Labor, division of, 123 ; effect of attempts by government to limit the hours of, 362 Major Moody's new philosophy of, and its refutation, 373 398 Laboring classes (the), their condition in England and on the Continent, 178 ; in the United States, 180 Labourdonnais, his talents, 202 ; his treatment by the French government, 294 Laedaunon. See Sparta. La Fontaine, allusion to, 393 Lalla Kookli, 485 Lally, Governor, his treatment by the French government, 294 Lamb, Charles, his defence cf the dramatists of the Restoration, 357 ; his kind nature, 358 Lampoons, Pope's, 408 Lancaster, Dr., his patronage of Addison, 326 Langton, Mr., his friendship with Johnson, 204 219 ; his admiration of Miss Burney, 271 Language, Drvden's command of, 367 ; effect of its cultivation upon poetry, 337 338 Latin, its decadence, 55 ; its characteristics, 55 Italian, Dante the first to compose in, 56 Languedoc, description of it in the twelfth century, 308 309 ; destruction of its prosperity and literature by the Normans, 310 Lansdowne, Lord, his friendship for Hastings, 106 Latimer, Hugh, his popularity in London, 423 428 Latin poems, excellence of Milton's, 211 Boileau's praise of, 342 343 Petrarch's, 96 ; language, its character and literature, 347 349 Latinity, Croker's criticisms on, 381 Laud, Archbishop, his treatment by the Parliament, 492 493 ; his correspondence with Strafford, 492 ; his character, 452 453 ; his diary, 453 ; his impeachment and imprisonment, 468 ; his rigor against the Puritans, and tenderness towards the Catholics, 473 Lauderdale, Lord, 417 Law, its administration in the time of James II., 520 ; its monstrous grievances in India, 64 69 Lawrence, Major, his early notice of Clive, 203, 241, ; his abilities, 203 Lawrence, Sir Thomas, 305 Laws, penal, of Elizabeth, 439 440 Lawsuit, imaginary, between the parishes of St. Dennis and St. George-in-the-water, 100, 111 Lawyers, their inconsistencies as advocates and legislators, 414 415 Learning in Italy, revival of, 275 ; causes of its decline, 278 Legerdemain, 353 Legge, Et. lion. H. B., 230 ; his return to the Exchequer, 38 13 ; his dismissal, 28 Legislation, comparative views on, by Plato and by Bacon, 456 Legitimacy, 237 Leibnitz, 324 Lemon, Mr., his discovery of Milton's Treatise on Christian Doctrine, 202 Lennox, Charlotte, 24 Leo X., his character, 324 ; nature of the war between him and Luther, 327 328 Lessing, 341 Letters of Phalaris, controversy between Sir William Temple and Christ Church College and Bentley upon their merits and genuineness, 108 112 114 119 Libels on the court of George III., in Bute's time, 42 Libertinism in the time of Charles II., 517 Liberty, public, Milton's support of, 246 ; its rise and progress in Italy, 274 ; its real nature, 395 397 ; characteristics of English, 399 68 71 ; of the Seas, Barrere's work upon, 512 Life, human, increase in the time of, 177 Lincoln Cathedral, painted window in, 428 Lingard, Dr., his account of the conduct of James II. towards Lord Rochester, 307 ; his ability as a historian, 41 ; his strictures on the Triple Alliance, 42 Literary men more independent than formerly, 190-192; their influence, 193 194 ; abjectness of their condition during the reign of George IL, 400 401 ; their importance to contending parties in the reign of Queen Anne, 304 ; encouragement afforded to, by the Revolution, 336 ; see also Criticism, literary. Literature of the Roundheads, 234 ; of the Royalists, 234 ; of the Elizabethan age, 341 346 ; of Spain in the 16th century, 80 ; splendid patronage of, at the close of the 17th and beginning of the 18th centuries, 98 ; discouragement of, on the accession of the House of Hanover, 98 ; importance of classical in the 16th century, 350 Petrarch, its votary, 86 ; what its history displays in all languages 340 341 ; not benefited by the French Academy, 23 Literature, German, little known in England sixty or seventy years ago, 341 Literature, Italian, unfavorable influence of Petrarch upon, 59 60 ; characteristics of, in the 14th century, 278 ; and generally, down to Alfieri, 60 Literature, Royal Society of, 202, 9 "Little Dickey," a nickname for Norris, the actor, 417 Livy, Discourses on, by Machiavelli, 309 ; compared with Montesquieu's Spirit of Laws, 313 314 ; his characteristics as an historian, 402 403 ; meaning of the expression lactece ubertus, as applied to him, 403 Logan, Mr., his ability in defending Hastings, 139 Lollardism in England, 27 London, in the 17th century, 479 ; devoted to the national cause, 480 481 ; its public spirit, 18 ; its prosperity during the ministry of Lord Chatham, 247 ; conduct of, at the Restoration, 289 ; effects of the Great Plague upon, 32 ; its excitement on occasion of the tax on cider proposed by Bute's ministry, 50 University of, see University. Long Parliament (the), controversy on its merits, 239 240 ; its first meeting, 457 ; ii.406; its early proceedings, 469 470 ; its conduct in reference to the civil war, 471 ; its nineteen propositions, 486 ; its faults, 490 494 ; censured by Mr. Hallam, 491 ; its errors in the conduct of the war, 494 ; treatment of it by the army, 497 ; recapitulation of its acts, 408 ; its attainder of Stratford defended, 471 ; sent Hampden to Edinburgh to watch the king, 479 ; refuses to surrender the members ordered to be impeached, 477 ; openly denies the king, 489 ; its conditions of reconciliation, 480 Lope, his distinction as a writer and a soldier, 81 Lords, the House of, its position previous to the Restoration, 287 ; its condition as a debating assembly in 177 420 Lorenzo de Medici, state of Italy in his time, 278 Lorenzo de Medici (the younger), dedication of Machiavelli's Prince to him, 309 Loretto, plunder of, 346 Louis XI., his conduct in respect to the Spanish succession, 80 99 ; his acknowledgment, on the death of James II., of the Prince of Wales as King of England, and its consequences, 102 ; sent an army into Spain to the assistance of his grandson, 109 ; his proceedings in support of his grandson Philip, 109 127 ; his reverses in Germany, Italy, and the Netherlands, 129 ; his policy, 309 ; character of his government, 308 311 ; his military exploits, 5 ; his projects and affected moderation, 36 ; his ill-humor at the Triple Alliance, 41 ; his conquest of Franche Comte, 42 ; his treaty with Charles, 53 ; the early part of his reign a time of license, 364 ; his devotion, 339 ; his late regret for his extravagance, 39 ; his character and person, 576 ; his injurious influence upon religion, 64 Louis XV., his government, 646 6 293 Louis XVI., 441 ; to: 449 455 150 67 Louis XVIII., restoration of, compared with that of Charles II., 282 ; seq. Louisburg, fall of, 244 L'Ouverture, Toussaint, 366 390 392 Love, superiority of the. Romans over the Greeks in their delineations of, 83 ; change in the nature of the passion of, 84 ; earned by the introduction of the Northern element, 83 "Love for Love," by Congreve, 392 ; its moral, 402 "Love in a Wood," when acted, 371 Lucan, Dryden's resemblance to, 355 Lucian, 387 Luther, his declaration against the ancient philosophy, 446 ; sketch of the contest which began with his preaching against the Indulgences and terminated with the treaty of Westphalia, 314 338 ; was the product of his age, 323 ; defence of, by Atterbury, 113 Lysurgus, 185 Lysias, anecdote by Plutarch of his "speech for the Athenian tribunals," 117 Lyttleton, Lord, 54
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