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me, 142: ill health, 142: made an Irish peer, 143: not a supporter of the Bute Administration, 143: Mr. Lawrence Sulivan, enemy of Clive, 144: Sulivan's objection to the donation of the jagir to Clive, 145: Clive voted against the Peace of Paris, 145: Sulivan tried to exclude Clive from a seat in the India House, 145: Clive defeated, 146: disturbance in Calcutta caused a panic in the India House, 146: Clive urged to accept the office of Governor-General, 146: fresh election by the Court of Proprietors, and Clive returned, 147: Clive's proposal regarding the jagir, 147: Clive started for India, 148: Clive appointed Vansittart to succeed him as President of the Council in Bengal, 149: disturbances arose about the successor to Miran, who had died suddenly, 150-1: war broke out, 156: Clive returned to Calcutta, 157: remodelled the army and the Civil Service, 159-60: presents from the Natives to Civil Servants prohibited, 161: Clive's dealings with the corrupt faction, 162-3: his attempts to improve the Company's trade, 163-5: re-constitution of the Calcutta Council, 165-6: the Select Committee, 166: his attempts to reform civil administration, 166-7: Clive hated, 167: his good influence over the younger members of the service, 169: Clive's tour northward, 171: Clive's instructions to the young Subahdar at Murshidabad, 171, 172: he proceeded to Benares, 173: after an interview with Nawab-Wazir, they proceeded to Allahabad to confer with Shah Alim, 174: Clive's demands, 174: Nawab-Wazir granted all except the one regarding factories, 174-5: the meeting at Chapra, 175: league formed against Maratha aggression, 175: question of the English frontier discussed, 175-6: Clive's views regarding the Subah, the English to keep in the background, the power to be in the hands of the Subahdar, 176-7: 'Lord Clive's Fund,' 178: Clive's army administration, 179-89: 'double batta,' 179, 181-2: conspiracy in the army, 184-9: Clive's mode of suppressing it, 189: Clive resigned in 1766, and returned to England in 1767, 191: his persecutions, 192-6, 201-9: visit to Paris, 196: on return to England found he was elected Member of Parliament, 197: affairs in India unsatisfactory, 198-201: attacks on Clive, 201-9: his acquittal, 209: went to Bath to try the waters, 209: went abroad, 210: returned to E
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