translated, 164;
his dinners, 199
Home, Henry, _see_ Kames
Home, John, poet, Smith's interest in _Douglas_, 82, 130;
journey north with Smith, 295
Home, John, of Ninewells, correspondence with Smith about Hume's
legacy, 302;
and about the _Dialogues_, 305
Hope, Henry, banker, Amsterdam, Smith's acknowledgment to, 401
Home, Bishop, the "Letter to Adam Smith", 312
Horne Tooke, J., visits Smith at Montpellier, 183
Horsley, Bishop, disapproval of Sunday schools, 407
Hostellaries in Scotland, Smith on, 247
Hume, David, presents Smith with his _Treatise_, 15;
candidature for Logic chair, Glasgow, 46;
Essays on Commerce, subject of paper by Smith, 95;
friendship with Smith, 105;
descriptions of Select Society, 109;
exclusion from _Edinburgh Review_, 125;
letter to Smith on chair of Law of Mature and Nations, 132;
letters on _Theory of Moral Sentiments_, 141;
Secretary of Legation at Paris, 162;
reception in Paris, 163;
perplexity where to fix his abode, 195;
quarrel with Rousseau, 206;
Smith's letter on quarrel, 208;
Smith on his idea of residing in France, 225;
Smith on his continuing his _History_, 233;
appointed by Smith his literary executor, 262;
letter on _Wealth of Nations_, 286;
correspondence with Smith about publication of
_Dialogues on Natural Religion_, 296, 299;
farewell dinner with his friends, 299;
death, 302;
Smith on his monument in Calton Cemetery, 302;
Smith's letter to Strahan on his death, 304, 307, 311;
proposal to publish selection from his letters, 309;
Smith's objection to this, 310;
Was Hume a Theist? 313;
Smith's opinion of Hume as historian, 368
Hutcheson, Francis, influence over Smith, 11;
power as lecturer, 11;
author of phrase, "greatest happiness of greatest number," 12;
specific influences on Smith in theology, 13;
in ethics, 14;
in political economy, 14;
taught doctrine of industrial liberty, 15
Hutchinson, Hely, report on free trade for Ireland, 349
Hutton, Dr. James, geologist, 339;
Smith's literary executor, 434
India Company, East, Smith on, 242;
Smith mentioned for supervisorship, 253;
Smith on Fox's Bill, 386
Indignation, Smith's dislike of the man without, 245
Ireland, free trade for, 346;
discontent in, 347;
Smith's letter to Lord-Lieutenant on free trade for, 350;
Dundas on free trade for, 352;
Smith's reply to Dundas's letter, 353
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