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Independence of mind, always more or less influenced by independence of fortune, vii. 78. India, the people of, classification of them, ix. 376; xi. 207. Indians, British alliances with them in the American war denounced, vi. 171. Indifference, pleasure, and pain, viewed in relation to each other, as states of the mind, i. 103. Indolence, the prevailing characteristic of the class of elegant, weak-minded people, vii. 147. Industry, effect of the Irish Popery laws in discouraging it, vi. 351. Infinite, the artificial, consists in succession and uniformity of parts, i. 149, 220. Infinity, a source of the sublime, i. 148. in agreeable images, a cause of pleasure, i. 153. Influence of the crown, operation of it, i. 444. Inheritance, value of this principle in the British constitution, iii. 274. Injury is quick and rapid, justice slow, x. 151; xi. 181. Innocence, contrasted with guilt, ix. 371. Insolvency, who ought to suffer in a case of, iii. 381. Institutions, ancient juridical ones in England, intended to retard the headlong course of violence and oppression, ii. 193. in political institutions, soundness of the materials of more importance than the fashion of the work, v. 120. how, when revolutionized, to be reestablished, v. 126. benefits of institution, properly conditional, vii. 15. Interest of a debt, not the principal, distresses a nation, i. 329. Intolerance, mischief of it, vii. 34. Ireland, danger of a proposed tax upon, i. 352. early transmission thither of English liberties and institutions, ii. 146. Two Letters to Gentlemen of Bristol relative to the Trade of Ireland, ii. 247. Mr. Burke's defence of his Parliamentary conduct with regard to it, ii. 377. the plan for the government of Ireland until 1782, what, iv. 233. the true revolution there, that of 1782, iv. 276. state of religion there before the grant of Pope Adrian IV., vi. 342. object of the grant, vi. 342. mutual importance of Ireland and Great Britain to one another, vi. 420. reduction of Ireland by Henry II., vii. 410. nature and previous condition of the country, vii. 410. motives which led Adrian to commission Henry to reduce it, vii. 410, 413. the English laws said to have been established there at its subjugation by John, vii. 449. Irish language, names of the letters of it taken from the names of several species of tree
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