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need to commemorate in this place. I returned to my old pursuits and to the enjoyment of a country life in the south of Europe, alternating twice a year with a residence of some few weeks or months in the neighbourhood of London. I have written various articles in periodicals (chiefly in my friend Mr. Morley's Fortnightly Review), have made a small number of speeches on public occasions, have published the "Subjection of Women," written some years before, with some additions

* and have commenced the preparation of matter for future books, of which it will be time to speak more particularly if I live to finish them. Here therefore, for the present, this memoir may close.

THE END.

Y

LONDON:

SAVILL, EDWARDS AND CO., PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,

COVENT GARDEN.

INDEX.

ABOLITIONISTS, 268

Address to University of St.
Andrews, 306

Æsop's Fables, 5

the Author to logic, 225; vindi-
cated against Hamilton and his
school, 273

Atheism, 39

Age, Spirit of the, articles on the, 173 Austin, Charles, his abilities and pe-

Agrarian Laws, 13

Agricultural Hall, meeting of working
men at the, 291

Aldrich's Logic, a superficial text.
book, 122
Alexander's Feast, 16
America, civil contest in, 266; demo-

cracy in, 191, 202. See Canada
Analysis of the Mind, by James Mill,
prepared and published, 68; dis-
cussed, 123; posthumous edition
of, 307

Ancient History, early reading of, 12
Anglada, M., his lectures on chemistry,
57

Annals of the Parish, one of Galt's
novels, suggests the word Utili-
tarian, 79
Annual Register, 7

Anson's Voyages, a delightful book, 8
Anstruther, Sir Robert, 302

Arabian Nights, 9

Argument. See Logic
Aristotle, studies in, 11, 17
Arithmetic, 6

Association Psychology, promoted by
Hartley, James Mill, and their
editors, 68, 108, 308; applied by

culiar influence over the Author,
76; writes for the Westminster
Review, 96; propagandism of,
103; reviews the Parliamentary
Debates, 118; as a speaker, 78,
124-6

Austin, John, his friendship and as-

sistance, 63, 72; on primogeni-
ture, 96; his Lectures on Juris-
prudence, 177, 271; his later views
on parliamentary reform 260; his
life, character, and opinions, 73-6,
176-9; phrases quoted from him,
178, 215, 234
Autobiography, why written, 1; later
portions of, when written, 240,
251
Avignon, 250
Ayrton, Mr., 287

BAGNÈRES DE BIGORRE, 57

Bagshot Heath, 18

Bailey, his work on Value, discussed,
120

Baillie, Joanna, inspiring influence
of one of her dramas, 15
Bain, Mr., assists the Author in pre-

Black, Mr. John, editor of the
Morning Chronicle, 89, 103.
Blackstone, 64

paring the System of Logic, 245; | Birth, 2
helps to annotate James Mill's
Analysis, 307; further aids the
Association Psychology by his
great treatise on the Mind, 260,
274

Baldwin, first publisher of the West-

minster Review, 95

Baring, Mr. Alexander, 99

Barrow Green House, 55

Bayonne, 57

Bazard, the St. Simonian, 166
Beales, Mr., 290
Beattie, 16

Beauchamp, Philip, pseudonyme of a
writer whose work on religion
greatly influenced the Author's
mind, 69

Beaver's African Memoranda, 8
Belper, Lord, 77, 103, 118, 194
Bentham, Mr., his close intimacy with

James Mill and the Author, 8,
54, 91; leading doctrines of, 64;
sets up the Westminster Review,
91; his supposed school, 100;
some of his followers, 63, 89, 91,
95; his editors, M. Dumont, Bing-
ham, and the Author, 114; his
estimate of poetry, 112; his earlier
and later style, 116; his services
to mankind, 204, 265; points on
which his views need qualification
or extension, 157, 198, 214, 230;
the Author's published estimate of
his philosophy, 218

Bentham, Sir Samuel, 56
Benthamism, 64, 105-113
Berkeley, 69

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Books, read by the Author in early

life, 5—28, 47, 62—71, 113; after-
wards noted, 120, 140, 160, 175,
191, 208; reviewed, 214-20, 260,
271; edited, 114, 307; written by
him (see Mill)

Bowring, Sir John, 91-7, 130
Bradlaugh, Mr., 311

Bribery, indifference to legislation on,
300

Bright, Mr., 270, 287, 292 304
British public, their dread of change,

294

Brooke's Fool of Quality, 9
Brougham, Lord, 91, 195, 262
Brown's Lectures, 69

Brown, John, the voluntary martyr,
268

Buller, Charles, 103; joins the De-

bating Society, 128; in Parliament,
194-7; writes Lord Durham's re-
port, 216

Bullion controversy, 28
Bulwer, 126, 198
Burdetts, 98
Burnet's History, 7
Burns, 16

Butler's Analogy, 38
Buxton, Mr. Charles, 297

Byron, 146; relative merits of his
writings and Wordsworth's de-
bated between Roebuck and the
Author, 150

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Capital Punishment, speech against Coleridgians, 128, 152, 161, 243

abolishing, 286

Capitol, 250

Carlile, Richard, prosecuted, 88
Carlyle, Thomas, his relations with
the Author, 142, 161, 161, 174-6,
243; and Sterling, 152, 155;
writes for the Westminster Re-
view, 206; his "Sartor Resar-
tus," 175; his "French Revo-
lution," 131, 217

Castres, 57

Catholic Disabilities, article on, 118
Cattle Plague Bill, 288

Cause of human actions, 169
Cazotte's Arabian Tales, 9
Centralization, 192

Chadwick, Mr., 300

Character, how related to circum-

stances, 108, 169

Chemistry, treatises on, devoured in
childhood, 17; attend lectures on,
57; contrasted with dynamics, 160
Choice of Hercules, 47
Christianity, 39, 164
Christie, Mr. W. D., 300
Church Question, 182; James Mill on
the, 107; Maurice on the, 153;
settled in Ireland, 292

Cicero, 11

Civilization, essay on, 202; some es-
sentials of, 106, 230-4
Clarendon, Earl of, 126

Classification, early training in, 65;
treated of, in "System of Logic,"
221

Cobbetts, 98

Cockburn, Sir Alexander, 128, 298
Coercion measures in Canada and Ire-

land, 194

Coleridge, 75; lines from, fitting the

Collins, 8

Colonial policy, 216
Commercial crisis, 118

Commons, House of, 93, 99, 194,
279-312
Communities, 256

Composition, the Author's mode of,
222, 241, 250

Comte, Auguste, a pupil of St. Simon,

165; his latest views, 213; obli-
gations to, 209, 223, 245; cor-
respondence with, 211; the Au-
thor's essay on his doctrines, 277
Condillac's writings, 62, 68
Condorcet's Life of Turgot, 113
Conservatives, 126; rally, 215; the
stupid party, 289; their inade-
quate Bribery Bill, 301; mistake
the Author's views, 309
Constantine Paleologus, 15
Continent, first visit to the, 56; later

journeys on the, 84, 250; the
Author's final residence on the,
251, 262

Continental society and opinions, 58,
227, 269

Co-operation Society of Owenites, 123
Co-operative Societies, socialistic ex-
periments, 234
Corporations, 182

Correspondence, 237, 305; with
Comte, 211
Corrupter-general, 107
Coulson, Walter, 87, 118
Courier, 117

Cowper's Works, 16

Crime and Punishment, amenable to
Classification, 65

Crisis in the Author's mental life,
132; commercial, 118; in colonial

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