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2 _note_[2]; ii. 4, 5 Cotton Loan, ii. 155 _et seq._ 179; reception of, in England, 160-1; amounts realized by, 162 Declaration of Paris negotiation: attitude to, i. 186 Finance, ii. 156 _et seq._ Hampton Roads Conference: suggestions in, ii. 252-3 Leaders of: British information on, i. 58-9 Manifesto to Europe, ii. 241 _and note_[2], 242 Mediation: feeling in, on England's refusal of, ii. 71 _and note_[2]; hope of change in British policy on, 213-4 Military resources: decline of, ii. 219; desertions from the Army, 222 Negroes, arming of, ii. 240-1, 251 Privateering. _See that heading._ Recognition of independence: anger at failure to secure, i. 252 _note_[2]; desire for, without mediation, ii. 217 Secret service funds, ii. 154 _note_[1] Shipbuilding in British ports for, ii. 115 _et seq._; British protest to, on, 148. _See also under_ Alabama, Laird Rams, Oreto, etc. Slavery attitude, ii. 88 _and note_[3]; intention of gradual emancipation, 98; British views on, 220; offer of abolition in return for recognition, 249-51 Spain, and Mexican debts, i. 259, 260 Spargo, _Karl Marx_, cited, ii. 292 _note_[1] _Spectator_, The, i. 70 _note_[1]; ii. 231 _note_; constant advocacy of Northern cause, i. 39; on Lincoln's election, 39; views on the Civil War, 41, 69, 100, 181; on secession, 57; on Proclamation of Neutrality, 100, 136 _note_[1]; attacks Bulwer Lytton's speech on dissolution of the Union, 182; on servile insurrection and emancipation, ii. 79, 80; on British Press attitude to emancipation, 89; on declaration of anti-slavery purpose in the war, 89; on the Emancipation Proclamation, 104-5; on British lack of sympathy with the North, 280; on anti-slavery sympathies and view of democracy in England, 280; otherwise mentioned, i. 180; ii. 105, 223 _note_[1], 282 Spence, James, i. 183 _note_[2], 266 _and note_[2]; conferences of, in London, 266, 267, 272 _and note_[1], 273; prevents demonstration by cotton operatives, 300; plan to appeal to the Tories, ii. 153, 155, 164; as Confederate financial adviser, 156, 157, 158; and Confederate Cotton Loan, 159, 161-2; urges withdrawal of Roebuck's motion, 173-4; effect of the fall of Vicksburg on, 179; organization of Southern Clubs by, 186-7, 188, 189, 190; hopes for intervention, 187-8, 189-90; organization of Southern Independe
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