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Rh Villiers, Elizabeth, 97, 130

Villiers, Francis, 79

Waller, Edmund, 181

Walpole, Horace, his anecdote of the Gunnings, 225

Watching-chamber, 15

Water Gallery, the, 106, 130

Wellesleys, the, 230

West, Benjamin, 201; his life and work,202 ;his "Death of General Wolfe," 203

William and Mary, their initials on the east front, 19; their respective rights to the sovereignty,94; death of Mary, 109

William III., his designs for the gardens, 18, 23; his connection with Hampton Court, 31; his state bedroom, 84; his claims to greatness considered, 90; his private character, 95; his part in the murder of the De Witts considered, 99; his inexcusable attack upon Marshal Luxembourg, 100; his complicity in the Glencoe massacre, 100; his character as King, 102; Hallam's opinion of him as King, 104; his preference for Hampton Court as a residence, 105; his intention to pull down the chapel, 144; wearing his hat in chapel, 145; his neglect of Mary, 106; his last years and death, 109

Windsor Castle, its inferiority to Hampton Court, 2

Withdrawing-room, the, 15

Wolsey, Cardinal, as architect, 3; his private rooms, 9; his Consessionary or closet, 9; his arms, 12; his claims to greatness, 32; as Statesman and Churchman, 34; his life at Hampton Court, 35; his gift of Hampton Court to Henry, 42; assignment of rooms to Henry and Catherine, 43; his reception of the French ambassage, 43; his fall, 50; his death, 51; his chapel and his ecclesiastical state, 139 Wren, Christopher, his colonnade, 11; his architectural style, 16, 18, 19, 25; his monogram in the Fountain Court, 17; his plans for the work, 23, 24; his dismissal from his post, 25; criticisms upon his work, 26; his work in the chapel, 142

, his reputed portrait of a porter,172; his portrait of Queen Elizabeth, 176, 178