king ref1, ref2; coronation ref1; qualities ref1, ref2; relations with parliament ref1, ref2; hostility to Louis XIV ref1; war with France ref1, ref2, ref3; campaign in Ireland ref1; maintains coalition against France ref1; favours Whigs ref1; and Mary’s death ref1; recaptures Namur ref1; conspiracy against ref1; Louis XIV recognizes as king ref1, ref2; army curtailed ref1; and Spanish succession ref1; death and achievements ref1; Queen Anne disdains ref1; introduces gin to England ref1

  Willis, Thomas: Two Discourses Concerning the Soul of Brutes ref1

  Wilmot, Alderman ref1

  Wilson, Benjamin ref1, ref2

  Wiltshire Outrages ref1

  Windham, William ref1, ref2, ref3

  Wolfe, Major-General James ref1

  women: in industrial labour ref1, ref2, ref3

  Wood, John ref1

  Wood, William: Survey of Trade ref1

  wool industry ref1

  Wordsworth, Dorothy ref1

  Wordsworth, William: attitude to French Revolution ref1; The Excursion ref1, ref2; ‘Lines Written Above Tintern Abbey’ ref1; Lyrical Ballads (with Coleridge) ref1; The Prelude ref1

  Workmen’s Combination Bill (1799) ref1

  Wright, Joseph ref1; A Blacksmith’s Shop (painting) ref1; An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump (painting) ref1; An Iron Forge Viewed from Without (painting) ref1; A Philosopher Giving that Lecture on the Orrery, in which a Lamp Is Put in Place of the Sun (painting) ref1

  Wrigley, E. A. 219

  Wyvill, Christopher ref1

  Yale university ref1

  York: Assembly Rooms ref1

  York, Frederick Augustus, duke of ref1, ref2

  Yorke, Charles ref1, ref2

  Yorktown, Virginia: British surrender at (1781) ref1

  Young, Arthur: on working class ref1; Annals of Agriculture ref1, ref2; The Northern Tour ref1; Political Arithmetic ref1

  Young, Edward: Night Thoughts ref1

  1. An inset from the ceiling of the painted hall of the royal naval college at Greenwich, with William III and Mary II in majesty.

  2. Queen Anne. A singularly unhappy and gouty queen.

  3. John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough. A great general and a great spendthrift – Blenheim was his shining star.

  4. A scene from the Battle of Blenheim. ‘I am very sensible that I take a great deal upon me,’ he wrote before the battle, ‘but should I act otherwise the Empire would be undone . . .’

  5. George I of England, who had a very fat mistress, and a very thin mistress. It is almost a limerick.

  6. George II was full of bullying, boastfulness and bluster.

  7. An animated table at a London coffee house, circa 1700.

  8. Robert Walpole. Plump, genial and a master of intrigue. All political strings led to him.

  9. William Pitt ‘the Elder’, prime minister twice, with the badly misquoted line ‘unlimited power corrupts the possessor’.

  10. The Old Pretender, James Francis Edward Stuart, son of the deposed James II who quite improperly considered himself to be James III.

  11. The Young Pretender, Charles Edward Stuart (circa 1740), otherwise known as Bonnie Prince Charlie.

  12. Illustration from Hogarth Restored: The Whole Works of the Celebrated William Hogarth. The artist was the Rowlandson and Rembrandt of the age.

  13. The spinning jenny, the latest example of industrial torture.

  14. The horrors of gin and, at the time, spirituous frenzy.

  15. John Dryden, poet, playwright and the first official Poet Laureate.

  16. Jonathan Swift, satirist, pamphleteer and progenitor of the famous Gulliver.

  17. Alexander Pope, perhaps contemplating ‘this long disease, my life’.

  18. Scrofulous and scruffy, Samuel Johnson was the giant of the age.

  19. George III: He lost his reason and the American colonies.

  20. The Prince Regent, later George IV, was fat, dissolute and entangled with wives. He was the model of a Hanoverian monarch.

  21. Joseph Wright’s The Iron Forge, circa 1773.

  22. The Ball from ‘Scenes at Bath’. It looks very respectable.

  23. From the sublime to the domestic. A teapot, circa 1775.

  24. The Boston Tea Party, 16 December 1773. Do you want tea with your water?

  25. George Washington, from slave owner to liberator.

  26. William Pitt the Younger. Not a chip off the old block, but the old block itself.

  27. A disconsolate and melancholy Edmund Burke at the loss of America.

  28. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1804. He had a glow-worm in his head.


  29. Wordsworth, in characteristically reflective mind.

  30. A mythological depiction of The Ancient of Days by William Blake.

  31. Taking the waters at the pump room in Bath.

  32. Ladies in coffee-houses: It was a city of coffee-houses. They had begun life in the 1660s, and before long they were considered to be the most essential component of city life. It was important to be noticed.

  33. A modern Belle creeping around Bath like a caterpillar in a chrysalis.

  34. The Duchess of Richmond organized a ball for the Duke of Wellington and other famous participants two days before the Battle of Waterloo.

  35. The great Battle of Trafalgar.

  36. Napoleon in excelsis.

  37. The Duke of Wellington at Waterloo. To the victors go the spoils.

  BY THE SAME AUTHOR

  Non-Fiction

  The History of England Vol. I: Foundation

  The History of England Vol. II: Tudors

  The History of England Vol. III Civil War

  London: The Biography

  Albion: The Origins of the English Imagination

  The Collection: Journalism, Reviews, Essays, Short Stories

  Lectures Edited by Thomas Wright

  Thames: Sacred River Venice: Pure City

  Fiction

  The Great Fire of London

  The Last Testament of Oscar Wilde

  Hawksmoor Chatterton First Light

 

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