HYPOCRISY. 'I hoped you had got rid of all this hypocrisy of misery,' iv. 71.

HYPOCRITE. 'No man is a hypocrite in his pleasures,' iv. 316.

I.

I. 'I put my hat upon my head,' ii. 136, n. 4.

IDEA. 'That fellow seems to me to possess but one idea, and that is a wrong one,' ii. 126; 'There is never one idea by the side of another,' iv. 225.

IDLE. 'If we were all idle, there would be no growing weary,' ii. 98;
'We would all be idle if we could,' iii. 13.

IDLENESS. 'I would rather trust his idleness than his fraud,' v. 263.

IGNORANCE. 'A man may choose whether he will have abstemiousness
and knowledge, or claret and ignorance,' iii. 335;
'He did not know enough of Greek to be sensible of his ignorance
of the language,' iv. 33, n. 3;
'His ignorance is so great I am afraid to show him the bottom of
it,' iv. 33, n. 3
'Ignorance, Madam, pure ignorance,' i. 293;
'Sir, you talk the language of ignorance,' ii. 122.

IGNORANT. 'The ignorant are always trying to be cunning,' v.
217, n. 1;
'We believe men ignorant till we know that they are learned,'
v. 253.

ILL. 'A man could not write so ill if he should try,' iii. 243.