- Aberdeen, Earl of, 105
- Ailesbury, Lord, 58
- Airlie, Earl of, 105
- Albemarle, Lord, 115, 118, 119, 120
- Alberoni, Cardinal, 14, 17
- Amelot, his warning to Murray of Broughton, 73
- Anderson, Mrs., of Arradoul, nurses Prince Charles, 85 note
- Ardsheil, his estates, 274
- Argyll, Duke of, at Sheriffmuir, 11;
- cited, 106, 162, 226, 263, 271
- Arkaig, Loch, French gold buried at. See French treasure
- Association of Scottish Jacobites, the, foundation of, 32
- Atholl, Duke of, his comparison of Pickle’s and Glengarry’s letters, 249
- Atholl, James, Duke of, 82, 83, 106, 214
- Atterbury, Bishop, urges proclamation of King James, on Anne’s death, 8;
- conspiring, 22
- Baillie, William, letter on Glengarry’s reconcilement to the Government, 226
- Balhaldie (chief of the Macgregors), 72;
- his Ossianic prophecies of a French invasion, 73;
- in Paris, 73;
- in Flanders, 75;
- working against Murray of Broughton, 76;
- cited, 32, 33, 34, 36, 222, 238, 239
- Barisdale, Colonel (grandson of Macdonell of Barisdale), 124
- Barisdale, Macdonell of, physical powers, 100;
- marriage, 101;
- fight with Cameron of Taask, 101;
- arrested for theft, 102;
- thief-catcher, 102;
- cruelty, 103;
- joins a confederacy for theft, 104;
- devices for levying blackmail, 105;
- captain of a ‘Watch,’ 105;
- wadsetter of Glengarry’s, 106;
- duel with Cluny, 106;
- made a colonel by Charles, 107;
- at Prestonpans, 107;
- made a knight banneret, 108;
- raising the clans, 108;
- reducing the shires of Ross and Sutherland, 109;
- letter to Lady Sutherland, 112;
- too late for Culloden, 113;
- and Lochiel, 114;
- endeavours to seize Charles, 115;
- gets a ‘protection,’ 115;
- his protection rescinded, 115;
- with his son put in irons by Charles, 116;
- in a French prison, 117;
- imprisoned in Edinburgh Castle, 117;
- his narrative to the Justice Clerk, 118-121;
- Jacobite charges against him, 122;
- dies in Edinburgh Castle, 123;
- family seat, 178;
- cited, 86, 87, 131, 133, 134, 138, 139, 188, 190, 195, 259
- Barisdale, Young (son of Macdonell of Barisdale), in a French prison, 117;
- a fugitive in the Highlands, 123;
- takes the oaths, 124;
- cited, 160, 190, 195, 196, 259
- Barry, Dr., betrayed by Murray of Broughton, 75, 88
- Barrymore, Lord, 36, 38, 74, 75
- Beaufort, Duke of, 36, 38, 74, 75
- Berwick, Duke of, urges James to join his adherents, 9;
- then advises delay, 9;
- detained by the Regent Orléans in France, 9
- Blair (an agent of James), 229
- Bland, General, Governor of Edinburgh Castle, 174, 198, 240, 241, 290, 291
- Bolingbroke, 9
- Brado, Mr. (Jew), 200
- Breck, Allan, 194, 274
- Bruce (Court Trusty), 217, 218, 240, 241, 291
- Burt, Captain, 221, 263, 265
- Cameron, Allan (brother of Glenevis), dies at Culloden, 149
- Cameron, Allan, of Landavrae, 164
- Cameron, Alexander, of Glenevis, 147;
- genealogy, 148;
- brutality of Cumberland’s men to his wife, 148;
- Colonel Crawfurd’s attempt to arrest, 150;
- surrenders to Crawfurd, 152;
- believes that Young Glengarry gave information against him, 153;
- in Edinburgh Castle, 156;
- cited, 141, 142, 146, 168, 196, 229, 230, 232
- Cameron, Angus, of Downan, 136, 146, 149, 151, 153, 154, 156, 159, 160, 196
- Cameron, Archibald, of Dungallon, 133, 147, 150, 151
- Cameron, Dr. Archibald (brother of Lochiel), entrusted with French treasure, 131;
- buries a portion at Loch Arkaig, 131;
- accuses, and is accused by, Young Glengarry of embezzlement, 140, 141;
- vindicated in a letter from Douay, 142;
- also by an informer, 143;
- Cluny Macpherson’s alleged accounts, 144;
- innocent of malversation of the Prince’s money, 146;
- relationship to Lochiel, 147;
- accusations from and of Young Glengarry about the French treasure, 228;
- cited, 85, 86, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 159, 232
- Cameron, Donald, 135
- Cameron, Dugald (cowherd), 272
- Cameron, Duncan, 156
- Cameron, Evan, of Drumsallie, 145
- Cameron, Mrs. Archibald, 148, 227
- Cameron, Mrs. Jean, 138
- Cameron of Lochiel. See Lochiel
- Cameron of Taask, 101
- Cameron of Torcastle, 141, 142
- Cameron, Rev. John, 114
- Cameron, Samuel (brother of Cameron of Glenevis; Major in Lochiel’s regiment in French service), 138;
- cited, 149, 159
- Cameron, Sergeant Mohr, hanged, 159;
- cited, 194, 196
- Campbell of Auchenbreck (father-in-law of Lochiel), 72, 73
- Campbell of Glenure, murdered, 158, 161, 194, 274
- Campbell of Lochnell, 227
- Campbell, Sheriff, of Stonefield, 266
- Carlyle, Dr., 142
- Carte, the historian, 29, 37, 41
- Caryl, Lady Elizabeth, 27
- Cecil, Colonel, 73
- Charles Edward, Prince, disliked by the Earl Marischal, 5;
- repudiates assassination schemes, 22;
- affected contempt for all religion, 25;
- proposal to settle him in Corsica, 30;
- offers to go alone with the Marischal to Scotland, 34;
- living concealed in Paris, 35, 43;
- anxious to join the French army in Flanders, 35;
- implores the Earl Marischal to meet him at Venice, 40, 42;
- breaks with Goring, 43;
- declines to cashier his mistress, Miss Walkinshaw, 44;
- his retreat in Flanders detected by the English, 44;
- appeals to the Earl Marischal, 47;
- his life of exile, 49;
- absurd anecdote of his want of courage, 58;
- story of his presence at the coronation of George III., 59;
- his personal appearance, 70, 71;
- Murray of Broughton’s attachment to him, 71;
- Murray exposes Balhaldie and Sempil to him, 76;
- avows his intention of visiting Scotland, 76;
- warned against this intention, 76, 78, 79;
- embarks for Scotland, 36, 80;
- believes in Murray of Broughton, 81;
- anger with Lord George Murray on the march southwards, 83, 84;
- attacked with pneumonia, 85;
- behaviour after Culloden, 85, 86;
- kindness shown him by Mlle. Ferrand and Mme. de Vassé, 92-96;
- makes Barisdale a colonel, 107;
- warned by Sheridan against Barisdale, 115;
- puts Barisdale and his son in a French prison, 116;
- account of his escape from Skye, 127;
- instructions about French treasure at Arkaig, 137;
- directs the remainder of the French gold to be brought to France, 156;
- deserted by his adherents, 171;
- invitation from France, 180;
- break up of his party in England, 208;
- loyalty to his adherents, 223, 224;
- interview with Young Glengarry in France, 235, 236;
- collection made for him, 238;
- cited, 286, 291, 292, 294, 295
- Charteris, Colonel, 270 note
- Churchill, General, 175
- Clancarty, Lord, 36, 37
- Clanranald, after Sheriffmuir, 13, 14;
- cited, 86, 131, 227, 236, 256
- Clement XI., 21
- Cluny’s treasure. See French treasure
- Cockburn, his carelessness with the Jacobite cypher, 75
- Cole, 138
- Condillac, Abbé, his tribute to Mlle. Ferrand and Madame de Vassé, 93, 94, 95
- Conti, Princesse de, 19
- Cope, General, 82, 83
- Cotton, Sir John Hinde, 36, 74
- Craigie, Lord-Advocate, 231
- Crawfurd, Colonel (Governor of Fort William), 142;
- arrests Fassifern, 149;
- Glenevis surrenders to him, 152;
- examines Glenevis concerning the French gold, 154, 155;
- urges the ‘uprooting’ of Fassifern, 161;
- induces Charles Stewart to lie about Fassifern’s claims, 169, 171;
- cited, 229, 272
- Creach (in the Irish Brigade), 180
- Créquy, Madame de, pseudo-Memoirs of, 6;
- her love affair with the Earl Marischal, 15;
- fraudulent compilation of her Memoirs, 15
- Cromarty, Lord, 108, 109, 111, 113
- Crystal-gazing, 96 note
- Culloden, 85
- Cumberland, Duke of, 117, 118, 119, 121, 128, 189, 190
- D’Alembert, quoted, 4, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 14, 18, 24, 34, 35, 47, 60, 61, 62, 64
- D’Argens, 60, 62
- D’Argenson, 34, 36, 37, 223
- D’Avenant, threatens to bombard Genoa if the Keiths are not expelled, 21
- Davies, Sergeant, murder of, 172, 173
- Dawkins, Jemmy, 43
- Dillon, General, 14, 22
- Douglas (Sheriff-substitute), 150
- Douglas, Sir John, 88
- Drummond, Lord John (brother of Duke of Perth), 32, 33, 86, 131
- Drummond, of Balhaldie. See Balhaldie
- Drummond, Provost, 201, 202, 203, 204
- Dumas the Younger, his dramatic use of an incident in Murray of Broughton’s career, 90
- Dunbar, Lord, 26
- Edgar (James’s secretary), 83, 71, 89, 228, 229, 230, 231
- Elcho, Lord, 79, 86, 110, 131
- Elibank, Lord, 232
- Elibank Plot, the, 43, 231, 232
- Emetté, Mlle. (Turkish captive), 31
- Erskine, 117
- Fassifern (Lochiel’s brother), 143;
- examined as to the French treasure, 145;
- arrested by Colonel Crawfurd, 149;
- in Edinburgh Castle, 156;
- denounced by Young Glengarry, 160;
- Colonel Crawfurd’s accusations, 161;
- charged with suborning Glenure’s murder, 162;
- accused of forging deeds of Lochiel’s estate, 163;
- evidence of an informer against him, 164;
- protests against points in his indictment, 165;
- petitions for bail, 166, 167;
- bail refused, 168;
- Charles Stewart on his claims, 169;
- Macfarlane’s preparation of claims from missing deeds, 170;
- found guilty of abstracting his own papers, 171;
- ‘uprooted,’ 171;
- cited, 151, 196, 232, 235, 236
- Faulkner, Sir Everard, 115, 116, 200, 211
- Fergusson, Captain, 103, 195
- Ferrand, Mademoiselle (Mlle. Luci), kindness to Charles, 92;
- influence on Condillac, 93;
- character, 94;
- death, 95;
- crystal-gazing in research of her identity, 96 note
- Fire-charming, 24
- Fitzjames, Duc de, 186
- Fleury, Cardinal, death of, 73
- Floyd, Captain, 41, 58
- Floyd, David (son of Captain Floyd), 58, 59
- Forbes, Bishop, 141, 148, 224, 231, 286
- Forbes, Captain, 214
- Forbes of Culloden, 106, 126, 127, 263, 269, 294
- Fowler, Mr. (gentleman gaoler of the Tower), 89
- Frazer, General (son of Old Lovat), 200
- Frederick the Great, his esteem for the Earl Marischal, 4;
- employs him, 40;
- concerned at his health, 45;
- asks the Marischal to find him a good French cook, 46;
- foresees the oncoming of the Seven Years’ War, 46;
- loses Marshal Keith, 50;
- sends the Marischal to Spain, 51;
- surety with George II. for the Marischal’s conduct, 51;
- patronises Rousseau, 56;
- tampers with the Jacobites, 238
- French treasure, in aid of Charles’s expedition, 129;
- Murray of Broughton’s and Archibald Cameron’s disposition of it, 181;
- burial of a portion in the garden of Mrs. Menzies of Culdairs, 132;
- burial of major part at Loch Arkaig, 132;
- intelligence sent to Colonel Napier about, 133-139;
- Cameron’s accusation of Young Glengarry, 140;
- Glengarry charges Cluny and the Doctor with embezzlement, 140, 141;
- Cameron of Torcastle’s statement, 141;
- a letter from Douay, 142;
- evidence of an Informer, 143;
- Cluny Macpherson’s intromissions, 144;
- Fassifern’s admissions, 145;
- Glenevis under examination concerning, 154, 155;
- Young Glengarry’s dealings with it, 155, 156;
- causes dissensions among the clans, 156;
- Knoydart and Lochaber demoralised by it, 194
- Froullay, Mlle. de. See Créquy, Mme. de
- Gardiner, Mr. (an agent of Crawfurd’s), 150
- Gartmore MSS., 263
- Gask, the Laird of, 141
- Geoffrin, Madame, 51
- George II., pardons the Earl Marischal, 51
- George III., story of Charles’s presence at his coronation, 59
- Glendarule, 17
- Glenevis. See Cameron of Glenevis
- Glengarry, Æneas (brother of Young Glengarry), 201, 221, 260
- Glengarry, Duncan, 260
- Glengarry of Killiecrankie, 256
- Glengarry, Old (father of Pickle), 82, 114, 116, 181, 190, 210, 224, 228, 266
- Glengarry, Young. See Pickle
- Glenshiel, the conflict at, 18, 19
- Gordon, Admiral, 26
- Gordon, Duke of, 105, 274, 275, 276
- Gordon of Glenbucket, 86, 210, 274, 275
- Gordon, Sir Thomas, of Earlstoun, 75
- Goring, Henry, 40, 43, 48
- Grant, Major, 287
- Grant, Miss Marjory (daughter of Sir Ludovick Grant of Dalvey), 261
- Grant, Mrs., 85
- Grant of Grant, 106
- Grey (English Jacobite), 22
- Hamilton, Duke of, 71, 72;
- contributes monetary aid to Charles’s cause, 79;
- accepts Charles’s commission, 81
- Harrison, Father, 132, 135
- Hay, John, of Restalrig, 21, 85, 86
- Hay of Drumelzier, 72
- Hay, William, cited, 26
- Helvetius, 25, 58, 59
- Highlanders, character of, 97
- Highlands, the, the old times and the new in, 254;
- deer driving, 254;
- poverty, 255;
- ignorance, 256;
- a Highland home in 1747, 257;
- emigration of the clans, 257;
- the Glengarry estate a typical instance of clan holding, 258-262;
- evidence concerning, 263, 264;
- poetry, 264;
- Strathnaver crofters, 265;
- living cows’ blood mixed with oatmeal for food, 265, 283;
- hardness of living, 265;
- rents, 266;
- the truck system, 267;
- thriftless agricultural methods, 268;
- tyranny of the tacksmen, 269;
- Forbes of Culloden’s leases, 270;
- customary services and ‘casualties,’ 271, 272;
- rent paid in kind, 271;
- commutation of services for money, 272;
- copy of a formal rent, 273 note;
- evictions, 273;
- the eviction of the Macphersons from Badenoch, 274;
- the Mackenzies as landlords, 275;
- the Camerons as tenants, 276;
- evictions a part of clan warfare, 277, 278;
- obligations of the chiefs to the necessitous, 278, 279;
- times of scarcity, 280;
- blackmail, 280, 281;
- the creed of communism, 281;
- association of Sutherland farmers to suppress sheep-stealing, 282;
- attitude of landlords, 284;
- clan affection becomes clan hatred, 284;
- old times contrasted with new, 285
- Hodgson, Captain, 127
- Holderness, Lord, 51
- Holker (of Ogilvie’s regiment), 229
- Howard, G., letter on Barisdale’s protection, 115
- Hume, David, 55;
- letter from Marischal concerning Rousseau, 56;
- disseminates an anecdote reflecting on the courage of Charles, 58;
- letters from Marischal, 59-64
- Hunter, Mrs., of Polmood, 87
- Huntly, 11, 13
- Ibrahim (the Marischal’s Turk), 31
- Innes, George (head of the Scots College), 179
- Innes, Thomas (historian), 179
- Inverness, Lord, 26
- Izard, Captain, 124, 195
- James (the Third, Chevalier de St. George), urged to quit France and join his adherents, 9;
- his wintry welcome at Perth, 11;
- after Sheriffmuir, 12;
- escapes from Scotland, 12;
- at Avignon, 14;
- his assassination planned by Stair, 20;
- his bride, 20;
- endeavours to relieve his destitute followers, 21;
- pension from Spain, 26;
- at the tomb of Clementina, 28;
- his trust in Balhaldie, 33;
- believes in ‘lying still,’ 39;
- opposed to desperate ventures, 49;
- deserted by the Earl Marischal, 52;
- announces the French King’s resolution to help him, 75;
- appealed to about the French treasure, 140;
- his name forged by Young Glengarry, 155;
- cited, 27, 181, 182, 222, 226, 228, 230, 275
- Johnson, Dr., quoted, 259, 266
- Johnston, Captain, 160
- Johnstone, Chevalier, 107, 109, 178
- Jones, Captain, 149
- Kaunitz, Count, 238
- Keith, George, Earl Marischal of Scotland, his place in contemporary history, 1;
- ancestry, 2;
- political views, 2, 3;
- personal character, 4;
- date of birth, 5;
- parentage, 6;
- Colonel and disciplinarian, 6;
- neglects the chance on Anne’s death of proclaiming King James, 8;
- urges James to join his adherents, 9;
- induces his brother James to join the Jacobite cause, 10;
- at Sheriffmuir, 11;
- remains with the defeated army, 13;
- ships to France, 13;
- in Spain, 14;
- legendary romance about Mlle. de Froullay (Créquy), 15;
- portrait in 1716, 16;
- at the Lewes with a Spanish force, 17;
- in Holland, 19;
- in Rome, 20;
- communicates the Glenshiel fiasco to Alberoni, 20;
- vicissitudes, 21;
- friendship with the Duchess of Medina Sidonia, 24;
- investigates fire-charming, 24;
- religious ideas, 25;
- receives from James the Order of the Thistle, 27;
- dislike of Prince Charles, 5, 27;
- finds the Jacobite Court at Rome no place for an honest man, 28;
- at Avignon, 28;
- modesty of his requirements, 29;
- on the hanging of Porteous, 30;
- at St. Petersburg, 30;
- Turkish captives in his custody, 31;
- impatient with Sempil and Balhaldie, 32;
- accused of being lukewarm, 33;
- appointed General of a diversion in Scotland, 34;
- asked by Charles to set forth with him in a sailing boat, 34;
- accused of stopping the Dunkirk expedition, 35;
- tries to influence Louis XV. for French aid, 36, 37;
- at odds with Sempil, 37;
- averse from Charles’s unsupported expedition, 38;
- disappears from the diplomatic scene, 39;
- at Venice, 39;
- at Berlin, 40;
- in the service of Frederick the Great, 40;
- distrust of George Kelly, 40, 41;
- Frederick’s ambassador to Versailles, 43;
- tolerance of the Elibank Plot, 43;
- breaks with Charles, 43, 44;
- letter from his brother, Marshal Keith, 45;
- Frederick’s generous offers, 46, 47;
- Prince Charles appeals to him, 47;
- seeks pardon from the English Government, 48;
- his judgment of Charles too severe, 49;
- death of his brother, 50;
- squabble with Keith’s mistress, 50;
- sent by Frederick to Spain, 51;
- succeeds to Lord Kintore’s estate, 51;
- pardoned by George II., 51;
- visits England,52;
- Provost of Kintore, 52;
- dislikes Scotland and returns to Neufchâtel, 53;
- acquaintance with J. J. Rousseau, 53;
- leaves Neufchâtel and secures Rousseau an asylum in England, 55, 56;
- at Potsdam, 58;
- disseminates a scandalous anecdote about Charles, 58, 59;
- letters to Hume, 59-64;
- his life at Berlin, 64;
- attachment to Frederick, 65;
- character, tastes, and habits, 66;
- death, 67;
- cited, 208, 223, 234, 236, 238
- Keith, Marshal James, joins the Jacobite cause, 10;
- account of Sheriffmuir, 11;
- escapes to France, 13, 14;
- reception by Mary of Modena, 14;
- in Spain, 14, 17;
- meets Tullibardine in Paris, 17;
- brings a Spanish force to Scotland, 17;
- defeated by the English forces, 18;
- in Holland, 19;
- in Rome, 20;
- vicissitudes, 21;
- ill in Paris, 24;
- enters the Russian service, 26;
- wounded, 30;
- his Turkish captives, 31;
- in the service of Frederick, 40;
- his Livonian mistress, 42;
- letter to the Earl Marischal, 45;
- his death, 50
- Keith, Sir Robert Murray, 67
- Kelly, Rev. George (one of the Seven Men of Moidart), imprisoned in the Tower, 19;
- escapes therefrom, 29;
- cited, 23, 30, 34 note, 38, 40, 41, 58, 121
- Kennedy, Major, concerned with the French treasure, 86, 130, 132, 134, 138, 140, 154
- Keppoch, 100
- Keppoch, Lady, 137
- Kingsburgh, 128
- Kintore, Lord, 51
- Kirk, Rev. Mr., 109
- Knyphausen, 45, 51
- Lambert, Colonel, 214
- Law, founder of the Mississippi scheme, 19
- Layer, his mob-plot, 23;
- hanged, 23
- Leslie (priest), 227
- Lichfield, Earl of, 36
- Liria, Duke de (son of the Duke of Berwick), 17
- Lismore (James’s agent), 226, 227
- Loch Arkaig, French treasure buried at. See French treasure
- Lochgarry, in a thievish confederacy, 104;
- accused of treachery, 114;
- handling French treasure, 140;
- wadsetter of Old Glengarry’s lands of Cullachy, 210-212;
- possessions forfeited to the Crown, 211;
- in Edinburgh with Pickle, 240,
- cited, 86, 153, 172, 188, 190, 232, 235, 290, 291, 292, 294
- Lochiel (head of the Cameron clan), extracts from Macleod of Skye a promise to raise his clan, 77;
- believes every man of honour should rise, 81;
- determines to wage guerilla war after Culloden, 86;
- clan relationships, 147;
- cited, 32, 72, 100, 107, 109, 132, 130, 136, 141, 145, 147, 188, 222, 223, 268, 272, 286
- Lockhart, Alexander (counsel), 173, 174
- Lockhart of Carnwath, 6, 72, 86
- Lockhart of Carnwath (the younger), 131
- Loudon, Lord, 109, 110, 119, 120
- Louis XIV., death of, 9
- Louis XV., induced to adopt the Jacobite cause, 34, 36
- Lovat, Lord, one of the ‘Association,’ 72;
- his betrayal of the Duke of Beaufort, 75;
- after Culloden, 86, 87;
- cited, 32, 99, 100, 108, 135, 257
- Lovat, Master of, 108, 113, 261
- Luci, Mademoiselle. See Ferrand, Mademoiselle
- Lynch, Captain (Irish Jacobite), 187, 188, 189, 190
- Macdonald, Æneas (banker), 223, 228
- Macdonald, Alexander Bain, trial of, for murder of Sergeant Davies, 172, 173, 174
- Macdonald, Angus (of the Clanranald family), 178, 179
- Macdonald, Captain Allan, of Knock, in Sleat, 195, 196, 197
- Macdonald, Flora, assists Charles to escape, 127
- Macdonald, Lady Margaret, of Sleat, connives at Charles escape from Skye, 127, 128
- Macdonald, Major, 241
- Macdonald of Morar, 124
- Macdonald, Sir Alexander, of Sleat, 18;
- Jacobite and Hanoverian, 126;
- letter to Cumberland on Pretender’s movements, 127;
- epigram on his death, 128;
- cited, 118, 119, 120, 121, 223
- Macdonell, Archibald (son of Barisdale), 107
- Macdonell, Colonel John, of Knoydart, 176;
- early life, 176;
- his Memoirs, 177;
- family and estate, 178;
- educated in Rome, 178;
- an adventure at Toulon, 179;
- Creach’s attempt at robbery and his repulse, 180;
- introduced to King James, 181;
- presented with a sword and a prediction, 181;
- horrified by the ideas of his comrades, 181;
- his baptism of fire, 182;
- wounded in battle with the Austrians, 183, 184;
- goes in aid of Charles to Scotland, 185, 186;
- arrives after Culloden, 186;
- robbed of part of money destined for Charles, 187;
- reaches Loch Arkaig, 188;
- meets Barisdale, 188;
- hands remainder of money to Murray of Broughton, 189;
- makes for Knoydart, 189;
- adventure while in search of money stolen by Colin Dearg, 190-192;
- confronts Colin Dearg on the subject, 193, 194;
- arrested by Captain Fergusson, 195;
- denounces his cousin Captain Allan Macdonald, 195;
- imprisoned in Fort William, 196;
- released, 196;
- challenges Macdonald of Knock, 196;
- in America, 197
- Macdonell, Dr., of Kylles, 195
- Macdonell of Barisdale. See Barisdale
- Macdonell, Ranald, 197
- Macdonnell, Æneas (brother of Young Glengarry), 201, 221, 260
- Macdonnell, Alastair Ruadh (Young Glengarry). See Pickle
- Macdonnell, Dr. (Young Glengarry’s uncle), 124
- Macdonnell, General (of the Antrim family), 181, 182, 183, 197
- Macdonnell, Isobel (Young Glengarry’s sister), 221
- Macdonnell, John (Spanish John), 160
- Macdonnell, Miles, 185
- Macdonnell of Scotus, 109
- Macfarlane (Fassifern’s lawyer), 163, 170
- Macgregor, James Mohr, 82, 98, 100, 107, 175, 238, 239
- MacIan, Angus, 152, 153
- Mackenzie, Colin Dearg, of Laggy, 187, 188, 191;
- accused by Colonel John Macdonell of robbery of the Prince’s money, 193
- Mackenzie, Mrs. (niece of Colin Dearg), 188
- Mackenzie of Dundonell, 193, 194
- MacKinnon, 103, 128
- Mackintosh, Fraser, quoted on Highland history, 116, 118, 215, 261, 264, 272, 273, 275, 277, 282
- Mackintosh, The, 106
- Maclean, Sir Hector, arrested in Scotland, 79;
- cited, 223
- Macleod, Malcolm, of Raasay, 126, 127
- Macleod, Norman, 294, 295
- Macleod of Raasay, letters of, 246
- Macleod of Skye, 77;
- sends his forces to join Loudon’s in Hanoverian service, 77;
- turns his coat, 81;
- Young Glengarry asks him to join in a loan, 205;
- cited, 88, 206, 207, 214, 223
- Macleod (Young) of Neuck, 132
- Macnaughten, John, 79, 80
- Macpherson, Cluny, his watch or safeguard of followers, 105;
- joins Prince Charles, 106;
- duel with Barisdale, 106;
- alleged copy of his intromissions, 144;
- cited, 98, 99, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 143, 154, 156, 158, 230
- Macpherson of Brechachie, 136, 140, 154, 161, 162
- Macrimmon (Macleod of Skye’s piper), 77
- Mar, Earl of, defeat of, at Sheriffmuir, 10, 11, 12;
- cited, 22
- Mary of Modena, 14
- Maxwell of Kirkconnell, 76, 81, 84
- McDonald, Donald, 127
- McDonell, Donald (Younger), of Scotus, 211
- McFarlane, John, W.S., 143, 145
- McKenzie, Lieut. Murdoch, 191
- McKenzie, Major William, of Kilcoy, 191
- McKenzie of Torridon, 192
- McLachlan, Alexander, 134
- McLeod, Alexander, 134
- McLeod, Rory, letter from Young Glengarry, 201
- Medina Sidonia, Duchess of, 24
- Menzies, Mrs., of Culdairs, 132
- Menzies of Culdairs, treasure buried in his garden, 90
- Meston (Jacobite wit and poet), 6
- Millar, Mr., on the handwriting of Pickle and Young Glengarry, 247-249
- Mitchell, Sir Andrew, 51, 52, 53
- Montesquieu, 92, 93
- Morar, Young, 160
- Morgan, 21, 22
- Murray, George Siddons (great-grandson of Murray of Broughton), 70
- Murray, John, of Broughton (traitor), connected with the Association of Scottish Jacobites, 32;
- faithful to Prince Charles Edward, 69;
- his ‘Memorials,’ 70;
- birth, family, and education, 70;
- opinion of the Prince’s personal appearance, 70;
- at Traquair, 71;
- Scottish correspondent of Edgar, 71;
- Jacobite organiser, 72;
- his associates, 72;
- reception in Paris, 73;
- feud with Balhaldie, 32, 73;
- betrays names of English leaders, 74;
- denounces Balhaldie and Sempil to Charles, 76;
- impolicy of his methods of securing adherents to Charles, 77;
- on Macleod’s treason, 78;
- dissuades Charles’s visits to Scotland without an armed force, 78, 79;
- his self-justification, 80;
- believes in his own military skill, 81;
- suspicious of Lord George Murray, 81, 82, 83;
- on the march southwards with Charles, 84;
- illness, 85;
- after Culloden, 85;
- stands by Lochiel, 86;
- in charge of money for Charles, 188, 189;
- arranges for the burial of the French gold, 86;
- captured, 87;
- justifies personal honesty in money matters, 88;
- character of his confessions, 88;
- betrays the secret of the Arkaig treasure, 88, 130;
- accepted as King’s evidence, 89;
- pardoned, 89;
- tries to provoke Traquair to a duel, 89;
- sells Broughton, 90;
- dies in a madhouse, 90;
- summary of his character, 91;
- cited, 27, 101, 102 note, 114, 126, 221, 222, 229, 294
- Murray, Lord George, defeated at Glenshiel, 18;
- represented by Murray of Broughton as a traitor to Charles, 81;
- his loyalty, 82;
- equivocal action, 83;
- general-in-chief of Charles’s expeditionary forces, 84;
- anger with Charles after Culloden, 85;
- cited, 109
- Murray, Mrs. (wife of Murray of Broughton), 88, 89
- Murray of Philiphaugh, the descendants of, 70
- Murray, Sir David (father of Murray of Broughton), 70
- Murray, William (brother of Lord George), 82
- Mylne, Captain, 160
- Napier, Colonel, A.D.C. to the Duke of Cumberland, 115, 133
- Needham, 63
- Newcastle, Duke of, 159, 206, 209, 214, 218, 238, 290, 291, 292, 293
- Neynho, 23
- North (English Jacobite), 22
- Ogilby, Lord, 286
- O’Niel, a follower of Charles, 85
- Orléans, Regent, intrigues in Hanoverian interest, 9
- Orme, Mr., W.S., 200, 203, 205
- Ormonde, Duke of, action on Anne’s death, 8;
- cited, 14, 17, 18, 23, 28, 34, 75
- O’Rourk, Mr., of Tipperary, 180
- Orrery, Lord, 22, 36, 74
- O’Sullivan, a follower of Charles, 85
- Oxford, English Jacobite, 22
- Parker, Lord Chief Justice, the Earl Marischal’s letter to, 7
- Pelham, Henry, 198, 206, 207, 208, 232, 235, 237
- Percheron, M., 15
- Perth, Duke of, resigns the command of Charles’s expeditionary forces, 84;
- wounded, 86;
- cited, 78, 79, 106, 109, 131
- Peterborough, Lord, 14
- Pickle (the spy; Young Glengarry), obtains from Murray of Broughton information of the Loch Arkaig treasure, 89;
- Leslie’s aid, 89;
- his alleged copy of Cluny Macpherson’s Intromissions, 144;
- treachery to Glenevis, 153;
- forges King James’s name, 155;
- permitted by the Government to reside in London, 155, 156;
- denounces Fassifern, 160;
- treatment of his wadsetters, 198;
- Young Lochgarry’s intimacy with, 199;
- letters to Mr. Orme, W. S., on business, 200, 203, 205;
- letter to Rory McLeod on family matters, 201;
- his niece, 203;
- letter to the Chief of the Macleods asking him to go conjunct with him in a loan, 205;
- writes to the Duke of Newcastle complaining, 206;
- Pelham’s promise to abate demands on his estate, 207;
- those promises never fulfilled, 208;
- series of coincidences in Pickle’s fortunes and those of Glengarry, 208;
- their uniformity of bad spelling, 209, 214;
- Young Glengarry’s estate troubles, 210-213;
- remonstrance to Colonel Trapaud, 213;
- illness and bad sight, 214;
- his offer to raise a regiment coincident with Young Glengarry’s, 214;
- Young Glengarry’s will, 214;
- the Pickle letters, 217;
- his close relations with Henry Pelham, 217;
- coincidence of his father’s death with that of Old Glengarry, 218;
- claims to be chief of the Macdonnells, 218;
- the clue to his identity with Glengarry, 219;
- his career identical with that of Glengarry, 219;
- suggestion that Glengarry was personated by an unknown intimate calling himself Pickle, 220;
- his early life, 221;
- usage by his stepmother, 221;
- in France, 222;
- meets Murray of Broughton, 222, 223;
- in the Tower, 223;
- released, 224;
- attempts reconciliation with the Government, 225;
- asks James for a colonelcy vacant by the death of Lochiel, 226;
- at the nadir of his fortunes, 227;
- offers his services ‘in any shape’ to the English Government, 227;
- helps himself to the treasure of Cluny, 228;
- earliest charge of treachery against Glengarry, 229;
- Edgar warned against him, 229;
- his real situation in 1751, 229, 230;
- account of the Elibank Plot, 231;
- he and Young Glengarry both receive remittances from Baron Kennedy, 231;
- Pelham’s personal knowledge of him, 232;
- date of his illness and that of Young Glengarry, 232;
- points shared in common by Pickle and Glengarry, 233;
- a spy’s evidence, 233-235;
- interview with Charles in France, 235;
- Young Glengarry in France same date, 236;
- mutual promises from Pelham, broken after Pelham’s death, 237;
- consulted by Government on Frederick’s tampering with Jacobites, 238;
- the hypothesis that Pickle personated Glengarry, 239;
- hurries to Edinburgh on the death of Old Glengarry, 240;
- Young Glengarry near at hand on his father’s death, 241;
- impersonation physically impossible, 243;
- duns the Duke of Newcastle, 243, 244;
- internal evidence of identity of authorship of Pickle’s and Glengarry’s letters, 245, 246;
- Mr. Millar’s criticism, 247-249;
- the Duke of Atholl’s conclusion, 249;
- summary of the case proving identity, 250-253;
- two letters incriminatory and confirmatory, 289-294;
- cited, 43, 76, 77, 78, 79, 140, 142, 143, 190, 199, 256, 286
- Pitsligo, Lord, 83, 265
- Podewils, Count, 45
- Porteous, hanged by the mob, 30
- ‘Prescot,’ suspected of intending to murder James, 14
- Pringle, Sir John, 58
- Reay, Lord, 109
- Rob Roy, letter to General Wade, 98
- Robison of Ballnicaird, 201, 202, 203, 204
- Ross of Balnagoun, 109
- Rousseau, Jean Jacques, meeting with and impressions of Marischal, 53-55;
- wants to write the history of the Keiths, 55;
- cited, 4, 5, 40, 41, 66
- Saxe, Marshal, 34
- Scott, Sir Walter, 97, 172
- Scott (Sir Walter’s father), his sentiment regarding John Murray of Broughton, 69, 90
- Scotus (Old), 190
- Scotus (Young), 86
- Seaforth, 11, 17, 18, 106
- Sempil, Lord, 32, 36, 37, 38, 76, 222
- Sheridan, Sir Thomas (Prince Charles’s tutor), 58, 85, 86, 108, 131
- Skeldoich, Mr. (minister), 276
- Small, Ensign, 117, 140, 159, 172, 173, 174, 285
- Sobieska, Clementina, 20
- Spence, cited, 8
- Stewart, Alexander (solicitor), 165, 166, 167
- Stewart, Charles (writer in Banavie), 160, 166, 167, 168, 169, 171
- Stewart, General, 199, 239, 264, 281, 282, 283, 284
- Stewart, James, hanged for the murder of Campbell of Glenure, 159;
- cited, 274, 275
- Stewart, John Roy, 86
- Stewart of Appin, 77, 78, 166, 167, 169
- Stonor, cited, 89, 90
- Strathnaver crofters, bleeding their cows for sustenance, 265
- Sutherland, Earl of, 107, 109, 110, 113
- Sutherland, Countess of, letter to the Young Pretender, 110;
- Barisdale’s letter to her, 112;
- her clever diplomacy, 113
- Stuart, Charles (Fassifern’s agent), 196
- Tacksmen, 259, 268, 269, 282
- Talmond, Madame de, Charles’s mistress, 95
- Tencin, Cardinal, 73
- Terig (or Clerk), Duncan, 172, 173, 174
- Thompson, Sir E. Maunde, 216
- Threipland, Sir Stewart, 132
- Thurot, M., 52
- ‘Toboso,’ the Order of, 26
- Tollendal, Lally, 186
- Trant, Mr., 238
- Trapaud, Colonel (Governor of Fort Augustus), 198, 213, 218, 241, 260
- Traquair, Lord, feebleness of his Jacobite sentiment, 71;
- one of the ‘Association,’ 72;
- responsible for Scotland south of Forth, 73;
- in London, 73, 74;
- skulks from the rising, 77;
- fails to transmit the warning to Charles against his visit to Scotland, 78, 79;
- causes Murray of Broughton to be arrested for breach of peace, 90;
- cited, 32, 88, 223
- Tullibardine, William (brother of Lord George Murray), 17, 18, 82
- Urquhart, Colonel, Scottish correspondent of Edgar, 71
- Vassé, Madame de (La Grande Main), 64, 92, 93
- Vaughan, Gwynne, 289, 292
- Villettes, Arthur, 48
- Voltaire, 42, 47, 61
- Wade, General, 98
- Wadsets, 260
- Walkinshaw, Miss, Charles Edward’s mistress, 44
- Wall, General, 48
- Wedderburn, of Gosford, 145
- Wedderburn, Thomas, 107
- Wemyss, Earl of, 78, 110
- White, Major, 225
- Williams, Sir Charles Hanbury, 42
- Wingfeild, Thomas (trooper), 7
- Wodrow, cited, 10
- Wogan, Charles, 20
- Wogan, Nicholas, 21, 22, 23, 224
- Wynne, Sir Watkin Williams, 36, 38, 74, 75
- York, Duke of, 38, 185, 186, 188