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Life of Johnson, Volume 6 (of 6)
by James Boswell
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Lord Lonsdale's brutality, ii. 179, n. 3. 1791 _The Life of Samuel Johnson_, i. 9. Appointed Secretary for Foreign Correspondence to the Royal Academy, iii. 462. Returns to the Home Circuit, _Letters of Boswell_, p. 341. 1792 1793 Second edition of the _Life of Johnson_, i. 13. 1794 1795 Death, May 19th, i. 14. BOSWELL, James, account of himself, i. 383, 404; iii. 416, n. 3; v. 51; birth, his, i. 147, n 3; death, i. 14; _Account of the Kirk of Scotland,_ v. 213; accuracy: See below, Authenticity; activity, v. 52, n. 6, 168; Address to the King, carries an, iv. 265, 267; Advocate, admitted as an, ii. 20: See below, Counsel; affectation of distress, iv. 71, 379; allowance from his father of L300 a year, iii. 93, n. 1; Alnwick, visits, ii. 142; ambiguous prayer, his, iii. 391, n. 3; ambition, iii. 179, n. 1; America, ignorance of, ii. 293, 312, n. 4; Americans, sides with the, ii. 294, 312; iii. 205-7; iv. 81, 259; ancestry, Thomas Boswell, ii. 413; iv. 198; Veronica Sommelsdyck, v. 25, n. 2; Robert Bruce, ib.; Boswells of Balmuto, v. 70; anonymous mention of himself, ii. 14, 56, 84, 193, 227, n. 1, 330, n. 2, 436, n. 1, 449, n. 1; iii. 49, n 2, 57, n. 3, 237, n. 3, 407, n. 1; iv. 173, 274; antiquary, an, iii. 414, n. 3; archives, his, iii. 271, n. 5; 3O1, n. 1; army, wishes to enter the, i. 400; v. 52; fancies himself a military man, v. 125; Ashbourne, visits, iii. 127,131, 135-208; Auchinleck Castle, describes, i. 462; iii. 178; v. 379; authenticity, love of, i. 7; ii. 350, 434, n. 1; iii. 209, 299, n. 2; iv. 83; v. 1, 419; avidity for delight, iii. 415; bar, enters at the: See below, English Bar; Barbauld's, Mrs., lines on him, ii. 4, n. 1; Baretti, dislike of, ii. 97, n. 1; Bath, visits, iii. 45; Bristol, 50; bear, led by a, ii. 269, n. 1; Beauclerk's hit at his talk, ii. 192, n. 2; birth-day, ii. 69, n, 3; birth and gentility, love of, i. 490-2; ii. 261, 328-9; v. 51, 103, 380; birthright, granted his father a renunciation of his, ii. 415, n. 1; bishops, on, iv. 75; 'Blood:' See above, Birth and Gentility; boastful, iv. 193; Bologna, at, v. 115; books, slight knowledge of, ii, 360; Johnson buys him some, ii. 377, n. 1; iii. 86-8, 91; _Boswell_, all that is comprehended in, ii. 382, n. 1; 'Boswell, Mr. James, a native of Scotland,' i. 190, n. 4; boy, longer than others, v. 308; 'Bozzy,' ii. 258; _British Essays in favour of the brave Corsicans_, ii. 59, n. 1; Burke, visits, iv. 210; bustle, makes a, iii. 130, n. 1, 372 Cambridge, visits, ii. 335, n. 1; cards, spends a night at, iii. 377; Carlisle, invites Johnson to meet him at, iii. 107, 118, 123, 127; celebrated men, acquaintance with, ii. 13; iii. 64: See below, Great Men; changefulness, wretched, iii. 193; character, Johnson's account of his, i. 474; ii 267, n. 4, 278, n. 1; v. 52; Paoli's, i. 6, n. 2; Lord Stowell's, v. 52, n. 6: See above, Account of himself; Chatham, Earl of, correspondence with the, ii. 13, n. 3, 59, n. 1; Chester, visits, iii. 413; his journal there a log-book of felicity, iii. 415; 'Chief, my Yorkshire,' ii. 169, n. 2; iii. 130, n. 1, 439; children, his, ii. 265, 280, 386; iii. 366; blessed by a non-juring Bishop, iii. 372; loved by Johnson, iii. 436; church, not easy unless he goes to it, i. 418, n. 1; fondness for going, iii. 180; 'would pray with a Dean and Chapter,' iii. 375, n. 2; chymistry, his intellectual, iii. 65; citizen of the world, a, ii. 306; v. 20; classical quotation apt, v. 56; _Clubable,_ iv. 254, n. 2; Cocoa-tree Club, at the, v. 386, n. 1; _Collection of Original Poems_, i. 383, n. 3; collection of Scotch words, begins a, ii, 91; and of Scotch antiquities, ii. 92; iii. 414, n. 3; consecrated ground, comfort in nearness to, v. 169; divinely cheered by the nearness of Carlisle Cathedral, iii. 416, 417; consecutive paragraphs, iii. 339, n. 1; iv. 223, n. 2; _Conversation between His Most Sacred Majesty, &c_., ii. 34, n. 1; _conspicuonsness, his_, iv. 248, n. 2; convict unjustly condemned, ii. 285; correspondence with Adams, i. 8; iv. 376; Beattie, ii. 148, n. 2; v. 15; Blair, iii. 402; v. 398; Blacklock, v. 417; Chatham, Earl of, ii. 13, n. 3, 59, n. 1; Cullen, iv. 263; Dempster, v. 407; Dilly, iii. 110; Elibank, Lord, v. 181; Forbes, Sir W., v. 413; Garrick, ii. 279, n. 1; iii. 371; v. 347-50, 382, n. 2; Hailes, Lord, i. 432; v. 406; Hastings, Warren, iv. 66; Hector, iv. 375; Johnson: See below, JOHNSON, and under JOHNSON; Langton, iii. 424; Monboddo, v. 74; Parr, iv. 47, n. 2; Percy, iii. 278; Pitt, iv. 261, n, 3; Rasay, v. 410-1; Robertson, v. 14, 32; Reynolds, iv. 259, n. 2; Thurlow, iv. 327, 336; Vyse, iii. 125; Wilkes, ii. 11, n. 3; iv. 224, n. 2; _Correspondence with the Hon. Andrew Erskine_, i. 383; _Corsica, Account of_: See CORSICA; Corsica, his head filled too much with it, ii. 22, 58, 59; his memory honoured there, ii. 3, n. 1; a tradition of him, ii. 451, n. 3; Corsicans, raises a subscription for the, ii. 59, n. 1; Counsel, engaged as, Douglas Cause, iii. 219, n. 2; v. 378, n. 2; Ecclesiastical censure case, iii. 58; House of Lords, before the, ii. 144, 375, n. 4, 377, n. 1; iii. 219; House of Commons, iii. 224; iv. 73, 259, n. 1; Dr. Memis's case, ii. 291; schoolmaster, prosecution of a, iii. 212; Society of Solicitors' case, iv. 128; country-house, takes a little, iii. 116, 128; Court of General Assembly, despises pleading at the, ii. 381, n. 1; Court of Sessions, little dull labours, ii. 381, n. 1; _Court of Session Garland_, i. 432, n. 3; ii. 200, n. 1; Courtenay's lines on him, i. 223; cow, lows like a, v. 396; cowardly caution, iii. 210-1; critical skill, v. 214; _Critical Strictures_, i. 383, n. 3, 409; critics 'cannot or will not understand him,' v. 259, n. 1; _Cub at Newmarket_, i. 383, n. 3; curiosity, his wise and noble, ii. 4, 59; Dalblair and Young Auchinleck, known as, v. 116; daughters, on the treatment of, ii. 420, n. 1; 'dazzled' by Johnson and Paoli, i. 460; death, at times not afraid of, iii. 153; debts, i. 2, n. 2; ii. 275; paid by his father, iii. 93; Johnson's warnings, against incurring any, iv. 148-9, 152, 154, 163; dedications, his, i. 1; ii. 1, n. 2; v. 1; delights to talk of the state of his mind, iv. 249; describes visible objects with difficulty, v. 173, 219; desert, has wished to retire to a, ii. 75; Devonshire, visits, ii. 371; dignity, hardly possible uniformly to preserve, ii. 69, n. 3; acquires 'dignity in London,' 375, n. 4; dinners, gives admirable, ii. 59, n. 3; gives one to some Hebrideans and Highlanders, ii. 308, 380; goes without one, ii. 178; displays his classical learning, v. 15, n. 5; dissatisfaction, too much given to, iii. 225; _Dorando, A Spanish Tale_, ii. 50, n. 4; 'Drawing-room' dress, his, ii. 83, n. 1; Dresden, visits, i. 266, n. 2; drudges in an obscure corner, ii. 381, n. 1; duel, risk of having to fight a, ii. 179, n. 3; early rising, difficulty of, iii. 168; Easter meetings with Johnson, iv. 148. n. 2; elated at getting Johnson to the Hebrides, v. 215; _Elegy on the Death of an Amiable Young Lady_, i. 383, n. 3; elevated by pious exercises, iv. 122; English Bar, enters at the Inner Temple, ii. 375, n. 4; iii. 178; eats his dinners, ii. 377, n. 1; iii. 45, n. 1; called, i. 2, n. 2; iv. 309, n. 5; discouraging prospects, iii. 179, n. 1; takes chambers, ib.; attends the Northern Circuit, iii. 261, n. 2; discussion with Johnson on the way to success at the bar, iv. 309; enthusiasm of mind, solemn, iii. 122, n. 2; to go with Captain Cook, iii. 7; to go to the wall of China, iii. 269; feudal, iii. 178; v. 223; genealogical, v. 379; envy of Dundas's success, ii. 160, n. 1; _Epistle from Menalcas to Lycidas_, i. 383, n. 3; _Essays_, his, iv. 179; _Essence of the Douglas Cause_, ii. 230, n. 1; Essex Head Club, member of the, iv. 254, n. 2; estate, income of his, iv. 154, n. i; 155, n. 4; Eumelian Club, member of the, iv. 394, n. 4; exact likeness, draws an, i. 486; executions, love of seeing, ii. 93, n. 3; iii. 384, n. 1; iv. 328; executors, his, iii. 301, n. 1; 'facility of manners,' v. 19, n. 1; fame, ardour for literary, ii. 69, n. 3; iv. 50, n. 2; fancies that he is neglected, ii. 384; iii. 44, 135; that Johnson is ill or offended, ii. 410; that his wife or children are ill, iii. 4; at Stains Castle, v. 105; in a Highland inn, v. 139; farm, purchases a, iii. 207; father, his (Lord Auchinleck), death, iv. 154; disagreement with, i. 346, n. 2; ii. 311, n. 1; iii. 95; about heirs general and male, ii. 414-5; iii. 86; uneasy with him, i. 426; a timid boy in his presence, ii. 382, n. 1; iii. 93, n. 1; on better terms with him, iii. 93, 95, 108, 212, 368, 442; dulls his faculties by strong beer before him, ii. 382, n. 1; Johnson, reproached by him as regards, ii. 381,72. i; v. 384, n. 1; Johnson's advice about him, iii. 417; likeness to him in face, v. 84; feelings, avows his ardent, ii. 69; 'fervour of Loyalty,' iii. 113; fees made before the House of Lords, ii. 377, n. 1; feudal system, love of the, ii. 177; iii. 178; feudal enthusiasm, his, v. 223: see SUCCESSION, male; forwardness, ii. 449; Franklin, Dr., dines with him, ii. 59, n. 3; Free-will, love of discussing: see FREE-WILL; 'gab like Boswell,' v. 52, n. 4; Garrick, friendship with, iii. 371: see above, under Correspondence; genealogist, a, iii. 271, n. 5; George III, relation to, v. 379; ghosts, talks of, iv. 94, n. 2; disturbed by the cry of one, v. 237, n. 2; fearful of them, v. 327, n. 1; Gibbon, dislike of: see GIBBON, Edward; Glasgow University, a student of, i. 465; god, makes another man his, v. 129, n. 1; Goldsmith's lodgings, visits, ii. 182; takes leave of him, ii. 260; affected by his death, ii. 279, n. 2; good-nature, described by Burke, iii. 362, n. 2; great men, hopes from, iii. 80, n. 2; Burke, iv. 223, 249, n. 1, 258, n. 2; Lonsdale, Lord, ii. 10, n. 1; iv. 220, n. 4; Pembroke, Lord, ii. 371, n. 3, iii. 80, n. 2; Pitt, iv. 261, n. 3; Rockingham ministry, iv. 148; seeking great men's acquaintance, iii. 189; v. 215-6; _Great man_, really the, ii. 59, n. 3, 83, n. 1; quite the _great man_, iii. 396, n. 2, 413, n. 4; Greek, ignorance of, iii. 407; 'Griffith, an honest chronicler as,' i. 24; guardians to his children, iii. 400; Hague, at the, v. 25, n. 2; Handel musical meeting, at the, iv. 283, 285-6; happiest days, one of his, iv. 96-7; Hebrides, first talk of visiting the, i. 450; ii. 291; _homme grave_, ii. 3, n. 1; Horne Tooke, altercation with, iii. 354, n. 2; house in Edinburgh, his, iii. 155; v. 22, n. 2; Hume, intimacy with, ii. 59, n. 3, 437, n. 2; has memoirs of him, v. 30; humorous vein, v. 409; _Hypochondriack, The_, iv. 179, n. 5; hypochrondria, suffers from, i. 65, n. 1, 343; ii. 381, n. 1, 423; iii. 86-9, 215, 366, 418; iv. 379; pride in it, i. 65, n. 1; iii. 87, 421; 'hypocrisy of misery,' his, iv. 71; idleness, i. 465; imaginary ills: See FANCIES; imagination, should correct his, iii. 363; independency of spirit, v. 305; infidelity, his, in his youth, i. 404; says that 'it causes _ennui_,' ii. 442, n. 1; infidels, keeping company with, iii. 409; intellectual excesses, iii. 416; 'intoxicated not drunk,' ii. 436, n. 1: See below, WINE; Ireland, visits, ii. 156, n. 3; isthmus, compares himself to an, ii. 80; Italy, visits, ii. 11, 54; Jacobitism when a boy, i. 431, n. 1; associations connected with it, v. 140; January 30, old port and solemn talk on, iii. 371; Jeffrey, helped to bed by, v. 24, n. 4; Jockey Club, member of the, i. 383, n. 3; Johnson's acquaintance, makes, i. 391; ii. 349; and calls on him, i. 395; under his roof for the last time, iv. 337; last talk, ib.; last farewell, iv. 339; advice on his coming into his property, iv. 155; advises him to stay at home in 1782, iv. 155; affection, tries an experiment on, iii. 394-7; assigns him a room in his house, ii. 376; iii. 104, 222; company, time spent in, i. 11, n. 1; complains of the length of his letters, iii. 86, n. 4; constant respectful attention to, ii. 357; consulted about America by, ii. 292, 312; conversation reported at first with difficulty, i. 421; copartnership in the tour to the Hebrides with, v. 264, 278; _Custos Rotulorum_, offers himself as, v. 364; describes him as 'worthy and religious,' iii. 394; _Diary_, reads, iv. 405-6; regrets that Mrs. Boswell did not copy it, v. 53; differed in politics on two points only from, iii. 221; iv. 259; dines for the first time at the house of, ii, 215; drawn by him as too 'awful,' ii. 262, n. 2; regrets losing some of his awe, iii. 225; easier with him than with almost any body, iv. 194; encourages him to turn author, i. 410; not encouraged to share reputation with, ii. 300, n. 2; exhorts him to plant, v. 380; faults, does not hide, i. 30; iii. 275, n. 2; firmness, supported by, v. 154; gaps in correspondence with, ii. 1, 43, 116, 140; iii. 394-5; gives him _Les Pensees de Paschal_, iii. 380; gives him a thousand pounds in praise, iii. 382; his guest for the first time, i. 422; his 'Guide, Philosopher, and Friend,' iii. 6; iv. 122, 420; imitates, ii. 326, n. 2; iv. 1, n. 2; invited to visit Scotland, ii. 51, 201, 232,264; joins in his bond at the Temple, ii. 375, n. 4; _Journey_, reads in one night, ii. 290; projects a Supplement to it, ii. 300, n. 2; keeps him up late drinking port, i. 434; iii. 381; leads, to talk, i. 6, n. 2, 398, n. 2; ii. 187; iii. 39; v. 159, 264, 278; letters to, ii. 2, 20, 22, 58, 107, 139, 141, 144, 203, 269, 270, 278, 279, 283-4, 290, 293, 295, 308, 380, 386, 406, 410, 422; iii. 86, 89, 91, 101, 105, 106, 107, 116, 122, n. 2, 126, 129, 132, 209, 211, 215, 219-222, 277, 359, 371, 391, 395, 411, 415, 433, 438; iv. 259, 379, 380; three letters kept back, ii. 3, n. 1; iii. 118, 122; keeps his letters, ii. 2; life, would add ten of his years to, iii. 438; love for, iii. 105; iv. 226, 259, n. 2, 337; v. 19; love for him, i. 405, 434, n. 1, 450, 462; ii. 3, 70, iii. 145, 205, 266, 359, 375, n. 4, 377, n. i, 383-4, 411; iii. 80, 86, 105, 123, 135, 198, 210, 215, 216, 312, 362, 391, 413-4, 435, 439, 442; iv. 71, 81, n. 3, 166, 226, 337, 379, 380; v. 398; loved by him and Mrs. Thrale, ii. 427; monument, circular-letter about, iv. 423, n. 1; projected monument at Auchinleck, v. 380; mysterious veneration for, i. 384; necessity of a yearly interview with, iii. 118, 127; neglects to write to, iii. 394-7; iv. 380; offended and reconciled, ii. 107, 109; heated in a talk about America, iii. 205-7, 221; a second time, iii. 315; a week's separation, iii. 337; reconciliation, iii. 338; dispute about effects of vice on character, ii. 350; in a violent passion on Rattakin, v. 145; reconciliation, v. 147; offers to write a history of his family, iv. 198; pension, tries for an addition to, iv. 326-8, 336-9, 348; poems, projects an edition of, i. 16, n. 1; iv. 381, n. 1; praises him for vivacity, iii. 135, n. 2; good-humour, iii. 208, n. 1; as a travelling companion, iii. 294; v. 52; as one sure of a reception, v. 134, n. 2; proposes a meeting in 1780 with, iii. 424, 439, 441; proposes that they should meet one day every week, ii. 359; iii. 122, n. 2; proposes weekly correspondence with, iii. 399; publishes without leave a letter from, ii. 3, n. 2, 46, 58; may publish all after—death, 60; recommended to a lady client by, ii. 277; sadness in parting with, ii. 263; iii. 196; says that to lose him would be a limb amputated, iv. 81, n. 3; tries, by not writing, iii. 394-7; visits Harwich with, i. 464; the Hebrides, v. 1-416; Oxford, ii. 46; Oxford and the Midland Counties, ii. 438; Bath, iii. 45-51; Ashbourne, iii. 135-208; Southill, iv. 118-132; Oxford, 283-311; visits him ill in bed, iii. 391; and Wilkes together, brings, iii. 64-79; a successful negotiation, iii. 79; will, not in, iv. 402, n. 2; witty at his expense, i. 3; ii. 187; v. 216; yearly meeting with, need of a, iii. 439; Johnson's Court, veneration for, ii. 229; Journal, in his youth keeps a, i. 433; by the advice of Mr. Lowe, ii. 159, n, 4; accuracy, its, asserted, ii. 65, n. 2; 'exact transcript of conversations,' v. 414; justification for keeping it, ib.; entries in it made in company, i. 6, n. 2; iv. 318, n. 1, 343; method of keeping it, v. 272; kept with industry, i. 5-6; four nights in one week given to it, i. 461-2; neglected, i. 6, n. 2; ii. 47, n. 2, 71, 352, n. 1, 372; iii. 354, 375, 376; iv. 88, n. 1, l00, 110, 274, n. 5, 311; v. 360, 374, 394, 398; advised by Johnson to keep one, i. 433; Johnson pleased with it, iii. 260; helps to record a conversation, ib.; v. 307; reminded that it is kept, iii. 439; kept in quarto and octavo volumes, iv. 83; Journal of his visit to Ashbourne, iii. 208; Johnson's remark on it, iii. 209, n. 3; Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, extensive circulation, ii. 267; in spite of ridicule, iii. 190; editions and translation, ii. 267, n. 3; v. 3, n. 1; corrections made in part of first edition, v. 245, n. 2; passages omitted in the later editions, v. 148, n. 1, 381, n. 4, 387, n. 4, 388, n. 2, 415, n. 4; 'an honest chronicler as Griffith,' i. 24, n. 1; attacks on it, v. 3; Johnson's life, exact picture of a portion of, v. 279; praised by him, i. 24, n. 1; motto, iii. 190, n. 1; read in MS. by Johnson, ii. 383, n. 2; v. 58, n. 2, 226, 245, n. 2, 262, 277, 307, 360, n. 4; by Mrs. Thrale, ii. 383; v. 245, n. 2; and Malone, v. 1; task of much labour, v. 227; juxtaposition of stories and names, iii. 40, n. 3; Knight-errant, feels like a, v. 355; knowledge at the age of twenty-five, ii. 9; Laird, seen as a, iv. 164; Lancaster Assizes, at, iii. 261, n. 2; Latin corrected by Johnson, ii. 20; defended, ii. 23; talked Latin in Highland houses, v. 321; law, ignorance of, ii. 21, n. 4; v. 108, n. 2; study of it, i. 400, 427; professor of it in the imaginary college, v. 108; lawyer, unwilling to become a, i. 400, 427; lay-patron, a, ii. 246; learning, praises his own, v. 52, n. 3; _Letter to the People of Scotland on the Present State of the Nation_ (1783), iv. 258, 260-1; sent to Pitt, ib., n. 3; _Letter to the People of Scotland against diminishing the number of the Lords of Session_ (1785), Burke, Edmund, mentioned, iv. 173, n. 1; George III, i. 219, n. 3; Goldsmith and Reynolds, i. 417, n. 1; juries judges of the law, iii. 16, n. 1; Lee, 'Jack,' iii. 224, n. 1; 'Montgomerie, a true,' his wife, ii. 140, n. 1; Thurlow, Lord, iv. 179, n. 2; universal man, Boswell a very, iii. 375, n. 2; vanity, owns his, i. 12, n. 2; Whitefield, ii. 79, n. 4; Wilkes, iii. 64, n. 3; v. 339, n. 5; letters: see CORRESPONDENCE; letters, reasons for inserting his own, v. 16; Liberty and Necessity, troubled by, iv. 71; Lichfield, visits in 1776, ii. 461; shown real 'civility' there, iii. 77; visits it in 1779, iii. 411; life, reflections on, iii. 164-6; Life of Johnson, _additions_ to it, i. 10; Advertisement of it in the _Tour to the Hebrides_, v. 421; cancels, i. 520; ii. 2, n. 1; delayed by dissipation, i. 5, n. 2; Johnson approves of him as his biographer, i. 26; ii. 166, 217; iii. 196; v. 312; 'claws,' would not cut off his, i. 30, n. 4; death and character, how to describe his, iv. 399, n. 1; mode in which it is written, i. 30, n. 1; 'new kind of libel,' iv. 30, n. 2; printed by H. Baldwin: see BALDWIN; Odyssey, like the, i. 12; progress and sale, i. 9, n. 3 and 10; iv. 399, n. 1; translated, never, v. 3, n. 1; likes, a man whom everybody, iii. 362; Literary Club, a member of the, i. 478, n. 3, 481, n. 3; proposed by Johnson, ii. 235; v. 76; elected, ii. 240; Johnson's charge, ib.; how he got in, v. 76; for meetings: see CLUBS, Literary; lodgings, his London, Downing Street, i. 422; Farrar's Buildings, i. 437, 463. n. 3; Half-Moon Street, ii. 46, n. 2; 59; Old Bond Street, ii. 82; Conduit Street, ii. 166; Piccadilly, 219; Gerrard Street, iii. 51, n. 3; General Paoli's in South Audley Street, iii. 35, 324; Inner Temple Lane, chambers in, iii. 179, n. 1; London, expedition to it highly improving, ii. 311, n. 1; increased spirits there, iii. 246; Johnson consulted about a visit to it, ii. 275-7; agrees to his removing to it, iv. 351; love of it, i. 463; ii. 275; iii. 5, 176, 363; London, visits, in 1760, i. 385; 1762-3, i. 385-464; 1766, ii. 4-15; 1768, ii. 46-66; 1769, ii. 68-111; 1772, ii. 146-200; 1773, ii. 209-263; 1775, ii. 311-377; 1776, ii. 427-475, iii. 1-80; (in 1777 Boswell met Johnson in Ashbourne, iii. 135-208); 1778, iii. 222-359; 1779, spring, iii. 373-394; autumn, iii. 400-411; 1781, iv. 71-118; 1783, iv. 164-226; 1784 (sets out in March but turns back at York, iv. 265), 271-339; Lonsdale, pays court to Lord, ii. 10, n. 1; brutality, suffers from, ii. 179, n. 3; looks forward to his future worth, ii. 58, n. 3; loose life, his, ii. 46, n. 1, 47, n. 2, 58, n. 3, 170, 352, n. 1; manners, want of, ii. 475; manuscripts, his, destroyed by his executors, iii. 301, n. 1; 344, n. 1; v. 30, n. 2; marriage, approaching, ii. 68, 70, 76, 110; takes place, ii. 140; thinks of a second one, iii. 199, n. 1; masquerade, at a, ii. 205; _Matrimonial Thought_, ii. 110; melancholy: see above, Hypochondria; military life, love of, i. 400; iii. 413, n. 4; mind 'somewhat dark,' ii. 381; 'mingles vice and virtue,' ii. 246; mob, reported to have headed a, ii. 50, n. 4; Montagu, Mrs., quarrel with, iv. 64; mother-in-law, his, ii. 377, n. 1; Mountstuart, Lord, friendship with, iv. 128; music, made a fool of by, iii. 197-8; mystery, love of, iii. 225; and the mysterious, iv. 94, n. 2; Naples, at, v. 54; narrowness, troubled with a fit of, iv. 191; nature, no relish for the beauties of, i. 461; 'never left a house without leaving a wish for his return,' iii. 412; newspapers, inserted notices of himself in the, ii. 46, n. 2, 71, n. 2; noble friend, puzzled by a, iv. 209; objects on the road, not observant of, iv. 311; _Ode to Tragedy_, i. 383, n. 3; v. 51, n. 3; Oglethorpe, flattered by, ii. 59, n. 1 and 3; old-fashioned principles, v. 131; 'old-hock humour,' i. 383, n. 3; ii. 436, n. i; ostentatious, i. 465; Oxford, visits, in 1768, ii. 46; in 1776, ii. 438; in 1784, iv. 283-311; '_Paoli_ Boswell,' known as, v. l23; 'the friend of Paoli,' i. 426, n. 3; ii. 58, n. 3; 59, n. 3; attention to him, beautiful, iii. 51, n. 3; guest in London, ii. 375, n. 4; iii. 35, 51, n. 3; present of books to, ii. 61; parliament, wishes to be in, iv. 220, 267; perfection, periods fixed for arriving at his, ii. 46, n. 1; v. 337; piety, exalted in, ii. 360, n. 2; Pitt's neglect, complains of, iii. 213, n. 1; dislikes him, iii. 464; writes to him, iv. 261, n. 3; place, longing for a, i. 5, n. 2; ii. 381, n. 1; players, intimacy with, iii. 413, n. 4; plays his part admirably, iii. 413; 'all mind, iii. 415; pleasing distraction, in a, iii. 256; political speculation, owns himself unfit for, ii. 312, n. 4; portrait by Reynolds, i. 2, n. 2; _Praeses_, elected, iv. 248; preached at in Inverness chapel, v. 128; _Quare adhaesit pavimento_, iii. 261, n. 2; quotations sometimes inaccurate, i. 7, n. 1; quotes himself, v. 204, n. 1, 348, n. 4; changes words, ii. 45, n. 3; _Rasselas_, yearly reading of, i. 342; read, promises Johnson to, ii. 377, n. 1, 378, n. 1; sat up all night reading Gray, ii. 335, n. 2; reads Ovid's _Epistles_, v. 295; reserve, practises some, i. 4; ii. 84, n. 3; retaliates for attacks on Johnson made by Lord Monboddo, ii. 74, n. 2; by Foote, ii. 95, n. 2; Reynolds, introduced to, i. 417, n. 1: See REYNOLDS, Boswell; ridicule, defies, i. 33; iii. 190; right-headed, said by Baretti to be not, iii. 135, n. 2; Rousseau, wishes to see, iii. 463, n. 2; visits him, ii. 11-12, 215; sympathy with him, ii. II, n. 3; Royal Academy, Secretary for Foreign Correspondence, ii. 67, n. 1; letters of acceptance, iii: 370, n. 1, 462-4; seat reserved for him at a lecture, iii. 369, n. 2; Rudd, Mrs., acquaintance with, ii. 450, n. 1; iii. 79-80; rural beauties, little taste for, i. 461; v. 112; Scot, 'Scarce esteemed a Scot,' i. 223; Scotch accents, ii. 158, 159; Scotticisms, corrected, iii. 432, n. 2; v. 15, n. 4; criticised, 425; Scotch shoeblack, his, ii. 326; Scotland, forty years' absence from it suggested to him, iii. 26; finds it too narrow a sphere, 176; its manners disagreeable to him, ii. 381, n. 1; vulgar familiarity of its law life, iii. 179, n. 1; suffers from its rudeness, ii. 381, n. 1; Scotchman, the one cheerful, iii. 388; a Scotchman without the faults of one, iii. 347; _Scots Magazine_, contributes to the, i. 112; self-tormentor, i. 470; Seward, controversy with Miss, i. 92, n. 2; iv. 331, n. 2; Shakespeare Jubilee, ii. 68; short-hand, uses a kind of, iii. 270; his long head equal to it, iv. 166; slavery, approves of, iii. 200, 203-5, 212; Smith, Adam, opinion of, ii. 430, n. 1; praises his facility of manners, v. 19, n. 1; Socrates, does not affect to be a, ii. 25; sophist, plays the, iii. 386; spy, charge of being a, ii. 383, n. 2; St. Paul's, Easter worship in, ii. 171, 215, 275-7, 360; iii. 24, 316, 380; iv. 91; stepmother, on ill terms with his, ii. 382, n. 1; iii. 95; storm, among the Hebrides, in a, v. 281-2; studies, Johnson's advice as to his, i. 410, 457, 460, 464, 474; study, has a kind of impotency of, ii. 21, n. 4; succession, preference of male, ii. 387, n. ii, 411, n. 1, 420, n. 1; succession to the Barony of Auchinleck, ii. 413-23; superstition an enjoyment, ii. 318, n. 3; iv. 94, n. 2; dreams, i. 235, 236; iv. 379; Johnson's relief from dropsy, iv. 272: See above, MYSTERY, and below, GHOSTS, and SCOTLAND-HEBRIDES, second sight; swearing, blameless of, ii. 166, n. 1; talk, not from books, v. 378; _tanti-man, a, iv. 112; Temple, enter at the Inner: See above, English Bar; tenants, kindness to his, iv. 155, n. 1, 163; tenderness, calls for, iii. 216; _Thesis_ in Civil Law, ii. 20, 23; Thrale, Mrs., introduction to, ii. 77; her 'love' for him, ii. 145, 206, 383; attacked by her, iv. 318, n. 1; v. 245, n. 2; argument with her, iv. 72; see under, MRS. THRALE; Thurlow bows the intellectual knee to, iv. 179, n. 2; toleration, discusses, ii. 252; Tory, boasts of the name of, iii. 113, 375, n. 2; confirmed in his Toryism, iii. 392, n. 2; town, pleasure in seeing a new, iii. 163; _Travels,_ wishes to publish his, iii. 300, 301, n. 1; truthfulness: See AUTHENTICITY; 'universal man, a,' iii. 375, n. 2; 'unscottified,' ii. 242; Utrecht, goes to, i. 400, 473; vanity, avows his, i. 12; in his youth, i. 436, n. 3; variety of men and manners, sees a, ii. 352, n. 1, 378, n. 1; Voltaire, wishes to see, iii. 463, n. 2; visits him, i. 434, 435, n. 2; ii. 5; vows, love of making, ii. 20, 24: see below, WINE, vows of sobriety; Walpole, Horace, calls on, iv. 110, n. 3; who is silent in his presence, iv. 314, n. 5; Warren, Dr., attended on his death-bed by, iv. 399, n. 5; water-drinking, tries: See below, WINE; welcome where-ever he goes, iii. 414; wife, his search of a, ii. 47, n. 2, 56, n. 2, 169, n. 2; wife, his, 'a true Montgomerie,' ii. 140, n. 1; his praise of her, v. 24; bargain with her, ib. n. 3; death, i. 236, n. 1; See BOSWELL, Mrs.; will, his, iii. 400, n. 1; Williams, Miss, tea with, i. 421, 463; ii. 99; Wilkes, dines with, ii. 378, n. 1: See under Wilkes, John; Wine, bruised and robbed when drunk, i. 13, n. 3; 'intoxicated, but not drunk,' ii. 436, n. 1; intoxicated at Bishop Shipley's, iv. 88, n. 1; at Miss Monckton's, 109; in Sky on punch, v. 258; penitent, v. 259; thinks it good for health, v. 260; Johnson advises him to drink less, ii. 377, n. 1; iv. 266; 274; to drink water, iii. 169; life shortened by his indulgence, iii. 170, n. 1; lover of it, a, iii. 243, n. 4; v. 156; nerves affected by port, i. 434, iii. 381; vow of sobriety under the venerable yew, ii. 381, n. 1, 436, n. 1; to Paoli and Courtenay, ib.; water-drinking, tries, iii. 170, n. 1, 328; wits, one of a group of, ii. 324; works, list of his projected, v. 91, n. 2 (to this list should be added _An account of a projected Tour to the Isle of Man_, iii. 80); writings, early, i. 383, n. 3; York, at, in 1784, iv. 265, 267; Zelide, a Dutch lady, in love with, ii. 56, n. 2. BOSWELL, Mrs. (the author's wife), Boswell praises her as 'a true Montgomerie,' ii. 140, n. 1; a valuable wife, iii. 160, n. 1, 416; she describes him as a man led by a bear, ii. 269, n. 1; death, i. 7, n. 2, 236, n. 1; iv. 136, n. 2; health, iii. 130-1, 215, 362; iv. 155; Johnson, feelings towards, ii. 269, n. 1, 272, 275, 379, 380, 383, 387, 411, 412, 418, 420, 422, 424; iii. 86, 93, 95, 104, 105, 210, 372, 436, 442; iv. 149, 155, 226, 264; hospitality to, v. 23-4, 45, 395; invites her to his house, iii. 216, 316; letter to, iv. 157. For letters from—: See JOHNSON, Letters; sends marmalade to, iii. 105, 108, 120, 129; receives a set of _The Lives_ and _Poets,_ iii. 372, 436; Scotch accent, iii. 106; shrewd observation, her, iii. 160, n. 1; travelling, dislikes, iii. 219; mentioned, ii. 265, 416. BOSWELL, James, the author's second son, birth, iii. 366; account of him, ib. n. 1; educated at Westminster School, iii. 12; describes Malone's friendship with the Boswells, v. 1. n. 5; writes his father's dying letter, i. 14, n. 1; supplies notes to the _Life,_ i. 15. BOSWELL, Miss, ii. 378, n. 1. BOSWELL, Robert, burnt Boswell's manuscripts, iii. 301, n. 1. BOSWELL, Thomas (founder of the family), ii. 413; iv. 198; v. 379. BOSWELL, Veronica, Johnson pleased with her, v. 25; origin of her name, ib. n. 2; additional fortune promised her, 26; death, ib. n. 1; her Scotch, iii. 105; mentioned, ii. 379; iii. 86, 93, 372. BOSWELL, Sir W., i. 194, n. 2. _Boswelliana,_ variations in Boswell's anecdotes, i. 454, n. 1; ii. 450, n. 4; story about Voltaire, iii. 301, n, 1. BOSWORTH, i. 84; ii. 473; iv. 407, n. 4. BOTANICAL GARDEN, iv. 128. BOTANIST, Johnson not a, i. 377, n. 2. "BOTTOM OF GOOD SENSE," iv. 99. BOUCHIER, Governor, iv. 88. BOUFFIER. See BUFFIER. BOUFFLERS, Comtesse de, visits Johnson, ii. 118, 405; his letter to her, ib.; account of her, ib. n. 1. BOUFFLERS, Marquise de, ii. 405, n. 1. BOUHOURS, Dominic, ii. 90. _Boulter's Monument_, i. 318. BOULTON, Matthew, sells power, ii. 459; Johnson visits his works, v. 458. BOUNTY HERRING-BUSSES, v. 161. BOUNTY ON CORN. See CORN. BOUQUET, Joseph, bookseller, i. 243, BOURBON, House of, iv. 139, n. 4. BOURDALOUE, ii. 241, n. 3; v. 311. BOURDONNE, Mme. de, ii. 241, n. 3. _Bouts rimes_, ii. 336. BOWEN, Emanuel, _Complete System of Geography_, iii. 445. BOWLES, William, Johnson dines with him, iv. 1, n. 1; visits him, iv. 234-9; his wife a descendant of Cromwell, iv. 235, n. 5. BOWLES, ——, of Slains Castle, v. 106, n. 1. BOWOOD, iv. 192, n. 2. BOWYER, William, iv. 369, 437. _Box_, a tradesman's, v. 291, n. 4. BOYD, Hon. Charles, v. 97-107; 'out in the '45,' v. 99. BOYDS OF KILMARNOCK, v. 104. BOYDELL, Alderman, ii. 293, n. 2. BOYLE, family of, v. 237. See ORRERY, Earls of. BOYLE, Hon. Hamilton, (sixth Earl of Corke and Orrery), i. 257, n. 3; v. 238. BOYLE, Hon. Robert, _Martyrdom of Theodora_, i. 312; compares argument and testimony, iv. 281, n. 3. BOYSE, Samuel, account of him, iv. 407, n. 4, 441; compared with Derrick, iv. 192, n. 2. BRADLEY in Derbyshire, i. 82, 366. BRADSHAW, William, iv. 200, n. 2. BRAHMINS, admit no converts, iv. 12, n. 2; the mastiffs of mankind, iv. 88. BRAIDWOOD, Thomas, v. 399. BRAITHWAITE, Mr., iv. 278. BRAMHALL, Archbishop, ii. 104. BRAMSTON, James, i. 73, n. 3. BRANDY, the drink for heroes, iii. 381; iv. 79. BRANTOME, v. 55. 'BRAVE WE,' v. 360. _Bravery of the English Common Soldiers,_ i. 335. BRAZIL, iv. 104, n. 3; language, v. 242, n. 1. BREAD TREE, ii. 248. BREEDING, good, ii. 82; v. 82, 211, 276. BRENTFORD, iv. 186; v. 369. BRETT, Colonel, i. 174, n. 2. BRETT, Mrs., i. 166, n. 4. BRETT, Miss, i. 174, n. 2. BRETT, Rev. Dr. Thomas, the nonjuror, iv. 287. BREWERS, thwart the 'grand scheme of subordination,' i. 490. BREWING in Paris, ii. 396. See THRALE, Henry. BREWOOD, iv. 407, n. 4. BREWSE, Major, v. 123-5. BRIBERY, statutes against, ii. 339. BRIDGENORTH, v. 455. BRIDGEWATER, Duke of, v. 359, n. 2. BRIGHT, John, _Speeches_, quoted, ii. 480. BRIGHTHELMSTONE (Brighton), books burnt there as Popish, iii. 427, n. 1; Johnson describes it, iii. 92, n. 3; finds it very dull, iii. 93; does not much like it, iii. 442; stays there in 1782, iv. 159-60; other visits, iii. 452-3; Ship Tavern, iii. 423, n. 1; mentioned, iii. 45, n. 1, 397. BRILLE, iii. 458. BRISTOL, Boswell and Johnson's visit in 1776, iii. 50; bad inn, iii. 51; Burke its representative, iii. 378; Hannah More keeps a school there, iv. 341, n. 5; Newgate prison, Savage dies in it, i. 164; described by Wesley, iii. 431, n. 1; Dagge, the keeper, praised by Johnson, iii. 433, n. l; Whitefield forbidden to preach in it, ib.; St. Mary Redcliff, iii. 51. BRISTOL, first Earl of, i. 106, n. 1. BRISTOL-WELL (Clifton), iii. 45, n. 1. BRITAIN, ancient state, iii. 333. BRITAIN and Great Britain, Swift dislikes the names of, i. 129, n. 3. BRITISH MUSEUM, library, iv. 105, n. 2; papers deposited by Boswell, ii. 297, n. 2, 307, 399, n. 2; mentioned, iv. 14. _British Princes, The_, ii. 108, n. 2. BRITON, Johnson's use of the term, i. 129, n. 3; George III gloried in being born one, ib. BROADLEY, Captain, iii. 359. BROCKLESBY, Dr., account of him, iv. 176; Boswell and Johnson dine with him, iv. 273; Essex Head Club, member of the, iv. 254; generosity towards Johnson and Burke, iv. 338; Johnson's physician in 1783-4, iv. 229, n. 2, 230-1, 245, 262-4, 267, 360, 378; attends his death-bed, iv. 399; quotes Shakespeare, iv. 400; Juvenal, iv. 401; instructed by Johnson in Christianity, iv. 414,416; tells him that he cannot recover, iv. 415; bequest from him, iv. 402, n. 2. For Johnson's letters to him, See JOHNSON, LETTERS. BRODIE, Captain, i. 83, n. 4; ii. 466. BROMLEY, i. 241; ii. 258; iv. 351-2, 394. BROOKE, Henry, _Earl of Essex_, iv. 312, n. 5; _Gustavus Vasa_, i. 140; subscription raised for him, i. 141, n. 1. BROOKE, Mrs., _Siege of Sinope_, iii. 259, n. 1. BROOKS, Mrs., the actress, v. 158. BROOKS, unchanged for ages, iii. 250. _Broom's Constitutional Law_, iii. 87, n. 3. BROOME, William, iii. 427; iv. 49. _Broomstick, Life of a_, ii. 389. BROTHERS AND SISTERS, born friends, i. 324. BROWN, Dr. John, account of him, ii. 131, n. 2; _Athelstan_, ii. 131, n. 2; _Barbarossa_, ii. 131, n. 2; _Estimate_, ii. 131. BROWN, Launcelot, (_Capability_), account of him, iii. 400, n. 2; improves Blenheim park, ii. 451; anecdote of Clive, iii. 401. BROWN, Professor, of St. Andrew's, v. 64. BROWN, Rev. Robert, of Utrecht, ii. 9; iii. 288. BROWN, Tom, author of a spelling-book, i. 43. BROWN, ——, Keeper of the Advocates' Library, v. 40. BROWNE, Hawkins, iv. 272. BROWNE, Isaac Hawkins, delightful converser, ii. 339, n. 1; _De Animi Immortalitate_, v. 156; drank freely, v. 156; parodied Pope, ii. 339, n. 1; silent in Parliament, ii. 339. BROWNE, Patrick, _History of Jamaica_, i. 309. BROWNE, Sir Thomas, Anglo-Latian diction, i. 221; 'Brownism,' ib., 308; _Christian Morals_, i. 308; death, on, iii. 153, n. 1; 'do the devils lie?' iii. 293; fortitude in dying, iv. 394, n. 3; _Life by Johnson_, i. 308, 328; oblivion, on, iv. 27, n. 5; Pembroke College, member of, i. 75, n. 3. BROWNE, Mr., 'a luminary of literature,' i. 113, n. 1. _Brownism_, i. 221, 308. BRUCE, James, the traveller, ii. 333; v. 123, n. 3. BRUCE, Robert, Boswell's ancestor, v. 25, n. 2, 379, n. 3; not the lawful heir to the throne, v. 204. BRUCE, ways of spelling it, v. 123. BRUMOY, Peter, i. 345. BRUNDUSIUM, iii. 250. BRUNET, ——, ii. 394. BRUNSWICK, House of. See HANOVER, House of. BRUTES, future life, their, ii. 54; misery caused them recompensed by existence, iii. 53; not endowed with reason, ii. 248. BRUTUS, Marcus Junius, i. 389, n. 2. BRUYERE, La, ii. 358, n. 3; v. 378. BRYANT, Jacob, his antediluvian knowledge, v. 458, n. 5; Johnson's knowledge of Greek, v. 458, n. 5; mentioned, iv. 272; v. 303, n. 3. BRYDGES, Sir Egerton, ii. 296, n. 1; v. 384, n. 1. BRYDONE, Patrick, _Travels_, ii. 346; antimosaical remark, ii. 468; iii. 356. _Bubbled_, v. 29. n. 6. BUCCLEUGH, third Duke of, v. 142, n. 2. BUCHAN, sixth Earl of, ii. 173, 177. BUCHANAN, George, born _solo et seculo inerudito_, v. 182; _Calendae Maiae_, v. 398; _Centos_, ii. 96; Johnson's retort about him, iv. 185; learning, v. 57; poetical genius, i. 460; ii. 96; mentioned, v. 225. _Buck_, v. 184, n. 3. BUCKHURST, Lord, v. 52, n. 5. BUCKINGHAM, George Villiers, second Duke of, The Rehearsal, ii. 168, n. 2; _Zimri_, ii, 85, n. 4. BUCKINGHAM, Duchess of, iii. 239. BUCKLES, iii. 325; v. 19. BUDGELL, Eustace, calls Addison cousin, iii. 46, n. 3; Addison wrote his _Epilogue to The Distressed Mother_, i. 181, n. 4; iii. 46; mended his _Spectators_, ib.; his suicide, ii. 229; v. 54. BUDWORTH, Captain, iv. 407, n. 4. BUDWORTH, Rev. Mr., i. 84, n. 3; iv. 407, n. 4. BUFFIER, Claude, i. 471. BUFFON, account of the cow shedding its horns, iii. 84, n. 2; his conversation, v. 229, n. 1. _Builder, The_. King's Head, i. 191, n. 5. _Bulk_, i. 164, n. 1, 457. BULKELEY, Lord, v. 447. BULKELEY, Mrs., ii. 219. BULL, Alderman, Lord Mayor, iii. 459-60; attacks Lord North, iii. 460. BULL-DOG, Dr. Taylor's, iii. 190. BULLER, Mr., ii. 228, n. 3. BULLER, Mrs., iv. 1, n. 1. _Bulse_, iii. 355, n. 1. BUNBURY, Sir Charles, member of the Literary Club, i. 479; ii. 274, 318; at Johnson's funeral, iv. 419. BUNBURY, H.W., Burns sheds tears over one of his pictures, v. 42, marries Miss Horneck, i. 414, n. 1; ii. 274, n. 5. BUNYAN, John, Johnson praises _The Pilgrim's Progress_, ii. 238; Franklin buys his works, iv. 257, n. 2. BURBRIDGE, ——, i. 170 n. 5. BURCH, Edward, R.A., iv. 421, n. 2. BURGESS-TICKET, Johnson's, at Aberdeen, v. 90. BURGOYNE, General, disaster to his army, iii. 355. BURGOYNE, ——, iii. 388, n. 3. BURIAL SERVICE, iv. 212. BURKE, D., iv. 358, n. 1. BURKE, Edmund, affection, on the descent of, iii. 390; Akerman, keeper of Newgate, praises, iii. 433; America, increase of population in, ii. 314, n. 3; American taxation, speech on, ii. 294; arguing on either side, on, iii. 24, n. 2; Bacon's _Essays_, iii. 194, n. 1; balloon, sees a, iv. 358, n. 1; Baretti's trial, gives evidence on, ii. 97, n. 1, 98; the consultation for the defence, iv. 324; Barnard's verses, mentioned in, iv. 433; Beaconsfield, Johnson visits it, ii. 285, n. 3; '_non equidem invideo_,' iii. 310; Gibbon mentions it, 128, n. 4; Beauclerk's character, draws, ii. 246, n. 1; Berkeley, projects an answer to, i. 472; Bible, on subscribing the, ii. 151, n. 3; Birmingham buttons, likens the Spanish Declaration to, v. 458, n. 3; Boswell's epithets for him, ii. 222, n. 4; good-nature, describes, iii. 362, n. 2; v. 76; hopes for place from him, iv. 223, 249, n. 1; _Life of Johnson_, admires, i. 10, n. 1; looks upon him as continually happy, iii. 5, n. 5; meets him for the first time, ii. 240; successful _negotiation_, admires, iii. 79; visits him, iv. 210; bottomless Whig, a, iv. 223; boy, loves to be a, iv. 79; Bristol, would be upon his good behaviour at, iii. 378; Brocklesby, Dr., gives him L1000, iv. 338, n. 2; 'bulls enough in Ireland,' iii. 232; _Cecilia_, reads, iv. 223, n. 5; Chatham and the Woollen Act, jokes about, ii. 453, n. 2; Cicero or Demosthenes, not like, v. 214; composition, promptitude of, iii. 85; conversation, his, its 'affluence,' ii. 181; corresponds with his fame, iv. 19; ebullition of his mind, 167; never hum-drum, v. 33; ready on all subjects, iv. 20, 275-6; talk, partly from ostentation, iii. 247; not good at listening, v. 34; _Corycius Senex_, iv. 173; Croft's imitation of Johnson's style, iv. 59; definition of a free government, iii. 187; domestic habits, iii. 378; Dutch sonnet, mentions a, iii. 235; Dyer, Samuel, draws the character of, iv. 11, n. 1; Economical Reform Bill, v. 32, n. 3; eloquence, v. 213; emigration, on, iii. 231-3; exaggerated praise, would suffer from, iv. 82; extraordinary man, an, ii. 450; iv. 26, 275; v. 34; first man everywhere, iv. 27, n. 1; v. 269; Fitzherbert's character, describes, iii. 148, n. 1; Fox introduced into the Club, ii. 274, n. 4; Garrick, dines with, ii. 155, n. 2; epitaph on, ii. 234, n. 6; Glasgow professorship, seeks a, v. 369, n. 2; Goldsmith's college days, recollections of, iii. 168; and the _Fantoccini_, story of, i. 414; _Haunch of Venison_, mentioned in, iii. 225, n. 2; and _Retaliation_, i. 472; iii. 233, n. 1; Grenville's character, ii. 135, n. 2; Hamilton, engagement with, i. 519; estimate of him, iv. 27, n. 1; Hawkins, attacked by, i. 480, n. 1 histories, his opinion of, ii. 366, n. 1; House of Commons, enters the, ii. 450; first speeches, ii. 16; described as the second man in it, iv. 27, n. 1; as the first, v. 269; describes it as a mixed body, iii. 234; Hume's partiality for Charles II, ii. 341, n. 2; Hussey, Rev. Dr., praises, iv. 411, n. 2; immorality, possible charge of, iv. 280, n. 1; 'imprudent publication,' i. 463; _influence_ of the Crown, on the, iii. 205, n. 4; Ireland—penal code against the Catholics, ii. 121, n. 1; people condemned to ignorance, ii. 27, n. 1; Roman Catholics the nation there, ii. 255, n. 3; Irish language, iii. 235; Johnson charges him with want of honesty, ii. 348; iii. 45; describes him as 'Le grand Burke,' iv. 20, n. 1; as 'a great man by nature,' ii. 16: See above, conversation, and extraordinary man; has a low opinion of his jocularity, iv. 276: See below, Wit; predicts his greatness, ii. 450; buys a print of him, i. 363, n. 3; explains the excellence of his eloquence, v. 213; visits him at Beaconsfield, ii. 285, n. 3; v. 460; in Parliament defends—, iv. 318; eulogises him, iv. 407, n. 3; funeral, at, iv. 419; has the greatest respect for, iv. 318; _Journey_, commends, iii. 137; last parting with, iv. 407; praises his work, ib., n. 3; iii. 62; likens him to _Appius_, iv. 374, n, 2; as a member of parliament, considers, ii. 138; joins in raising a monument to, iv. 423, n. 1; 'oil of vitriol,' speaks of, v. 15, n. 1; parody of his speech, iv. 317, n. 3; powers, calls forth all, ii. 450; rings the bell to, iv. 26-7; roughness in conversation, iv. 280; sends his speech on India to, iv. 260, n, 2; shuns subjects of disagreement in their talk, ii. 181; study of Low Dutch, iv. 22; style, i. 88; at a tavern dinner, meets, i. 470, n. 2; Thames scolding, admires, iv. 26; 'Why, no, Sir,' explains, iv. 316, n. 1; _Junius_, not, iii. 376; 'kennel, in the,' iv. 276; knowledge, variety of, v. 32, 213; law, intended for the, v. 34; _Letter to the Sheriffs of Bristol_, iii. 186; life led over again, on, iv. 303; Literary Club, original member, i. 477; attendance, ii. 16; mentioned by Gibbon, iii. 128, n. 4; name distinguished by an initial, iii. 230, n. 5; playful talk, iii. 238; 'live pleasant,' i. 344; London, describes, iii. 178, n. 1; mankind, thinks better of, iii. 236; Middle Temple, enters at the, v. 34, n. 3; minority, always in the, iii. 235; ministry, on the pretended vigour of the, iv. 140, n. 1; 'mire, in the,' v. 213; Monckton's, Miss, at, iv. 108, n. 4; 'Mund,' ii. 528, n. 1; iii. 84, n. 2; '_mutual_ friend,' iii. 103, n. 1; Newgate, visits Baretti in, ii. 97, n. 1; Nugent, Dr., his father-in-law, i. 477, n. 4; opponent, as an, ii. 450; 'parcel of boys,' iv. 297, n. 2; parliament: See above, House of Commons; 'party,' defines, ii. 223, n. 1; party, sticking to his, ii. 223; v. 36; Paymaster of the Forces, iv. 223, n. 1; poetry is truth rather than history, ii. 366, n. 1; portrait at Streatham, iv. 158, n. 1; Powell and Bembridge, case of, iv. 223, n. 3; _Present Discontents_, iii. 205, n. 4; professor in the imaginary college, v. 108; puns, on the Isle of Man, iii. 80; Wilkes, iii. 322; v. 32, n. 3; _modus_ and _fines_, iii. 323; Deanery of Ferns, iv. 73; Langton, v. 32, n. 3; Boswell's definition of man, ib.; reforms the King's household expenses, iv. 368, n. 3; reputation in public business, ii. 16; retiring, talks of, iv. 223, n. 3; Reynolds's character, draws, i. 245, n. 3; v. 102, n. 3; Reynolds is his echo, ii. 222, n. 4; is too much under him, iii. 261; Robinhood Society, iv. 92, n. 5; Rockingham, advice to, ii. 355, n. 2; Royal Academy, seat reserved for him at the, iii. 369, n. 2; romances, loves old, i. 49, n. 2; Round-Robin, draws up the, iii. 83; should have had more sense, iii. 84, n. 2; same one day as another, iii. 192; v. 33; Shelburne speaks of him with malignity, iv. 191, n. 4; soldiers, on the quartering of, iii. 9, n. 4; son, extravagant estimate of his, iv. 219, n. 3; _Speech on Conciliation_, ii. 314, n. 3, 317, n. 2; iv. 317, n. 3; speeches too frequent and familiar, ii. 131; effect of them, iii. 233; not like Demosthenes or Cicero, v. 213-4; statues, on the worth of, iii. 231; Stonehenge, sees, iv. 234, n. 2; stream of mind, ii. 450; style censured by Johnson, iii. 186; and Francis, iii. 187, n. 1; _Sublime and Beautiful_, i. 310, 472, n. 2; ii. 90; subscription to the Articles, on the, ii. 150, n. 7; talk, his: see CONVERSATION; Thurlow, Lord, iv. 349, n. 3; Townshend, Charles, ii. 222, n. 3; translations of Cicero, could not bear, iii. 36, n. 4; understands everything but gaming and music, iv. 27, n. 1; Vesey's gentle manners, praises, iv. 28; _Vindication of Natural Society_, i. 463, n. 1; Virgil, his ragged Delphin, iii. 193, n. 3; prefers him to Homer, v. 79, n. 2; Whigs, quietness of the nation under the, iv. 100; 'wild Irishmen,' v. 329; Wilkes on his want of taste, iv. 104; winds into a subject like a serpent, ii. 260; wit, fails at, i. 453; iii. 323; iv. 276, n. 2; v. 32, 213; Langton's description of it, i. 453, n. 2; Boswell's defence, v. 32, n. 3; Reynolds's, ib.; mentioned, i. 432, n. 3; ii. 255; iii. 305; iv. 78, 344. BURKE, Richard, senior, Barnard's verses on Johnson, iv. 431-3. BURKE, Richard, junior, (Edmund Burke's son), account of him, iv. 219, n. 3; at Chatsworth, iv. 367; Johnson, calls on, iv. 218-9; rebuked by, 335, n. 3; member of the Literary Club, i. 479. BURKE, William, ii. 16, n. 1; v. 76, n. 3. BURKE, William, the murderer, v. 227, n. 4. BURLAMAQUI, ii. 430. BURLINGTON, Lord, iii. 347; iv. 50, n. 4. _Burman, Peter, Life of_, i. 153. BURNET, Arthur, v. 81. BURNET, Gilbert, Bishop of Salisbury, dedication to Lauderdale, v. 285; Hickes, George, v. 357, n. 4; _History of his own Time_, very entertaining, ii. 213; v. 285; Kincardine, Earl of, v. 25, n. 2; _Life of Hale_, iv. 311; _Life of Rochester_, iii. 191-2; _Lilliburlero_, effect of, ii. 347, n. 2; Lloyd's learning in ready cash, ii. 256, n. 3; Popery, controversial war on, v. 276, n. 4; style mere chit-chat, ii. 213; truthfulness, ii. 213, ib. n. 3; Whitby, Daniel, v. 276, n. 4. BURNET, James. See MONBODDO, Lord. BURNET, Thomas, v. 352, n. 2. BURNET, Miss, v. 82, n. 1. BURNEY, Dr. Charles, _Account of the Handel Commemoration_, iv. 361; Boscovitch, visits, ii. 125, n. 5; Boswell's _Life of Johnson_, notes to, i. 15; Doctor of Music, i. 285; Eumelian Club, member of the, iv. 394, n. 4; Garrick, Mrs., dines with, iv. 96-9; Handel musical meeting, iv. 283, n. 1; _History of Music_, ii. 409, n. 1; iii. 366-7; v. 72; house in St. Martin's Street, iv. 134; Johnson accompanies his son to Winchester, iii. 367; anecdotes of, ii. 407; iv. 134; asks him to teach him the scale of music, ii. 263, n. 4; begs his pardon, iv. 49, n. 3; character, draws, iii. 24, n. 2; character of him, ii. 407, n. 1; death-bed, iv. 410, n. 1, 438-9; funeral, 420, n. 1; dislike of _the former, the latter_, iv. 190, n. 2; first visit to his house, ii. 364, n. 3; house in Gough Square, i. 328; in the Temple, iv. 134; letters: See JOHNSON, letters; hearth-broom, iv. 134; introduces him at Oxford, iii. 366-7; kindness, i. 410, n. 2; love of him, ii. 407, n. 1; and of his family, iii. 367, n. 4; iv. 377; parting with Burke, iv. 407, n. 3; pension, i. 375, n. 1; politeness, i. 286; praises his library, ii. 364, n. 3; sayings, collection of, ii. 407; _Shakespeare_, i. 323, 499; at Streatham in 1775, ii. 406; talking to himself, i. 483, n. 4; will, not in, iv. 402, n. 2; Literary Club, member of the, i. 479; Lynne Regis, residence at, i. 285; _Musician_, article on, ii. 204, n. 2; musical scheme, a, iii. 373, n. 3; portrait at Streatham, iv. 158, n. 1; _Rambler_, sale of, i. 208, n. 3; Smart, Kit, kindness to, i. 306, n. 1; Smart's madness, i. 397; Streatham library, account of, iv. 158; Thornton's _Ode_, i. 420, n, 2; Thrale, Mrs., neglected by, iv. 153, n. 4; rebukes her, iv. 339, n. 2; _Travels_ ridiculed by Bicknell, i. 315, n. 4; praised by Johnson, iv. 186; mentioned, ii. 52; iii. 109, n. 1, 256. BURNEY, Mrs., i. 328, 491, n. 3; iv. 208, 360-1. BURNEY, Dr. Charles (jun.), account of Beckford's speech to the King, iii. 201, n. 3; Greek, knowledge of, iv 385; Johnson's funeral, at, iv. 420, n. 2; head on a seal, has, iv. 421, n. 2; regard for him, iv. 377; n. 1; studied at Aberdeen, v. 85, n. 2. BURNEY, Frances (Mme. D'Arblay), Baretti's bitterness, iii. 96, n. 1; Bath, at, in 1780, iii. 422-3, 428, n. 4; Boswell's imitation of Johnson, iv. 1, n. 2; Boswell meets her at Johnson's house, iv. 223; 'Broom Gentleman, the,' iv. 134, n. 3; Burke, first sight of, iv. 276, n. 1; Burke's account of Lady Di. Beauclerk, ii. 246, n. 1; Burke, young, iv. 219, n. 3; Cambridge, R. O., iv. 196, n. 3; Carter, Mrs., iv. 275, n. 1; Cator, John, iv. 313, n. 1; _Cecilia_, iv. 223; Clerk, Sir P. J., iv. 80, n. 4; dates, indifferent to, iv. 88, n. 1; _downed_, will not be, iii. 335, n. 2; _Evelina_ first praised by Mrs. Cholmondeley, iii. 318, n. 3; copy in the Bodleian, iv. 223, n. 4; drawings from it, 277, n. 1; grossness of sailors described, ii. 438, n. 2; not heard of in Lichfield, ii. 463, n. 4; Fielding and Smollett, exhilarated by, ii. 174, n. 2; Garrick's mimicry of Johnson, ii. 192, n. 2; George III compliments her, ii. 35, n. 5; criticises Shakespeare, i. 497, n. 1; popularity, iv. 165, n.. 3; Goldsmith's projected _Dictionary_, ii. 204, n. 2; Gordon Riots, iii. 428, n. 4, 435, n. 2; Grub Street, had never visited, i. 296, n. 2; Hamilton, W. G., character of, i. 520; Harington's _Nugae Antiquae,_ iv. 180, n. 3; Hawkesworth's death, v. 282, n. 2; _Irene,_ iv. 5, n. 1; Johnson accuses her of writing Scotch, iv. 211, n. 2; appearance: See JOHNSON, personal appearance; attacks W. W. Pepys, iv. 65, n. 1; benignity, ii. 141, n. 2; borrows a shilling of her, iv. 191, n. 1; at Brighton, iv. 159, n. 3; and Dr. Burney, friendship of, ii. 407, n. 1; and Burney's _History of Music_, ii. 409, n. 1; Cecilia, praises, iv. 163, n. 1; comical humour, ii. 262, n. 2; consulted by letter, ii. 119; describes Garrick's face, ii. 410, n. 1; eye-sight, iv. 160, n. 1; _Evelina,_ praises, ii. 12, n. 1, 173, n. 2; on expectations, iv. 234, n. 2; Garrick, let nobody attack, iii. 312, n. 1; good humour and gaiety, iii. 440, n. 1; iv. 245, n. 2; and Greville, iv. 304, n. 4; grief at Thrale's death, iv. 85, n. 1; household, iii. 461; ill, iv. 163, n. 1, 256, n. 1; violent remedies, iii. 135, n. 1; 'in the wrong chair,' iv. 232, n. 1; introduction to her, ii. 364, n. 3; kindliness, iv. 426, n. 2; kitchen, ii. 215, n. 4; last days, iv. 377, n. 1; likes an intelligent man of the world, iii. 21, n. 3; made or marred conversation, v. 371, n. 2; and Miss More, iv. 341, n. 6; needed drawing out, iii. 307, n. 2; and the newspapers, iii. 79, n. 4; parting with Burke, iv. 407, n. 3; portrait, ii. 141, n. 1; praises her, iv. 275; Mrs. Montagu, quarrels with, iv. 64, n. 1, 65, n. 1; urges Miss Burney to attack her, iii. 244, n. 2; and Miss Reynolds, i. 486, n. I; sight, i. 41, n. 4; sorrow for his bitter speeches, ii. 256, n. 1; at Streatham, i. 493, n. 3; iii. 451; style, imitates, iv. 389; talk, iv. 237, n. 1; and Mrs. Thrale, provoked by Mrs. Thrale's praise, iv. 82, n. 3; reproves her for flattery, v. 440, n. 2; drives her from his mind, iv. 339, n. 3; Warley Camp, returns from, iii. 361, n. 1; writes to, iv. 361; Johnson, Mrs., lodgings, iv. 377, n. 1; Kauffmann, Angelica, iv. 277, n. 1; Lade, Sir John, iv. 412, n. 1; Langton's imitation of Johnson, iv. 1, n. 2; lived to a great age, iv. 275, n. 3; Lowe the painter, iv. 202, n. 1; Macaulay, on her style, iv. 223, n. 5; iv. 389, n. 4; marriage, iv. 223, n. 4; Metcalfe, W., iv. 159, n. 2; Miller, Lady, ii. 336, n. 6; Monckton's, Miss, assemblies, iv. 108, n. 4; Montagu, Mrs., character of, ii. 88, n. 3; iv. 275, n. 3; Murphy, Arthur, described, i. 356, n. 2; loved by Thrale, i. 493, n. 1; Musgrave, Richard, ii. 343, n. 2; iv. 323, n. 1; Omai, iii. 8, n. 1; Pantheon and Ranelagh, ii. 169, n. i; Paoli's account of Boswell, i. 6, n. 2; Queen Charlotte's opinion of Boswell, i. 5, n. 1; _regale_, use of the word, iii. 308, n. 2; Reynolds's inoffensiveness, v. 102, n. 3; matrimonial wishes about, iv. 161, n. 5; Rousseau, admires, ii. 12, n. 1; Seward, William, iii. 123, n. 1; Solander, Dr., v. 328, n. 2; Streatham, life at, iv. 340, n. 3; farewell to, 158, n. 4; Thrale, Henry, his character, i. 494, n. 2; luxurious table, iii. 423, n. 1; stroke of apoplexy, iii. 397, n. 2; sale of his brewery, iv. 86, n. 2; Thrale, Mrs., her character, i. 494, n. 4; letters to her, iv. 340, n. 3; love of Piozzi, iv. 158, n. 4; rudeness to him, iv. 339, n. 2; want of restraint, iv. 82, n. 4; Vesey, Mrs., iii. 426, n. 3; Walker, the lecturer, iv. 206, n. 2; Warton, Dr. Joseph, ii. 41, n. 1; Warton, Rev. Thomas, iv. 7, n. 1. BURNS, Robert, Beattie's _Minstrel_, praises, v. 273, n. 4; Boswell's neighbour, v. 375, n. 3; Dempster, R., i. 408, n. 4; elegy on Miss Burnet, v. 82, n. 1; Elphinston's _Martial_, iii. 258, n. 2; 'gab like Boswell,' v. 52, n. 4; gauger, a, iv. 350, n. 1; 'Holy Willie,' ii. 472, n. 3; iii. 449; Hume, attacks, v. 273, n. 4; Scott, seen by, v. 42, n. 1; _Tristram Shandy_ and _The Man of Feeling_, i. 360, n. 2. BURROW, a man near his, i. 82, n. 3; iii. 379. BURROWES, Rev. R., iv. 385. BURROWS, Dr., iii. 379. BURTON, Dr. John Hill, Beattie's _Essay on Truth_, v. 273, n. 3; Burke, Hume and Clow, v. 369, n. 2; _Captain Carleton's Memoirs_, iv. 334, n. 4; Helvetius's advice to Montesquieu, v. 42, n. 1; Douglas Cause, ii. 50, n. 4; Hume's dislike of the English, v. 19, n. 4; house in James's Court, v. 22, n. 2; and Dr. Cheyne, iii. 27, n. 1; in Paris, ii. 401, n. 4; praise of Scotch writers, iv. 186, n. 2; predecessors in history, ii. 53, n. 2; Scotticisms, ii. 72, n. 2; Toryism, iv. 194, n. 1; King's College, Aberdeen, v. 91, n. 1; Scotch Militia Bill, iii. 360, n. 3. BURTON, Robert, _Anatomy of Melancholy_ made Johnson rise earlier, ii. 121; recommended by him, 440; 'Be not solitary; be not idle,' iii. 415; elected student of Christ Church, i. 59. _Burton's Books_, iv. 257. BURTON-ON-TRENT, i. 86, n. 2. BUSCH, Dr., iv. 27, n. 1. BUSINESS, retiring from, ii. 337. BUSTLING, v. 307. _Busy Body_, i. 325, n. 3. _Busy, curious, thirsty fly_, ii. 281. BUTCHER, the art of a, v. 246-7. BUTE, third Earl of, Adams the architect, patronises, ii. 325, n. 3; a book-minister, ii. 353; his Chancellor of the Exchequer, ii. 135, n. 2; concessions to the people, ii. 353; daughter-in-law, his, ii. 378, n. 1; favourite of George III, i. 386; and of the Princess Dowager of Wales, iv. 127, n. 3; _Humphry Clinker_, mentioned in, ii. 81, n. 2; Jenkinson, his secretary, iii. 146, n. 1; Johnson's letters to him, i. 376, 380; Johnson's pension, i. 372-377; iv. 168, n. 1; Luton Hoe, iv. 118; purchase of the estate, 127, n. 3; minister, when once, should not have resigned, ii. 470; pensions conferred by him, i. 373, n. 1; Scotchmen, partiality to, ii. 354; Scotland, never goes to, iv. 131; Shelburne on his strengthening the power of the Crown, iii. 416, n. 2; Shelburne's 'pious fraud,' iv. 174, n. 5; son, his, Colonel James Stuart, iii. 399; took down too fast, ii. 356; Wilkes attacks him, ii. 300, n. 5; dedicates to him _Mortimer_, iii. 78. BUTE, first Marquis of. See MOUNTSTUART, Lord. BUTLER, Bishop, _Analogy_, v. 47. BUTLER, Samuel, _Hudibras_, bullion which will last, ii. 369; not a poem, iii. 38; shows strength of political principles, ii. 369; seldom read, ii. 370, n. 1; quotations from it: 'H' was very shy of using it,' iii. 282, n. 1; 'Indian Britons made from Penguins,' v. 225; 'Jacob Behmen understood,' ii. 122, n. 6; 'True as the dial to the sun,' iv. 296, n. 2; 'Thou wilt at best but suck a bull,' i. 444, n. 1; 'The Devil was the first,' &c., iii. 326, n. 3; _Remains_, v. 57. BUTT, Mr., i. 47, n. 1. BUTTER, Dr., ii. 475, n, 1; iii. 1, 154, 163; iv. 110, 399, 402, n. 2. BUTTER, Mrs., iii. 164. BUTTON-HOLE ACT, v. 18, n. 5. BUXTON, iii. 152; v. 432. BYNG, Admiral, _Appeal to the People concerning_, i. 309, 314; _Letter on the case of_, i. 309; _Some further particulars by a gentleman of Oxford_, i. 309; Epitaph, his, i. 315; Mallet, attacked by, ii. 128; Voltaire's saying about him, i. 314. BYNG, Hon. John, iv. 418. BYRON, Captain, v. 387, n. 6. BYRON, Lord, admires the _Vanity of Human Wishes_, i. 193, n. 3; attacked in the _Edinburgh Review_, iv. 115, n. 2; praises and abuses the Earl of Carlisle, iv. 113, n. 5.



C.

CABBAGES, ii. 455; v. 84. CABIRI, i. 273. CADDEL, William, of Cockenzie, ii. 302, n. 2. CADELL, Thomas, Gibbon's Decline and Fall, publishes, ii. 136, n. 6; praised by him, ii. 425, n. 2; Hawkesworth's Cook's Voyages, publishes, ii. 247, n. 5; Hume and his opponents, gives a dinner to, ii. 441, n. 5; Johnson's Journey, publishes, ii. 310, n. 2; False Alarm, ii. 425, n. 2; one of a deputation to, iii. 111; asks Parr to write Johnson's Life, iv. 443; Mackenzie's Man of Feeling, publishes, i. 360; Robertson's Scotland, publishes, iii. 334. Cadet, The, a Military Treatise, i. 309. CADOGAN, Dr., v. 210-11. CADOGAN, Lord, i. 12. CAEN-WOOD, iii. 429. CAERMARTHEN, Lord, iii. 213, n. 1. CAESAR, Julius, i. 34. CAIRO, iii. 134, n. i, 306, 379, n. 2, 455. CALAIS, ii. 221, 385. Calaminaris, v. 441, n. 1. CALCULATION. See JOHNSON, calculation. CALDER, Dr. John, ii. 212, n. 1. CALDERWOOD, Mrs., ii. 49, n. 2. CALDWELL, Sir James and Sir John, ii. 34, n. 1. CALEDON, i. 185. 'CALIBAN of Literature,' ii. 129. CALIGULA, iii. 283. CALLANDER, Earl of, v. 103, n. 1. Called, iv. 94. CALLIMACHUS, iv. 2. CALMING ONESELF, v. 60. CALVINISM, v. 170, n. 1. CALYPSO, i. 278. CAMBRAY, ii. 401. CAMBRICK BILL, iii. 71, n. 4. CAMBRIDGE, Emmanuel College, Farmer, Dr., master, i. 368; ii. 449, n. 3; Johnson promised an habitation there, i. 517; strong in Shakespeare and black letter, iii. 38, n. 6; King's College, Steevens a member, ii. 114; Pembroke College, Kit Smart a Fellow, i. 306, n. 1; Queen's College, iv. 125; Trinity College, Lord Erskine a member, ii. 173, n. 1; Johnson spends an evening there, i. 487; Trinity Hall, i. 437; University, examinations for the degree, iii. 13, n. 3; Johnson visits it, i. 487, 517; Parr neglected, i. 77, n. 4; Professor Sanderson, ii. 190, n. 3; University-verses, ii. 371. See UNIVERSITIES. CAMBRIDGE MEN, on Johnson's criticism of Gray, iv. 64. Cambridge Shakespeare. See under SHAKESPEARE. CAMBRIDGE, R. O., Boswell's account of him, iv. 196; Walpole's and Miss Burney's, ib. n. 3; dinners at his house, ii. 225, n. 2, 361; Essex Head Club, member of the, iv. 254, n. 1; Horace, talk about, iii. 250-1; World, The, contributor to, i. 257, n. 3; mentioned, ii. 368, 370; iv. 65, n. 1, 195. CAMDEN, Lord, Douglas Cause, ii. 230, n. 1; Garrick, intimacy with, iii. 311; general warrants, ii. 72, n. 3; Johnson, attacked by, ii. 314; Goldsmith, neglect of, iii. 311; Literary Club, blackballed at the, iii. 311, n. 2; iv. 75, n. 3; popularity, ii. 353, n. 2; one of the sights of London, iv. 92, n. 5; Wilkes's case, judge in, ii. 353, n. 2. CAMDEN, William, epitaph on a man killed by a fall, iv. 212; 'mira cano,' iii. 304; Pembroke College Latin grace, i. 60, n. 4; v. 65, n. 2; mentioned, v. 438. CAMERON, Dr., executed, i. 146. CAMERON, Dugall, v. 298. CAMERON, Ewen, v. 297. CAMERON OF LOCHIEL, i. 146, n. 2. CAMERONS, a branch of the, called Maclonich, v. 297. CAMP, at Warley, iii. 360, 365; Coxheath, ib. n. 4; one of the great scenes of human life, iii. 361, n. 1. CAMPBELL, Hon. and Rev. Archibald, Johnson's account of him, iv. 286; v. 356-7; his collection of Scotch books, ii. 216; Doctrine of a Middle State, v. 356, n. 2. CAMPBELL, Archibald (Lexiphanes), ii. 44. CAMPBELL, Colonel Sir Archibald, iii. 58. CAMPBELL, Colonel Mure, iii. 118. CAMPBELL, Evan, v. 141. CAMPBELL, General, v. 55, n. 1, 259. CAMPBELL, Dr. John, author, a rich, i. 418, n. 1; Biographia Britannica, ii. 447; Britannia Elucidata, v. 323; cold-catching at St. Kilda, on, ii. 51; Hermippus Redivivus, i. 417; ii. 427; inaccurate in conversation, iii. 243-4; Johnson's character of him, i. 417; ii. 216; iii. 244; v. 324; declines to argue with, v. 324; never lies on paper, i. 417, n. 5; or with pen and ink, iii. 244; piety in passing a church, i. 418; Political Survey of Great Britain, killed by its bad success, ii. 447; its publication delayed, v. 324; Sunday evenings in Queen Square, i. 418; thirteen bottles of port at a sitting, iii. 243. CAMPBELL, Rev. John (brother of Cambell of Treesbank), v. 373. CAMPBELL, Rev. John of Kippen, ii. 28. CAMPBELL, Lord, Lives of the Chancellors Cameron's execution, i. 146, n. 2; Chancellors, appointment of, ii. 157, n. 3; Douglas Cause, ii. 230, n. 1; Eldon's, Lord, attendance at Church, iv. 414, n. 1 inaccuracy in list of Lichfield scholars, i. 45, n. 4; Ladd, Sir John, anecdote of, iv. 412, n. 1 Mansfield's, Lord, speech in Somerset's case, iii. 87, n. 3; Radcliffe's trial, i. 180, n. 2; Thurlow and Horne Tooke, iv. 327, n. 4. CAMPBELL, Mungo, account of him, iii. 188-9. CAMPBELL, Rev. Dr. Archibald, of St. Andrews, Enquiry into the original of Moral Virtue, i. 359. CAMPBELL, Rev. Dr. George, Principal of Marischal College, Aberdeen, v. 90. CAMPBELL, Rev. Dr. Thomas, an Irish clergyman, account of him, ii. 338; Baretti's love of London, i. 371, n. 5; Baretti and Mrs. Thrale, iii. 49, n. 1; Diary of a visit to England, ii. 338, n. 2; Dublin physicians, iii. 288, n. 4; English and Irish cottagers, ii. 130, n. 2; English and Scotch learning, v. 57, n. 3; Irish bull, guilty of an, ii. 343; Johnson and America, ii. 315, n. 1; appearance, i. 144, n. 1; bon-mots, ii. 338, n. 2; came from Ireland to see, ii. 342; dancing lessons, iv. 80, n. 2; introduced to, ii. 339; and Dr. James Foster, iv. 9, n. 5; and Madden, i. 318; suspects Burke to be Junius, iii. 376, n. 4; writings, and Reynolds's pictures, ii. 317, n. 2; penal code against the Papists, ii. 121, n. 1; Philosopical Survey, ii. 339; published as an Englishman's book, iv. 320, n. 4; Rutty, Dr., iii. 170, n. 4; Taxation no Tyranny, sale of, ii. 335, n. 4; mentioned, ii. 349, 350; iii. 111. CAMPBELL, ——, of Auchnaba, iii. 127, 133. CAMPBELL,——, a factor, v. 312. CAMPBELL, ——, a tacksman of Mull, v. 332, 340. CAMPBELL, ——, of Treesbank, v. 372. CAMPBELLS, ——, Mrs. Boswell's nephews, iii. 116. CAMPBELLTOWN, ii. 183; v. 284. CANADA, i. 307, n. 3, 428. Canal, iii. 362, n. 5. CANDIDATES FOR ORDERS, iii. 13, n. 3. Candide. See VOLTAIRE. CANNING, Miss, ii. 393, n. 1. Canons of Criticism, i. 263, n. 3. CANT, clearing the mind of it, iv. 221; meanings of the word, ib., n. 1; modern cant, iii. 197. CANTERBURY, iii. 314, 457; iv. 230, n. 2. CANTERBURY, Archbishops of, public dinners, their, iv. 367, n. 3; Cornwallis, Archbishop, Johnson's application to him, iii. 125; Seeker, Archbishop, Johnson asked to seek his patronage, i. 368. CANUS, Melchior, ii. 391. CANYNGE, 'a Bristol merchant,' iii. 50, n. i. CAPEL, Lord, v. 403, n. 2. CAPELL, Edward, editor of Shakespeare, iv. 5. CAPITAL PUNISHMENTS. See EXECUTIONS, NEWGATE, and TYBURN. CARACCIOLI, M. de, iii. 286, n. 2. Caractacus, ii. 335. Card, The, v. 270, n. 4. CARDONNEL, Commissioner, iii. 390, n. 1. CARDROSS, Lord (sixth Earl of Buchan), ii. 177. CARDS, Johnson wishes he had learnt to play at them, i. 317; iii. 23; v. 404; condemns them in the Rambler, iii. 23, n. 2. CARELESS, Mrs., Johnson's first love, ii. 459-461; mentioned, iv. 146-8, 378. Careless Husband. See CIBBER, Colley. CARELESSNESS, iv. 21. CARIBS, iii. 200, n. 4. Carleton's, Captain, Memoirs, iv. 333-4. CARLISLE, Boswell proposes to meet Johnson there, iii. 107; 'cathedral so near Auchinleck,' iii. 416-7; Percy made Dean, iii. 365; printer run out of parentheses, iii. 402, n. 1. CARLISLE, Law, Bishop of, i. 437, n. 2. CARLISLE, fifth Earl of, iv. 113, n. 5; Poems, iv. 113; The Father's Revenge, iv. 246-8. CARLISLE HOUSE, iv. 92, n. 5. CARLISLE OF LIMEKILNS, v. 316. CARLYLE, Dr. Alexander Blair, Robert, iii. 47, n. 3; Blair's, Hugh, conversation, v. 397, n. 3; Cardonnel, Commissioner, iii. 390, n. 1; clergy (English), at Harrogate, v. 252, n. 3; clergy (Scotch), and card-playing, v. 404, n. 1; Cullen's mimicry, ii. 154, n. 1; Culloden—London in an uproar of joy, v. 196, n. 3; dinners in London and Edinburgh, i. 103, n. 2; Dodd, Dr., iii. 139, n. 4; Douglas, Duchess of, v. 43, n. 4; Elibank, Lord, v. 386, n. 1; Elphinston's school, ii. 171, n. 2; Guthrie, W., i. 117, n. 2; Home patronised by Lord Bute, ii. 354, n. 4; Douglas, v. 362, n. 1; as an historian, iii. 162, n. 5; Hume, account of, v. 30, n. 1; opinion of Ossian, ii. 302, n. 2; Leechman's prosecution, v. 68, n. 4; liberality of leading clergymen, v. 21, n. 1; Lonsdale, Lord, v. 113, n. 1; Maclaurin, Professor, v. 49, n. 6; Macpherson, James, ii. 300, n. 1; Mansfield on Hume's style, i. 439, n. 2; Millar, Andrew, i. 287, n. 3; Poker Club, ii. 376, n. 1; Pretender, Young, v. 196, n. 2; Robertson and the claret, iii. 335; n. 4; conversation, v. 397, n. 3; romantic humour, iii. 335, n. 1; Smith, Adam, iv. 24, n. 2; study of English by the Scotch, i. 439, n. 2. CARLYLE, Thomas, Cromwell's speeches, i. 150, n. 2; Gough Square, visits, i. 188, n. 1; errors about Johnson, i. 58, n. 2, 78, n. 1, 113, n. 1, 328, n. 1; Henault, quotes, ii. 383, n. 1; Johnson's god-daughter, subscribes for an annuity to, iv. 202, n. 1; Novalis, quotes, iii. 11, n. 1; Sandwich, Lord, and Basil Montague, iii. 383, n. 3; teacher's life, on a, i. 85, n. 2; walking to Edinburgh University, v. 301, n. 2; writing an effort, iv. 219, n. 1. CARMICHAEL, Miss, Johnson lodges her in his house, iii. 222; speaks of her as 'Poll,' iii. 368; describes her, iii. 461. CARNAN, Thomas, bookseller, iii. 100, n. 1. CAROLINE, QUEEN, Clarke's refusal of a bishopric, iii. 248, n. 2; Leibnitz, patronizes, v. 287; Savage, bounty to, i. 125, n. 4, 173, n. 3. CARPENTER, anecdote of a, iv. 116. CARRE, Rev. Mr., v. 27-8. CARRUTHERS, Robert, Highland emigration, v. 150, n. 3. Carstares' State Papers, v. 227, n. 4. CARTE, Thomas, believed in the 'regal touch,' i. 42; History of England, i. 42; ii. 344; iv. 311; Life of Ormond, v. 296. CARTER, Rev. Dr., i. 122, n. 4. CARTER, Miss Elizabeth (Mrs.), account of her, i. 122, n. 4; age, lived to a great, iv. 275, n. 3; alarum, her, iii. 168; Amelia, praises, iii. 43, n. 2; Burney, Miss, described by, iv. 275, n. 1; her Correspondence, i. 203, n. 5; Crousaz's Examen, translates, i. 138; Garrick, Mrs., dines with, iv. 96-9; Greek and pudding-making, i. 122, n. 4; Johnson advises her to translate Boethius, i. 139; writes an epigram to her, i. 122, 140; English verses, ib.; a letter, i. 122, n. 4; praises her, iv. 275; known as 'the learned,' iv. 246, n. 6; Ode to Melancholy, i. 122, n. 4; Rambler, contributes to the, i. 203; criticises it, i. 208, n. 3; mentioned, i. 242. CARTER,—, a riding-school master, ii. 424, n. 1. CARTERET, John, Lord, afterwards Earl Granville, i. 507, 509. Carteret, a dactyl, iv. 3. CARTHAGE, iv. 196. CARTHAGENA, v. 386. CARTHUSIAN CONVENT. See MONASTERY. CASCADES, v. 429, n. 4, 442. CASHIOBURY, i. 381, n. 1. CASIMIR'S Ode to Pope Urban, i. 13, n. 2. CASTES OF THE HINDOOS, iv. 12, n. 2, 88. CASTIGLIONE, author of Il Corteggiano, v. 276. CASTIGLIONE, Prince Gonzaga di, iii. 411, n. 1. CASTLE, shut up in one, ii. 100. CASUISTRY, i. 254. CATALOGUE of Johnson's Works, i. 16. CATALOGUES, why we look at them, ii. 365. CATCOT, George, iii. 50-1. CATHCART, Lord, ii. 413; iii. 346. CATHEDRALS of England, most seen by Johnson, iii. 107, 456; neglected, v. 114, n. 1. CATHERINE II, Empress of Russia, Boswell's eulogium on her, iii. 134, n. 1; engages English tutors, iv. 277, n. 1; Evelina, has drawings made from, iv. 277, n. 1; Houghton Collection, buys the, iv. 334, n. 6; Rambler, orders a translation of the, iv. 277; sends Reynolds a snuff-box, iii. 370. Catholicon, ii. 399. CATILINE, i. 32. CATO the Censor, iv. 79. CATOR, John, iv. 313, 340, n. 3. CATS, shooting, iv. 197. CATULLUS, iv. 180. CAULFIELD, Miss, iii. 100. CAVE, Edward, account of him, i. 113, n. 1; Abridgment of Trapp's Sermons, publishes an, i. 140, n. 5; attacked by rivals, i. 113, n. 3; Birch, Dr., Letters to, i. 139, 150, 151, 153; Boyse's verses to him, iv. 441; coach, sets up a, i. 152, n. 1; ii. 226, n. 2; death and effects, i. 256, ns. 1 and 2; Debates, publishes the, i. 115-8, 136, 150-2, 501-12; reports them, i. 503; descendants, collateral, i. 90, n. 4; examined before House of Lords, i. 111, n. 3, 501; (Sylvanus Urban), Gentleman's Magazine, projects the, i. 90, 111; attends closely to its sale, iii. 322; ghost, saw a, ii. 178, 182; indecent books, sells, i. 112, n. 2; Johnson 'Cave's Oracle,' i. 140, n. 5; first employer, i. 103; Life of Savage, buys the copyright of, i. 165, n. 1; letters from: see JOHNSON, Letters; money account with, i. 135; Ode to him, i. 113; Rambler, proprietor of, i. 203, n. 6, 208, n. 3, 209, n. 1; and the screen, i. 163, n. 1; writes his Life, i. 256; 'penurious paymaster,' i. 121, n. 2; iv. 409; prizes for verses, offers, i. 91, n. 2, 136; treatment of his readers, i. 157, n. 4; mentioned, i. 122, n. 4, 135, 176, n. 2, 242. CAVE, Edward, Jun., i. 111, n. 3. CAVE, Miss, i. 90, n. 4. CAVERSHAM, ii. 258, n. 3. CAWSTON, ——, iv. 418. CAXTON, William, iii. 254. CECIL, Colonel, ii. 183. Cecilia. See Miss BURNEY. CEDED ISLANDS, money arising from the, ii. 353, n. 4. CELIBACY, cheerless, ii. 128. CELSUS, iii. 152, n. 2. CELTS, descended from the Scythians, v. 224. CENSURE, ecclesiastical, iii. 59. Cento, ii. 96, n. 1. CERTAINTIES, small, the bane of men of talents, ii. 323. CERVANTES, Don Quixote's death, ii. 370: see DON QUIXOTE; praised Il Palmerino d' Inghilterra, iii. 2 'CHAIR OF VERITY,' iii. 58, n. 3. CHALMERS, Alexander, edits the Spectator, ii. 212, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 136, n. 3; iii. 230, n. 5. CHALMERS, George, edits Johnson's Debates, i. 152, n. 2. 'CHAM OF LITERATURE,' i. 348. CHAMBERLAIN, Lord, Johnson's application to the, iii. 34, n. 4. CHAMBERLAYNE, Edward, iv. 98. CHAMBERLAYNE, Rev. Mr., iv. 288. CHAMBERS, Catherine, i. 513-6; death, ii. 43. CHAMBERS, Ephraim, Dictionary of Arts and Sciences, i. 138, 219; new edition, ii. 203, n. 3; epitaph, i. 219, n. 1, 498, n. 2; Johnson takes his style as a model, i. 218. CHAMBERS, Sir Robert, dissenters and snails, ii. 268, n. 2; Johnson's companion to Newcastle, ii. 264; v. 16, 20; learnt law from him, iii. 22; letter to him, i. 274; prescribes remedies to, ii. 260; recommends him to Warren Hastings, iv. 68-9; visits him, ii. 25, 46; judge in India, appointed, ii. 264; threatened with revocation, ib., n. i; Langton's will, makes, ii. 261; Lincoln College, Oxford, member of, i. 274; Literary Club, member of the, i. 478, n. 2, 479; married, ii. 274; Principal of New Inn Hall, ii. 46, 268, n. 2; portrait in University College, ii. 25, n. 2; at Streatham, iv. 158, n. 1; professor in the imaginary college, v. 109; proud or negligent, ii. 272; Warton, Dr., recommends him to W. G. Hamilton, i. 519; mentioned, i. 274, 336, 357, 370; ii. 265; iv. 344; v. 66. CHAMBERS, Dr. Robert, Traditions of Edinburgh—Boyd's Inn, v. 21, n. 2; Edinburgh, a new face in the streets, v. 39, n. 3; noble families in the old town, v. 43, n. 4; Hailes, Lord, i. 432, n. 3; Hardyknute, ii. 91, n. 2; James's Court, v. 22, n. 2; Kames, Lord, ii. 200, n. 1; Macdonald's, Flora, virulence, v. 185, n. 4; Monboddo, Lord, ii. 74, n. 1. CHAMBERS, Sir William, Dissertation on Oriental Gardening, iv. 60, n. 7; v. 186; ridiculed in The Heroic Epistle, ib.; Johnson writes an introduction to his Chinese Architecture, iv. 188; Somerset House, architect of, iv. 187, n. 4; Treatise on Civil Architecture, iv. 187, n. 4. CHAMIER, Andrew, account of him, i. 478; Goldsmith, his estimate of, iii. 252-3; Johnson consults him in Dodd's case, iii. 121; gets his interest for Mr. Welch, iii. 217; visits him, iii. 398, n. 1; professor in the imaginary college, v. 109; signs the Round-Robin, iii. 83. CHAMPION, Sir G., iii. 459. Champion, The, i. 169. CHANCELLORS, Lord High, how chosen, ii. 157. CHANCES, iv. 330. Chances, The, ii. 233, n. 4. CHANDLER, Dr., ii. 445, n. 1. CHANGE, silver, iv. 191. CHANTILLY, ii. 400. CHAPEL-HOUSE, ii. 451. CHAPLAINS, ii. 96. CHAPONE, Mrs., account of her, iv. 246, n. 6; Correspondence, her, i. 203, n. 4; Johnson, letter from, iv. 247; his meeting with the Abbe Raynal, iv. 434; his views on natural depravity, v. 211, n. 3; Rambler, contributes to the, i. 203; Williams, Mrs., account of, i. 232, n. 1. CHARACTER, a most complete one, ii. 402; argument, its weight in an, ii. 443; v. 29, n. 5; delineation in the Anabasis, iv. 31; expectation of uniformity, iii. 282, n. 2; Johnson saw a great variety, iii. 20; his sketches of them, ib.; men not bound to reveal their children's character, iii. 18; not to be tried by one particular, iii. 238; must not be lessened, v. 247; nature and manners, ii. 48; as to this world not hurt by vice, iii. 342, 349. CHARADE, a, iv. 195. CHARITABLE ESTABLISHMENT IN WALES, a, iii. 255. CHARITY. See ALMSGIVING. CHARLEMONT, first Earl of, Beauclerk's character, draws, i. 249, n. 1; letters to him, ii. 192; Hume's French, i. 439, n. 2; Hume and Mrs. Mallet, ii. 8, n. 4; Literary Club, member of the, i. 479; Johnson and Vestris, iv. 79; professor in the imaginary college, v. 108; story of the Pyramids, iii. 352, 449, 458; mentioned, ii. 235, 274, n. 3; iv. 78. CHARLES I, anniversary of his death, ii. 152, n. 1; kept by Boswell with old port and solemn talk, iii. 371; birth-place, v. 399; concessions to parliament, v. 340; corn, price of, in his reign, iii. 232, n. 1; Johnson and Lord Auchinleck dispute about him, v. 382, n. 2; 'murder,' his, unpopular, ii. 370; political principles in his time, ii. 369; saying about lawyers, ii. 214; mentioned, i. 194, n. 2, 466; ii. 170, n. 2; v. 204, 346, 406. CHARLES II, atheist and bigot, iv. 194, n. 1; betrayed and sold the nation, ii. 342, n. 2; corn, price of, in his reign, iii. 232, n. 1; descendants, his, Beauclerk, i. 248, n. 2; Commissioner Cardonnel, iii. 390, n. 1; Charles Fox, iv. 292, n. 2; Duke of York and Catharine Sedley, v. 49; France, took money from, ii. 342; Heale, at, iv. 234, n. 1; Hume's partiality for him, ii. 341, n. 2; Johnson's partiality for him, i. 248; ii. 341; iv. 292, n. 2; 'lenity,' his, iv. 41; Lewis XIV, might have been as absolute as, ii. 370; manners, ii. 41; political principles in his time, ii. 369; social, i. 442; story-telling, excelled in, iii. 390, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 437, n 2; v. 357, n. 3. CHARLES III (the Young Pretender), ii. 253. CHARLES EDWARD, Prince. See PRETENDER. CHARLES V, Emperor, plays at his own funeral, iii. 247. CHARLES X, of France, ii. 401, n. 4. CHARLES XII, of Sweden, compared with Socrates, iii. 265; dressed plainly, ii. 475; Johnson's Vanity of Human Wishes, i. 195. Charles of Sweden, i. 153. CHARLOTTE, Queen, account of Boswell, i. 5, n. 1; Garrick's compliment to her, ii. 233; 'a lady of experience,' ii. 142; Queen's House, ii. 33, n. 3; Sunday knotting, iii. 242, n. 3; mentioned, i. 383; ii. 290. Charmer, The, v. 313. CHARTER-HOUSE, iii. 124, 441. CHARTER-HOUSE SCHOOL, iii. 222. CHARTRES, Colonel, ii. 211, n. 4. CHASTITY, one deviation from it ruins a woman, ii. 56; property depends on it, ii. 457; v. 209. CHATHAM, William Pitt, Earl of, Boswell, correspondence with, ii. 13, n. 3, 59, n. 1; Capability Brown, account of, iii. 400, n. 2; Cardross, Lord, offers a post to, ii. 177; Cumming the Quaker's account of him, v. 98, n. 1; Dictator, iii. 356; excisemen, attacks, i. 294, n. 9; Garrick, notes to, ii. 227; Highland regiments, raises, iii. 198; v. 150; House of Commons, last speech in the, ii. 16, n. 2; Johnson attacks him, ii. 134, n. 4, 314; criticises his oratory, iv. 317; writes a speech in his name, i. 504; Loudoun, Lord, recalls, v. 372, n. 3; merchants and tradesmen, praises honest, v. 327, n. 4; 'meteor,' i. 131; v. 339; oratory, his, i. 152; Oxford in 1754, at, i. 171, n. 1; 'Ptit,' figures in the Debates as, i. 502; public and private schools, on, iii. 12, n. 1; Scotch Militia bill, acquiesces in the, ii. 431, n. 1; Shelburne joins his ministry, iii. 36, n. 1; son, his, superior to him, iv. 219, n. 3; Trecothick, praises, iii. 76, n. 2; Walpole, distinguished from, ii. 196; war, his glorious, ii. 126; Whigs and Tories, distinguishes, i. 431, n. 1; 'woollen, buried in,' ii. 453, n. 2; mentioned, iii. 201, n. 3. CHATSWORTH, Boswell visits it, iii. 208; Johnson visits it in 1774, v. 429; in 1784, iv. 357, 367; present at a 'public dinner,' ib., n. 3. CHATTERTON, Thomas, money gained by Beckford's death, iii. 201, n. 3; Rowley's Poetry, iii. 50; pretended discovery, ib., n. 1; Johnson's admiration, iii. 51; Goldsmith's belief, ib., n. 2; Walpole's disbelief, ib.; quarrel about it between Goldsmith and Percy, iii. 276, n. 2; 'wild adherence to him,' iv. 141. CHAUCER, took much from the Italians, iii. 254. Chaucer, Life of, i. 306. CHEAP, Captain, i. 117, n. 2. CHELSEA, ii. 169, n. 1. CHELSEA COLLEGE, ii. 64. CHEMISTRY, Johnson's love of it, i. 140, 436; ii. 155; 'the new kinds of air,' iv. 237; Priestley's discoveries, 238. CHENEY WALK, ii. 99, n. 5. CHEROKEES, v. 248. CHESELDEN, William, iii. 152, n. 3. CHESTER, Boswell visits it, iii. 411-15; Johnson and the Thrales, v. 435; Michael Johnson attends the fair, ib.; passage thence to Ireland, i. 105. CHESTERFIELD, fourth Earl of, active sports and idleness, i. 48, n. 1; Addison and Leandro Alberti, ii. 346, n. 7; appeal to people in high life, how to be made, i. 257, n. 1; Bolingbroke's ready knowledge, ii. 256, n. 3; 'But stoops to conquer,' quotes, ii. 205, n. 4; conversation and knowledge, iv. 332; dedications, the plastron of, i. 183, n. 3; dignified but insolent, iv. 174; dissembling anger, i. 265, n. 1; duplicity, his, i. 264-5; Eliot, Mr., praises, iv. 334, n. 5; epigram written with his diamond, iv. 102, n. 4; exquisitely elegant, iv. 332; Faulkner, George, account of, v. 44, n. 2; friend, had no, iii. 387; flogging, on, i. 46, n. 2; general reflections, on, iv. 313, n. 2; graces and wickedness, on uniting the, ii. 340; great, pronunciation of, ii. 161; Letters, 'Hottentot, a respectable,' i. 266; v. 103, n. 2; Ireland's sufferings from a drunken gentry, v. 250, n. 1: Johnson addresses to him the Plan, i. 183-5; ii. 1, n. 2; 35, n. 5; his MS. notes on it, i. 185, n. 2; Dictionary, writes in The World on, i. 257-60; flatters with a view to a Dedication, i. 257; letter to him, i. 260-5, 284, n. 3; iv. 192, n. 2; v. 130, n. 3; Boswell begs for a copy of it, iii. 418, 420; gets it, iv. 128; neglects, i. 256-265; presents ten pounds to, i. 261, n. 3; speeches ascribed to him, iii. 351; laughter low and unbecoming, declares, ii. 378, n. 2; letter to his son at Rome, iv. 78, n. 1; Letters, Johnson's description of them, i. 266; Boswell's, ib., n. 2; Lord Eliot's, iv. 333; literary property in them contested, i. 266; pretty book, might be made a, iii. 53; sale, ii. 329; mentioned, iii. 54; Miscellaneous Works, published in 1777, iii. 108, n. 2; old and ill, i. 262, n. 1; Parisians not learned, declares the, i. 454, n. 3; patron of bad authors, iv, 331, n. 1; position, great, ii. 329; pride, i. 265; respectable, use of the term, iii. 241, n. 2; Richardson's novels, ii. 174, n. 2; Robinson, Sir T., epigram on, i. 434, n. 3; Secretary of State, iv. 333, n. 2; speeches composed by Johnson, i. 505; study of eloquence, on the, iv. 184, n. 1; transpire, iii. 343, n. 2; Tyrawley, Lord, criticism on, ii. 211; 'wit among Lords,' i. 266; wit, his, ii. 211; world, on the judgment of the, i. 200, n. 2; mentioned, i. 151; iv. 78. CHESTERFIELD, fifth Earl of, Dodd, Dr., forges his name, iii. 140. CHEVALIER, the, v. 140, n. 3. Chevalier's Muster Roll, v. 142, n. 2. CHEYNE, Dr. George, account of his diet, iii. 27, n. 1; on bleeding, iii. 152, n. 3; English Malady, i. 65; iii. 27, 87; v. 210; rule of conduct, v. 154. Cheynel, Life of, i. 228; ii. 187, n. 2. v. 48. CHICHESTER, iv. 160. CHIEFS. See HIGHLANDS. CHIESLEY OF DALRY, v. 227, n. 4. CHILDHOOD, companions of one's, iii. 131. CHILD, ——, of Southwark, i. 491, n. 1. CHILDREN, business men care little for them, iii. 29; company, should not be brought into, iii. 28, 128; Gay's writings for them, ii. 408, n. 3; Johnson on books for them, iv. 8, n. 3, 16; library, to be turned loose in a, iv. 21; management of them, i. 46, n. 3; method of rearing them, ii. 101; natural aptitudes, v. 211, 214; prematurely wise, ii. 408. CHINA, dog-butchers, ii. 232; mortality on the voyage thither, i. 348, n. 3; wall of, iii. 269, 457; people 'perfectly polite,' i. 89; barbarians, iii. 339; plantations, iv. 60. China, Du Halde's Description of. See Du HALDE. CHINA-FANCY, iii. 163, n. 1. CHINA-MANUFACTORY, iii. 163. Chinese Architecture. See CHAMBERS, Sir W. Chinese Stories, i. 136. CHISWICK, iv. 168, n. 1. 'CHOICE OF DIFFICULTIES,' v. 146. CHOISI, Abbe, iii. 336. CHOLMONDELEY, G. J., iv. 345. CHOLMONDELEY, Mrs., account of her, iii. 318, n. 3; a very airy lady, v. 248; an affected gentleman, iii. 261; Johnson takes her hand, iii. 318, n. 3; mentioned, ii. 125; iii. 256. CHRIST'S HOSPITAL, ii. 286. CHRIST'S satisfaction, iv. 124; v. 88. CHRISTIAN, Rev. Mr., ii. 52. Christian Hero, ii. 448. Christian Philosopher and Politician, i. 202, n. 1. CHRISTIANITY, differences political rather than religious, i. 405; chiefly in forms, ii. 150; iii. 188; evidences for it, i. 398, 405, 428, 444,454; ii. 8, 14; iii. 188, 316; v. 47, 340; revelation of immortality its great article, iii. 188; its 'wilds,' iii. 313. CHRISTIE, James, the auctioneer, iv. 402, n. 2. CHRYSOSTOM, v. 446. CHURCH, The, possesses the right of censure, iii. 59-62, 91, n. 3. 'CHURCH AND KING,' iv. 29, 296. CHURCH OF ENGLAND, in Charles II's reign, ii. 341; 'Churchmen will not be Catholics,' iv. 29, n. 1; Convocation denied it, i. 464; discipline and Convocation, iv. 177; example of attendance at the services, ii. 173; House of Hanover, all against the, v. 271; manner of reading the service, iii. 436; neglected state of the buildings, v. 41, n. 3; of the cathedrals, 114, n. 1; observance of days, ii. 458; parishes neglected, iii. 437; patronage, ii. 242-6; revenues, iii. 138; theory and practice, iii. 138. CHURCH OF ROME. See ROMAN CATHOLICS. CHURCH OF SCOTLAND. See under SCOTLAND. CHURCHILL, Charles, account of the publication of his poems, i. 419, n. 3; profits, ib. n. 5; 'blotting,' hatred of, i. 419, n. 5; Boswell criticises his poetry, i. 419; 'brains not excised,' v. 51; Cowper's high estimate of his poetry, i. 419, n. 4; Davies and his wife, i. 391, n. 2, 484; iii. 223, 249; death, his, i. 395, n. 2, 419, n. 3; Dodsley's Cleane, i. 326, n. 3; Flexney, his publisher, ii. 113, n. 2; Francklin, Dr., iv. 34, n. 1; 'gainst fools be guarded,' v. 217, n. 1; Gotham, i. 420, n. 1; Guthrie, William, i. 118, n. 1; Hill, Sir John, ii. 38, n. 2; Holland the actor, iv. 7, n. 5; Johnson, attacks, about Shakespeare, i. 319-20, 419; about the Cock-Lane Ghost, i. 406; about his strong terms, iii. 1, n. 2; despises his poetry, i. 418; Lloyd in the Fleet-prison, i. 395, n. 2; Norton, Sir Fletcher, ii. 472, n. 2; Ogilvie's poetry, i. 423, n. 1; Prophecy of Famine, i. 373, n. 1, 420; iii. 77, n. 1; Gotham, Europe's treatment of savages, iii. 204, n. 1; straw in Bedlam, ii. 374, n. 2; 'strolling tribe,' i. 168, n. 1; Warburton, Bishop, iv. 49, n. 1; v. 81, n. 2; Whitehead, Paul, i. 125; 'With wits a fool, with fools a wit,' i. 266, n. 1. CHURTON, Rev. Ralph, ii. 258, n. 3; iv. 212, n. 4, 300, n. 2. CIBBER, Colley, Apology, ii. 92; iii. 72; Goldsmith praises it, ib., n. 2; Birth-day Odes, i. 149, n. 3, 401-2; ii. 92; iii. 72, 184; Careless Husband, revised by Mrs. Brett, i. 174, n. 2; origin of the story, ib.; no doubt written by Cibber, ii. 340; praised by Pope and H. Walpole, iii. 72, n. 4; Comedies, merit in his, ii. 340; iii. 72; Chesterfield, and Johnson, anecdote about, i. 256; conversation, his, ii. 92, 340; iii. 72; Dryden, recollections of, iii. 71; Fenton, insulted, i. 102, n. 2; genteel ladies, his, ii. 340; Hob or The Country Wake, ii. 465, n. 1; ignorance, iii. 72, n. 1; iv. 243; impudence, i. 154, n. 2; ii. 340, n. 3; Johnson's epigram on him, i. 149; v. 348, 350, 404; shows one of his Odes to, ii. 92; mode of arguing: see JOHNSON, arguing; manager of Drury Lane, v. 244, n. 2; Musa Cibberi, iv. 3, n. 1; Non-juror, The, ii. 321; poet-laureate, i. 401, n. 1; Provoked Husband, ii. 48; iv. 284, n. 2; Richard III, version of, iii. 73, n. 3; Richardson's respect for him, ii. 93; iii. 184; vanity, iii. 264; Walpole praises his character, i. 401, n. 1; his Apology, iii. 72, n. 4; and his acting, iv. 243, n. 6; Whig, violent, iii. 30, n. 1. CIBBER, Theophilus, edits the Lives of the Poets, i. 187; iii. 29-31, 117; death, iii. 30, n. 1. CIBBER, Mrs. (wife of Theophilus), account of her, v. 126, n. 5; acted in Irene, i. 197; mentioned, ii. 92. CICERO, Burke not like him, v. 213-4; Chesterfield likened to him, iii. 351; image of Virtue, ii. 15, n. 2, 443; quotations from Cato Major, iii. 438, n. 2; iv. 374, n. 2; Ep. ad Att., iv. 379, n. 2; Ep. ad Fam., iv. 424, n. 1; Tuscul. Quaest., ii. 107, n. 1. CIRCULATING LIBRARIES, i. 102, n. 2; ii. 36, n. 1. CITY, a, its solitude, iii. 379, n. 2. CITY OF LICHFIELD, a county, i. 36, n. 4. CITY OF LONDON. See LONDON. CITY-POET, iii. 75. CIVIL LAW, i. 134. CIVILISED LIFE. See SAVAGES, and SOCIETY. Civility, ii. 155; iii. 77. Civilisation, ii. 155. CLANRANALD, ii. 309; Allan of Clanranald, v. 290. CLAPP, Mrs., ii. 63, 115-6. CLARE, Lord, friendship with Goldsmith, ii. 136; iii. 311. CLARENDON, first Earl of, History of the Rebellion, its authenticity, i. 294, n. 9; characters trustworthy, ii. 79; character of Falkland, iv. 428, n. 2; compared with Hume and Robertson, v. 57, n. 3; recommended by Johnson, iv. 311; style and matter, iii. 257-8; Villiers's ghost, iii. 351; University of Oxford and his heirs, ii. 424. CLARENDON PRESS, Johnson's letter on its management, ii. 424, 441. CLARET, for boys, in. 381; iv. 79; gives the dropsy before drunkenness, v. 248-9. Clarissa. See RICHARDSON, S. CLARK, Alderman Richard, member of the Essex Head Club, iv. 258, 438; Johnson, letter from, iv. 258. CLARKE, Rev. Dr. Samuel, Christian evidences, i. 398; free-will, ii. 104; Homer, edition of, ii. 129; Johnson's Dictionary, not quoted in, i. 189, n. 1; iv. 416, n. 2; Leibnitz, controversy with, v. 287; learning, iv. 21; studied hard, i. 71; literary character, i. 3, n. 2; orthodox, not, iii. 248; v. 288; Queen Caroline wished to make him a bishop, iii. 248, n. 2; Sermons, ii. 263, 476; iii. 248; recommended by Johnson on his death-bed, iv. 416; unbending himself, fond of, i. 3. CLARKE, Sir T., i. 45, n. 4. CLAUDIAN, ii. 315. CLAVIUS, ii. 444. CLAXTON, Mr., ii. 247. CLEMENT, William, Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, i. 489. CLENARDUS, iv. 20. Cleone. See DODSLEY. Cleonice, ii. 289, n. 3. CLERGYMAN, a, at Bath, iv. 149; Johnson's letter to him, iv. 150; extraordinary character, an, iv. 296, n. 3; hopeless ignorance of one, iv. 33, n. 3; one rebuked by Johnson, iv. 19; a young clergyman, Johnson's letter to, iii. 436. CLERGYMEN, can be but half a beau, iv. 76; Court-party, of the, v. 255, n. 5; decorum required in them, iv. 76; duties, i. 320; elocution, taught, iv. 206; English compared with Scotch, v. 251-3, 381; Harrogate, at, v. 252, n. 3; holy artifices, iii. 438; learning, iv. 13; library fit for one, v. 121; life, their, i. 320, 476; iii. 304; men of the world, aping, iv. 76; popular election, ii. 149; preaching: see PREACHING; sinners in general, ii. 172. CLERK, Sir Philip Jennings, account of him, iv. 80; argument with Johnson, iv. 81. CLERMONT, Lady, iii. 425. CLIENTS. See LAW. CLIMATE, happiness not affected by it, ii. 195. CLINABS, i. 502, 512. CLINTON, Sir Henry, iv. 140, n. 2. CLITHEROE, iv. 162. CLIVE, Lord, astonished at his own moderation, iii. 401, n. 1; character by Dr. Robertson, iii. 334, 350; his chest full of gold, iii. 401; destroyed himself, iii. 334, 350. CLIVE, Mrs., Johnson describes her acting, iv. 243; v. 126; and Walpole, H., iv. 243, n. 6; robbed by highwaymen, iii. 239, n. 1; 'understands what you say,' iv. 7. CLOTHES. See DRESS. CLOUGH, Arthur, v. 149, n. 1. CLOUGH, Sir Richard, v. 436. CLOW, Professor, v. 369, n. 2. Clubable, iv. 254, n. 2. CLUBS: Almack's, iii. 23, n. 1; Arthur's, v. 84, n. 1; Boar's Head, v. 247; British Coffee-house, ii. 195; iv. 179, n. 1; Brookes's, ii. 292, n. 4; iv. 279, n. 2, 358, n. 1; City Club at the Queen's Arms, iv. 87; Cocoa-tree Club, v. 386, n. 1; Essex Head, account of its foundation and members, iv. 253-5,436-8; Boswell and Johnson at a meeting, iv. 275; Johnson attacked with illness there, iv. 259; mentioned, iv. 354, 359, 360; Eumelian, iv. 394; Gaming Club, iii. 23; Ivy Lane, account of it, i. 190, 191, n. 5, 478, n. 2; Lennox, Mrs., supper in honour of, i. 103, n. 3, 255, n. 1; old members meet in 1783, iv. 253, 435-6; Johnson's definition of a club, iv. 254, n. 5; Literary Club, account of it, i. 477-81; v. 109; attendance expected, ii. 273; attendances in 1766, ii. 17, 201; Althorpe, Lord, iii. 424; Banks, Sir Joseph, iii. 365; Beauclerk, described by, ii. 192, n. 2; loss by his death, iii. 424; black-ball, exclusion by a single, iii. 116; books, some of the members talk from, v. 378, n.4; Boswell's election: See BOSWELL, Literary Club; Boswell's account of meetings at which he was present, his introduction, ii. 240; Johnson's apology to Goldsmith, ii. 255; talk of second-sight and Swift, ii. 318; Mrs. Abington's benefit, ii. 330; Travels, Ossian, the Black Bear, and patriotism, ii. 345; speakers distinguished by initials, iii. 230; Johnson's last dinner, iv. 326; Boswell's reports of meetings generally brief, ii. 242, n. 1, 345, n. 5; Burke's company lost to it, ii. 16; Bunbury elected, ii. 274; Camden Lord, black-balled, iii. 311, n. 2; day and hour of meeting, i. 478, 479; ii. 20, n. 1, 330, n. 1; iii. 128, 365, 368; described in 1774 by Beauclerk, ii. 274, n. 3; Dodd sought admittance, iii. 280; Dunning, John, elected, iii. 128; first meeting of the winter, iii. 210; Fordyce elected, ii. 274; foundation, and list of members, i. 477-9, 481, n 3; Fox elected, ii. 274; talked little, iii. 267; Garrick elected, i. 480; his vanity, iii. 311, n. 3; Gibbon elected, i. 481, n. 3; describes it, ii. 348, n. 1; poisons it to Boswell, ii. 443, n. 1; Goldsmith recites some absurd verses, ii. 240; iv. 13; he wishes for more members, iv. 183; his epitaph to be shown to the Club, iii. 81; hanged or kicked, members deserving to be, iii. 281; hogshead of claret nearly out, iii. 238; imaginary college at St. Andrews, v. 108-9; increase of members proposed, iii. 106; Johnson's attendance in his latter years, iii. 106, n. 4; attends after his attack of palsy, iv. 232-3; his last dinner, iv. 326, (for attendances with Boswell, See just above, under BOSWELL); dislikes several members, iii. 106; his friends of the Club, iv. 85; his funeral, iv. 419; subscriptions for his monument, iv. 423, ns. 1 and 3; incompliance with a Call, iv. 84; mentions the Club in a letter, ii. 136; reads his epitaph on Lady Elibank, iv. 10; talks of Mrs. Lennox's play, iv. 10; Jones, Sir W., described by, v. 109, n. 5; motto, its, i. 478, n. 3; name, i. 477; v. 109, n. 5; number of members, i. 478, n. 2, 479; iii. 106; Palmerston, second Lord, black-balled, iv. 232; elected, ib. n. 2; Porteus, Bishop of Chester, black-balled, iii. 311, n. 2; select merit, loses its, ii. 430, n. l; Sheridan, R.B., elected, iii. 316; Shipley, Bishop of St. Asaph, elected, iv. 75, n. 3; Smith, Adam, elected, ii. 430, n. 1; Steevens elected, ii. 273-4; Vesey elected, iv. 28; Vesey's (Mrs.) evening parties on Club nights, iii. 424, n. 3; iv. 108, n. 4; Nonsense Club, i. 395, n. 2; Old Street Club, iii. 443-4; iv. 187; Poker Club, ii. 376, n. 1; 431, n. 1; Tall Club, i. 308, n. 6; White's, ii. 329, n. 3; World, The, iv. 102, n. 4. COACH, post-coach, iii. 129; iv. 283; heavy coach, iv. 285. COAL-HEAVERS, riots of, iii. 46, n. 5. COALITION MINISTRY (Duke of Portland's) formed, iv. 174, n. 3; dismissed, i. 311, n. 1; iv. 165, n. 3, 249, n. 1; mentioned, iv. 170, n. 1, 223, n. 1, 258, n. 2. COBB, Mrs., ii. 388, 466; iii. 412; iv. 142, 143. COBHAM, Lord, i. 491, n. 1; iii. 347; iv. 50, n. 4, 102, n. 4. COBLENTZ, ii. 427, n. 4. COCHRAN, General, i. 431, n. 1. COCKBURN, Baron, iii. 335, n. 1. COCKBURN, Dr., iii. 152, n. 3. COCKBURN, Lord, civil juries in Scotland, ii. 201, n. 1; Dundas, Henry, Viscount Melville, ii. 160, n. 1; Edinburgh High School, ii. 144, n. 2; Edinburgh in the 18th century, v. 21, n. 1; Jeffrey's English accent, ii. 159, n. 6; Scotch county electors, iv. 248, n. 1; Scotch entails, ii. 414, n. 1; St. Giles, Edinburgh, v. 41, n. 1; titles of Scotch judges, v. 77, n. 4. COCKENZIE, ii. 302, n. 2. Cocker's Arithmetic, v. 138, n. 2. COCK-LANE GHOST. See GHOSTS. CODRINGTON, Colonel, iii. 204, n. 1. COFFEE-HOUSE CRITICS, i. 288. COFFEY, ——, v. 256, n. 1. COFFLECT, iv. 77, n. 3. COHAUSEN, Dr., ii. 427 n. 4. COIN, exportation of, iv. 104-5. COKE, Lord, a mere lawyer, ii. 158; his definition of law, iii. 16, n. 1; his painful course of study, iv. 310. COKE, Lady Mary, i. 407, n. 1. COL, the old Laird of, iii. 133; v. 29, n. 2. COL, Alexander Maclean, of, the second son, ii. 308, 406, 411. COL, Donald Maclean, the young Laird of, account of him, v. 250-1; the first road-maker, v. 235, n. 2; plans an excursion for Johnson, v. 254; accompanies him, v. 256-331; his bowl of punch, v. 258; manages the ship in the storm, v. 280-1; puts a rope in Boswell's hands, v. 282; juvenis qui gaudet canibus, v. 283; introduces turnips, v. 293; his family papers, v. 297-9; takes Johnson to his aunt's house, v. 312; anecdotes of Sir A. Macdonald, v. 315; his house in Mull, v. 316; deserves a statue, v. 327; his father's deputy, v. 329; 'a noble animal', v. 330; death, ii. 287-8, 406; v. 331; mentioned, v. 95, 267, 341. COLCHESTER, i. 466; iv. 15, n. 5. COLDS, catching, ii. 51, 150; v. 278. COLE, Henry, iv. 402, n. 2. COLEBROOKE, Sir G., ii. 222, n. 3. COLISEUM, ii. 106. COLLECTIONS, the desire of augmenting, iv. 105. COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS, ii. 297. COLLEGE TUTOR, an old, advice to his pupils, ii. 237. COLLEGES. See OXFORD. COLLIER, Jeremy, censures actors, i. 167, n.. 2; 'fought without a rival,' iv. 286, n. 3. COLLINS, Anthony, iii. 363, n. 3. COLLINS, William, affected the obsolete, iii. 159, n. 2; Johnson's affection for him, i. 276, 383, n. 1; Life by Johnson, i. 382; madness, his, i. 65, n. 3, 276, 277, 383; Poems, Glasgow edition, ii. 380. COLLOQUIAL BARBARISMS, iii. 196. 'COLLYER, Joel', i. 315. COLMAN, George, the elder, Boswell's belief in second sight, mocks, ii. 318; Connoisseur, starts the, i. 420, n. 3; ii. 334, n. 3; Foote's patent, buys, iii. 97; Good Natured Man, brings out the, iii. 320; Jealous Wife, The, i. 364, n. 1; Johnson, imitation of, iv. 387-8; Literary Club, member of the, i. 478, n. 2, 479; Odes to Obscurity, ii. 334; professor in the imaginary college, v. 108; Prose on Several Occasions, iv. 387; Round-Robin, signed the, iii. 83; Shakespeare's Latin, iv. 18; She Stoops to Conquer, brings out, ii. 208, n.. 5; 'Sir, if you don't lie you're a rascal,' iv. 10; Student, contributes to the, i. 209; Terence, translation of, iv. 18; Westminster School, at, i. 395, n. 2. COLMAN, George, the son, Aberdeen, a student at, v. 85, n. 2; made a freeman of the city, v. 90, n. 2; Dunbar, Dr., describes, iii. 436, n. 1; Gibbon's dress, describes, ii. 443, n. 1; Johnson and Gibbon, describes, iii. 54, n. 2. COLOGNE, Elector of, iii. 447. COLONIES, a loss to the community, i. 130, n. 2. COLQUHOUN, Sir James, v. 363-5. COLQUHOUN, Lady Helen, v. 365. COLSON, Rev. Mr., Garrick and Johnson recommended to him, i. 102; Gelidus, i. 101, n. 3. Columbiade, The, iv. 331. COLUMBUS, i. 455, n. 3; iv. 250. COLVILL, Lady, v. 387, 394-5. COMB-MAKER, a punctuating, iii. 32, n. 5. Combabus, iii. 238, n. 2. COMBERMERE, v. 433-5. COMBERMERE, Lord, v. 433, n. 1. COMEDY, distinguished from farce, ii. 95; its great end, ii. 233. COMMANDMENT, ninth, emphasis in it, i. 169; in the sixth, i. 326, n. 1. COMMENTARIES ON THE BIBLE, iii. 58. COMMERCE, circulation of, iii. 177; effect of taxes on it, ii. 357; effect on relationship, ii. 177; not necessary to England, ii. 357. COMMISSARIES, ii. 339, n. 2; iii. 184. COMMON COUNCIL. See LONDON. COMMON PEOPLE, inaccuracy in thoughts and words, iii. 136; their language proverbial, ib. COMMON PRAYER BOOK, iv. 293. COMMONS, DOCTORS', i. 462, n. 1. COMMONS, House of. See DEBATES OF PARLIAMENT and HOUSE OF COMMONS. COMMUNION OF SAINTS, iv. 290. COMMUNITY OF GOODS, ii. 251. COMMUTATION OF SINS AND VIRTUES, iv. 398. COMPANION, the most welcome one, ii. 359, n. 2; a lasting one, iv. 235, n. 2. COMPANY, good things must be provided, iii. 186; iv. 90; love of mean company, i. 449; of a new person, iv. 33. See JOHNSON, Company. COMPIEGNE, ii. 400. COMPLAINTS, iii. 368. Complete Angler, i. 138, n. 5. Complete Vindication of the Licensers of the Stage, i. 140. COMPLIMENTS, offending the company by them, iv. 336; right to repeat them, iii. 240; without violating truth, iii. 161; unusual, v. 440, n. 2. COMPOSITION, causes of hasty, i. 192, n. 5; errors caused by partial changes, iv. 11; fine passages to be struck out, ii. 237; happy moments for it, v. 40; Johnson's advice, iii. 437; v. 66-8; man writing from his own mind, ii. 344; pleasure, not a, iv. 219, n. 1; practised early, to be, iv. 12; setting oneself doggedly to it, v. 40, 110. See JOHNSON, Composition. Compositor, iv. 321, n. 3. COMPTON, Bishop of London, iii. 445, 447. Comus, Johnson's Prologue to, i. 227. CONCANEN, Matthew, v. 92, n. 4. CONCEIT OF PARTS, iii. 316. Conceits, i. 179. Concoction, of a play, iii. 259. CONDAMINE, La, Account of the Savage Girl, v. 110; of a Brazilian tribe, v. 242. CONDE, Prince of, ii. 393, 400. CONDESCENSION, iv. 3. CONDUCT, gradations in it, iv. 75; wrong but with good meaning, iv. 360. Conduct of the Ministry (1756), i. 309. CONFESSION, ii. 105; iii. 60. Conf.

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