Exclaim, why all nations cry Oh! when they exclaim, [374].

Experience of greater use in procuring good laws than genius, [491].

Fable, the, or what is supposed to have occasioned the first dialogue, [273], [274].

Fable of the Bees, the first part of the, quoted, [326], [332], [436],
spoke against, [280], [301], [332], [336],
defended, [293], [332].—
What view the book ought to be seen in, [333].
The treatment it has had illustrated by a simile, [333].
Vice is no more encouraged in it than robbing is in the Beggar’s Opera, [263].

Fall, the, of man not predestinated, [429].

Fame, what the thirst after fame consists in, [20].

Fathers of the church delighted in acclamations whilst they are preaching, [269].

Fear, not to be conquered by reason, [118].
A definition of fear, ibid.
The necessity of fear in the society, [122].
Fear of death, when the strongest, [211].
Fear the only thing man brings into the world with him towards religion, [408].
The Epicurean axiom that fear made the gods exploded, ibid. and [409].

Fees, the power of them upon lawyers and physicians, [293].

Fish, a visible provision made by nature for their extraordinary numbers, [437].
The vast consumption of them, [438], [439].