|
Clinker_, authors sleeping on bulks, i. 457, n. 2; in the pillory, iii. 315, n. 1; Bath described, iii. 45, n. 1; Butcher Row, i. 400, n. 2; Edinburgh Cawdies, iv. 129, n. 1; Edinburgh a hot-bed of genius, ii. 53, n. 1; Elibank, Lord, v. 386, n. 1; 'gardy loo,' v. 22, n. 3; _Hemisphere_, ii. 81, n. 2; Highland funeral, v. 332, n. 2; libels, i. 116, n. 1; Methodists, ii. 123, n. 2; _Ossian_, ii. 302, n. 2; Psalmanazar, George, iii. 443; Queensberry, Duke of, ii. 368, n. 1; Quin at Bath, iii. 264, n. 1; Scotch, English prejudice against the, ii. 300, n. 5; Scotch churches, dirtiness of, v. 41, n. 3; Scotland as little known as Japan, v. 392, n. 6; Smollett's, Commissary, house, v. 365, n. 1; St. Andrews, v. 61, n. 5; _straw_ in Bedlam, ii. 374, n. 2; whisky as a medicine for infants, v. 346, n. 2; _Peregrine Pickle_, governor, v. 185, n. 2; Lady Vane, v. 49, n. 4; _Roderick Random_, 'cham,' i. 348, n. 5; finding a person comprehension, iv. 313, n. 4; hospital on a man-of-war, iii. 266, n. 2; _loblolly boy_, i. 378, n. 1; Lyttelton, Lord, said to be abused in it, iii. 33, n. 1. SMOLLETT, Mrs., v. 366. SMUGGLING, iii. 188, n. 5. SNAILS and Dissenters, ii. 268, n. 2. SNAKES, concerning, iii. 279. SNOWDON, ii. 284; v. 451. SOBIESKI, King, v. 185, n. 4, 200. SOCIAL ATTENTIONS, i. 477. SOCIETY, condition upon which all societies subsist, ii. 374; duty to it, v. 62; external advantages of great value, i. 440; held together by respect for birth, ii. 153; right to prohibit propagation of dangerous opinions, ii. 249; submitting to its determinations, v. 87; truth, held together by, iii. 293. SOCIETY OF ARTISTS, i. 363; _Preface to the Catalogue_, ib., n. 2, 367. _Society of Arts and Sciences_, Johnson tries to speak there, ii. 139; is recommended by Hollis, iv. 97; votes against a Scotchman, iv. 11; mentioned, iv. 92, n. 5. SOCIETY for Conversation, iv. 90. SOCIETY for the Encouragement of learning, i. 153, n. 2. SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE GOSPEL, Archbishop Markham's Sermon, v. 36, n. 3; bequest of slaves made to it, iii. 204, n. 1. SOCIETY FOR PROPAGATING CHRISTIAN KNOWLEDGE, ii. 27-30, 279; v. 370. SOCRATES, compared with Charles XII, iii. 265; education, on, iii. 358, n. 2; learnt to dance, iv. 79; passing through the fair at Athens, i. 334, n. 2; reduced philosophy to common life, i. 217. SODOR AND MAN, Bishop of, iii. 412. _Solamen miseris socios habuisse doloris_, iv. 181, n. 3. SOLANDER, Dr., account of him, v. 328; proposed expedition, ii. 147, 148; iii. 454. _Soldiers Letter_, i. 156. SOLDIERS, breeding, their, ii. 82; character high, iii. 9; common soldiers usually gross, iii. 9; Coronation, at the, iii. 9, n. 2; courage, iii. 266; deaths from gaol fever, iv. 176, n. 1; Dicey, Professor, on the difficulties of their position, iii. 46, n. 5; English stronger than French, v. 229; estimation in which they are held, iii. 265-6; fame, get little, v. 137; France, respect paid to them in, iii. 10; governed by want of agreement, ii. 103; insolence, iii. 9, nn. 2 and 3; Johnson's estimate of them in his talk and study, iii. 266-7; Mutiny Act, iii. 9, n. 4; officers, their ignorance, v. 398; respected, iii. 9; superiority of their accommodation, iii. 361, 365; pay, ii. 218; peace, in time of, iii. 267, n. 1; quartered in inns, ii. 218, n. 1; iii. 9, n. 4; real life and modern fiction, in, ii. 134, n. 3; regularity, want of, iii. 266, n. 4; relish of existence, iii. 413, n. 4; riches in them do not excite anger, v. 328; shot at for five-pence a day, ii. 250; trial of two soldiers for murder, iii. 46, n. 5. SOLICITORS, iv. 128-31. See ATTORNEYS. SOLITUDE, Burton's warning against it, iii. 415. See under JOHNSON, solitude. SOMERS, Lord, patron of learning, v. 59, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 157, n. 3. SOMERSET, James, a negro, account of his case, iii. 87, n. 3, 212; v. 401, n. 3; Hargrave's _Argument_ quoted, v. 401, n. 3; Knight the negro reads his case, iii. 214, n. 1. SOMERSET, Duchess of, i. 452, n. 2. SOMERSETSHIRE, iii. 226, n. 2. SOMERVILLE, Lord, iv. 50. SOMMELSDYCK, family of, v. 25, n. 2. _Somnium_, i. 60. SORROW, inherent in humanity, v. 64; remedies for it, ib., n. 2; useless, iii. 137, n. 1. See GRIEF. SOUND, beauty in a simple sound, ii. 191. SOUTH, Dr. Robert, Johnson criticises his _Sermons_, iii. 248; recommends his _Sermons on Prayer_, ii. 104. _South Briton_, a libel, iv. 318, n. 3. SOUTH SEA, voyages to the, ii. 247; iii. 8; iv. 308. _South Sea Report_, i. 157. SOUTH SEA SCHEME, Dr. Young loses by it, iv. 121; Fenton's advice to Gay, v. 60, n. 4. SOUTHAMPTON, Lord, ii. 323, n. 1. SOUTHEY, Robert, _Adventurer_, i. 252, n. 2; Colman and Lloyd, ii. 334, n. 3; correcting _doggedly_, v. 40, n. 3; dreams, i. 235, n. 2; English historians, ignorance of, v. 220, n. 1; _Gentleman's Magazine_, despises the, iv. 437; Georgia, settlement of, i. 127, n. 4; _Methodists_, origin of the term, i. 458, n. 3; poet-laureate, i. 185, n. 1; Robertson's, Dr., omissions, ii. 238, n. 1; v. 220, n. 1; Robinson, Sir T., i. 434, n. 3; supernatural appearances, iii. 298, n. 1; walks, the habit of taking long, i. 64, n. 4; want of readiness, ii. 256, n. 3; Wesley's manners, iii. 230, nn. 3 and 4; Wesley warned by 'a serious man,' v. 62, n. 5; Westminster School, account of, iii. 12, n. 3; Whitefield's oratory, ii. 79, n. 4; v. 36, n. 1; _Whole Duty of Man_, ii. 239, n. 4. SOUTHILL, the residence of Squire Dilly, Boswell visits it in 1779, iii. 396; Boswell and Johnson in 1781, i. 260; iv. 118; the church, i. 315; iv. 122. SOUTHWELL, Thomas, second Lord, i. 243; iii. 380; 'most qualified man,' iv. 174. SOUTHWELL, Mr., i. 362. SOUTHWELL, Robert, the Jesuit, v. 444. SPACE, _quasi sensorium numinis_, v. 287. SPAIN, Boswell, David, lives there, n. 195, n. 3; embassy to it in 1766, ii. 177; expedition to Scotland in 1719, v. 140, n. 3; exportation of coin, iv. 105, n. 1; Johnson attacks it in _London_, i. 130, 455; in _Lives of Blake and Drake_, i. 147, n. 5; wishes that it should be travelled over, i. 365, 410, 455; iii. 454; Spanish invasion, fears of a, iii. 360, n. 3; treaty of peace of 1782-83, iv. 282, n. 1. SPANISH PLAYS, iv. 16. SPANISH PROVERBS, i. 73, n. 3; iii. 302. SPARTA, ii. 176; iii. 293. SPEAKING, of another, iv. 32; of oneself, iii. 323; public speaking, ii. 139, 339. SPEARING, Mr., an attorney, i. 132, n. 1. _Spectator_, Addison, badness of the part not written by, iii. 33; Baretti, read by, iv. 32; Bonn's edition, iv. 190, n. 1; Bouhours quoted, ii. 90, n. 3; bows of the Spectator's banker, i. 440, n. 1; _British Princes_, ii. 108, n. 3; curious epitaph, iv. 358, n. 2; edition with notes, ii. 212; end of its publication, i. 201, n. 3; _Epilogue to the Distressed Mother_, i. 181, n. 4; 'find variety in one,' iii. 424, n. 2; Freeport, Sir Andrew, ii. 212, n. 2; 'Gentleman, The,' ii. 182; Grove's paper on Novelty, iii. 33; Hockley in the Hole, iii. 134, n. 1; Kurd's notes, iv. 190, n. 1; Ince's papers, iii. 33, n. 3; Indian King at St. Paul's, i. 450, n. 3; Johnson praises it, ii. 370; milking a ram, i. 444, n. 1; motto to No. 379, v. 25, n. 2; Osborne's _Advice to a Son_, ii. 193, n. 2; paper of notanda, i. 205; _Philip Homebred_, iii. 34; Pope's letter to Steele, iii 420, n. 2; Psalmanazar ridiculed, iii. 449; reputation enjoyed by chance writers in it, iii. 33; singularity, ii. 75; Two-penny Club, iv. 254, n. 1; _Whole Duty of Man_, i. 216, n. 1: See under ADDISON. SPEDDING, James, _Bacon's Works_, i. 431, n. 2. SPEECH-MAKING, a knack, iv. 179. SPELLING, in the seventeenth century, v. 299, n. 1. See JOHNSON, spelling. SPENCE, Rev. Joseph, account of him, v. 317; _Anecdotes_, iv. 63; v. 414; Blacklock's poetry, i. 466; Pope visits him at Oxford, iv. 9; mentioned, ii. 84, n. 2. SPENCER, second Earl, member of the Literary Club, i. 479. SPENCER, Lady, iii. 425, n. 3. SPENSER, Edmund, Bunyan, read by, ii. 238; _Dictionary_, as an authority for a, iii. 194, n. 2; George III suggests that Johnson should write his _Life_, ii. 42, n. 2; iv. 410; imitations of him, iii. 158, n. 4; _Ruines of Rome_, iii. 251, n. 1; 'Spenser, Mr. Edmund,' iv. 325, n. 3. SPHINX, the, iii. 337. SPINOSA, i. 268, n. 2; iii. 448. SPIRIT, evidence for. See JOHNSON, spirit. SPIRITS. See GHOSTS. SPIRITS, evil, iv. 290. _Spiritual Quixote_, its author, a member of Pembroke College, i. 75, n. 3; and a friend of Shenstone, i. 94, n. 5; ii. 452, n. 4; on clean shirts, v. 60, n. 4. SPIRITUOUS LIQUORS, felicity of drunkenness cheaply attained by them, iii. 381, n. 3; misery caused by them, ii. 435, n. 7; iii. 292, n. 1; pleasant poison, v. 346, n. 2. _Spleen, The_, iii. 38, 405. SPLENDOUR, iv. 337. SPOONER, Rev. Mr., v. 73. SPOTTISWOODE, Dr., ii. 323, n. 2. SPOTTISWOODE, John, iii. 326-7. SPRAT, Bishop, _History of the Royal Society_, iv. 311; _Life_ quoted, i. 34, n. 5; meets Bentley, v. 274, n 4; style, iii. 257, n. 3. SQUILLS, iv. 355. _Squire Richard_, iv. 284. SQUIRES, Rev. Mr., i. 208, n. 3. STAGE, Mr., iv. 257, n. 2. STAFFORD, ii. 164, n. 5. STAFFORDSHIRE, fruit, very little, iv. 206; Jacobite fox-hunt, iii. 326, n. 1; nursery of art, iii. 299, n. 2; Toryism, its, ii. 461; two young Methodists from it, ii. 120; Whig, a Staffordshire, iii. 326. STAGE. See PLAYERS. STAGE-COACHES, i. 340, n. 1. See COACH. STAIR, Earl of, v. 372. ST. ALBAN'S, Boswell and Johnson pass the night there, iii. 4; monument to John Thrale, i. 491, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 459; iv. 80, n. 1. ST. ALBAN'S, first Duke of, i. 248, n. 2. ST. ASAPH, ii. 284; v. 436. ST. AUBYN, Sir John, i. 508. ST. AUGUSTINE, '_misericordia domini inter pontem et fontem_' iv. 212, n. 2; weighed against Jonathan Wild plus three-pence, iv. 291. ST. CAS, expedition to, i. 338, n. 2. ST. COLUMBA, v. 335, 337, 338. ST. CROSS, at Winchester, iii. 124. ST. CUTHBERT'S DAY, at University College, ii. 445. ST. GLUVIAS, i. 436. ST. IGNATIUS LOYOLA, i. 77. ST. JEROME, ii. 358, n. 3. ST. JOHN. See BOLINGBROKE. ST. MALO, expedition sent against it, i. 338, n. 2; mentioned, ii. 82, n. 3. ST. PAUL, 'chief of sinners,' iv. 294; converted by supernatural interposition, iii. 295; fear of being a cast-away, iv. 123; saw unutterable things, ii. 123; thorn in the flesh, v. 64; 'warring against the law of his mind,' iv. 396. ST. PETERSBURGH, iv. 277, n. 1. ST. QUINTIN, ii. 401. ST. VITUS'S DANCE, i. 143. STAMP ACT, Burke's speeches, ii. 16. STANHOPE, first Earl, i. 160. STANHOPE, third Earl, presided at a meeting of the Revolution Society, iv. 40, n. 4. STANHOPE, fifth Earl, on the author of _Captain Carleton's Memoirs_, iv. 334, n. 4. STANHOPE, Mr. (Lord Chesterfield's son), Boswell's description of him, i. 266, n. 2; Johnson's, iv. 333, n. 1; Harte, Dr., his tutor, iv. 78, n. 1. 333: See CHESTERFIELD, Earl of, Letters to his Son. STANHOPE, Mr., mentioned in Tickell's _Epistle_, iii. 388, n. 3. STANISLAUS, King, ii. 405, n. 1. STANLEY, Dean, _Memorials of Westminster Abbey_—Ephraim Chambers's epitaph, i. 219, n. 1; Goldsmith's epitaph and Johnson's Latin, iii. 82, n. 3; Johnson's and Macpherson's graves, ii. 298, n. 2. STANTON, Mr., manager of a company of actors, ii. 464, 465. STANYAN, Temple, iii. 356. STAPYLTON, family of, v. 442, n. 3. _Starvation_, ii. 160, n. 1. STATE, its right to regulate religion, ii. 14; iv. 12; the vulgar are its children, ii. 14; iv. 216. _State_ used for _statement_, iii. 394. STATE OF NATURE, v. 365. _State Trials_, i. 157. STATIONERS' COMPANY, ii. 345. STATIUS, i. 252. STATUARY, ii. 439. STATUES, reason of their value, iii. 231. STAUNTON, Dr. (afterwards Sir George), Johnson's letter to him, i. 367; _Debates_, iv. 314. '_Stavo bene, &c._,' ii. 346. STEELE, Joshua, _Prosodia Rationalis_, ii. 327. STEELE, Mr., of the Treasury, i. 141. STEELE, Sir Richard, Addison's loan, iv. 52, 91; _Apology_, ii. 448, n. 3; _British Princes_, ridicules the, ii. 108, n. 2; _Christian Hero_, ii. 448; _Conscious Lovers_, i. 491, n. 3; grammar-schools, account of, i. 44, n. 2; Ince, praise of, iii. 33; Marlborough's, Duke of, papers, v. 175, n. 1; old age, ii. 474, n. 3; 'practised the lighter vices,' ii. 449. STEEVENS, George, Boswell complains of his unkindness, iii. 281, n. 3; praises his principles, iii. 282; character by Garrick and Parr, iii. 281, n. 3; Chatterton's poems, iii. 50, n. 5; Courtenay's _Poetical Review_, mentioned in, i. 223; Davies, Tom, sneers at, i. 390, n. 3; Fox's election to the Club, ii. 274, n. 7; generosity, iii. 100; assists Mrs. Goldsmith, ib.; _Hamlet_, proposed emendation of, ii. 204, n. 3; Hawkins, attacked by, iv. 406, n. 1; Johnson, anecdotes of, iv. 324; not trustworthy, ib., n. 1; epitaph, iv. 444; aids, in the _Lives_, iv. 37; interpretation of two passages in _Hamlet_, iii. 55, n. 2; letters to him, ii. 273; iii. 100; levee, attends, ii. 118; 'the old lion,' ii. 284, n. 2; reflection on Garrick, ii. 192, n. 2; and the spunging-house, i. 303, n. 1; and Torre's fireworks, iv. 324; Literary Club, member of the, i. 479; election, ii. 273; present, ii. 318; literary impostures, his, iv. 178, n. 1; outlaw, leads the life of an, ii. 375; deserves to be hanged or kicked, iii. 281; anonymous attacks, iv. 274; Rochester's _Poems_, castrates, iii. 191; Shakespeare, edits, ii. 114, 204; Shakespearian editors, i. 497, n. 3; mentioned, ii. 58, 107; iii. 354, 386; iv. 438. STELLA (Mrs. Johnson), ii. 389, n. 1. _Stella in Mourning_, i. 178. STEPHANI, the, Henry Stephens' _Greek Dictionary_, ii. 74, n. 1; Maittaire's _Stephanorum Historia_, iv. 2; what they did for literature, iii. 254. STEPHENS, Alexander, Beckford's speech to the King, iii. 201, n. 3. STEPNEY, George, iv. 36, n. 4. STERNE, Rev. Laurence, beggars, iv. 32, n. 4; death, ii. 222, n. 1; dinner engagements, ii. 222; Goldsmith calls him a blockhead, ii. 173, n. 2; and 'a very dull fellow,' ii. 222; indecency, ii. 222, n. 2; Johnson's opinion of him, ii. 222; Monckton, Miss, finds him pathetic, iv. 109; _Sentimental Journey_, imitation of it, ii. 175; _Sermons_ read by Johnson in a coach, iv. 109, n. 1; seen by him at Dunvegan, v. 227; _Tristram Shandy_, Burns's bosom favourite, i. 360, n. 2; 'did not last,' ii. 449; Farmer, Dr., foretells that it will be speedily forgotten, ii. 449, n. 3; Gray mentions it, ii. 222, n. 1; Harris's _Hermes_, anecdote of, ii. 225, n. 2; Walpole describes it as 'the dregs of nonsense,' ii. 449, n. 3; references to it, 'daily regularity of a clean shirt,' v. 60, n. 4; _Lilliburlero_, ii. 347, n. 2. STEVENAGE, iii. 303. STEVENS, R., a bookseller, i. 330, n. 3. STEVENSON, Dr., v. 369. STEWART, Sir Annesly, iv. 78. STEWART, Commodore, v. 445. STEWART, Dugald, authorship in Scotland, ii. 53, n. 1; existence of matter, i. 471, n. 2; Glasgow University, at, v. 369, n. 3; Hume's Scotticisms, ii. 72, n. 2; Select Society, The, v. 393, n. 4; Smith's, Adam, conversation, iii. 307, n. 2; peculiarities, iv. 24, n. 2. STEWART, Francis, Johnson's amanuensis, i. 187; Johnson buys his old pocket-book, iii. 418, 421; and a letter, iv. 262, 265. STEWART, George, bookseller of Edinburgh, i. 187. STEWART, Sir James, iii. 205, n. 1. STEWART, Mr., sent on a secret mission to Paoli, ii. 81. STEWART, Mrs., iii. 418, 421; iv. 262, 265. STILL, John, Bishop of Bath and Wells, iv. 420, n. 3. STILLINGFLEET, Benjamin, iv. 108. STINTON, Dr., iii. 279; iv. 29. STOCKDALE, Rev. Percival, account of him, ii. 113, n. 2; Johnson's defence of drunkenness, ii. 435, n. 7; on dictionary-making, ii. 203, n. 3; on expectations, i. 337, n. 1; _Works_, edits two volumes of, i. 190, n. 4; 335, n. 3; _Remonstrance, The_, ii. 113; Russia, offered a post in, iv. 277, n. 1; St. Andrews, lodgings at, v. 65, n. 4; mentioned, ii. 148. STOICK, the, in _Lucian_, iii. 10. STONE, Mr., iii. 143, n. 1. STONEHENGE, iv. 234, n. 2. STOPFORD, General, ii. 376. STORMONT, seventh Viscount (afterwards second Earl of Mansfield), v. 362, n, 1. STORY, Thomas, the Quaker, i,68, n. 1. STORY, its value depends on its being true, ii. 433. STOURBRIDGE, Johnson at the school, i. 49; v. 456, n. 1; the town formerly in the parish of Old Swinford, v. 432. STOW, Richard, i. 163, n. 1. STOWE, iii. 400, n. 2. STOWELL, Lord. See SCOTT, William. STRAHAN, Andrew, iv. 371. STRAHAN, Rev. George, Vicar of Islington (son of William Strahan), attends Johnson when dying, iv. 415-6; Johnson's bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; _Prayers and Meditations_, edits, i. 235, n. 1; ii. 476; iv. 376-7; omits some passages, iv. 84, n. 4; visits him, iv. 271, 415; will, witnesses, iv. 402, n. 2; mentioned, ii. 37, n. 1; iv. 49. STRAHAN, William, the King's Printer, purchaser in whole or in part of Blair's _Sermons_, iii. 97; _Cook's Voyages_, ii. 247, n. 5; _Duke of Berwick's Life_, iii. 286; _Gibbon's Decline and Fall_, ii. 136, n. 6; iii. 97, n. 3; Johnson's _Dictionary_, i. 287; iv. 32l; _Journey to the Western Isles_, ii. 94; _Patriot_, ii. 288; _Rasselas_, i. 341; Mackenzie's _Man of Feeling_, i. 360; Boswell's praise of him, i. 288; breakfast and dinner at his house, ii. 321; iii. 400; coach, keeps his, ii. 226; Elphinston's _Martial_, iii. 258; epigram, how far a judge of an, iii. 258; Franklin's letter to him on their rise in the world, ii. 226, n. 2; on the American war, iii. 364, n. 1; Gordon Riots, iii. 428-9, 435; Hume left him his manuscripts, ii. 136, n, 6; corrected Hume's style, v. 92, n. 3; Johnson's altercation with Adam Smith, iii. 331; attempts to bring, into Parliament, ii. 137-9; difference with, iii. 364; friendly agent, ii. 136; interested in one of his apprentices, ii. 323; letter to him, iii. 364; letters to Scotland, franked, iii. 364; one of a deputation to, iii. 111; _London Chronicle_, printer of the, iii. 221; member of parliament, ii. 137; obtuse, iii. 258; Robertson's style, corrected, v. 92, n. 3; small certainties, on, ii. 322; Smith's, Adam, letter to him, v. 30; Spottiswoode, Dr., his greatgrandson, ii. 323, n. 2; Warburton's letter, shows, v. 92-3; Wedderburne, anecdote of, ii. 430; mentioned, i. 243, 303, n. 1; ii. 34, n. 1, 282, 310. STRAHAN, Mrs. (wife of William Strahan), Johnson's letters to her, iv. 100, 140; mentioned, i. 212. STRAHAN, William, junior, death, iv. 100. STRAITS OF MAGELLAN, v. 225. _Stranger, The_, iv. 244, n. 1. STRATAGEM, iii. 275, 324, n. 3. STRATFORD-ON-AVON, Boswell and Johnson drink tea there, ii. 453; Jubilee, ii. 68; Shakespeare's mulberry-tree, ii. 470. _Stratford Jubilee, The_, ii. 471. STRATICO, Professor, i. 371. STRAW, balancing a, iii. 231. _Straw, beating his_, ii. 374. STREATHAM, Church, Thrale's monument, iv. 85, n. 1; Johnson's farewell, iv. 159; Common, ii. 72, n. 1; Thrale's Villa, Boswell's first visit to it, ii. 77; visit in 1778, iii. 225; dining-room, iii. 348; luxurious dinners, iii. 423, n. 1; Johnson gives a bible to one of the maids, iii. 247; 'home,' i. 493, n. 3; iii. 405, n. 6, 451; laboratory, iii. 398, n. 3; last dinner, iv. 159, n. 1; musing over the fire, ii. 109, n. 2; parting use of the library, iv. 158; library, compared with the one at St. Andrews, v. 64, n. 1; pictures round it, iv. 158, n. 1; 'none but itself can be its parallel,' iii. 395, n. 1; Omai dines there, iii. 8; Shelburne, Lord, let to, iv. 158, n. 4; summerhouse, iv. 134; village, iii. 451; mentioned, iii. 392. STREETS, passengers who excite risibility, i. 217. STRICHEN, Lord, v. 107, n. 1. STRICKLAND, Mrs., iii. 118, n. 3. STRIKES in London, iii. 46, n. 5. STUART, Andrew, duel with Thurlow, ii. 230, n. 1; _Letters to Lord Mansfield_, ii. 229-30, 475. STUART, Gilbert, iii. 334, n. 1. STUART, Hon. Colonel James (afterwards Stuart-Wortley), Boswell, accompanies him to London, iii. 399; to Lichfield, iii. 411; to Chester, iii. 413; raises a regiment, iii. 399; ordered to Jamaica, iii. 416, n. 2. STUART, Rev. James, of Killin, ii. 28, n. 2. STUART, Hon. and Rev. W., iv. 199. STUART, Mrs. ii. 377, n. 1. STUART, the House of, Johnson defends it, i. 354; has little confidence in it, i. 430; maintains its popularity, iii. 155-6; iv. 165; his tenderness for it, i. 176; right to the throne, ii. 220; iii. 156; v. 185, n. 4, 202-4; Scotch Episcopal Church, faithful to it, iii. 371; Scotch non-jurors give up their allegiance, iv. 287; Voltaire sums up its story, v. 200; mentioned, ii. 26. STUART CLAN, ii. 270. STUBBS, George, iv. 402, n. 2. _Student, The, or Oxford and Cambridge Miscellany_, i. 209, 228. STUDIED BEHAVIOUR, i. 470. STUDY, all times wholesome for it, iv. 9; Johnson's advice to Boswell, i. 410, 457, 460, 474; iii—407; five hours a day sufficient, i. 428; particular plan not recommended, i. 428; studying hard, i. 70. _Stultifying_ oneself, v. 342. STYLE, elegance universally diffused, iii. 243; foreign phrases dragged in, iii. 343, n. 3; Hume and Mackintosh on English prose, iii. 257, n. 3; Johnson's dislike of Gallicisms, i. 439; metaphors, iii. 174; iv. 386, n. 1; peculiar to every man, iii. 280; seventeenth century style bad, iii. 243; studiously formed, i. 225; Temple gave cadence to prose, iii. 257; unharmonious periods, iii. 248; which is the best? ii. 191. See under ADDISON and JOHNSON. STYLE, Old and New, i. 236, n. 2, 251. SUARD, Johnson introduces him to Burke, iv. 20, n. 1; Voltaire and Mrs. Montague, ii. 88, n. 3. SUBORDINATION, breaking the series of civil subordination, ii. 244; broken down, iii. 262; conducive to the happiness of society, i. 408, 442; ii. 219; iii. 26; v. 353; essential for order, iii. 383; feudal, ii. 262; v. 106; French happy in their subordination, v. 106; grand scheme of it, i. 490; high people the best, iii. 353; Johnson's great merit in being zealous for it, ii. 261; Mrs. Macaulay's footman, i. 447; iii. 77; mean marriages to be punished, ii. 328-9; men not naturally equal, ii. 13; promoted by a Corsican hangman, i. 408, n. 1; without it no intellectual improvement, ii. 219. SUBSCRIPTION to the Thirty-nine Articles. See THIRTY-NINE ARTICLES. SUCCESSION, male, Boswell and the Barony of Auchinleck, ii. 413-423; Johnson's advice to Boswell, ii. 415-423; his zeal for it in Langton's case, ii. 261; as regards the Thrale family, ii. 469; iii. 95. SUCKLING, Sir John, _Aglaura_, iii. 319, n. 1. SUENO, King of Norway, v. 289. SUETONIUS, i. 433, n. 1; iii. 283, n. 1. _Sufflamina_, i. 273. SUFFOLK, militia bill of 1756, i. 307, n. 4; price of wheat in 1778, iii. 226, n. 2. SUFFOLK, Lady, ii. 342, n. 1. SUGAR, taken in the servant's fingers, ii. 403; v. 22. _Sugar Cane, a Poem_. See GRAINGER, James. SUGER, Abbot, iii. 32, n. 5. SUICIDE, Baxter on the salvation of a suicide, iv. 225; civil suicide, iv. 223; Fitzherbert's 'melancholy end,' ii. 228; going to the devil where a man _is_ known, v. 54; Johnson supposed to recommend it, iv. 150; martyrdom a kind of voluntary suicide, ii. 250; motives that lead to it, ii. 228-9. SUIDAS, i. 277, n. 4. SULPITIUS, iii. 36, n. 2; iv. 374, n. 5. SUNDAY, abroad a day of festivity, ii. 72, n. 1; bird-catching on it, ii. 72, n. 1; harvest work, iii. 313; heavy day to Johnson when a boy, i. 67; legal consultations, ii. 376; militia exercise, i. 307, n. 4; reading, v. 323; relaxation allowed but not levity, v. 69; scheme of life for it, i. 303; throwing stones at birds, v. 69. SUNDERLAND, iii. 297, n. 2. SUNDERLAND, third Earl of, Lowther the miser, v. 112, n. 4; mentioned, i. 160. '_Sunk upon us_,' ii. 148. SUPERFOETATION of the Press, iii. 332. SUPERIORITY, iv. 164. SUPERNATURAL AGENCY, general belief in it, v. 45. SUPERNATURAL APPEARANCES, evidence of them, ii. 150; use of them, iii. 298, n. 1: See GHOSTS, WITCHES; and under SCOTLAND, Hebrides, second-sight. SUPERSTITIONS, not necessarily connected with religion, v. 306. See under BOSWELL and JOHNSON. SUPPER, a turnpike, iii. 306. SURINAM, v. 25, n. 2, 357. SURNAMES, easily mistaken, iv. 190. SURREY, militia bill of 1756, i. 307, n. 4. SUSPICION, often a useless pain, iii. 135. _Suspicious Husband, The_, ii. 50. _Suspirius_, i. 213; ii. 48. SUSSEX, militia bill of 1756, i. 307, n. 4; price of wheat in 1778, iii. 226, n. 2; violence of the waves on its coast, v. 251, n. 2. SUSSEX, Duke of, ii. 152, n. 2. SUTER, Mr., v. 164, n. 2. SWALLOWS, their hibernation, ii. 55, 248. SWAN, Dr., i. 153. SWANSEA, i. 164. SWARKSTONE, i. 79, n. 2. SWEARING, Court of Justice, in a, v. 390; conversation, in,—causes of the custom, ii. 166; genteel people swear less than formerly, ii. 166, n. 1; Johnson disapproves of it, ii. 111; iii. 4l; represented as swearing in Dr. T. Campbell's _Diary_, ii. 338, n. 2; shows his displeasure, iii. 189. SWEDEN, Johnson promised a letter of good-will from it, i. 323; wishes to visit it, iii. 454; v. 215; torture used there, i. 467, n. 1. SWEDEN, King of, knights Dr. Hill, ii. 38, n. 2. SWEDEN, King of (Gustavus III), Boswell wishes to see him, v. 215; his death, iii. 134, n. 1. _Sweden, History of_, by Daline, ii. I56. SWEET-MEATS, iii. 186; iv. 90. SWIFT, Jonathan, _Advice to the Grub-Street Verse Writers_, i. 143, n. 1; affectation of familiarity with the great, iv. 62; anonymously, published, ii. 319; _Apology for the Tale of a Tub_, ii. 319, n. 1; _Artemisia_, ii. 76, n. 3; _Beggar's Opera_, opinion of the, ii. 369, n. 1; Bettesworth, Sergeant, iii. 377, n. 1; Blackmore, Sir Richard, ii. 108, n. 2; iv. 80, n. 1; broomstick, could write finely on a, ii. 389, n. 1; _Conduct of the Allies_, ii. 65; death, troubled by thoughts of, ii. 93, n. 4; what reconciles us to it, iii. 295, n. 2; Delany's _Observations_: See DELANY; _Drapier's Letter_, ii. 319; Dryden's prefaces, iv. 114, n. 1; _Epistle to Captain Gulliver_, v. 139; _Eugenia_, ii. 240, n. 4; Faulkner, G., ii. 154, n. 3; feared by a country squire, iv. 295, n. 5; flowered late, iii. 167, n. 3; French writers superficial, i. 454, n, 3; frugal but liberal, iii. 265, n. 1; Gay's writings for children, ii. 408, n. 3; geniuses united, the power of, i. 206; Glover's _Leonidas_, v. 116, n. 4; Goldsmith on his 'strain of pride,' iii. 165, n. 3; Grimston, Viscount, iv. 80, n. 1; _Gulliver's Travels_, ii. 319; quoted in Johnson's _Dictionary_, ib., n. 3; brought its author money, iii. 20, n. 1; happiness, definition of, ii. 351, n. 1; Hawkesworth's _Life_ of him, i. 190, n. 3; _History of John Bull_, v. 44, n. 4; Howard, Hon. Edward, ii. 108, n. 2; inferior to his contemporaries, v. 44; Ireland his debtor, ii. 132; reception there in 1713, iii. 249, n. 6; return to it in 1714, iii. 249, n. 6; Johnson's attacks on him, i. 452; ii. 65, 318; iv. 61; v. 44; recommended to him, i. 133; iv. 61; worse than Swift,' v. 211; writes his Life, iv. 61-3; _Journal_, iv. 177; laugh, did not, ii. 378, n. 2; _Letter to Tooke the Printer_, ii. 319, n. 1; _Lines on Censure_, ii. 61, n. 4; low life, love of, v. 307, n. 3; Manley, Mrs., satirised in _Corinna_, iv. 200, n. 1; _Memoirs of Scriblerus_, i. 452, n. 2; v. 44, n. 4; _Miscellanies in Prose and Verse_, i. 125, n. 4; _Ode for Music_, ii. 67, n. 1; _On the death of Dr. Swift_, iii. 441, n. 3; original in a high degree, ii. 319, n. 2; Orrery's, Lord, _Remarks_: See ORRERY, fifth Earl of; 'paper-sparing Pope,' i. 142; payment for writing, iii. 20, n. 1; _Plan for the Improvement of the English Language_, ii. 319; _Poetry; a Rhapsody_, ii. 108, n. 2; Pope's condensation of sense, v. 345, n. 2; parting with, iii. 312; P. P. _clerk of this parish_, i. 383, n. 3; Prendergast, attacks, ii. 183, n. 1; projectors, i. 301, n. 3; _Rules to Servants_, ii. 148, n. 2; Sacheverell's sermon at the end of his suspension, i. 39, n. 1; saving, habit of, iv. 61-2; _scoundrel_, use of, iii. 1, n. 2; 'screen between me and death,' iii. 441, n. 3; _Sentiments of a Church of England man_, ii. 319, n. 1; _Sermon on the Trinity_, ii. 319, n. 1; shallow fellow, a, v. 44, n. 3; singularities, given to, ii. 74, n. 3; 'spectacles and pills,' iv. 285; Steele, lines on, i. 125, n. 4; Stella's 'artifice of mischief,' v. 243; _Stella's birthday_, iv. 181, n. 3, 285, n. 2; strong sense his excellence, i. 452; study, hours of, ii. 119, n. 2; style, a good neat, ii. 191; according to Hume not correct, ib., n. 3; praised by him, iii. 257, n. 3; Tale of a Tub, doubts as to the authorship, i. 452; ii. 318, 319, n. 1; he gives a copy to Mrs. Whiteway, i. 452, n. 2; lost him a bishopric, i. 452, n. 2; much superior to his other writings, ii. 318; v. 44; quotations from it Boswell like Jack, ii. 235; dirtiness of the Scotch churches, v. 41, n. 3; Temple's style, iii. 257, n. 3; 'washed himself with oriental scrupulosity,' iv. 5, n. 2; 'Whiggism and Atheism,' i. 431, n. 1. SWIMMING. See JOHNSON, swimming. SWINFEN, Dr. Samuel, Johnson's godfather, i. 34, n. 2; consults him about his health, i. 64; intimate with him, i. 80, 83; kind to his daughter, iii. 222, n. 3; leaves a legacy to his grandson, iv. 440; Pembroke College, a member of, i. 58, n. 1. SWINNEY. See MAC SWINNY, Owen. SWINTON, Rev. Mr., i. 273. SWISS, Johnson praises their wonderful policy, i. 155; suffer from the _maladie du pays_, iii. 198. SWISS GUARDS, iv. 282, n. 2. SYDENHAM, Dr. Thomas, _Life_ by Johnson, quoted, i. 38; published, i. 153; Locke's Latin verses, v. 93; St. Vitus's dance, i. 143. SYDNEY, Algernon, ii. 210. SYLVANUS'S _First Book of the Iliad_, iii. 407. _Sylvanus Urban_, i. 111. SYMPATHY, ii. 94-5, 469-471; iii. 149. SYNOD, 'A Synod of Cooks,' i. 470. SYNONYMES, iv. 207. _System of Ancient Geography_, i. 187. _Systeme de la Nature_, v. 47. SZEKLERS, ii. 7, n. 3.
T.
T', fitted to a, iv. 288. TAAF, Mr., ii. 398. TACITUS, Agricola, quoted, iii. 324, n. 5; iv. 204; Germania, quoted, v. 381; his writings are notes for an historical work, ii. 189. TAILOR, the metaphysical. See METAPHYSICAL. TAIT, Rev. Mr., v. 128. TAIT, Mr., an organist, v. 84. TALBOT, Lord Chancellor, i. 232, n. 1. TALBOT, second Lord, i. 507, 508. TALBOT, Miss Catharine, correspondence with Mrs. Carter, i. 232, n. 1; Greenwich Park, describes, i. 106, n. 2; Rambler, contributes to the, i. 203; criticises it, i. 208, nn. 2 and 3; Williams, Mrs., account of, i. 232, n. 1. Tale of a Tub. See SWIFT. TALES, telling tales of oneself, ii. 472. TALK, above the capacity of the audience, iv. 185; distinguished from conversation, iv. 186; Johnson loved to have it out, iii. 230; talking for fame, iii. 247; from books, v. 378; of oneself, iii. 57; on one topic, ib. TALKERS, exuberant public, ii. 247. TALLEYRAND, v. 397, n. 1. TALLOW-CHANDLER, in retirement, ii. 337. TAMEOS, v. 242, n. 1. TANNING, v. 246. TAR, v. 216. TARTARY, ii. 156. Tartuffe, ii. 321, n. 1; iii. 449. TASKER, Rev. Mr., iii. 373-5. TASSO, borrows a simile from Lucretius, iii. 330. TASTE, changes in it, iii. 192, n. 2; defined, ii. 191; refinement of it, iv. 338; Reynolds's rule for judging it, iv. 316. Tatler, end of its publication, i. 201, n. 3; esquire, title of, i. 34, n. 3; rural esquires, v. 60, n. 4; great perfections without good breeding, ii. 256, n. 3. Tatler Revived, i. 202. TAUNTON, iv. 32. TAVERNS, admitting women, iv. 75; felicity of England in its tavern life, ii. 451; tavern chair the throne of human felicity, ii. 452, n. 1. Taxation no Tyranny, account of it planned, ii. 292; published, ii. 312; written at the desire of ministers, i. 373, n. 2; ii. 313; corrected by them, ii. 313-5; not attacked enough, ii. 335; pelted with answers, ii. 336, n. 1; sale, ii. 335, n. 4; Birmingham traders praised, ii. 464, n. 3; drivers of negroes, iii. 201; Macaulay, Mrs., attacked, ii. 336, n. 2; mentioned, iii. 221. TAXES, effect of their increase, ii. 357. TAYLOR, Chevalier, a quack, iii. 389-39. TAYLOR, Jeremy, 'chief of sinners,' iv. 294; Golden Grove, iv. 295; Holy Dying, iii. 34, n. 3. TAYLOR, Rev. Dr. John, account of him and his establishment, ii. 473; his person, ii. 474; his character by Johnson, ii. 474; iii. 139, 181; all his geese swans, iii. 189; Ashbourne, his daily life, iii. 132; iv. 378; the water-fall, iii. 190; garden, iii. 199; bleeding, habit of, iii. 152; Boswell, gives, particulars of Johnson, iv. 375; laughed at by, iii. 135, n. 2; and Johnson visit him in 1776, ii. 473; in 1777, iii. 135; bull-dog, his, iii. 189; bullocks, his talk is of,' iii. 181; cattle, iii. 150, 181, n. 3; chandelier of crystal, iii. 157; Christ Church, Oxford, enters, i. 76; dinners at his London house, iii. 52, 238; eagerness for preferments, ii. 473, n. 1; 'elegant phraseology,' his, ii. 474, n. 1; Garrick's emphasis, anecdote of, i. 168; mediates between Garrick and Johnson, i. 196; house in Westminster, i. 238; iii. 222; Johnson's character, iii. 150 company, not very fond of, iii. 181; correspondence with, iii. 180, n. 3: See under JOHNSON, letters; dread of annihilation, iii. 296, n. 2; funeral, iv. 420; heart, knowledge of, i. 26, n. 1; invites, to dine on a hare, iii. 207; Reynolds's explanation of his intimacy with, iii. 180; roars him down, iii. 150; himself roused to a pitch of bellowing, iii. 156; serious talk with him, iii. 296, n. 2; wearies of Ashbourne life, iii. 154, 211; iv. 356, 357, n. 3, 362, 365, 378; will, not in, iv. 402, n. 2; writes sermons for him, i. 241; iii. 181; youth, friend of, iv. 270; Johnson's, Mrs., death, i. 238; iii. 180, n. 3; Langley, quarrels with, iii. 138, n. 1; lawsuit, ii. 474, n. 1; iii. 44, n. 3, 51, n. 3; Lichfield School, at, i. 44; living in ruins and rubbish, iv. 378; matriculation, i. 76; neighbours, iii. 138; sermons, iii. 181-2; sleep, observation on, iii. 169; Whig, a, ii. 474; iii. 156; widower, anecdote of a, iii. 136; wife, separation from his, i. 472, n. 4; wit, single instance of his, iii. 191; mentioned, ii. 464, 468; iii. 185, 187. TAYLOR, Mrs., Rev. Dr. John Taylor's wife, separated from her husband, i. 472, n. 4; mentioned, i. 239. TAYLOR, John, a Birmingham trader, i. 86. TAYLOR, John, of Christ Church, Oxford, confounded with Dr. John Taylor, i. 76, n. 1. TAYLOR, John (Demosthenes Taylor), iii. 318. TAYLOR, William, of Norwich, ii. 408, n. 3. TAYLOR, Mr., an engraver, iv. 421, n. 2. TAYLOR, Mr., a gentleman-artist, of Bath, iii. 422. TEA, Garrick charges Peg Woffington with making it too strong, iii. 264; his finest sort, i. 216, n. 3; Hanway's attack on its use, and Johnson's defence, i. 313; Johnson a hardened tea-drinker, i. 103, n. 3: see under JOHNSON; price of it in 1734, i. 313, n. 2; run tea, v. 449, n. 1; tea-making a l'Anglaise, ii. 403; weak, generally made, iii. 264, n. 4; Wesley attacks its use, i. 313, n. 2. TEACHING, wretchedness of, i. 85. Tears of Old May-day, i. 101. Telemachus, a Mask, i. 411; ii. 380. TEMPE, iii. 302. TEMPLE, second Earl, iv. 249, n. 3. TEMPLE, Right Rev. Frederick, Bishop of London, i. 436, n. 3. TEMPLE, Rev. William Johnson, account of him, i. 436; iii. 416, n. 3; Boswell, correspondence with, i. 436, n. 3; and he read Gray all night, ii. 335, n. 2; executor, iii. 301, n. 1; last letter written to him, i. 14, n. 1; occupies his chambers in the Temple, i. 437; visits him at Mamhead, ii. 371; Gray's character, writes, i. 436, n. 3; ii. 316; iv. 153, n. 1; Johnson, compares, with the 'infidel pensioner Hume,' ii. 316; introduced to, ii. 11; political speculations, unfit for, ii. 312, n. 4; mentioned, i. 433, n. 3; ii. 3, n. 2, 247. TEMPLE, Sir William, drinking by deputy, iii. 330; Dutch free from spleen, iv. 379; English prose, gave cadence to, iii. 257; great generals, ii. 234; Heroic Virtue, ii. 234, n. 4; Ireland, ancient state of, i. 321; peerages and property, ii. 421; style condemned by Hume, iii. 257, n. 3; praised by Mackintosh, ib.; a model to Johnson, i. 218. TEMPLE OF FAME, ii. 358. TEMPTATION, exposing people to it, iii. 237. TENANTS, their independence, v. 304: See LANDLORDS, and under SCOTLAND, Hebrides, landlords and tenants. TENDERNESS OF HEART, v. 240. Tenders, v. 196, n. 1. TENERIFFE, iv. 358. TENISON, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury, Psalmanazar introduced to him, iii. 447. TENNYSON, Alfred, Lord, poet-laureate, i. 185, n. 1; Ulysses quoted, v. 278, n. 2. TENURES, ancient, ii. 202; iii. 414. TERENCE, quoted, i. 129, n. 1; ii. 358, n. 3, 465, n. 3. TESTIMONY, compared with argument, iv. 281. Tetty or Tetsey, i. 98. THACKERAY, W. M., Addison's Cato, quotations from, i. 199, n. 2; one failing, iv. 53, n. 4; History of the Newcomes quoted, ii. 300, n. 3; subscribed to the annuity for Johnson's goddaughter, iv. 202, n. 1. THALES, i. 125, n. 4. THAMES, Budgell drowns himself in it, ii. 229; v. 54; convicts working on it, iii. 268, n. 4; Johnson and Boswell row to Greenwich, i. 458; to Blackfriars, ii. 432; returns on it from Rochester, iv. 233, n. 2; London, mentioned in, i. 460; New-England men at its mouth, v. 317; ribaldry of passers-by, iv. 26. THATCHING, v. 263. The one, iv. 211, n. 2. THEATRES, French and English compared in point of decency, ii. 50, n. 3; orange-girls, v. 185, n. 1; proposal for a third one, iv. 113: See under LONDON, Covent Garden, Drury Lane, and Haymarket. THEBES, ii. 179. THEFT, allowed in Sparta, ii. 176; iii. 293. THELWALL, John, iv. 278, n. 3. THEOBALD, Lewis, Double Falsehood, iii. 395, n. 1; Pope, attacked by, ii. 334, n. 1; Shakespeare, edits, v. 244, n. 2; Warburton, compared with, i. 329; helped by him, v. 80. THEOCRITUS, iv. 2. Theodosius, ii. 471. Theophilus Insulanus, v. 225. THEOPHRASTUS, v. 378. THICKNESSE, Philip, criticises Smollett, iii. 235-6. THIEVES, all men naturally thieves, iii. 271. Thing, not the, iv. 89. THINKING, liberty of, ii. 249, 252. THIRLBY, Dr. Styan, iv. 161, n. 4. THIRTY-NINE ARTICLES, articles of peace, ii. 104; meaning of subscription, ii. 151; petition for removing the subscription, ii. 150; motion to consider it, ii. 208, n. 4. THOMAS, Colonel, iv. 211, n. 4. THOMAS, Nathaniel, iii. 92, n. 2. THOMSON, James, blank verse of the Seasons, iv. 42, n. 7; Boswell's assistance to Johnson in his Life, ii. 63; iii. 116, 133, 359; character, his, not to be gathered from his works, iii. 117, n. 7; cloud of words, iii. 37; Edward and Eleonora not licensed, i. 141, n. 1; family, account of his, iii. 359; Johnson inserts him among the Lives, iii. 109; letters to his sisters, ii. 64; iii. 117, 360; licentiousness, ii. 63; iii. 117; Lives of Thomson, iii. 116-7; 'loathed much to write,' iii. 360; poetical eye, i. 453; ii. 63; iii. 37; 'Queensberry, worthy,' ii. 368, n. 1; Quin's generosity to him, iii. 117; Scotland, never returned to, iii. 117; Seasons, quoted, i. 98, n. 1; iii. 151, n. 4; by Voltaire, i. 435, n. 2; sisters, generosity to his, ii. 64; iii. 360; wine, love of, i. 359. THOMSON, Rev. James, case of ecclesiastical censure, iii. 58-64, 91. THOMSON, Mr., a schoolmaster (the poet's brother-in-law), ii. 64; iii. 116, 360. THORNTON, Bonnell, Adventurer, writes for the, i. 252, n. 2; Boswell enlivened by his witty sallies, i. 395; Ode on St. Cecilia's Day, i. 420; Rambler, parodies the, i. 218, n. 1; Student, writes for the, i. 209. THORP, Mr. Robert, of Macclesfield, iv. 393. n. 3. THORPE, iii. 359. THOUGHTS, command of one's, ii. 190, 202, n. 2; inquisitive and perplexing, iv. 370, n. 3; troublesome at night, ii. 440; vexing, iii. 5. Thoughts on Executive Justice, iv. 328, n. 1. Thoughts on the late Transactions respecting Falkland's Islands. See Falkland's Islands. THRALE FAMILY, account of the, i. 491, n. 1. THRALE, John, a London merchant, i. 491, n. 1. THRALE, 'Old,' the brewer, Henry Thrale's father, i. 490-1. THRALE, Henry, account of him, i. 490, 494; ambition of out-brewing Whitbread, iii. 363, n. 5; Baretti, present to, iii. 97; Bath, visits, in 1776, iii. 44; in 1780, iii. 421; Boswell's familiarity in speaking of him, i. 492, n. 1; hospitality to, iii. 45; writes to him, iii. 372; brewery,—profits, i. 491; iii. 210, 363, n. 5; iv. 87, n. 1; beer brewed, ii. 396; iii. 210, n. 5; L20,000 a year paid in excise, v. 130; first sale of it, i. 490; second sale, i. 491; iv. 86, n. 2, 132; Cator, John, one of his executors, iv. 313; champagne, his, iii. 119; churches, intends to beautify two Welsh, v. 450; death, iv. 84; false report of it, iii. 107; dinners and breakfasts at his house, ii. 77, 227, 246, 327, 338, n. 2, 349, 378, n. 1, 427; iii. 27, 248, 344; iv. 80; dislikes the times, iii. 363; eating, immoderate in, iii. 422-3; iv. 84, n. 4; expenses, iii. 210; France, tour to, ii. 384-401; Goldsmith's Haunch of Venison, mentioned in, iii. 225, n. 2; questions a statement of his about horses, ii. 232; Gordon Riots, property in danger, iii. 435; flees from Bath, ib., n. 2; Grosvenor Square, house in, iv. 72; heir, desires a male, ii. 469; iii. 95, 363, n. 4; highwayman, robbed by a, iii. 239, n. 2; illness, dangerous, i. 322, n. 1; iii. 397, 423, n. 1; better, iii. 417, 420; withdrawn from business, iii. 434; very ill, iv. 72; Baretti's account of it, iv. 84, n. 4; Italy, projected tour to, ii. 423; given up, iii. 6, 18, 27; Johnson's affection for him, iii. 397, n. 2; iv. 84-5, 89, 100; wishes to hear 'The History of the Thrales v. 313; his feelings towards Johnson, ii. 77; iv. 84, 85, n. 1, 145, 340; 'will go nowhere without him,' iii. 27, n. 3; and the Earl of Marchmont, iii. 345; epitaph on him, iv. 85, n. 1; his executor, iv. 85; receives a bequest of L200, iv. 86; guardian of his children, iv. 198, n. 4; illness in 1766, i. 521; intimacy not without restraint, iii. 7; introduction to his family, i. 490, 520; iii. 451; kitchen, inquires into, ii. 215, n. 4; loss by his death, iv. 85, 145, 157-9; prayer on it, i. 240, n. 5; suggests, as a member of parliament, ii. 137, n. 3; writes The Patriot for him, ii. 286; Lade, Sir John, his nephew, iv. 412, n. 1; melancholy, suffers from, iii. 363, n. 5; 'worried by the dog,' iii. 414, n, 1; money difficulties, iv. 85, n. 2; 'My Master,' i. 494, n. 3; iii. 119; portrait, iv. 158, n. 1; prospects, loves, v. 439, n. 2; receives L14,000, iii. 134, n. 1, 455; Rome, will not die in peace without seeing, iii. 27, n. 3; silent at Oglethorpe's, v. 277; society in his house, i. 496; son, loses his only surviving, ii. 468, 470; grief, his, iii. 18, n. 1; orbus et exspes, iii. 24, n. 5; at the Assembly Rooms, Bath, iii. 45, n. 2; son, loses his younger, iii. 4, n. 3; Southwark, Member for, i. 490; receives 'instructions' from the electors, ii. 73, n. 2; election of 1774, ii. 286, 287; of 1780, Johnson writes his Addresses, iii. 422, n. 1, 439-440; defeated, iii. 442; house in the Borough, ii. 286, n. 1; iii. 6; iv. 72, n. 1; Wales, tour to, ii. 285; v. 427-460; wife's, his, jealousy, iii. 96, n. 1; will, afraid of making his, iv. 402, n. 1; account of it, iv. 86, n. 1; mentioned, i. 83, n. 3; ii. 136, 311, 411; iii. 22-4, 54, n. 1, 126, 132, 158, n. 1, 190, n. 3, 222, 225, 240, 398, n. 3; v. 84, 102, n. 3. THRALE, Henry (son of Mr. and Mrs. Thrale), death, ii. 468, 471; iii. 4; Johnson's letter on it, i. 236, n. 3; his love of him, ii. 469; iii. 4. THRALE, Hester Lynch (Miss Salusbury, afterwards Mrs. Piozzi), account of her, i. 492-6; birth, i. 149, n. 5, 520; character by Johnson, i. 494; by Miss Burney, iv. 82, n. 4; dress and person, i. 494-5; accident to her eye, iii. 214; Argyll Street, house in, iv. 157, 164; Baretti, character of, ii. 57, n. 3; flatters her, iii. 49, n. 1; ignorance of the scriptures, v. 121, n. 4; knowledge of languages, i. 362, n. 1; quarrel with, ii. 205, n. 3; iii. 49, n. 1, 96; her account, ib., n. 1; Bath, visits, in 1776, iii. 6, 44; in 1780, iii. 421; an evening at Mrs. Montagu's, iii. 422; in 1783, iv. 166, 198, n. 4; Beattie, Dr., loves, ii. 148; Beauclerk's anecdote of the dogs, v. 329, n. 1; Beauclerk, hatred of, i. 249, n. 1; v. 329, n. 1; his truthfulness, ib.; birthplace, v. 449-51; Boswell, accuses, of spite, iv. 72, n. 1; of treachery, iv. 318, n. 1, 343; advises, not to publish the Life of Sibbald, iii. 228; alludes to her second marriage, iii. 49; argues with, on Shakespeare and Milton, iv. 72; brother David, iii. 434, n. 1; compliments, on his long head, iv. 166; controversy with, about Mrs. Montagu, v. 245; dines with her, iv. 166; hospitality to, iii. 45; introduced to her, ii. 77; 'loves,' ii. 145, 206; MS. Journal, reads, ii. 383; proposes an epistle in her name, v. 139; British Synonymy, iv. 412; Burke's son, can make nothing of, iv. 219, n. 3; Burney, Miss, letters to, iv. 340, n. 3; calculating and declaiming, iii. 49; canvasses for Mr. Thrale, iii. 442, n. 1; character, influence of vice on, iii. 350; children, her, births, ii. 46, n. 3, 280; iii. 210, n. 4, 363, 393; deaths, ii. 281, n. 2; iii. 109; three living out of twelve, iv. 157, n. 3; unfriendly with her married daughter, v. 427, n. 1; Johnson's kindness to them, iv. 345; clerk, gives a crown to an old, v. 440; clippers, warned of, iii. 49; common-place book, iv. 343; conceit of parts, iii. 316; Congreve, quotes from, ii. 227; dates, neglects, i. 122, n. 2; iv. 88, n. 1; Demosthenes's 'action,' ii. 211; 'despicable dread of living in the Borough,' iv. 72, n. 1; divorces, iii. 347-8; 'dying with a grace,' iv. 300, n. 1; Errol, Lord, at the coronation, v. 103, n. 1; estate, prefers the owner to the, ii. 428; fall from her horse, ii. 287; Fermor's, Mrs., account of Pope, ii. 392, n. 8; flattery, coarse mode of, ii. 349; Johnson talks with her about it, v. 440; Foster's Sermons, quotes, iv. 9, n. 5; France, tour to, ii. 384-401; French, contentment of the, v. 106, n. 4; Convent, visits a, ii. 385; maxims, attacks, iii. 204, n. 1; Garrick's poetry, praises, ii. 78; good breeding, want of, iv. 83; Gordon Riots, alarmed at the, iii. 428, n. 4; Gray's Odes, admires, ii. 327; Grosvenor Square, removes to, iv. 72, n. 1; Hogarth's account of Johnson, i. 147, n. 2; illness, in 1779, iii. 397; inaccuracy, her extreme, in general, i. 416, n. 2; iii. 226, 229; no anxiety about truth, iii. 243, 404; her defence of it, iii. 228; instances of it—Anecdotes, iv. 340-7; anecdote about in vino veritas, ii. 188, n. 3; Barber's visit to Langton, i. 476, n. 1; Garrick's election to the Club, i. 481; Goldsmith and the Vicar of Wakefield, i. 415, 416, n. 2; Johnson's answer to Robertson, iii. 336, n. 2; and G. J. Cholmondeley, iv. 345; harshness, i. 410; lines on Lade, iv. 412, n. 1; mother calling Sam, iv. 94, n. 4; and small kindnesses, iv. 201, 343-4; Verses to a Lady, i. 92, n. 2; 'natural history of the mouse,' ii. 194, n. 2; sutile mistaken for futile, iii. 284, n. 4; indelicacy, iv. 84, n. 4; insolence of wealth, shows the, iii. 316; interpolation in one of Johnson's letters, suspected, ii. 383, n. 2; Italian, an, on clean shirts, v. 60, n. 4; jelly, her, compared with Mrs. Abington's, ii. 349; Johnson's account of French sentiments and meat, ii. 385, n. 5; advice about the brewery, iii. 382, n. 1; about sweet-meats, iii. 186; iv. 90; on Mr. Thrale's death, iii. 136, n. 2; anxiety not to offend, iii. 54, n. 1; appeals to her love and pity, iv. 229, n. 3; appearances of friendship kept up with, iv. 164, 166; apprehensive of evil, v. 232, n. 5; asperses, i. 28; wishes to depreciate him, i. 66, n. 2; belief, fantastical account of, i. 68, n. 3; biographers, i. 26, n. 1; blames her conduct, iv. 277; his friendly animadversions, iii. 48; change in her feeling towards, iv. 340, n. 3; on children's books, iv. 8, n. 3; conversation too strong for the great, iv. 117; copyist, iv—37; dislike of extravagant praise, iii. 225; of singularity, ii. 74, n. 3; doubts her friendship, iv. 145, n. 2; dress, iii. 325; drives her from his mind, iv. 339, n. 3; and the Earl of Marchmont, iii. 344; her 'enchantment over,' v. 14; epigram, translates, i. 83, n. 3; flatters, ii. 332, n. 1, 349; flatters her, iii. 34; household, asks about, iii. 461-2; illness in 1766, i. 521; introduction to her, i. 520; Journey into North Wales, v. 427, n. 1; her kindness to, i. 520; laugh, ii. 262, n. 2; lectures, iv. 65, n. 1; Letters, publishes them for L500, i. 124, n. 4; ii. 43, n. 1; arranged inaccurately, i. 122, n. 2; error in date, iii. 453; possible alterations and interpolations, ii. 383, n. 2; iii. 49, n. 1, 96, n. 1; read by Walpole, iv. 314; her own 'studied epistles,' iii. 421; his letters to her from Scotland, ii. 303, 305; about the Gordon Riots, iii. 428-30; her letters to him in Scotland, v. 84, n. 2 (for other letters, See under JOHNSON, letters); love of her children, iv. 198, n. 4; 'loved' by her and Boswell, ii. 427; mode of eating, i. 470, n. 2; and Mrs. Montagu, iv. 64, n. 1, 65, n. l; neglects, iv. 158-9; leaves him in sickness and solitude, iv. 249, n. 2; 'one pleasant day since she left him,' iv. 436; nursed in her house, iv. 141, 181; Ode to her, v. 157-8; parody on Burke, iv. 317; pleasure in her society, i. 493-6; severe to her, iv. 159, n. 3; stuns her, v. 288; style, iii. 19, n. 2; supposed wish to marry her, iv. 387, n. 1; takes leave of her in April, 1783, iv. 198, n. 4; talk, iv. 237, n. 1; tenderness to her mother, ii. 263, n. 6; urges economy, iv. 85, n. 2; wishes for her and Mr. Thrale in the Hebrides, iii. 455; would not toast her in whisky, v. 347; 'yoke' put upon her, iv. 340; Lennox, Mrs., liked by nobody, iv. 275, n. 2; Lichfield, visits, v. 428, nn. 1 and 3; Long, Dudley, praises, iv. 81; Lyttelton's vision, iv. 298, n. 3; Malone's criticism on her Anecdotes, iv. 341; marriage, second, alluded to by Boswell, ii. 328; signs that it was coming on, iv. 158, n. 4; takes place, iv. 339; marrying inferiors in rank, ii. 328; middle class abroad, absence of a happy, ii. 402, n. 1; Montagu, Mrs., praises, iv. 275, n. 3; mother, death of her, ii. 263; Musgrave, Mr., ii. 343, n. 2; iv. 323, n. 1; 'My Mistress,' or 'Madam,' i. 494; officious, iv. 137, n. 2; Paris, contradictions in, iii. 352, n. 2; Piozzi Letters: See above under MRS. THRALE, Johnson's Letters; Pope's Universal Prayer, iii. 346-7; portrait, iv. 158, n. 1; praise, blasts by, iv. 82; Presto, the dog, iv. 347; Prior's love verses, praises, ii. 78; purse, uneasiness at losing her, v. 442; regale, v. 347, n. 1; Richardson's love of praise, v. 396, n. 1; 'severe and knowing,' iii. 318, n. 3; Siddons, Mrs., as Euphrasia, v. 103, n. 1; son, loses her only surviving, ii. 468, 470; iii. 6, 45, n. 2; Johnson's advice to her, iii, 136, n. 2; son, loses her younger, iii. 4, n. 3; Thrale family, describes the rise of the, i. 491, n. 1; Thrale's death, iv. 84; effect on her and Johnson, v. 157; describes his manners, i. 494, n. 1; jealous of him, iii. 96, n. 1; Three Warnings, ii. 26; tongue, could not restrain her, iv. 82; truth, indifference to: See above under inaccuracy; Wales, estate in it, ii. 281; tour there, ii. 285; v. 427-60; wit, iv. 103, n. 1; Young's, Dr., ignorance of rhopalick verses, v. 269, n. 3; mentioned, ii. 142, 364, n. 3, 379; i11. 29, 33, 95, 126, 132, 248, 372; iv. 5, n. 1, 75, 80, 169, 242; v. 110. THRALE, Miss, Baretti's Dialogues written for her, ii. 449, n. 2; Bath, at, in 1780, iii. 422; birth-day party, iii. 157, n. 3; harpsichord, playing on the, ii. 409; Johnson teaches her Latin, iv. 345, n. 2; v. 451, n. 2; is visited by her in his last illness, iv. 339, n. 3; Marie Antoinette, seen by, ii. 385; marries Admiral Lord Keith, v. 427, n. 1; mother, unfriendly with her, v. 427, n. 1; portrait, iv. 158, n. 1; Queeny, iii. 422, n. 4; v. 451, n. 2; mentioned, iii. 6; iv. 86, n. 2. THRALE, Miss Sophia, Johnson advises her to study arithmetic, iv. 171, n. 3. Three Warnings, The, ii. 26. THRESHING, v. 263. THROCKMORTON, Mr., of Weston Underwood, v. 439, n. 1. THRONE, The, something behind it greater than it, iii. 416, n. 2. THUANUS (De Thou), Johnson thinks of translating his History, iv. 410; mentioned, i. 32, 208, n. 1. THUCYDIDES, his quotations from Homer, iii. 331. THURLOW, first Lord, Boswell bows the intellectual knee to him, iv. 179, n. 2; Journal of a Tour, praises, i. 3, n. 1; writes to him, iv. 327; his answer, iv. 336; character by Sir W. Jones, iv. 349, n. 3; copyright, speech on, ii. 247, n. 5, 345; Cowper, treatment of, iv. 349, n. 3; duel with Andrew Stuart, ii. 230, n. 1; Horne Tooke, encounter with, iv. 327, n. 4; prosecutes him, iii. 354, n. 3; Horsley, rewards, iv. 438; Johnson's companion, iii. 22; generous offer to, iv. 348; letter to, iii. 441; v. 364, n. 1; letter from him, iv. 349; pension, proposed addition to, iv. 327-8, 348-350, 367-8; would prepare himself to meet him, iv. 327; legal opinion on Rev. J. Thomson's case, iii. 63; Macbean and the Charterhouse, i. 187; Prince of Wales and Sir John Ladd, iv. 412, n. 1; 'puts his mind to yours,' iv. 179; Reynolds, letter to, iv. 350, n. 1; Royal Marriage Bill, ii. 152, n. 2; small certainties, ii. 323, n. 1; Taylor's, Dr., lawsuit, iii. 44; mentioned, iv. 310. THUROT, M., iv. 101. TIBER, iii. 251. TIBULLUS, Grainger's translation, ii. 454; quoted, iv. 407, n. 1. TICHBORNE TRIAL, v. 247, n. 2. TICKELL, Richard, Epistle from the Hon. Charles Fox, ii. 292, n. 4; iii. 388, n. 3; The Project, iii. 318, n. 2. TICKELL, Thomas, aided Blackmore in his Creation, ii. 108; Life by Johnson, iv. 56. TIGER, River, v. 242, n. 1. TILLEMONT, Gibbon praises his accuracy, i. 7, n. 1. TILLOTSON, John, Archbishop of Canterbury, Sermons, iii. 247; on transubstantiation, v. 71. TIME AND SPACE, iv. 25. Times, The, quoted, v. 400, n. 4. TIMIDITY, iv. 200, n. 4. TIMMINS, Mr. Samuel, Dr. Johnson in Birmingham quoted, i. 85, n. 3, 95, n. 3. TINDAL, Dr., ii. 229, n. 1. TIPPOO, iii. 356, n. 2. Titi, Prince, ii. 391. TOASTS, iv. 29. TOLAND, John, i. 29. TOLCHER, Old Mr., i. 152, n. 3. TOLERATION, ii. 249-254; iv. 12, 216; universal, iii. 380. TOMASI, Signora, ii. 451, n. 3. To Miss—, i. 178. To Miss—on her giving the Authour a Purse, ii. 25. Tommy Prudent, iv. 8, n. 3. TONSON, Jacob, Budgell's Epilogue, iii. 46; Dryden's engagement with him, i. 193, n. 1. TONSON, Jacob, the younger, Johnson praises him, i. 227, n. 3; mentioned, i. 263, n. 3. TOOKE, Horne (at first Rev. John Horne), Beckford's speech to the King, iii. 201, n. 3; Boswell, altercation with, iii. 354, n. 2; Diversions of Purley, iii. 354, n. 2; imprisonment, iii. 314, n. 6; writ of error, iii. 345, n. 3; Johnson's etymologies, criticises, iii. 354; reads the preface to his Dictionary with tears, i. 297, n. 2; iii. 354, n. 1; Letter to Mr. Dunning, iii. 354; living, resigns his, iii. 201, n. 3; Norton, Sir Fletcher, attacks, ii. 472, n. 2; pillory, should have been set in the, iii. 314; too much literature for it, iii. 354; Lord Mansfield durst not venture it, ib., n. 3; Thurlow, encounter with, iv. 327, n. 4. TOPHAM, Edward, proprietor of The World, iii. 16, n. 1. TOPLADY, Rev. Mr., attacked by Wesley, v. 35, n. 3; meets Johnson at Dilly's, ii. 247, 253, 255. TOPOGRAPHICAL WORKS, iii. 164, n. 1. TOPPING, Mr., of Christ Church, iii. 449. TOPSELL, Edward, i. 138, n. 5. TORIES, defined, i. 294; iii. 174, n. 3; generated, how, iii. 326; hostile to Spain, i. 147, n. 5; identified with Jacobites, i. 429, n. 4; Of Tory and Whig, iv. 117; opposition to the Court, ii. 112; reverence for government, iv. l00; Whigs, enmity with, iv. 291; Whigs when out of place, i. 129. TORRE, M., fire-work maker, iv. 324. TORTURE, i. 466, 467, n. 1. TOTTENHAM, iii. 45, n. 1. TOUCH, sense of, ii. 190. TOUR OF EUROPE, iii. 458. TOWERS, Dr. J., Essay on the Life of Johnson, iv. 41, n. 1; Johnson's Life of Milton, praises, iv. 40; Letter to Dr. Johnson, &c., ii. 316. TOWNLEY, C., an engraver, iv. 421, n. 2. TOWNLEY, Charles, iii. 118, n. 3. TOWNMALLING, iii. 452. TOWNSEND, Alderman, Johnson attacks him, ii. 135, n. 1; Lord Mayor, iii. 459; iv. 175, n. 1; refuses to pay the land-tax, iii. 460; mentioned, iii. 201, n. 3. TOWNSHEND, second Viscount, ii. 342, n. 1; v. 357, n. 1. TOWNSHEND, fourth Viscount (afterwards first Marquis), i. 437, n. 2. TOWNSHEND, Right Hon. Charles, Akenside, friendship with, iii. 3; 'Champagne Speech,' ii. 222, n. 3; jokes and wit, ii. 222; ib., n. 3; Kames, Lord, criticises, ii. 90, n. 1. TOWNSHEND, Hon. John, Tickell's Epistle, ii. 292, n. 4. TOWNSHEND, Right Hon. Thomas (afterwards first Viscount Sydney), Goldsmith's 'Tommy Townshend,' iii. 233, n. 1; attacks Johnson, iv. 318; moves that Nowell's sermon be burnt, iv. 296, n. 1. TOWNSON, Rev. Dr., ii. 258, n. 3; iv. 300, n. 2. TRADE, difficulty, has not much, iii. 382, n. 2; gaming, like, v. 232; injury done to the body, ii. 218; leisure of those engaged, v. 59; military spirit injured by it, ii. 218; opportunity of rising in the world, ii. 98; produces no capital accession of wealth, ii. 98; but intermediate good, ii. 176; profit in pleasure, ii. 98; rapid rise of traders, i. 490; writers on it, ii. 430. Trade, The (the booksellers of London), i. 438; ii. 345; iii. 285. TRADESMEN, Chatham's description of the honest tradesman, v. 327, n. 4; excite anger by their opulence, v. 327; fires in the parlour, v. 6; funeral-sermon for a tradesman's daughter, ii. 122; retired from business, ii. 120; one attacked by the stone, iii. 176, n. 1; wives, their, iii. 353. TRADITION, untrustworthy, v. 224; of the Church, v. 71. TRAGEDIANS, ridiculed in The Idler, v. 38, n. 1. TRAGEDY, a ludicrous one, iii. 238; passions purged by it, iii. 39; worse for being acted, ii. 92, n. 4; v. 38: See PLAYERS. TRANSLATIONS, how to judge of their merit, iii. 256; Sir John Hill's contract for one, ii. 39; n. 2; what books can and what cannot be translated, iii. 36, 257. Transpire, iii. 343. TRANSPORT, Rational, iii. 338. TRANSUBSTANTIATION, v. 71, 88. TRANSYLVANIA, ii. 7, n. 3. TRAPAUD, General Cyrus, v. 135. TRAPAUD, Governor, v. 134, 142. TRAPP, Dr. i. 140, n. 5; iv. 381, n. 1. TRAVELLERS, ancient, guessed; modern travellers measure, iii. 356; mean to tell the truth, iii. 235; modern mostly laughed at, iii. 300; strange turn to be displeased, iii. 236; unsatisfactory unless trustworthy, ii. 333. TRAVELLING, advice about it, i. 431; Cowper, Gibbon, Goldsmith and Locke on the age for travelling, iii. 458-9; human life great object of remark, iii. 301, n. 2; idle habits broken off, i. 409; Johnson's love of it, iii. 449-459; Rasselas, described in, i. 340, n. 1; rates of travelling London to St. Andrews, i. 359, n. 3; to Edinburgh, v. 21, n. 1; to Harwich, i. 466, n. 2; to Lichfield, i. 340, n. 1; ii. 45; iii. 411; to Milan, i. 370, n. 4; to Salisbury, iv. 234, n. 3; supplies little to the conversation, iii. 352; time ill spent on it in early manhood, iii. 352, 458. TRAVELS, books of, writers very defective, ii. 377; should start with full minds, iii. 301; writing under a feigned character, iv. 320. TREASON, constructive, iv. 87. Treatise on Painting, i. 128, n. 2. TRECOTHICK, Alderman, account of him, iii. 76, n. 2; his English, iii. 76, 201; Lord Mayor, iii. 459. TREE, given a jerk by Divines, iv. 226. TREES, their propagation, ii. 168. See under SCOTLAND, trees. TRENTHAM, i. 36, n. 2. TREVELYAN, Sir G. O., Johnson and the Rev. John Macaulay, v. 360. n. 1; Rev. Kenneth Macaulay's History of St. Kilda, v. 119, n. 3. TRIAL BY DUEL, v. 24. TRICKS, either knavish or childish, iii. 396. TRIFLES, life composed of them, i. 433, n. 4; ii. 359, n. 2; contentment with them, iii. 241-2; their importance, i. 317; iii. 355. TRIMLESTOWN, Lord, iii. 227-8. TRINITY, doctrine of the, ii. 254-5; v. 88. Tristram Shandy. See STERNE. TRONCHIN, M., iii. 301, n. 1. TROTTER, Beatrix, iii. 359. TROTTER, ——, an engraver, iv. 421, n. 2. TROTZ, Professor, i. 475. TROUGHTON, Lieutenant, a loquacious wanderer, v. 448. TRUTH, children to be strictly trained in it, iii. 228; comfort of life, essential to the, iv. 305; consolation drawn from it, i. 339; contests concerning moral truth, iii. 17; deviations from it very frequent, iii. 403-4; human experience its test, i. 454; 'I'd tell truth and shame the devil,' ii. 222; moral and physical, iv. 6; 'not at home,' i. 436; obligatory, how far, iii. 320, 377; iv. 305-6; painful to be forced to defend it, iii. 11; perpetual vigilance needed, iii. 230; iv. 361; publishing it against oneself, iv. 396; v. 211; religious truth established by martyrdom, ii. 250; rights to utter it and knock down for uttering it, iv. 12; sick, should be told to the, iv. 306; society held together by it, iii. 293; story, essential to a, ii. 433: See under JOHNSON, truthfulness. TUAM, Archbishop of, ii. 265, n. 4; iv. 198, n. 2. TULL, Jethro, v. 324. TUNBRIDGE SCHOOL, iv. 330. TUNBRIDGE WELLS, Mrs. Montagu writes from it in 1760, ii. 64. n. 2; print of the company there in 1748, i. 190, n. 1; mentioned, iii. 45, n. 1. TURGOT, existence of matter, i. 471, n. 2. TURKEY and the Turks, Boswell wishes to visit it, iv. 199; opium in common use, iv. 171; sweep Greece, ii. 194; want of Stirpes, ii. 421; mentioned, v. 74. TURKISH LADY, a, i. 343. Turkish Spy, iv. 199; v. 341. TURNER, John, a fencing-master, v. 103, n, 2. TURNPIKES, v. 56, n. 2. TURSELLINUS, i. 77. TURTON, Dr., iii. 164. TWALMLEY THE GREAT, iv. 193. TWELLS, Leonard, Life of Dr. E. Pocock, iv. 185. TWICKENHAM, Boswell and Johnson's drive to it, ii. 361-4; Cambridge's, Mr., villa, ii. 361; highwaymen, iii. 239, n. 1; society, ii. 120. TWINING, Rev. Thomas, Recreations and Studies of a Country Clergyman, Johnson's dislike of 'the former, the latter,' iv. 190, n. 2; funeral, iv. 420, n. 1; the old willow-tree at Lichfield, iv. 372, n. 1. TWISS, Richard, Travels, ii. 345. TYBURN, executions there abolished, iv. 188; procession to it, iv. 189, n. 1; 'Tyburn's elegiac lines,' ib.: See EXECUTIONS. TYERS, Jonathan, iii. 308. TYERS, Thomas, account of him, iii. 308-9; Biographical Sketch of Dr. Johnson, iii. 308; v. 73, n. 2; Johnson like a ghost: See JOHNSON, Ghost; rapid composition, i. 192, n. 1; talked as if on oath, ii. 434, n. 2; wish to visit India and Poland, iii. 456; Tom Restless of The Idler, iii. 308, n. 3; mentioned, ii. 107. TYRANNY, remedy against it, ii. 170. TYRAWLEY, Lord, account of him, ii. 211, n. 4; Chesterfield's saying, ii. 211. TYRCONNEL, Lord, Savage's letter to him, i. 161, n. 3; patronised by him, i. 173, 372, n. 1. TYRWHITT, Thomas, Chatterton's poems, iii. 50, n. 5; iv. 141, n. 1. TYTLER, A. F. (son of W. Tytler, afterwards Lord Woodhouselee), meets Johnson, v. 387, n. 4, 388, n. 2, 402. TYTLER, William, History of Mary Queen of Scots, i. 354; v. 274, n. 2, 387; Johnson's Journey, praises, ii. 305-6; meets him, v. 394, 396.
U.
UDSON, Mr., ii. 398. ULYSSES, i. 12. UNCLUBABLE, i. 27, n. 2, 480, n. 1; iv. 254, n. 2. UNDERSTANDING, inverted, iii. 379; man's superiority over woman, iii. 52; propagating it, ii. 109, n. 2; Reynolds's rule for judging it, iv. 316. UNEASINESS, iv. 273. UN-IDEA'D, 'A set of wretched unidea'd girls,' i. 251. Union, The, i. 117, n. 1. UNITARIANS, ii. 408, n. i; iv. 125, n. 2. Unius lacertae, iii. 255. Universal Chronicle, or Weekly Gazette, i. 330, 345, n. 1. Universal History, iii. 443; iv. 311. Universal Visiter, i. 178, n. 2, 306; ii. 345. UNIVERSITY, conversation of a man taught at an English one, v. 370; English and Scotch compared, i. 63, n. 1; v. 85, n. 2; fellowships, value of, iii. 13; foreign professorships, iii. 14; Gibbon, attacked by, iii. 13, n. 3; rich, not too, as Adam Smith asserts, iii. 13; school where everything may be learnt, should be a, ii. 371; subscription to the Articles, ii. 151; v. 64; theory and practice, ii. 52; iii. 138: See under CAMBRIDGE and OXFORD, and under SCOTLAND, Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow, and St. Andrews. Unscottified, ii. 242; v. 55, n. 1. UNWINS, the, Cowper's friends, i. 522. UPPER-OSSORY, Lord, iii. 230, n. 5. UPSTARTS, getting into parliament, ii. 153, 339. URBINO, v. 276. URIE, Captain, v. 135. URNS, iv. 421, n. 2; v. 453, n. 1. Ursa Major. See JOHNSON, bear. USHER, Archbishop, assists Lydiat, i. 194, n. 2; luminary of the Irish Church, ii. 132. USHER, at a school, i. 84. USURY, law against, iii. 26. UTILITY, beauty not dependent on it, ii. 166; iv. 167. Utopia, iii. 202, n. 3. UTRECHT, Boswell a student there, i. 400, 473; ii. 9; William Pitt (Earl of Chatham), a student, ii. 177, n. 1. UTTOXETER MARKET, Johnson does penance there, i. 56, n. 2; iv. 373; Michael Johnson's shop, i. 36, n. 3. UZa^S, Duke of, iii. 322, n. 3.
V.
VACANCIES, eagerness for, iii. 251. VACHELL, William, iii. 83, n. 3. VACUUM, i. 444, n. 2. 'VAGABOND, Mr.,' iii. 411, n. 1. Vagabondo, Il, i. 202; iii. 411. VAILS, ii. 78. VALENCIA, ii. 195, n. 3; iii. 434. VALETUDINARIANS, ii. 460; Johnson's disgust at them, iii. 1, 152. VALLANCY, Colonel, iv. 272, 278. VANBRUGH, Sir John, attempted to answer Jeremy Collier, iv. 286, n. 3; Provoked Husband, ii. 48, n. 3; iv. 284, n. 2; Reynolds's tribute to him, iv. 55. VANE, Anne, v. 49, n. 4. VANE, Lady, v. 49, n. 4. Vanessa, ii. 389, n. 1. Vanity of Human Wishes, account of it, i. 192-5; price paid for it, i. 193, n. 1; rapidly composed, i. 192; ii. 15; written mostly at Hampstead, i. 192; Boswell finds in it the means of happiness, iii. 122, n. 2; Byron's admiration of it, i. 193, n. 3; death, 'kind nature's signal of retreat,' ii. 106; De Quincey on the opening lines, i. 193, n. 3; Garrick's sarcasm on it, i. 194; Johnson reads it with tears, iv. 45, n. 3; misery, 'the doom of man,' iii. 198; v. 179; 'Patron and the jail,' i. 264; Rasselas, resemblance to, i. 342; Scott's admiration of it, i. 193, n. 3; iv. 45, n. 3; spreads changed into burns, iii. 357-8; Vane and Sedley, v. 49; Wolsey, Cardinal, iii. 221, n. 4. VANSITTART, Dr., account of him, i. 348, n. 1; v. 460, n. 1; story of the flea and the lion, ii. 194, n. 2; mentioned, ii. 192. VASS, Lauchland, v. 131, 144. VEAL, Mrs., her ghost, ii. 163. VEALE, Thomas, iv. 77, n. 3. VENICE, Beauclerk plundered there by a gambler, i. 381, n. 1; Johnson wishes to visit it, iii. 19; mentioned, i. 362; v. 69, n. 3. VENUS, of Apelles, iv. 104. Veracious, iv. 39, n. 3. VERACITY. See TRUTH. Verbiage ii. 236; iii. 256. Verecundulus, i. 68, n. 1. VERNON'S Parish Clerk, v. 268, n. 1. VERSAILLES, ii. 385, 395; theatre, ii. 395, n. 2. VERSES, in a dead language, ii. 371; making them, ii. 15. Verses on Ireland, iii. 319. Verses on a Sprig of Myrtle, i. 92. Verses to Mr. Richardson on his Sir Charles Grandison, ii. 26. VERTOT, ii. 237; iv. 311. VESEY, Right Hon. Agmondesham, gentle manners, his, iv. 28; Literary Club, member of the, i. 479; ii. 318; professor in the imaginary college, v. 108. VESEY, Mrs., evenings at her house described by Langton, iii. 424; iv. 1, n. 1; by Hannah More, iii. 424, n. 3; by Horace Walpole, iii. 425, n. 3; by Miss Burney, iii. 426, n. 3; by Johnson, ib., n. 4; wishes to introduce Johnson to Raynal, iv. 435. VESTRIS, the dancer, iv. 79. Vexing Thoughts, iii. 5. Vicar of Wakefield. See GOLDSMITH. VICE, character not hurt by it, iii. 349; compared with virtue, iii. 342; Mandeville's doctrine: See MANDEVILLE. Vicious Intromission, Johnson's argument, ii. 196-201, 206; iii. 102; v. 48. VICTOR, Benjamin, iv. 53. VICTORIA, Queen, death-warrants, iii. 121, n. 1. VIDA, i. 230, n. 1. Vidit et erubuit, iii. 304. VILETTE, Rev. Mr., Dodd's dedication to him, iii. 167, n. 1; his virtues, iv. 329. Village, The, a poem, iv. 121, n. 4, 175. VILLIERS, Sir George, his ghost, iii. 351. VINCENT, William, Dean of Westminster, i. 302, n. 1. Vindication of the Licensers of the Stage, i. 140; ii, 60, n. 3. VIRGIL, Aeneid, its story, iv. 218; Aeneas's treatment of Dido, iv. 196; Burke's ragged copy, iii. 193, n. 3; farming, love of, v. 78; Homer, compared with, iii. 193; Johnson reads him, ii. 288; iv. 218; juvenile translations, i. 51; machinery, his, iv. 16; Pope, less talked of than, iii. 332; printing-house, describes a, v. 311-12; Theocritus, compared with, iv. 2; quotations: Eclogues i. 5—i. 460; Eclogues i. 11—iii. 310, n. 4; Eclogues ii. 16—iii. 87, n. 3; 212, n. 2; Eclogues iii. 64—v. 291, n, 1; Eclogues iii. 111—v. 279, n. 3; Eclogues viii. 43—i. 261, n. 3; Georgics ii. 173—iv. 372, n. 1; Georgics iii. 9—ii. 329, n. 3; Georgics iii. 66—ii. 129; Georgics iv. l32—iv. 173, n. 2; Aeneid i. 3—v. 392, n. 4; Aeneid i. l99—iv. 258, n. 1; Aeneid i. 2O2—v. 333, n. 3; Aeneid i. 204—v. 392, n. 3; Aeneid i. 378—iv. 193, n. 2; Aeneid i. 460-iii. 162, n. 1; Aeneid ii. 5—iii. 64, n. 1; Aeneid ii. 6—ii. 262, n. 1; Aeneid ii. 49—iii. 108, n. 3; Aeneid ii. l98—iii. 212, n. 1; Aeneid ii. 368—v. 50, n. 1; Aeneid ii. 544—i. 142; Aeneid iii. 461—ii. 22; Aeneid vi. 273—v. 311; Aeneid vi. 4l7—v. 311, n. 4; Aeneid vi. 660—iv. 193, n. 2; Aeneid vi. 730—1. 66; Aeneid xii. 424—ii. 272, n. 1. VIRTUE, how far followed by happiness, i. 389, n. 2; men naturally virtuous compared with those who overcome inclinations, iv. 224; not natural to man, iii. 352; practised for the sake of character, iii. 342, 349; scholastic, ii. 223; why preferable to vice, iii. 342. Virtue, an Ethick Epistle, iii. 199, n. 2. Vision of Theodore the Hermit, i. 192, 483, n. 2. VIVACITY, an art, ii. 462. VOLCANOES, strata of earth in them, ii. 467. VOLGA, iv. 277. VOLTAIRE, 'Apres tout, c'est un monde passable,' i. 344; attacks, on answers to, v. 274, n. 4; Boswell visits him, i. 434, 435, n. 2; ii. 5; iii. 301, n. 1; v. 14; Bouhours, ii. 90, n. 3; Byng, Admiral, i. 314; Candide, i. 342; iii. 356; 'Cerberes de la litterature,' v. 311, n. 4; Charles XII's dress, ii. 475, n. 3; Derham, William, v. 323, n. 4; Des Maizeaux's Life of Bayle, i. 29, n, 1; Dubos, ii. 90, n. 2; Essai sur les Moeurs, ii. 53, n. 2; fame, his, iii. 263, 332; forgotten ideas, the situation of, i. 435, n. 2; Frederick the Great, contest with, i. 434; v. 103, n. 2; Ganganelli's Letters, iii. 286; Hay, Lord Charles, iii. 8, n. 3; Henault, ii. 383, n. 1; History of the War in 1741, v. 272; Histoire de Louis XIV, v. 393; Holbach's Systeme de la Nature, v. 47, n. 4; Hume, his echo, ii. 53; insurrection of 1745-6, account of the, iii. 414; Johnson attacks him, i. 498, 499, n. 1; praises his knowledge, but attacks his honesty, i. 435, n. 2; his reply, i. 499; and Frederick the Great, i. 434; Julia Mandeville, reviews, ii. 402, n. 1; Kames, Lord, ii. 90, n. 1; Le desastre de Lisbonne, iv. 302, n. 1; Le Monde comme il va, i. 344, n. 2; Leroi, the watch-maker, ii. 391, n. 5; Lewis XIV, celebrated in many languages, i. 123; and Mlle. de la Valliere, v. 49, n. 3; loved a striking story, iii. 414; Macdonald, Sir James, v. 152, n. 1; Malagrida, iv. 174, n. 5; master of English oaths, i. 435, n. 1; Maupertuis's death, ii. 54, n. 3; middle class in England and France, ii. 402, n. 1; Montagu's, Mrs., Essay, ii. 88; Moreri, v. 311, n. 1; narrator, good, ii. 125; Newton, Leibnitz and Clarke, v. 287, n. 2; Pope and Dryden, distinguishes, ii. 5; Pope, visits, i. 499, n. 1; Pretender, reflections on the, v. 199-200; read less than formerly, iv. 288; Reynolds's allegorical picture, v. 273, n. 4; Rousseau, compared with, ii. 12; Shakespeare, attacks, i. 498; ii. 88, n. 3; made him known to the French, ii. 88, n. 2; Stuart, House of, v. 200; torture in France, i. 467, n. 1; trial, has not yet stood his, v. 311; Universal History, v. 311; Vir est acerrimi ingenii et paucarum literarum, ii. 406; Wesley calls him coxcomb and cynic, v. 378, n. 1; witchcraft, v. 46, n. 1; wonders, caught greedily at, i. 498, n. 4; iii. 229, n. 3. Vossius, Isaac, i. 186, n. 2. Voting, privilege of, ii. 340. Vows, Cowley's lines on them, iii. 357, n. 1; Johnson's warning against them, ii. 21; a snare for sin, iii. 357; if unnecessary a folly and a crime, iii. 357, n. 1. Vox Viva, v. 324. Voyage to Lisbon, i. 269, n. 1. Voyages to the South Sea. See SOUTH SEA. Vranyken, University of, i. 475. Vulgar, The, children of the State, ii. 14; iv. 216. Vyse, Rev. Dr., Boswell, letter to, iii. 125; Johnson's letter to him, iii. 125; mentioned, iv. 372, n. 2.
W.
Wade, General, calls the M'Farlane Mr. M'Farlane, v. 156, n. 3; his Hut, v. 134. Wager, Charles, ii. 164, n. 5. Wages, raising those of day-labourers wrong, iv. 176; v. 263; women-servants' less than men-servants', ii. 217. Wake, Archbishop, ii. 342, n. 1. Waldegrave, Lady, ii. 224, n. 1. Wales, Abergeley, v. 446; Angle-sea, ii. 284; v. 447; Bach y Graig (Bachycraigh), iii. 134, n. 1, 454; v. 436, 438; Bangor, ii. 284; v. 447, 448, 452; Beaumaris, v. 447-8; Bible in Welsh, v. 450, 454; Bodryddan, v. 442, n. 3; Bodville, v. 449-51; Boswell proposes a tour, iii. 134, 454; Brecon, iii. 139; Bryn o dol, v. 449; Caernarvon, v. 448, 451; castles, compared with Scotch, ii. 285; v. 374, n. 1; vast size, v. 437, 442, 448-9, 452; charitable establishment, iii. 255; Chirk Castle, v. 453; churches at Bodville neglected, v. 450; Clwyd, River, v. 438; Conway, v. 446, 452; Danes, settlement of, v. 130; Denbigh, ii. 282; v. 437-8, 453; Dymerchion, v. 438, 440; Elwy, River, v. 438; great families kept a kind of court, v. 276; Gwaynynog, iv. 421, n. 2; v. 440, n. 1, 443, 452-3; hiring of harvest-men, v. 453; Holywell, v. 440-2; inhospitality, v. 452; inns, v. 446-7; Johnson's tour to Wales, ii. 279, 281, 282, 284; v. 427: see Journey into North Wales; Kefnamwyellh, v. 452; literature, indifference to, v. 443; Llanerk, v. 450; Llangwinodyl, v. 449, 451; Llannerch, v. 439; Llanrhaiadr, v. 453; Lleweney Hall, Johnson visits it, ii. 282; v. 435-46; description of it, v. 436; pales and gates brought from it, v. 433; Llyn Badarn, v. 451; Llyn Beris, v. 451; Maesmynnan, v. 445; manuscripts, ii. 383; Methodists, v. 451; Mold, v. 435; mutinous in 1779, iii. 408, n. 4; offers nothing for speculation, ii. 284; Oswestry, v. 454; parson's awe of Johnson, v. 450, n. 2; Penmaen Mawr, ii. 284; v. 447, 452; Penmaen Rhos, v. 446, 452; Pwlheli, v. 451; rivers, v. 442, n. 4; Ruabon, v. 450, n, 2; Ruthin Castle, v. 442; second sight, ii. 150; Tydweilliog, v. 449, 451; Ustrad, River, v. 442, n. 4; Welsh language, how far related to Irish, i. 322; scheme for preserving it, v. 443; used in the Church services, v. 438, 440, 441, 446, 449, 450; Welshmen, generally have the spirit of gentlemen, iii. 275; Wrexham, ii. 240, w. 4; v. 453. WALES, Prince of. See PRINCE OF WALES. WALKER, John, 'celebrated master of elocution,' iv. 206; dedication to Johnson, iv. 421, n. 2. WALKER, Joseph Cooper, i. 321; iii. 111, n. 4. WALKER, Thomas, the actor, ii. 368. WALKING, habit of, i. 64, n. 4. WALL, Dr., iv. 292. WALL, cost of a garden wall, iv. 205. WALL, taking the, i. 110; v. 230. WALLACE, ——, a Scotch author of the first distinction, ii. 53, n. 1. WALLER, Edmund, Amoret and Sacharissa, ii. 360; Divine Poesie, the communion of saints, iv. 290, n. 1; Dryden, studied by, iv. 38, n. 1; Epistle to a Lady, v. 221, n. 1; grandson, a plain country gentleman, v. 86; great-grandson, at Aberdeen, v. 85; Life by Johnson, iv. 36, n. 4, 38, n. 2, 39; Loving at first sight, iv. 36; Reflections on the Lord's Prayer, iv. 290, n. 4; water-drinker, iii. 327, n. 2; women, praises of, ii. 57. WALMSLEY, Gilbert, character by Johnson, i. 81; iii. 439; Colson, letter to, i. 102; debtor to Mrs. Johnson, i. 79, n. 2; Garrick, letter to, i. 176, n. 2; scholarship, ii. 377, n. 2; Greek, knowledge of, iv. 33, n. 3; house, ii. 467; Johnson and Garrick, recommends, i. 102; Johnson threatens to put Irene into the Spiritual Court, i. 101; Whig, a, i. 81, 430; iii. 439, n. 3; v. 386. WALMSLEY, Mrs., i. 82-3. WALPOLE, Horatio (afterwards first Baron Walpole), iii. 71, n. 4. WALPOLE, Horace (afterwards fourth Earl of Orford), Adams the architects, ii. 325, n. 3; addresses to the King in 1784, iv. 265, n. 5; arbitrary power, courtiers in favour of, iii. 84, n. 1; arithmetician, a woeful, iii. 226, n. 4; Professor Sanderson and the multiplication table, ii. 190, n. 3; Astle, Thomas, i. 155, n. 2; atheism and bigotry first cousins, iv. 194, n. 1; Atterbury on Burnet's History, ii. 213, n. 3; balloons, iv. 356, n. 1; Barrington, Daines, iv. 437; Barry's Analysis, iv. 224, n. 1; Bate and the Morning Post, iv. 296, n. 3; Beauclerk's library, iv. 105, n. 2; Beckford's Bribery Bill, ii. 339, n. 2; speech to the King, iii. 201, n. 3; tyrannic character, iii. 76, n. 2; Biographia Britannica, iii. 174, n. 3; Blagden on Boswell's Life, iv. 30, n. 2; Boccage, Mme. du, iv. 331, n. 1; bonmots, collection of, iii. 191, n. 2; Boswell calls on him, iv. 110, n. 3; Corsica, ii. 46, n. 1, 71, n. 2; Life of Johnson, iv. 314, n. 5; presence, silent in, ib.; Burke's wit, iv. 276, n. 2; Bute's, Lord, familiar friends, i. 386, n. 3; and the tenure of the judges, ii. 353, n. 3; Cameron's execution, i. 146, n. 2; Chambers's Treatise on Architecture, iv. 187, n. 4; Chatham's funeral, iv. 208, n. 1; Chatterton and Goldsmith, iii. 51, n. 2; Chesterfield as a patron, iv. 331, n. 1; wit, ii. 211, n. 3; Cibber, Colley, i. 401, n. 1; iii. 72, n. 4; City Address to the King in 1781, iv. 139, n. 4; City and Blackfriars Bridge, i. 351, n. 1; Clarke, Dr., and Queen Caroline, iii. 248, n. 2; Clive, Mrs., iii. 239, n. 1; iv. 243, n. 2; Cock Lane Ghost, i. 407, n. 1; Codrington, Life of Colonel, iii. 204, n. 1; Cornwallis's capitulation, iii. 355, n. 3; Critical Review, iii. 32, n. 4; Cross Readings, iv. 322, n. 2; Cumberland, William, Duke of, cruelty of, ii. 375, n. 1; Cumberland's Odes, iii. 43, n. 3; Dalrymple, Sir John, ii. 210, n. 2; Dashwood, Sir F., ii. 135, n. 2; Devonshire, third Duke of, iii. 186, n. 4; Dodd's execution, iii. 120, n. 3; attempt to bribe the Chancellor, iii. 139, n. 3; sermon at the Magdalen House, iii. 139, n. 4; Dodsley, Robert, ii. 447, n. 2; Drummond's Travels, v. 323, n. 3; Dublin theatre riot, i. 386, n. 1; duelling, ii. 226, n. 5; Dundas, 'Starvation,' ii. 160, n. 1; Dunning's motion on the influence of the Crown, iv. 220, n. 5; Eton, revisits, iv. 127, n. 1; Fitzherbert's suicide, ii. 228, n. 3; Fitzpatrick, Richard, iii. 388, n. 3; freethinking, iii. 388, n. 3; French, affect philosophy and free-thinking, iii. 388, n. 3; gentleman's visit to London in 1764, iv. 92, n. 5; ladies, indelicacy of the talk of, ii. 403, n, 1; iii. 352, n. 2; meals, ii. 402, n. 2; middling and common people, ii. 402, n. 1; philosophy, iii. 305, n. 2; savans, iii. 254, n. 1; 'talk gruel and anatomy,' iv. 15, n. 4; gaming-clubs, iii. 23, n. 1; Garrick's acting, iv. 243, n. 6; funeral, iv. 208, n. 1; George I and Miss Brett, i. 174, n. 2; burnt two wills, ii. 342, n. 1; his will burnt, ib.; iv. 107, n. 1; George II and Alexander's Feast, i. 209, n. 2; character, i. 147, n. 1; and the fast of Jan. 30, ii. 152, n. 1; and his father's will, ii. 342, n. 1; iv. 107, n. 1; George III aims at despotism, i. 116, n. 1; as commander-in-chief, iii. 365, n. 4; coronation, iii. 9, n. 2; v. 103, n. 1; and Sir John Dalrymple, ii. 210, n. 2; and the fast of Jan. 30, ii. 152, n. 1; and Johnson's Journey, ii. 290, n. 2; ministers his tools, iii. 408, n. 4; his own minister, i. 424, n. 1; mother and Lord Bute, iv. 127, n. 3; and the sea, i. 340, n. 1; George IV in his youth, ii. 33, n. 3; Leonidas Glover, v. 116, n. 4; Goldsmith's envy, i. 413, n. 3; an 'inspired idiot,' i. 412, n. 6; 'silly,' i. 388, n. 3; and Malagrida, iv. 175, n. 1; She Stoops to Conquer, ii. 208, n. 5; Gordon Riots, iii. 429, n. 3; v. 328, n. 2; Gower, Lord, i. 296, n. 1; Granger's patron, iii. 91; Gray, Sir James, ii. 177, n. 1; Grenville, George, ii. 135, n. 2; Gunning, the Misses, v. 359, n. 2; Hagley Park, v. 78, n. 3, 456, n. 1; Hamilton, W. G., i. 520; Heroic Epistle ascribed to him, iv. 315; Highland regiment in Jersey, v. 142, n. 2; highwaymen, iii. 239, n. 1; Hill, Sir John, ii. 38, n. 2; History of the House of Yvery, iv. 198, n. 3; Hollis, Thomas, iv. 97, n. 3; Hooke, Nathaniel, v. 175, n. 3; 'Horry' Walpole, iv. 314; Hotel du Chatelet, ii. 389, n. 2; Houghton Collection, sale of the, iv. 334, n. 6; House of Commons' contest with the City in 1771, ii. 300, n. 5; Hume, David, atheist and bigot, iv. 194, n. 1; conversation, ii. 236, n. 1; French, i. 439, n. 2; Hurd, Bishop, iv. 190, n. 1; Irish peers, creation of, iii. 407, n. 4; Italy, tour to, iii. 31, n. 1; Jealous Wife, The, i. 364, n. 1; Jenkinson, Charles (first Earl of Liverpool), iii. 146, n. 1; Johnson and Barnard's verses, iv. 433; 'Billingsgate on Milton,' iv. 40, n. 1; bombast, i. 388, n. 3; character, ignorant of, iv. 433; Debates, i. 505; described by, iv. 314; history reduced to four lines, i. 5, n. 1; at Lady Lucan's, iii. 425, n. 3; monument, iv. 423, n. 1; 'not a true admirer' of, iv. 314; attacks on him, ib., nn. 3 and 5; at the Royal Academy, iv. 314, n. 3; on sacrilege, v. 114, n. 2; writing for money, iii. 19, n. 3; Johnson the horse-rider, i. 399; Junius, authorship of, iii. 376, n. 4; Keppel's Court-martial, iv. 12, n. 6; Kinnoul, Lord, ii. 211, n. 4; libels in 1770, i. 116, n. 1; Lort, Rev. Dr., iv. 290, n. 4; Lovat's execution, i. 181, n. 1; Love and Madness, iv. 187, n. 1; Lucan's, Lady, bluestocking meeting, iii. 425, n. 3; Lyttelton, first Lord, i. 267, n. 2; Lyttelton, second Lord, iv. 298, n. 3; Maccaroni Club, v. 84, n, 1; Macclesfield, Earl of, i. 267, n. 1; Macdonald, Sir J., i. 449, n. 2; Mackintosh's criticism of his style, iii. 31, n. 1; Macpherson and the newspapers, ii. 307, n. 4; Mac Swinny (old Swinney), iii. 71, n. 4; Mansfield's, Lord, attacks on the press, i. 116, n. 1; severity, iii. 120, n. 3; Mason's Memoirs of Gray, i. 29, n. 3; Mead, Dr., iii. 355, n. 2; Methodists expelled from Oxford, ii. 187, n. 1; militia in 1778, iii. 360, n, 3, 365, n. 4; Millar, Andrew, i. 287, n. 3; Miller, Lady, ii. 336, n. 5; Miller, Philip, v. 78, n. 3; Miss, a, v. 185, n. 1; Montagu, Mrs., at the Academy, ii. 88, n. 3; at Lady Lucan's, iii. 425, n. 3; Morell, Dr., v. 350, n. 1; Motion, The, a caricature, v. 285, n. 1; 'mystery, the wisdom of blockheads,' iii. 324, n. 4; Nichols's Life of Bowyer, iv. 437; North, Lord, and Mr. Macdonald, v. 153, n. 1; Northumberland, Duchess of, ii. 337, n. 1; Northumberland, Earl of, ii. 132, n. 1; Norton, Sir Fletcher, ii. 472, n. 2; Oglethorpe, General, i. 128, n. 1; Orford, Earl of, becomes, iii. 191, n. 2; Otaheitans, The, v. 328, n. 1; Pantheon in Oxford Street, ii. 169, n. 1; pantomimes, i. 111, n. 2; Paoli, ii. 71, n. 2, 82, n. 1; v. 1, n. 3; Paris, ii. 403, n. 1; iii. 352, n. 2; Patagonia, Giants of, v. 387, n. 6; peerages, new, iv. 249, n. 4; Pelham's death, i. 269, n. 1; Pembroke, tenth Earl of, ii. 371, n. 3; petitions to the king against the House of Commons, ii. 90, n. 5; Philipps, Sir John and Lady, v. 276, n. 2; press prosecutions, ii. 60, n. 3; prize-fighting, v. 229, n. 2; public affairs in 1779, iii. 408, n. 4; Richardson's novels, ii. 174, n. 2; Royal Academy dinner, iii. 51, n. 2; Royal Marriage Bill, ii. 152, n. 2; Savage, Richard, i. 170, n. 5; Scotch and the Gordon Riots, ii. 300, n. 5; and the House of Commons, ii. 300, n. 5; officers of militia, iii. 399, n. 2; recruiting in London, iii. 399, n. 3; Scotland engendering traitors, iii. 430, n. 6; Seeker, Archbishop, iv. 29, n. 1; Shebbeare, Dr., broken Jacobite physician, iv. 113, n. 1; pension, ii. 112, n. 3; trial for libelling dead kings, iii. 15, n, 3; sinecure office, iii. 19, n. 3; slavery, iii. 200, n. 4, 204, n. 1; Smollett's abuse of Lord Lyttelton, iii. 33, n. 1; Humphry Clinker, i. 351, n. 1; Southwark election of 1774, ii. 287, n. 2; speeches in parliament, effect of, iii. 233, n. 1; Strawberry, v. 456, n. 2; tea, universal use of, i. 313, n. 2; Thurot's descent on |
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