INDEX TO THE LIFE. 



C.23 



WORCESTER. 



271; Finch s report, 273; case as re 

 spects John Hall, 273; offers a gra 

 tuity of 500 per annum, 275; seeks 

 to set up an engine, 276; offers a 

 judgment in lieu of preceding gra 

 tuity, 276; a draft letter, 277; Maza 

 rine s remark, 281 ; Queen Dowager s 

 saying, 281; borrows 200, 281; pe 

 titions for a Committee of Inquiry, 

 283; his autograph, 283 ; referred, 

 284 ; censures Lord Arlington, 284 ; 

 could have 50,000 yearly abroad, 

 284; he does &quot;as good as want bread,&quot; 

 285; his birth-right, 285; foreign 

 censure, 285; speaks of two petitions 

 unnoticed, 285; petition in respect to 

 Vauxhall, 286; 50,000 expended in 

 experiments, 286; survey of land and 

 works at Vauxhall, 28991; his 

 working-house or Operatory, 291; his 

 Act, and posting bills, 29 1 ; his ano 

 malous position as an inventor, 293; 

 alludes to his melancholy, 294; neg 

 lected by, yet clings to the court, 295; 

 his death, 295 ; probably at Lambeth, 

 295; buried at Raglan, and inscrip 

 tion, 295 ; his arms and funeral cer 

 tificate, 298 300 ; mis statement 

 about his burial, note, 298 ; his 

 prayer on beholding the completion of 

 his engine, 300; brief genealogical 

 retrospect, 309, 310; in his youth, 

 311; his marriage, 311; the civil 

 war, 311 ; as Earl of Glamorgan, 312, 

 valuable present from the Queen while 

 he was an exile in France, 313; his 

 &quot;Century,&quot; 314; his inventions and 

 experiments, 315; his public appeal, 

 316; list of five inventions, 316; a 

 further list, 317 ; Cromwell allows 

 him 3 per week, 317; statement of 

 his expenses and losses through 

 Charles L, 319; spent and lost 

 800,000, 321; proposes a troop of 

 Life-guards, 322 ; an ordinary for in 

 digent officers, 324 ; four causeways, 

 325 ; offer of 1000 for repairing St. 

 Paul s, 325,326; his troop of Life 

 guards, 328, 329 ; his father s remark 

 thereon, 329; took leave of the Par 

 liament (1641), 331 ; writes a sentence 

 in cipher, 333; troops at Gloucester, 

 333 ; summary of his proposed address, 

 335 ; its date, 335; his estimate of the 

 value of the Engine, 338 ; made it 

 public, 338 ; his great acquired know 

 ledge, 340; his promised work, 341 ; 

 neglected by contemporaries, 341 ; ge 

 neral estimate of his character and 

 his Century,&quot; 342 ; early list of his 

 inventions, Appendix A.; his Patent 

 for inventions, Appendix B ; his &quot; DC- 



WORCESTER. 



finitionand Act,&quot; Appendix C.; apo 

 cryphal passages relating to, Ap 

 pendix H.; Petitions, etc., of 1665, 

 Appendix I. 



WORCESTER, HENRY, Earl and 1st 

 Marquis of, his reported marriage, I ; 

 sent to a christening, 2 ; letters about 

 his marriage, 2 ; preparations for his 

 marriage at Blackfriars, 2 ; a memor 

 able masque, 3 ; feast, 3 ; ceremony, 

 3, 4 ; Lord and Lady Herbert at court, 

 4 ; his age, 6 ; summoned to Parlia 

 ment, 7 ; resident in London, 8 ; his 

 family, 9 ; his character and consti 

 tution, 9 ; family at Raglan, 9 ; his 

 autograph, 10 ; at forty-eight years of 

 age, 12; letter from Secretary Coke, 

 23 ; his son and heir, 23; death of his 

 wife, 31 ; letter from Charles L, 32; 

 munificent advances to the King, 34 ; 

 created Marquis of Worcester, 37; his 

 age, 37; person, age and wealth, 37; 

 noticed by Parliament, 38; order to 

 consider his commission, 38; guard 

 set on his house, 39; letter from Charles 

 I. 40; sends the King 5,000 to 

 Newstead, 42 ; the King &quot; hopes he 

 shall not die in his debt,&quot; 42 ; Parlia 

 mentary order to disarm him, 43 ; 

 ordered to appear before the House, 

 43 ; Raglan Castle garrisoned, 43 ; 

 message of Charles I. to him, as re 

 ported by Lord Herbert, from North- 

 amption, 44, 45, 46 ; the Marquis 

 character, 28 ; Raglan Castle des 

 cribed, 48, 51, 52, 53 ; warlike prepa 

 rations, 53 ; his wealth, 54 ; his horses 

 and stables, 54; early rumours against 

 him, 55 ; Lord Herbert obtains troops 

 and stores, 57; certain loans to Charles 

 L 58, 59 ; Lord Herbert leaves Lon 

 don for Raglan, 59 ; summoned to ap 

 pear before Parliament, 61; Monmouth 

 mostly the Marquis s tenants, 63; calls 

 in the aid of Prince Rupert to assist 

 Monmouth, 63 ; letter from Charles I. 

 1643, 64 ; promise of title (of Duke), 

 64 ; Prince Rupert s warrant, 65, 66 ; 

 he saves Monmouth, 66 ; it belongs to 

 him of inheritance, 66 ; supplies the 

 Marquis of Hertford with recruits, 67; 

 furnishes the King with soldiers at 

 Edge-hill, 67; Charles I. acknowledges 

 250,000, 74; sixty-three years of 

 age, 95 ; marriage of his daughter 

 Elizabeth, 97 ; a masque and mock 

 marriage for entertainment, 97, 98, 99, 

 100 ; practical joke on searchers for 

 arms, 100, 101 ; reproof to Lord 

 Herbert, 101, 102; letter from Charles 

 I. 102; promise of the Garter, 103; 

 another letter, 103; enclosing a war- 



