Habeas Corpus, ii. 73. Habeas Corpus Bill of 1758, iii. 233, n. 1. HABERDASHERS' COMPANY, i. 132, n. 1. HABITATIONS, attachment to, ii. 103. HABITS, early, force of, ii. 366. HACKMAN, Rev. Mr., Boswell attends his trial, iii. 383; and execution, iii. 384, n. 1; altercation about him, iii. 384-5; described in Love and Madness, iv. 187, n. 1. HADDINGTON, seventh Earl of, iii. 133. HADDO, Professor, v. 64. HADDOCKS, dried, v. 110. Hadoni exequioe, iv. 159, n. 1. HAGLEY, described by Walpole, v. 78, n. 3, 456, n. 2; Johnson visits it, v. 456-7. HAGUE, v. 25, n. 2. HAILES, Lord (Sir David Dalrymple), account of him, i. 432; v. 48; Annals of Scotland, a new mode of history, ii. 383; accuracy, ii. 421; a book of great labour, iii. 372; exact, but dry, iii. 404; praised by Gibbon, ib., n. 3; revised by Johnson, ii. 278-9, 283-4, 287, 293. 333, 379-80, 383-4, 387, 411-12, 421; iii. 120, 216, 219, 360; praised by him, iii. 58; Boswell, letters to, i. 432; v. 406; Catalogue of the Lords of Session, v. 213; Chesterfield's 'respectable Hottentot,' on, i. 267; consulted on the entail of Auchinleck, ii. 415, 418, 420-22; critical sagacity, ii. 201; v. 48; Elgin Cathedral, account of, v. 114; Inch Keith, account of, v. 55; Johnson, introduced to, v. 48; asks, to write a character of Bruce, ii. 386-7; compares, with Swift, i. 433; is not convinced by his Suasorium, iii. 91; records a talk with him, v. 399; sends him anecdotes for his Lives, iii. 396-7; drinks a bumper to him, i. 451; love for him, ii. 293; Knight, the negro's case, iii. 216, 219; La crédulité des Incrédules, v. 332; Lactantius, edits, iii. 133; modernizes John Hales's language, iv. 315; Ossian, faith in, ii. 295; Percy, resemblance to, iii. 278; Prior, censures, iii. 192; Remarks on the History of Scotland, v. 38-9; Sacred Poems, iii. 192; Stuarts, unfair to the, v. 255; Vanity of Human Wishes, corrects the, v. 49; Walton's Lives, proposal to edit, ii. 279, 283, 285, 445; mentioned, ii. 294; iii. 102, 129, 155; iv. 157, 216, 232, 241; v. 394. HAIR, growth of the, iii. 398, n. 3. HAKEWILL, Rev. George, i. 219. HALL, Sir Matthew, devoted to his office, ii. 344; knowledge varied, ii. 158; Life by Burnet, iv. 311; Primitive Origination of Mankind, i. 188, n. 4; rules of health and study, iv. 310; sentenced witches to death, v. 45, n. 5. HALES, John, of Eton, iv. 315. HALES, Stephen, On Distilling Sea-Water, i. 309; Statical Essays, v. 247, n. 1. HALIFAX, Dr., ii. 97, n. 1. HALKET, Elizabeth, ii. 91, n. 2. HALL, Dr., Master of Pembroke College, iv. 298, n. 2. HALL, General, iii. 361, 362, n. 1. HALL, John, the engraver, iii. 111; iv. 421, n. 2. HALL, Mrs., account of her, iv. 92; Johnson turns Captain Macheath, iv. 95; talks of the resurrection, iv. 93. HALL, Rev. Robert, influenced by a metaphysical tailor, iv. 187, n. 2; studied at Aberdeen, v. 85, n. 2. HALL, Rev. Westley (Wesley's brother-in-law), iv. 92, n. 3. HALL, ——, v. 98. HALLAM, Henry, ii. 210, n. 3. HALLAM, Henry, the younger, ii. 94, n. 2. HALLE, University of, i. 148, n. 1. HALLS, fire-place in the middle, i. 273; in squires' houses, v. 60. HALSEY, Edmund, i. 491, n. 1. HAM, posterity of, i. 401. HAMILTON, Archibald, the printer, ii. 226. HAMILTON, Captain, iv. 295, n. 5. HAMILTON, sixth Duke of, v. 359. n. 2. HAMILTON, eighth Duke of, ii. 50, n. 4; ii. 219; v. 43, 353, n. 1. HAMILTON, Gavin, ii. 270. HAMILTON, Lady Betty, v. 354, 358. HAMILTON, Sir William, member of the Literary Club, i. 479. HAMILTON, William, of Bangour, Johnson talks slightingly of him, iii. 150-1; verses on Holyrood, v. 43; to the Countess of Eglintoune, v. 374, n. 3. HAMILTON, William, of Sundrum, v. 38. HAMILTON, William Gerard, Boswell's Johnson, pays for a cancel in, i. 520; Burke, engagement and rupture with, i. 519; ranks very high, iv. 27, n. 1; character by H. Walpole and Miss Burney, i. 520; 'eminent friend,' an, iv. 280, n. 2; Jenyns's character, iii. 289, n. 1; Johnson accompanied him to the street-door, i. 490; arguing on the wrong side, iv. 111, n. 2; bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; complaint of the Ministry, ii. 317; death makes a chasm, iv. 420; engaging in politics with him, i. 489, 518-20; 'envied but one thing,' he had said, iv. 112; esteem for him, i. 489; long intimacy, ii. 317; as a fox-hunter, i. 446, n. 1; generous offer to, iv. 245, 363, n. 1; letters to him, iv. 245, 363; pension, ii. 317; on public speaking, ii. 139; Junius, suspected to be, iii. 376, n. 4; Parliamentary Logick, i. 518; satisfactory coxcomb, describes a, iii. 245, n. 1; 'Single-speech,' i. 489, n, 4; Warton, Dr., letter to, i. 519; mentioned, iv. 1, n. 1, 159, n. 3, 344. HAMILTON and BALFOUR, booksellers, iii. 334, n. 2. Hamlet, an Essay on the Character of, iv. 25, n. 4; rescued from rubbish, ii. 85, n. 7, 204, n. 3. HAMMOND, Dr. Henry, iii. 58. HAMMOND, James, Life, by Johnson, iii. 30, n. 1; Love Elegies, iv. 17; v. 268. HAMPDEN, Dr., Bishop of Hereford, iv. 323, n. 3. HAMPSTEAD, Mrs. Johnson's lodgings, i. 192, 238; Johnson composes most of The Vanity of Human Wishes there, i. 192; takes an airing to it, iv. 232; mentioned, v. 223. HAMPTON, James, Translation of Polybius, i. 309. HAMPTON COURT, Johnson's application for a residence in it, iii. 34, n. 4; mentioned, iii. 400, n. 2. HANDASYD, General, ii. 218, n. 1. HANDEL, musical meeting in his honour, iv. 283; his poet, v. 350, n. 1. HANMER, Sir Thomas, epitaphs on him, i. 177; ii. 25; Hervey's Letter to Sir Thomas Hanmer, ii. 32, n. 1, 33, n. 2; Shakespeare, edits, i. 175, 178; v. 244, n. 2. HANNIBAL, iii. 40. HANOVER, House of, Johnson attacks it, i. 141: asserts its unpopularity, iii. 155; calls it isolée, iv. 165; says that it is weak because unpopular, v. 271; oaths as to the disputed right, ii. 220; pleasure of cursing it, i. 429; right to the throne, v. 202-4; unpopular at Oxford, i. 72, n. 3 (see under OXFORD, Jacobite); becomes generally popular, iv. 171, n. 1 (see under GEORGE III, unpopularity). HANOVER RAT, ii. 455. HANWAY, Jonas, Eight Days' Journey, i. 309; ii. 122; Essay on Tea, i. 309. 313-4, 348, n. 3; iii. 264, n. 4; v. 23; Johnson's rejoinder, i. 314. HAPPINESS, attained by studying little things, i. 433, 440; iii. 165; business of a wise man, iii. 135; cannot be found in this life, v. 180; counterfeited, ii. 169, n. 3; cultivated, to be, iii. 164; experience shows that men are less happy, iii. 237; hope the chief part of it, i. 234, n. 2; ii. 351; Hume's notion, ii. 9; iii. 288; inn, produced most by a good, ii. 452; its throne a tavern chair, ib., n. 1; one solid basis of it, iii. 363; Pantheon, at the, ii. 169; pleasure, compared with, iii. 246; present time never happy but when a man is drunk, ii. 350, 435, n. 7; iii. 5; or when he forgets himself, iii. 53; public matters, little affected by, ii. 60, n. 4, 170; schoolboys, happiness of, i. 451; struggles for it, iii. 199; Swift, defined by, ii. 351, n. 1; virtue, not the certain result of, i. 389, n. 2. Happy Life, The, ii. 25. HARCOURT, Lord Chancellor, i. 75, n. 3. HARCOURT, Lord, iii. 426, n. 3. HARDCASTLE, Mrs., in She Stoops to Conquer, i. 213, n. 5. HARDING, ——, a painter, iv. 421, n. 2. HARDINGE, first Viscount, ii. 183, n. 1. HARDWICKE, Lord Chancellor, Dirleton's Doubts, on, iii. 205; Dr. Foster becomes popular through him, iv. 9, n. 5; prime minister, on the office of a, ii. 355, n. 2; Radcliffe's trial, i. 180, n. 2; Spectator, paper in the, iii. 34; mentioned, ii. 157, n. 3. HARDWICKE, second Lord, i. 260, n. 3. HARDYKNUTE, ii. 91. HARE, James, iii. 388, n. 3. HARE, W., the murderer, v. 227, n. 4. HARGRAVE, ——, the barrister, iii. 87, n. 3. HARINGTON, Dr., iv. 180. HARINGTON, Sir John, iv. 180, n. 3; 420, n. 3. HARLEIAN Library and Catalogue, i. 153, 158. Harleian Miscellany, Preface to the, i. 175. HARRINGTON, Countess of, iii. 141. HARRIS, James (Hermes Harris), account of him, ii. 225, n. 2; a coxcomb, v. 377; Hermes or Philological Inquiries, iii. 115, 245, 258; v. 377; Johnson's Dictionary, praises, iii. 115; talk with, iii. 256-9; pleasantry, his sense of, v. 378, n. 2; scholar and prig, iii. 245; mentioned, ii. 365. HARRIS, Thomas, of Covent Garden Theatre, iii. 114. HARRISON, Rev. Cornelius, iv. 401, n. 3. HARRISON, Elizabeth, Miscellanies, i. 309, 312. HARRISON, John, the inventor of the chronometer, i. 301, n. 3. HARRISON, ——, iv. 222, n. 2. HARROGATE, i. 287, n. 3; iii. 45, n. 1. HARRY, Miss Jane, iii. 298, n. 2. HARTE, Dr. Walter, companionable and a scholar, ii. 120; Essays on Husbandry, iv. 78; History of Gustavus Adolphus, ii. 120; iv. 78; Johnson and the screen, i. 163, n. 1; tutor to Eliot and Stanhope, iv. 78, 333. HARTLEBURY, v. 455. HARVEST OF 1777, iii. 226, n. 2; of 1775, iii. 313, n. 3. HARVEY. See HERVEY. HARWICH, i. 471; stage-coach, 465. HARWOOD, Dr. Edward, Liberal Translation of the New Testament, iii. 38. HASLERIG, Sir Arthur, ii. 118. HASTIE, a Scotch schoolmaster, his case, ii. 144, 146, 156, 157; Johnson's argument for him, ii. 183; Mansfield's speech, ii. 186; had his deserts, ii. 202. HASTINGS, Warren, Boswell, letter to, iv. 66; charges against him, iv. 213; Johnson, letters from, iii. 455; iv. 66, 68-70; Macaulay on his answer to Johnson, iv. 70, n. 2; scheme about Oxford and Persian literature, iv. 68, n. 2; trial, iv. 66, n. 1; Westminster School, at, i. 395, n. 2. HATE, steadier than love, iii. 150. HATSEL, Mrs., iv. 159, n. 3. HATTER, anecdote of a, ii. 287, n. 2. HAVANNAH EXPEDITION, i. 191, n. 5, 242, n. 1, 382. HAWES, L., i. 183, n. 1. HAWKESBURY, Lord. See JENKINSON, Charles. HAWKESTONE, v. 433-4. HAWKESWORTH, Dr. John, edits the Adventurer, i. 234; Cook's Voyages, edits, ii. 247; iii. 7; payment for it, i. 341, n. 4; ii. 247, n. 5; passage against a particular providence, v. 282; Courtenay's lines on him, i. 223; death, causes of his, v. 282, n. 2; Debates, continues the, i. 512; Ivy Lane Club, member of the, iv. 436; Johnson's imitator, i. 233, 252; ii. 216; tribute to him, i. 190, n. 3; Psalmanazar, anecdote of, iii. 443; spoilt by success, i. 253, n. 1; Swift, Life of, i. 190, n. 3; ii. 319, n. 1; mentioned, i. 241, 242; ii. 118. HAWKINS, Sir John, account of him, i. 27-8; Addison's style, i. 224, n. 1; 'Attorney, an,' i. 190; Barber, attacks, iv. 370, 402, n. 2; 440; Boswell attacks him indirectly, i. 226, n. 3; slights, i. 28, n. 1, 190, n. 4; 'bulky tome,' his, ii. 452, n. 1; Burke, rudeness, to, i. 480; ill-will towards, ii. 450; Cave, Edward, i. 113, n. 1; Dodd, Dr., iii. I20, n. 2; English lexicographers, i. 186; gentility, on, i. 162, n. 3; Goldsmith at the Club, i. 480, n. 1; Hector's notes of Johnson, iv. 375; History of Music, v. 72; Hogarth's physicians, iii. 288, n. 4; inaccuracy, his general, i. 27, n. 1; iii. 229; iv. 327, n. 5, 371; instances of it—Addison's notanda, i. 204; Essex Head Club, iv. 254, 437; ignorance for arrogance, iv. 138, n. 2; Irene, reception of, i. 197, n. 5; Johnson's Adversaria, i. 208, n. 1; 'enmity' to Milton, i. 230; fear of death, iv. 395; fondness for his wife, i. 234; and Heely, ii. 31, n. 1; loan of books, iv. 371, n. 2; and Millar, i. 287, n. 2; mother's death, i. 339, n. 2; operating on himself, iv. 399, n. 6, 418, n. 1; 'ostentatious bounty to negroes,' iv. 402, n. 2; warrants against, i. 141; wife's apparition, i. 240; will, iv. 370; Literary Club, i. 479-80; Rasselas, i. 341; Review of Burke's Sublime and Beautiful, i. 310; Vicar of Wakefield, sale of the copy of the, i. 415; Ivy Lane Club, iv. 253; Johnson's apologies, iv. 321, n. 1; bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; executors, one of, iv. 402, n. 2; funeral, iv. 420, n. 1; house in Johnson's Court, ii. 5, n. 1; humour, ii. 262, n. 2; letters to him, iv. 435; London and Savage, i. 125, n. 4; mode of eating, i. 468, n. 2; not a stayed, orderly man, iv. 371, n. 2; praise of a tavern chair, ii. 452, n. 1; quickness to see good in others, i. 161, n. 2; readiness to forgive injuries, iv. 349, n. 2; said to have slandered, iv. 420, n. 1; separation from his wife, i. 163, n. 2; sinking into indolence, iii. 98, n. 1; title of Doctor, i. 488, n. 3; will, iv. 402; Works, edits, i. 190, n. 4; writing for money, iii. 19, n. 3; knighted, i. 190, n. 4; Literary Club, account of the, i. 478, n. 2, 479; Pitt and Pulteney, oratory of, i. 152; pockets Johnson's Diary, iv. 406, n. 1; Porson, satirised by, ii. 57, n. 5; iv. 370, n. 5, 406, n. 1; 'rigmarole,' his, i. 351, n. 1; Thrale's, Mrs., second marriage, iv. 339; unclubable, i. 27, n. 2, 480, n. 1; iv. 254, n. 2. HAWKINS, Miss, 'Boswell, Mr. James,' i. 190, n. 4; Burke's estimate of his son, iv. 219, n. 3; Hawkins's attack on the Essex Head Club, iv. 438. HAWKINS, Rev. Professor William, member of Pembroke College, i. 75; quarrel with Garrick, ib., n. 2; iii. 259. HAWKINS, ——, under-master of Lichfield School, i. 43. HAWTHORNDEN. See DRUMMOND, William. HAY, Lord, v. 105. HAY, Lord Charles, at the Battle of Fontenoy, iii. 8, n. 3; his courtmartial, iii. 9. HAY, Sir George, i. 349. HAY, Dr., i. 349, 351, n. 1. HAY, John, v. 131, 137, 144. HAY, William, a translation of Martial, v. 368. HAYES, Rev. Mr., iii. 181. HAYLEY, William, correspondence with Miss Seward, iv. 331, n. 2; dedication to Romney, iii. 43, n. 4. HAYMAN, Francis, i. 263, n. 3. HAYWARD, Abraham, Thraliana, iv. 343, n. 4. HAZLITT, William, Baxter at Kidderminster, iv. 226, n. 2; Dr. Foster's popularity, iv. 9, n. 5; grieves at the defeat of Napoleon, iv. 278, n. 3. See under NORTHCOTE,Conversations of Northcote. HEALE, iv. 234-9. HEALTH, rules to restore it, iv. 153. Heard, Johnson's pronunciation of, iii. 197. HEARNE, Thomas, Duke of Brunwick's accession-day, i. 72, n. 3; Leland's Itinerary, v. 445, n. 3; Pembroke College Chapel, i. 59, n. 1; Psalmanazar at Oxford, iii. 449. HEATH, Dr., iv. 73. HEATH, James, the engraver, iv. 421, n. 2. HEAVEN, degrees of happiness in it, iii. 288. See FUTURE STATE. HE-BEAR AND SHE-BEAR, iv. 113, n. 2. HEBERDEN, Dr., account of him, iv. 228, n. 2; Johnson, attends, iv. 230-1, 260, n. 2, 262; bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; Markland, assists, iv. 161, n. 3; ultimus Romanorum, iv. 399, n. 4; timidorum timidissimus, iv. 399, n, 6; mentioned, ii. 311; iv. 353-4, 355, n. 1. HEBREW, Leibnitz traces all languages up to it, ii. 156. HEBRIDES. See under BOSWELL, Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides; Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland; and SCOTLAND, Highlands. HECTOR, Edmund, Birmingham, his house in, ii. 456, n. 2; Boswell and Johnson visit him in 1776, ii. 456, 457; 459-461; Johnson's chastity, i. 164; early life, gives Boswell particulars of, ii. 459; iv. 375, n. 2; early verses, i. 157, n. 5; friendship for him, iv. 135, 147, 270; last visit to him, iv. 375; letters to him: see under JOHNSON, letters; will, not in, iv. 402, n. 2; sister, his, Mrs. Careless, ii. 459. HEELY, Mr. and Mrs., ii. 30-1; iv. 370; Johnson's letter to Heely, iv. 371. Heinous, ii. 172. HEIRS AT LAW, right, their, ii. 432. HEIRS GENERAL, ii. 414. HELL, Johnson's dread of it, iv. 299; its pavement of good intentions, ii. 360; of infants' skulls, iv. 226, n. 2; subsists by truth, iii. 293. HELMET, hung out on a tower, iii. 273. HELOT, the drunken, iii. 379. HELVETIUS, advises Montesquieu to suppress his Esprit des Lois, v. 42, n. 1; Warburton 'would have worked him,' iv. 261, n. 3. HELVOETSLUYS, i. 471. Hemisphere, ii. 81. HÉNAULT, ii. 383, n. i, 412, 421. HENDERSON, John, the actor, his mimicry of Johnson not correct, ii. 326, n. 5; visits him, iv. 244, n. 2. HENDERSON, John (of Pembroke College), account of him, iv. 298-9; Johnson and the nonjurors, iv. 286, n. 3; mentioned, iv. 151, n. 2. HENLEY-IN-ARDEN, ii. 452, n. 2, 456. HENLEY-ON-THAMES, v. 454, n. 2. HENN, Mr., i. 132, n. 1. HENRY II. gives Langton a grant of free-warren, i. 248; History of him by Lyttelton, ii. 38. Henry V, Johnson proposes to act it in Versailles, ii. 395, n. 2. HENRY VIII. threatens the House of Commons, iii. 408. HENRY IV. of France, Johnson censures his epitaph, iv. 85, n. I. HENRY, Prince, of Portugal, happy for mankind had he never been born, iv. 250. HENRY, Robert, History of Great Britain, iii. 333; sale maliciously injured, in. 334, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 55, n. 1. HENS feeding their young, iv. 210. HEPHAESTION, iv. 274. HERALD'S OFFICE, i. 255. HERALDRY, i. 492. HERBERT, George, 'Hell is full of good meanings,' ii. 360, n. 1. HERCULES, his shirt, iii. 358; Johnson, the Hercules who strangled serpents, ii. 260; 'You, and I and Hercules,' iv. 45, n. 3. HEREDITARY OCCUPATIONS, v. 120. HEREDITARY TENURES, ii. 421. Hermes, or a Philosophical Inquiry concerning Universal Grammar, ii. 225, n. 2. HERMETICK PHILOSOPHY. See Hermippus Redivivus. Hermippus Redivivus, i. 417; ii. 427, n. 4. Hermit. See under BEATTIE and PARNELL. Hermit of Teneriffe. See Theodore the Hermit. HERMITS, v. 62. HERNE, Elizabeth, iv. 402, n. 2, 439. HERODOTUS, Egyptian mummies, iv. 125, n. 4. Heroic Epistle. See MASON, W. HERTFORD, first Earl of, Cock-lane ghost, goes to hear the, i. 407, n. 1; Hume, gets a pension for, ii. 317, n. 1; Johnson, correspondence with, iii. 34, n. 4. HERTFORD, Lady, i. 173, n. 3; iii. 139, n. 4. HERVEY, Hon. Henry, 'Harry Hervey,' i. 106; Johnson's love for him, i. 106; intimacy with his family, i, 194; story of Johnson's ingratitude, iii. 195. HERVEY, Rev. James, Meditations, v. 351; parodied by Johnson, v. 352. HERVEY, Hon. Thomas, Beauclerk's story of him and Johnson, ii. 32; Johnson, payment to, ii. 33; separation from his wife, ii. 32, 33, n. 2; vicious and genteel, ii. 341. HERVEY, Mrs., iii. 244, n. 2. HERVEY, Miss, iii. 195, n. 1. HERVEY, Miss E., iii. 435; n. 4. HESIOD, Pasoris Lexicon, iii. 407; quoted, v. 63. HESKETH, Lady, iii. 36, n. 3. HESSE, Landgrave of, v. 217. HETHERINGTON'S CHARITY, ii. 286. HEYDON, John, iv. 402, n. 2. HEYWOOD, i. 84, n. 2. HICKES, Rev. Dr., account of him, v. 357, n. 4; mentioned, iv. 287. HICKY, Thomas, ii. 340. HIERARCHY, English, Johnson's reverence for it, iv. 75, 197, 274; v. 61; its theory and practice, iii. 138. Hierocles, Jests of, i. l50; v. 308, n. 1. HIGGINS, Dr., iii. 354, 386. High, Johnson's use of the word, iii. 118, n. 3. HIGH DUTCH, resemblance to English, iii. 235. High Life below Stairs, iv. 7. HIGHWAYMEN, evidence of H. Walpole, Wesley, and Baretti as to their frequency, iii. 239, n. 1; Gay their Orpheus, ii. 367, n. 1; question of shooting them, iii. 239, 240, n. 1. HILL, Dr. Sir John, account of him, ii. 38, n. 2, 39, n. 2; wrote Mrs. Glasses Cookery, iii. 285; in the Heroic Epistle, iv. 113, n. 3. HILL, Joseph (Cowper's friend), i. 395, n. 2. HILL, Miss, of Hawkestone, v. 433-4. HILL, Professor, of St. Andrews, v. 64-5. HILL, Sir Rowland, of Hawkestone, v. 433. HILL, Thomas Wright, v. 455, n. 1. HINCHCLIFFE, John, Bishop of Peterborough, member of the Literary Club, i. 479; hated Whiggism, iii. 422. HINCHINBROOK, iii. 383, n. 3. HINCHMAN, ——, iv. 402, n. 2. HINDOOS, iv. 12, n. 2. Histoire de Pascal Paoli, ii. 3, n. 1. Historia Studiorum, Johnson's, iii. 321. HISTORIAN, great abilities not needed, i. 424; inferiority of English, i. 100, n. 1; ii. 236, n. 2; licence allowed, i. 355. HISTORY, almanac, no better than an, ii. 366; authentic, little, ii. 365; Bolingbroke's caution about reading it, ii. 213, n. 3; Bolingbroke, Burke, and Fox on it, ii. 366, n. 1; character and motives generally unknown, ii. 79; iii. 404; colouring and philosophy conjecture, ii. 365; Johnson's indifference to general history, iii. 206, n. 1; recommendation of many histories, iv. 312, n. 1; manners and common life, of, iii. 333; v. 79; oral at first, v. 393; 'painted form the taste of this age,' iii. 58; records only lately consulted, i. 117; v. 220; spirit contrary to minute exactness, i. 155; shallow stream of thought in it, ii. 195; unsupported by contemporary evidence, v. 403. History of the Council of Trent, i. 107. History of England, in Italian. See MARTINELLI. History of John Bull, i. 452, n. 2; written by Arbuthnot, i. 452, n. 2; quoted by Johnson, ii. 235, n. 1. History of the War, projected, i. 354. Historyes of Troye, v. 459, n. 2. HITCH, Charles, i. 183. HOADLEY, Archbishop, i. 318, n. 4. HOADLEY, Dr. Benjamin, Suspicious Husband, The, ii. 50, n. 2. HOADLEY, Dr. John, letter to Garrick, ii. 69, n. 1. Hob in the Well, ii. 465. HOBBES, Thomas, Bathurst's verses to him, iv. 402, n. 2; mentioned, iii. 448. HOCKLEY-IN-THE-HOLE, iii. 134, n. 1; 454. HODGE, the cat, iv. 197. HODGES, Dr., ii. 341, n. 3. HOG, William, i. 229. HOGARTH, William, Garrick's acting, describes, iii. 35, n. 1; Johnson's belief, describes, i. 147, n. 2; conversation, ib.; finds more like David than Solomon, iii. 229, n. 3; like his Idle Apprentice, i. 250; takes for an idiot, i. 146; Modern Midnight Conversation, iii. 348; partisan of George II, i. 146; physicians, his, iii. 288, n. 4; prints, his, at Slains Castle, v. 102; at Streatham, iii. 348; Wilkes, print of, v. 186. HOGG, James, Jacobite Relics, v. 142, n. 2. Hogshead of sense, v. 341. HOLBACH, Baron, anecdote of Hume and seventeen Atheists, ii. 8, n. 4; Système de la Nature, v. 47, n. 4. HOLBROOK, ——, Usher at Lichfield School, i. 44. HOLDER, ——, an apothecary, iv. 137, 144, 402, n. 2. HOLIDAYS OF THE CHURCH, ii. 458. HOLINSHED, quoted by Boswell, iv. 268, n. 2. HOLLAND, exportation of coin free, iv. 105, n. 1; Dutch fond of draughts and smoking, i. 317; free from spleen, iv. 379; English books printed there, iii. 162; France, pressed by, in 1779, iii. 408, n. 4; Johnson's proposed tour there, i. 470; iii. 454; lead from two Cathedrals shipped to it, v. 114, n. 2; populous, iii. 233; Scotch regiment at Sluys, iii. 447; suspension of arms in 1782-3, iv. 282, n. 1; torture employed there, i. 466; trade, i. 218, n. 3. HOLLAND, the actor, iv. 7. HOLLAND, Dr., ii. 94, n. 2. HOLLAND, first Lord, iv. 174, n. 5, 219, n. 3. HOLLAND, third Lord, Boswell and Horace Walpole, iv. 314, n. 5; Jeffrey's 'narrow English,' ii. 159, n. 6; Johnson and Fox, iv. 167, n. 1; and Garrick, i. 216, n. 3. HOLLAND HOUSE, iv. 174, n. 5. HOLLIS, Thomas, iv. 97. HOLLOWAY, Mr. M. M., autograph letters of Johnson, iv. 260, n. 2; v. 405, n. 1, 454. HOLROYD, John (Lord Sheffield), i. 465, n. 1; ii. 150, n, 7; iii. 178, n. 1. HOLY LAND, iii. 177. HOME, Francis, Experiments on Bleaching, i. 309. HOME, Henry. See LORD KAMES. HOME, John, Agis, ii. 320, n. 1; v. 204; Athelstanford, minister of, iii. 47, n. 3; Bute's errand-goer, ii. 354; and favourite, i. 386, n. 3; Carlyle, Dr. A., described by, v. 362, n. 1; Derrick's lines, parodied, i. 456; Douglas, Garrick rejects it, v. 362, n. 1; Hume and Scott admire it, ii. 320, n. 1; Johnson despises it, ii. 320; not ten good lines in it, v. 360-2; Sheridan gives the author a gold medal for it, ii. 320; v. 360; lines in it applicable to Johnson, iii. 80; quotations from it, v. 361, n. 1; Elibank, Lord, his patron, v. 386; History of the Rebellion of 1745, iii. 162, n. 5; Hume's bequest to him, ii. 320, n. 1; dislike of the Whigs, iv. 194, n. 1; remark on the incapacity of the period, iii. 46, n. 5; Settle, likened to, iii. 76; Shakespeare of Scotland, iv. 186, n. 2; better than Shakspeare, v. 362, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 53, n. 1, 381, n. 1. HOMER, advice given to Diomed (Glaucus), ii. 129; antiquity, his, iii. 331; quoted by Thucydides, ib.; characters, does not describe, v. 79; detached fragments, not made up of, v. 164; Iliad, a collection of pieces, iii. 333; prose translation of it suggested, ib.; Latin version, ib., n. 2; Johnson's early translation from him, i. 53; knowledge of him, iv. 218, n. 3; v. 79, n. 2; 'machinery,' his, iv. 16; Odyssey, Johnson's liking for it, iv. 218; Fox's, ib., n. 3; Life of Johnson likened to it, i. 12; quoted, iv. 444; prince of poets, ii. 129; Sarpedon, Earl of Errol likened to, v. 103, n. 1; shield of Achilles, iv. 33; v. 78; translated by Cowper, iii. 333, n. 2; by Dacier, ib.; by Macpherson, ii. 298, n. 1; iii. 333, n. 2; by Pope, iii. 256; Virgil, compared with, iii. 193; v. 79, n. 2; less talked of than, iii. 332. HOMFREY, family of, iv. 268, n. 1. Homo caudatus, ii. 383. HONESTY, iii. 237. HONITON, iii. 287, n. 1. HOOD, James, v. 66. HOOKE, Dr. (at St. Cloud), ii. 397. HOOKE, Nathaniel, writes the Duchess of Marlborough's Apology, v. 175. HOOKER, Richard, i. 219. HOOLE, John, account of him, ii. 289, n. 2; iv. 70; Ariosto, iv. 70; Cleonice, ii. 289, n. 3; dinners and suppers at his house, ii. 334; iii. 37, 342; iv. 88, 251; Essex Head Club, member of the, iv. 258; Johnson's bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; collects a City Club for, iv. 87; friendship with him, iv. 360; and Goldsmith, i. 414, n. 4; last days, iv. 399, n. 1, 406, 410, n. 2, 414; letters to him, ii. 289; iv. 359-60; recommends him to Warren Hastings, iv. 70; writes the dedication of his Tasso, i. 383; regularly educated, iv. 187; uncle, his, the metaphysical tailor, iii. 443; iv. 187; mentioned, iv. 266. HOOLE, Mrs., iv. 359. HOOLE, Rev. Mr., Johnson's bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; reads the service to, iv. 409; mentioned, iii. 436, n. 2. Hop-Garden, The, ii. 454. HOPE, 'A continual renovation of hope,' iv. 222, n. 5; Prince of Wales's enjoyment of it, iv. 182; a species of happiness, i. 368; ii. 351. HOPE, Dr., of Edinburgh, iv. 263-4. HOPE, Professor, of Edinburgh, v. 404. HOPE, Sir William, v. 66. HOPETON, second Earl of, iv. 43, n. 1. HORACE, Art of Poetry, a contested passage in the, iii. 73-5; Carmen Seculare set to music, iii. 373; Mr. Tasker's version, ib., n. 3; cheerfulness, iii. 251; inconstancy, ib.; editions collected by Douglas, iv. 279; gratitude to his father, iii. 12; Hamilton's Imitations, iii. 151; Johnson translates Odes, i. 22, and ii. 9; i. 51-2; and Ode, iv. 7; iv. 370; Journey to Brundusium mentioned, iii. 250; metres, ii. 445, n. 1; middle-rate poets, on, ii. 351; Nil admirari, ii. 360; read as far as the Rhone, iv. 277; religion, absence of, iv. 215; 'sapientiae consultus,' iii. 280; translations of the lyrics, iii. 356; Francis's, ib.; villa, iii. 250; quotations: 1 Odes, i. 2, i. 244; 1 Odes, ii. v. 101, n. 2; 1 Odes, ii. 21, i. 483, n. 4; 1 Odes, xii. 46, iv. 356, n. 3; 1 Odes, xxii. 5, ii. 140; 1 Odes, xxiv. 9, iv. 290, n. 4; 1 Odes, xxvi. 1, ii. 140; 1 Odes, xxxiv. 1, iii. 279; 1 Odes, xxxiv. 1, iv. 215, n. 4; 2 Odes, i. 4, i. 207; 2 Odes, i. 24, iv. 374, n. 3; 2 Odes, xvi. 1, v. 163; 2 Odes, xiv., iii. 193; v. 68, n. 2; 2 Odes, xx. 19, iv. 277, n. 2; 3 Odes, i. 34, ii. 207; 3 Odes, ii. 13, i. 181, n. 1; 3 Odes, xxiv. 21, iii. 160, n. 1; 3 Odes, ii., iii. 204; 3 Odes, xxx. 1, ii. 291, n. 3; 4 _Odes, iii. 2, i. 351, n. 1; iv. 57, n. 4; 4 Odes, ix. 25, v. 415, n. 3; Epodes, xv. 19, iv. 320, n. 1; 1 Sat. i. 66, iii. 322, n. 2; 2 Sat. i. 86, iv. 129, n. 3; 1 Sat. iii. 33, iv. 180, n. 5; 1 Sat iv. 34, ii. 79; 2 Sat. ii. 3, i. 105, n. 1; 1 Epis. i. 15, v. 283, n. 2; 1 Epis. ii. 41, iv. 120, n. 3; 1 Epis. vi. 1, ii. 360, n. 3; 1 Epis. vii. 96, ii. 337, n. 4; 1 Epis. xi. 29, v. 381, n. 2; 1 Epis. xiv. 13, iii. 417, n. 1; 2 Epis. ii. 84, ii. 337, n. 3; 2 Epis. ii. 102, i. 200; 2 Epis. ii. 110, i. 220; 2 Epis. ii. 212, iv. 355, n. 2; Ars Poet., line. 11, iii. 281, n. 4; l. 15, iv. 38, n. 5; l. 25, v. 78, n. 5; l. 39, iii. 404, n. 6; l. 41, ii. 126; l. 48, i. 221; l. 97, v. 399, n. 3; l. 126, v. 348, n. 1; l. 128, iii. 73; l. 142, ii. 13, n. 2; l. 161, v. 283, n. 3; l. 188, iii. 229, n. 3; l. 221, v. 375. n. 5; l. 317, i. 165: l. 372, ii. 351; l. 388, i. 196. HORNE, Dr., President of Magdalen College, (afterwards Bishop of Norwich), Garrick's funeral, lines on, iv. 208, n. 1; Garrick and Mickle, anecdote of, ii. 182, n. 3; Johnson's character, iv. 426, n. 3; Letter to Adam Smith, v. 30, n. 3; neglected state of churches, v. 41, n. 3; Walton's Lives, projected edition of, ii. 279, 283-4, 445. HORNE, Rev. John. See TOOKE, Horne. HORNECK, The Misses, i. 414, n. 1; ii. 209, n. 2, 274, n. 5; iv. 355, n. 4. HORREBOW, Niels, iii. 279. HORSE-TAX, v. 51. HORSEMAN, ——, iv. 435. HORSES, old, iv. 248, 250. HORSLEY, Dr. (afterwards Bishop of Rochester), account of him, iv. 437; member of the Essex Head Club, iv. 254. HORTON, Mrs., ii. 224, n. 1. Hosier's Ghost, v. 116, n. 4. HOSPITALITY, ancient, ii. 167; less need for it now, iv. 18; elaborate attention, iv. 222; in London, ii. 222; promiscuous, ii. 167; waste of time, iv. 221. HOSPITALS, their administration, iii. 53. HOSTILITY, temporary, iv. 266. HOT-HOUSES, iv. 206. 'HOTTENTOT, a respectable,' i. 266; not Johnson, i. 267, n. 2. HOUGHTON COLLECTION, iv. 334, n. 6. HOUSE OF COMMONS, afraid of the populace, v. 102; Bolingbroke, described by iii. 234, n. 2; bribed, must be, iii. 408; coarse invectives in 1784, iv. 297; city, contest with the, in 1771, ii. 300, n. 5; iv. 139; corruption, iii. 206, 234; Crosby the Lord Mayor committed by it to prison, iii. 459; debates: see DEBATES; dissolution of 1774, ii. 285; v. 460; of 1784. iv. 264, n. 2; election-committees, iv. 74; figure made by insignificant men, v. 269; influence of the Crown, motion on the, iv. 220; influence of the peers, v. 56; Johnson's account of it as it originally was, iii. 408; anecdote of Henry VIII, ib.; only once inside the building, i. 503-4; Middlesex Election: See under MIDDLESEX ELECTION; mixed body, iii. 234; Nowell's sermon on January 30, iv. 296; power of the nation's money, iv. 170; relation to the people, iv. 30; speaking at the bar, iii. 224; Wilkes's advice, ib.; speaking before a Committee, iv. 74; counsel paid for speaking, iv. 281; speeches, how far affected by, iii. 234-5; tenacity of forms, iv. 104; Wilkes, afraid of, iv. 140, n. I; resolution to expel him expunged, ii. 112. HOUSE OF LORDS, Copy-right Case, ii. 272; Corporation of Stirling Case, ii. 374; dissatisfaction with its judicature, ii. 421, n. 1; Douglas Cause, ii. 230, n. 1; lay peers in law cases, iii. 345; 'noble stands,' made, v. 102; Scotch Schoolmaster's Case, ii. 144, 186; wise and independent, iii. 204. HOUSEBREAKERS, iv. 127. HOVEDEN, iv. 310, n. 3. HOWARD, Hon. Edward, ii. 108, n. 2. HOWARD, General Sir George, ii. 375, n. 1. HOWARD, Lord, v. 403, n. 2. HOWARD, Sir Robert, ii. 168, n. 2. HOWARD,—, of Lichfield, i. 80, 515, 516; iii. 222. HOWARD,—, of Lichfield, the younger, iii. 222. HOWELL, James, in the Fleet, v. 137, n. 4; 'Stavo bene,' &c., ii. 346, n. 6. Howell's State Trials, Somerset's Case, iii. 87, n. 3. HUDDESFORD, Rev. Dr., Vice-Chancellor of Oxford, i. 280, 322; Johnson's letter to him, i. 282. Hudibras. See BUTLER, Samuel. HUET, Bishop, iii. 172, n. 1. HUGGINS, William, quarrel with Warton, iv. 6; mentioned, i. 382. HUGHES, John, Memoir by Duncombe, iii. 314, n. 2; Sieges of Damascus, iii. 259, n. 1; Spenser, edits, i. 270; mentioned, iv. 36, n. 4. HUGILL, an attorney, iii. 297, n. 2. HULK, The Justitia, iii. 268. HUMANITY, its common rights, iv. 191, 284. HUMBLE-BEE, v. 380, n. 3. HUME, David, account of his publications, v. 31, n. 1; Adams, Dr., answers his Essay on Miracles, i. 8, n. 2; ii. 441; iv. 377, n. a; v. 274; Adams the architects, ii. 325, n. 3; Agutter's sermon, attacked in, iv. 422, n. 1; American war, iv. 194, n. 1; ancient history, ii. 237, n. 4; art, indifference to, i. 363, n. 3; atheists in Paris, dines with seventeen, ii. 8, n. 4; attacks, reply to, ii. 61, n. 4; benefited by some, v. 274; Beattie's Essay on Truth: see BEATTIE; Blacklock, the blind poet, i. 466, n. I; v. 47, n. 3; books, the small number of good, iii. 20, n. 1; Boswell intimate with him, ii. 59, n 3,437; n. 2; v30; preserves memoirs of him, ib.; Boufflers, Mme. de, ii. 405, n. 2; Carlyle's, Dr., account of him, v. 30, n. 1; change of ministry in 1775, expects a, ii. 381, n. 1; Charles II, partiality for, ii. 341, n. 2; Cheyne, Dr., letter to, iii. 27, n. 1; composed with facility, v. 66, n. 3; conceit, his, v. 29; conversation, ii. 236, n. 1; death, said that he had no fear of, ii. 106; iii. 153; dedications, iv. 105, n. 4; Deist, denied that he was a, ii. 8; Dialogues on Natural Religion, i. 268, n, 4; dines with those who had written against him, ii. 441, n. 5; Douglas Cause, ii. 230, n. 1; education and disposition, opinion on, ii. 437, n. 2; England on the decline, ii. 127, n. 4; English and French politeness, iv. 237, n. 3; English, his hatred of the, ii. 300, n. 5; v. 19, n. 4; neglect of polite letters, ii. 447, n. 5; prejudice against the Scotch, ii. 300, n. 5; prose, iii. 257, n. 3; and Scotch education, iii. 12, n. 2; Essays Moral and Political, sale of his, iv. 440; fame, his, v. 31; Fergusson's Essay on Civil Society, v. 42, n. 1; France on the decline, thinks, ii. 127, n. 4; his reception there, ii. 401, n. 4; French, ignorance of, i. 439, n. 2; French prisoners, account of the, i. 353, n. 2; Germany, barbarians of, ii. 127, n. 4; Gibbon's praise of him, ii. 236, n. 3; Glasgow professorship, sought a, v. 369, n. 2; 'gone to milk the bull,' i. 444; happiness, equality in, ii. 9; iii. 288; happy with small means, i. 372, n. 1; Henry's History, reviews, iii. 334, n. 1; History of England, his alterations in it on the Tory side, iv. 194, n. 1; Adam Smith's Letter prefixed, v. 30, n. 3; slow sale of the first volume, v. 31, n. 1; written for want of occupation, iii. 20, n. 1; mentioned, iv. 78, n. 2; Hobbist, a, v. 272; Home, John, and Shakespeare, ii. 320, n. 1; Home, bequest to, ii. 320, n. 1; house, his, in James Court, v. 22, n. 2; in St. David Street, v. 28, n. 2; Hurd and the Warburtonian school, iv. 190, n. 1; hypocrite, longs to be a successful, iv. 194, n. 1; 'infidel pensioner,' called an, ii. 317; infidels, attacks, iii. 334, n. 1; infidelity, his death-bed, iii. 153; infidelity, his, less read, iv. 288; Johnson and Convocation, i. 464; Dictionary, absurdities in, ii. 317, n. 1; in the Green Room, i. 201; had not (in 1773) read his History, ii. 236; likes him better than Robertson, v. 57, n. 3; violent against him, v. 30; Kames and Voltaire, ii. 90, n. 1; Keeper of the Advocates' Library, v. 40, n. 1; Leechman's Sermon on Prayer, v. 68, n. 4; Life, with Adam Smith's letter prefixed, iii. 119; Macdonald, Sir James, i. 449, n. 2; Macpherson's Homer and History of Britain, ii. 298, n. 1; Mallet and Bolingbroke, i. 268, n. 4; Mallet's Life of Marlborough, iii. 386, n. 1; middle class in Scotland, absence of a, ii. 402, n. 1; Millar, Andrew, i. 287, n. 3; ministry, imbecility of Lord North's, iii. 46, n. 5; Miracles, Essay on, i. 444; iii. 188: see under Dr. ADAMS and BEATTIE; Monboddo's Origin of Language, ii. 259, n. 5; Murray (Lord Mansfield), at Lovat's trial, speech of, i. 181, n. 1; national debt, ii. 127, n. 4; neglect of a book, iii. 375, n. 1; New Testament, ignorance of the, ii. 9; iii. 153; Ossian, ii. 302, n. 2; Parties in General, iii. 11, n. 1; Parties of Great Britain, ii. 402, n. 1; pension, ii. 317, n. 1; philosopher, anecdote of a, iii. 305, n. 2; Poker Club, ii. 376, n. 1; Political Discourses, ii. 53, n. 2; Pretender's base character, v. 200, n. 1; visit to London, i. 279, n. 5; v. 201, n. 3; priests and dissenters, v. 255, n. 5; 'principle, has no,' iv. 194, n. 1; v. 272; Reynolds's allegorical picture, v. 273, n. 4; resistance, doctrine of, ii. 170. n. 2: Robertson's Scotland, price offered for, iii. 334, n. 2; Rousseau's visit to England and his pension, ii. 11, n. 4, 12, n. 1; Russia, barbarians of, ii. 127, n. 4; Sanquhar's trial, v. 103, n. 2; Scotch writers, foolish praise of, iv. 186, n. 2; Scotticisms, ii. 72; corrected by Strahan, v. 92, n. 3; second-sight, ii. 10, n. 3; Select Society, member of the, v. 393, n. 4; sentiments, unanimity and contrariety of, iii. 11, n. 1; Smith's, Adam, Letter, v. 30; answered by Dr. Home, ib., n. 3; Smith's, suggested knocking of his head against, iii. 119; soldiers, iii. 9, n. 3; Strahan, leaves his MSS. to, ii. 136, n. 6; style, i. 439; Swift's style, ii. 191, n. 3; Tory by chance, iv. 194; v. 272; Toryism, growth of his, iv. 194, n. 1; touchstones of party-men, i. 354, n. 1; tragedy, anecdote of a, iii. 238, n. 2; Treatise of Human Nature, i. 127, n. 1; Tytler, attacked by, v. 274; 'Voltaire, an echo of,' ii. 53; mentioned, ii. 160, n. 2. HUME, Mrs., James Thomson's grandmother, iii. 359. Humiliating, ii. 155. HUMMUMS, The, iii. 349. HUMOUR. See GOOD HUMOUR. HUMOUR, Scotch nation not distinguished for it, iv. 129. Humours of Ballamagairy, ii. 219, n. 1. HUMPHRY, Ozias, account of him, iv. 268, n. 2; Johnson's letters to him, iv. 268-9; his miniature, iv. 421, n. 2. Humphry Clinker. See SMOLLETT. HUNGARY, hospitality to strangers, iv. 18. HUNTER, John, the surgeon, i. 243, n. 3; iv. 220, n. 1. HUNTER, Dr. William, iv. 220. HUNTER, ——, Johnson's schoolmaster, i. 44-6; ii. 146, 467. HUNTER, Miss, iv. 183, n. 2. HUNTER, Mrs., i. 516. HUNTING, v. 253. HUNTINGDON, tenth Earl of, iii. 84, n. 1. HURD, Richard, Bishop of Worcester, accounts for everything systematically, iv. 189; Addison, impertinent notes on, iv. 190, n. 1; archbishop, declined to be, iv. 190; Boswell attacks him, iv. 47, n. 2; Cowley's Select Works, edits, iii. 29, 227; evil spirits, on, iv. 290; v. 36, n. 3; Horace, notes on, iii. 74, n. 1; Hume, attacks, iv. 190, n. 1; Johnson praises him, iv. 190; Moral and Political Dialogues, iv. 190; Parr's Tracts by Warburton and a Warburtonian, iv. 47, n. 2; mentioned, i. 404, n. 1; ii. 36, n. 2; iv. 407, n, 4. 'HURGOES,' i. 502. HUSSEY, Rev. John, Johnson's letter to him, iii. 369. HUSSEY, Rev. Dr. Thomas, iv. 411. HUTCHESON, Francis, on merit, iv. 15, n. 5. HUTCHINSON, John, Moral Philosophy, iii. 53. HUTCHISON, William, of Kyle, v. 107, n. 1. HUTTON, the Moravian, iv. 410. HUTTON, William (of Birmingham), Bedlam, visits, ii. 374, n. 1; Birmingham, cost of living at, i. 103, n. 2; Derby, History of, iii. 164, n. 1; sufferings as a factory-boy, iii. 164, n. 1. HYDER ALI, v. 124, n. 2. HYPOCAUST, a Roman, v. 435. HYPOCHONDRIA, i. 66, 343; iii. 192. See under BOSWELL, JOHNSON, and MELANCHOLY. Hypochondriack, The, iv. 179, n. 5. HYPOCRISY, little suspected by Johnson, i. 418, n. 3; middle state between it and conviction, iv. 122; no man a hypocrite in his pleasures, iv. 316. Hypocrite, The, ii. 321.
I.
ICELAND, Horrebow's Natural History, iii. 279; Johnson talks of visiting it, i. 242; iii. 454; iv. 358, n. 2. ICOLMKILL. See IONA. Idea, improperly used, iii. 196. IDLENESS, active sports not idleness, i. 48; hidden from oneself, i. 331, n. 1; miseries of it, i. 331; upon principle, iv. 9; why we are weary when idle, ii. 98. Idler, The (an earlier paper than Johnson's), i. 330, n. 2. Idler, The (Johnson's), account of it, i. 331-5; Betty Broom, story of, iv. 246; collected in volumes, i. 335; Johnson draws his own portrait in Mr. Sober, iii. 398, n. 3; writes on his mother's death, i. 331, n. 4, 339, n. 3; mottoes, i. 332; No. 22 omitted in collected vols., i. 335; pirated, i. 345, n. 1; profits on first edition, i. 335, n. 1; tragedians, a hit at, v. 38, n. 1. IFFLEY, iv. 295. IGNORANCE, guilt of voluntarily continuing it, ii. 27; in men of eminence, ii. 91; people content to be ignorant, i. 397. ILAM. See ISLAM. Ilk, defined in Johnson's Dictionary, iii. 326, n. 4; 'Johnson of that Ilk,' ii. 427, n. 2. ILLEGITIMATE CHILDREN, ii. 457. IMAGES, worship of, iii. 17, 188. Imagination, iii. 341. IMITATIONS OF POEMS, i. 118, n. 5, 122. IMLAC, why so spelt, iv. 31. See also under Rasselas. IMMORTALITY, belief of it impressed on all, ii. 358; of brutes, ii. 54. IMPARTIALITY IN TELLING LIES, ii. 434. IMPIETY, inundation of it due to the Revolution, v. 271; repressed in Johnson's company, iv. 295. IMPORTANCE, imaginary, iii. 327. IMPOSTORS, Literary, Douglas, Dr., i. 360; Du Halde, ii. 55, n. 4; Eccles, Rev. Mr., i. 360; Innes, Rev. Dr., i. 359; Rolt, E., i. 359. Impransus, i. 137. IMPRESSIONS, trusting to them, iv. 122-3; early ones, iv. 197, n. 1. In Theatro, ii. 324, n. 3. INCE, Richard, a contributor to the Spectator, iii. 33. Inchkenneth, Ode on, ii. 293; v. 325. Incidit in Scyllam cupiens vitare Charybdim, iv. 181, n. 3. INCIVILITY, iv. 28. INCOME, living within one's, iv. 226. INDECISION OF MIND, iii. 300. Index-scholar, iv. 407, n. 4, 442. INDIA, despotic governor the best, iv. 2l3; 'don't give us India,' v. 209; grant of natural superiority, iv. 68; hereditary trades, v. 120, Johnson's wish to visit it, iii. 134; n. 1, 456; judges there engaging in trade, ii. 343; mapping of it, ii. 356; nursery of ruined fortunes, iv. 213, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 194. See EAST INDIES and INDIES. INDIAN BILL, Fox's, Ministry dismissed on it, i. 311, n. 1; Lee's piece of parchment, iii. 224, n. 1. INDIANS, American, story told of them by two officers, iii. 246; v. 135; their weak children die, iv. 210; wronged, i. 308, n. 2. See NATIVES. INDICTMENT, prosecution by, iii. 16, n. 1. INDIES, the, discovery of the passage thither a misfortune, i. 455, n. 3; proverb about bringing home their wealth, iii. 302. Indifferently, i. 180. INDOLENCE, iv. 352. INFERIORITY, 'half a guinea's worth of it,' ii. 169. INFIDELITY abroad, iv. 288; affectation of showing courage, ii. 81; gloom of it, ii. 81; outcry about it, ii. 359. See CONJUGAL INFIDELITY. INFIDELS, compared with atrocious criminals, iii. 55; credulity, their, v. 331; ennui, must suffer from, ii. 442, n. 1; keeping company with them, iii. 409-10; number in England, ii. 359; treating them with civility, ii. 442; writings allowed to pass without censure, v. 271; writers drop into oblivion, iv. 288. INFLUENCE, America might be governed by it, iii. 205; crown influence salutary, ii. 118; Bute's attempt to govern by, ii. 353; lost and recovered, iii. 4; vote of the House of Commons against it, iv. 220; in domestic life, iii. 205, n. 4; Ireland governed by it, iii. 205; property, in proportion to, v. 56; wealth, from, v. 112. INFLUENZA, ii. 410. INGENHOUSZ, Dr., ii. 427, n. 4. INGRATITUDE, complaints of, iii. 2; Lewis XIV's saying, ii. 167. INNES, or INNYS, Rev. Dr., fraud about Dr. Campbell, i. 359; about Psalmanazar, i. 359, n. 3; iii. 444-5, 447-8. INNKEEPERS, soldiers quartered on them, ii. 218, n. 1. INNOCENT, punishment of the, iv. 251. INNOVATION, iv. 188. INNS, felicity of England in the, ii. 451; Shenstone's lines, ii. 452. INNYS, William, the bookseller, iv. 402, n. 2, 440. INOCULATION, iv. 293; v. 226. INQUISITION, i. 465. INSANITY. See JOHNSON, madness, and MADNESS. INSCRIPTIONS. See EPITAPHS. INSECTS, their numerous species, ii. 248. INSURRECTION OF 1745, Boswells projected History of it, iii. 162, 414; Voltaire's account, ib., n. 6; hard to write impartially, v. 393. INTELLECTUAL IMPROVEMENT, due to subordination, ii. 219. INTELLECTUAL LABOUR, mankind's aversion to it, i. 397. INTENTIONS, ii. 12; Hell paved with good intentions, ii. 360. INTEREST, how far we are governed by it, ii. 234. INTEREST OF MONEY, iii. 340. INTOXICATION, said to be good for the health, v. 260; see DRUNKENNESS, SPIRITUOUS LIQUORS, WINE; and JOHNSON, intoxicated, and wine; and BOSWELL, wine. Introduction to the Game of Draughts, i. 317. Introduction to the Political State of Great Britain, i. 307. Introduction to the World displayed, iv. 251. INTUITION, iv. 335. INVASION, fears of an, iii. 326, 360, n. 3. INVITATION, going into the society of friends without one, ii. 362. INVOCATION OF SAINTS. See SAINTS. INWARD LIGHT, ii. 126. IRELAND and IRISH, accent, ii. 160; ancient state, i. 321; iii. 112; baronets, traditional, v. 322, n. 1; Belanager, iii. 111, n. 4; British government, barbarous, ii. 121; Burke's saying about the Roman Catholics, ii. 255, n. 3; Catholics persecuted by Protestants, ii. 255; penal code against them, ii. 121, n. 1; their students abroad, iii. 447 (see below under WESLEY); clergy, ii. 132; condemned to ignorance, ii. 27, n. 1; corn-laws, ii. 130; corrupt government, iv. 200, n. 4; cottagers, ii. 130, n. 2; 'drained' by England, v. 44; Drogheda, ii. 156; drunkenness of the gentry, v. 250, n. 1; Dublin, Derrick's poem to it, i. 456; Capital, only a worse, iii. 410; Evening Post, iv. 381, n. 1; freedom of the guild given to Chief Justice Pratt, ii. 353, n. 2; 'not so bad as Iceland,' iv. 358, n. 2; physicians, iii. 288, n. 4; Rolt's fraud, i. 359; Theatre, Douglas acted, ii. 320, n. 2; riot in it, i. 386; Miss Philips the singer, iv. 227; University, Burke and Goldsmith at Trinity College, i. 411; Flood's bequest for the study of Irish, i. 321, n. 5; M.A. degree in vain sought for Johnson, i. 133; LL.D. degree conferred, i. 488; duelling, ii. 226, n. 5; export duties, ii. 131, n. 1; fair people, a, ii. 307; Falkland, ii. 116; family pride, v. 263; Ferns, iv. 73; French, contrasted with, ii. 402, n. 1; Grattan's speeches, iv. 317; History, Johnson exhorts Maxwell to write its, ii. 121; hospitality to strangers, iv. 18; independence in 1782, iv. 139, n. 4; influence, governed by, ii. 205; Insolvent Debtors' Relief Bill of 1766, iii. 377, n. 2; Irish chairmen in London, ii. 101; Johnson averse to visit it, iii. 410; kindness for the Irish, iii. 410; pity for them, ii. 121; prejudice against them, i. 130; lady's verses on Ireland, iii. 319; landlords and tenants, v. 250, n. 1; language, i. 321, n. 5, 322; ii. 156, 347; iii. 112, 235; literature, i. 321; Londonderry, iv. 334; v. 319; Lucan, v. 108, n. 8; Lucas, Dr., i. 311; mask of incorruption never worn, iv. 200, n. 4; minority prevails over majority, ii. 255, 478; mix with the English better than the Scotch do, ii. 242; iv. 169, n. 1; nationality, free from extreme, ii. 242; orchards never planted by Irishmen, iv. 206, n. 1; parliament, duration of, i. 311, n. 2; long debates in 1771, i. 394, n. 1; peers created in 1776, iii. 407, n. 4; players, succeed as, ii. 242; Pope's lines on Swift, ii. 132, n. 2; premium-scheme, i. 318; professors at Oxford and Paris Irish, i. 321, n. 6; Protestant rebels in 1779, iii. 408, n. 4; rebellion ready to break out in 1779, iii. 408, n. 4; scholars incorrect in quantity, ii. 132; school of the west, iii. 112; Swift, their great benefactor, ii. 132; Thurot's descent, iv. l01, n. 4; Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy, iv. 385; union wished for by artful politicians, iii. 410; Johnson's warning against it, ib.; volunteers, not allowed to raise, iii. 360, n. 3; Wesley against toleration, v. 35, n. 3; William III and the Irish parliament, ii. 255. Irene, altered for the stage and acted, i. 192, n. 3, 196; nine nights' run, i. 197, n. 5; never brought on the stage again, i. 198, n. 1; begun at Edial, i. l00; continued at Greenwich, i. 106; finished at Lichfield, i. 107; refused by Fleetwood, i. 153; offered to a bookseller, ib.; blank verse, iv. 42, n. 7; Cave, shown to, i. 123; dedication, no, ii. 1, n. 2; Demetrius's speech quoted, i. 237; dramatic power wanting, i. 198, 199, n. 2, 506; Epilogue, i. 197; Hill, Aaron, present at the benefit, i. 198, n. 4; Johnson hears it read aloud, iv. 5; reads it himself, ib., n. 1; his receipts from the acting and copyright, i. 198; original sketch of it, i. 108; Pot admires it, iv. 5, n. 1; Prologue, i. 196; quotable lines, i. 199, n. 2. IRISH GENTLEMAN, an, on the blackness of negroes, i. 401. IRISH PAINTER, an, Johnson's Ofellus, i. 104. IRON-WORKS at Holywell, v. 441. IRVINE, Mr., of Drum, v. 98. IRVING, Rev. Edward, iv. 9, n. 5. IRWIN, Captain, ii. 391. ISIS, THE, iv. 295. ISLAM, Boswell and Johnson visit it, i. 183, n. 4; iii. 187; Johnson and the Thrales, v. 429, 434, 457. ISLAND, retiring to one, v. 154. ISLE OF MAN, Boswell's projected tour, iii. 80; Burke's motto, ib.; Sacheverell's Account. See under Sacheverell, W.; mentioned, v. 233. ITALY, condemned prisoners, treatment of, iv. 331; copy-money, iii. 162; Guide-Books, v. 61; inferiority in not having seen it, iii. 36, 456; Johnson's wish to visit it: see JOHNSON, Italy; revival of letters, iii. 254; silk-throwing, iii. 164, n. 1. IVY LANE CLUB. See under CLUBS.
J.
Jack the Giant Killer, ii. 58, n. 1; iv. 8, n. 3. JACKSON, Henry, of Lichfield, ii. 463; iii. 131. JACKSON, Rev. Mr., i. 239, n. 1. JACKSON, Richard, all-knowing, iii. 19; commends Johnson's Journey, iii. 137. JACKSON, Thomas, Michael Johnson's servant, i. 38. JACOB, Giles, v. 419, n. 2. JACOBITES, identified with Tories, i. 429, n. 4. JACOBITISM. See under BOSWELL and JOHNSON. JAMAICA, constitutions of, iii. 202; den of tyrants, ii. 478; story of a young man going there, iv. 332; mentioned, i. 239, n. 1, 242, n. 1; iii. 76, n. 2, 416, n. 2. JAMES I (of England), Daemonology, iii. 382; Johnson, resemblance to, v. 12; Nairne, witticism about, v. 117, n. 3; Raleigh's trial, i. 180, n. 2; Sanquhar's trial, v. 103, n. 2; mentioned, ii. 175. JAMES II, deposition needful, i. 430; ii. 341; George III, compared with, iv. 139, n. 4; king, very good, ii. 341; Sedley, Catherine, v. 49, n. 5; mentioned, ii. 437, n. 2; v. 297, n. 1, 357, n. 3. JAMES I of Scotland, ii. 7. JAMES IV, patron of Boswell's family, ii. 413; v. 91. JAMES V, v. 181. JAMES, King (the Pretender), i. 429. JAMES, Dr. Robert, death, i. 81; iii. 4; Dissertation on Fevers, iii. 389, n. 2; Greek, knowledge of, iv. 33, n. 3; Johnson describes his character, i. 81, 159; learnt physic from him, iii. 22; opinion of his medicines, iv. 355; dedication to his Medicinal Dictionary, i. 159; assisted him in writing the Medicinal Dictionary, iii. 22; powder, his, its sale, iii. 4; traduced, iii. 389, n. 2; suspected of being not sober for twenty years, iii. 389, n. 2; wrote first line of the epigram Ad Lauram, i. 157, n. 5; mentioned, iii. 318, n. 1. JANES, ——, a naturalist, v. 149, 163, 408, n. 1. JANSENISTS, iii. 341, n. 1. JANUARY 30, fast of, ii. 152; old port and solemn talk on it, iii. 371. Janus Vitalis, iii. 251. JAPAN, five persecutions, v. 392. JAPIX, Gisbert, Rymelerie, i. 476. JARVIS, ——, a Birmingham person, i. 86, n. 1. JARVIS, or Jervis, the maiden name of Johnson's wife, i. 86, n. 1, 241, n. 2. Jealous Wife, The, i. 364. JEALOUSY, little people given to it, iii. 55. JEFFERIES, Judge, v. 113, n. 1. JEFFREY, Francis (Lord Jeffrey), birth, v. 24, n. 4; helps Boswell to bed, ib.; Edinburgh Review, payment to writers, iv. 214, n. 2; Scotch accent, loses his, ii. 159, n. 6; title, his, v. 77, n, 4; trees in Scotland, ii. 301, n. 1. JENKINSON, Right Hon. Charles (first Earl of Liverpool), account of him, iii. 146, n. 1; Johnson's letter to him, iii. 145-7. JENNINGS, Mr., iii. 231. JENYNS, Soame, benevolence as a motive to action, iii. 48; character, his, iii. 289, n. 1; conversion, i. 316, n. 2; iii. 280; 'Epitaph,' i. 316, n. 2; Free Inquiry into the Nature and Origin of Evil, i. 309, 315; Johnson's Review of it, i. 315-316; ii. 188, n. 6; iii. 48, n. 3; Johnson, attacks, i. 316; View of the Internal Evidence, &c., iii. 48, n. 3, 288; World, contributor to the, i. 257, n. 3. JEPHSON, Robert, i. 262, n. 1. JERSEY, v. 142, n. 2. JERSEY, Earl of, i. 31, n. 4. JERUSALEM, ii. 275-6. Jests of Hierocles, i. 150. JESUITS, attacked by Psalmanazar, iii. 444; persecuted in Japan, v. 392, n. 5. JEWISH KINGS, v. 340. JEWITT, Mr. L., ii. 324, n. 1. JOCULARITY, low, i. 449. JODDREL (Jodrell), R. P., iv. 254, 272, 437. JODRELL, Sir R. P., M.D., iv. 437. JOHN, King, i. 248. John Bull, v. 20, n. 2. Johnny Armstrong, quoted by Johnson for its abruptness, i. 403; in Holyrood, v. 43. JOHNSON, B., the actor, iv. 243, n. 6. JOHNSON, Andrew (Johnson's uncle), great at boxing and wrestling, iv. 111, n. 3; v. 229, n. 2. JOHNSON, Charles, author of The Adventures of a Guinea, v. 275, n. 2. JOHNSON, D., i. 79, n. 2. JOHNSON, Elizabeth (Dr. Johnson's wife, H. Porter's widow, maiden name Jarvis or Jervis), i. 86, n. 1; account of her, i. 95; her age, i. 95, n. 2; character, i. 241, n. 4; death, i. 203, n. 1, 234; epitaph, i. 241, n. 2; Ford's ghost, iii. 349; Garrick's mimicry of her, i. 99; Hampstead lodgings, i. 192; indulgencies, i. 238; Johnson's conversation, admires, i. 95; lodgings in her last illness, iv. 377, n. 1; marriage, i. 95; ii. 77; marriage-settlement, i. 95, n. 3; personal appearance, i. 95, 99; 238; Rambler, admiration of the, i. 210; Tetty or Tetsey, i. 98; ii. 77; wedding-ring, i. 237; mentioned, i. 488, 500; iii. 46. See JOHNSON, wife. JOHNSON, Fisher, and his sons (Johnson's cousins), iv. 402, n. 2. JOHNSON, 'the gigantick,' i. 388, n. 3. JOHNSON, Hester (Stella), iv. 177, n. 2; v. 243. JOHNSON, the horse-rider, i. 399; iii. 231. JOHNSON, Michael (Johnson's father), account of him, i. 34-7; accompanies his son to Oxford, i. 59; bankrupt, i. 78-9; iv. 402, n. 2; book-trade, i. 36; Chester fair, at, v. 435; death, i. 80; disapproved of tea, i. 313, n. 2; epitaph, i. 79, n. 2; iv. 393; excise prosecution, i. 36, n. 5; fire in the parlour on Sunday, v. 60; 'foolish old man,' i. 40; house, his, iv. 372, n. 2; Jacobite, a, i. 37; marriage register, i. 35, n. 1; melancholy, i. 35; oath of abjuration, signs the, ii. 322; observer, no careless, i. 34, n. 5; sheriff of Lichfield, i. 36, n. 4; Uttoxeter market, at, iv. 373. JOHNSON, Mr., in Blackmore's Lay Monastery, v. 384, n. 2. JOHNSON, Nathanael (Johnson's younger brother), complains of his brother, i. 90, n. 3; death, i. 35, 90, n. 3; epitaph, ib.; iv. 393; letter from him, i. 90, n. 3; succeeds his father, i. 90. JOHNSON, Samuel, Rev., i. 135. JOHNSON, SAMUEL, CHIEF EVENTS OF His LIFE. (For his publications see also i. 16-24; for a complete list of his travels and visits, iii. 450-3; and for his residences, iii. 405, n. 6.) 1709 Birth, i. 34. 1712 'Touched by Queen Anne, i. 43. 1716 (about) Enters Lichfield School, i. 43. 1725 Enters Stourbridge School, i. 49. 1726 Returns home, i. 50. 1728 Enters Pembroke College, i. 58. Translates Pope's Messiah, i. 61. 1729 Returns home, i. 78, n. 2. 1731 Death of his father, i. 80. 1732 Usher at Market Bosworth, i. 84. 1733 At Birmingham, i. 85, 86, n. 1. 1734 Returns to Lichfield, i. 89. Publishes proposals for printing Politian, i. 90. Returns to Birmingham, i. 90. Offers to write for the Gent. Mag. i. 91. 1735 Publishes Lobo's Abyssinia, i. 87. Marries Mrs. Porter and opens a school at Edial, i. 95, n. 2, 96. 1737 Visits London with Garrick, i. 101. Returns to Lichfield and finishes Irene, i. 107. Removes to London, i. 110. 1738 Becomes a writer in the Gent. Mag. i. 113. London, i. 118. Begins to translate Father Paul Sarpi's History, i. 135. Life of Father Paul Sarpi, i. 139. 1739 Seeks the Mastership of Appleby School and the degree of Master of Arts, i. 132-3. Life of Boorhaave, i. 140. Marmor Norfolciense, i. 141. 1740 Lives of Blake, Drake, and Barretier, i. 147. Begins to write the Debates, i. 150. 1741 Debates, i. 150. 1742 Debates, i. 150. Lives of Barman and Sydenham, i. 153. Proposals for printing Bibliotheca Harleiana, i. 153. 1743 Finishes the Debates, i. 150. 1744 Life of Savage, i. 161. 1745 Miscellaneous Observations on Macbeth, i. 175. Sketching outlines of his Dictionary, i. 176, 182, n. 3. 1746 Gets to know Levett, i. 243. 1747 Prologue on the opening of Drury Lane Theatre, i. 181. Plan for a Dictionary of the English Language, i. 182. 1748 Writing the Dictionary. Life of Roscommon, i. 192. The Vision of Theodore the Hermit, i. 192. 1749 Writing the Dictionary. Vanity of Human Wishes, i. 192. Irene acted, i. 196. Forms the Ivy Lane Club, i. 190, n. 5. Living in Gough Square, iii. 405, n. 6. 1750 Writing the Dictionary. Begins the Rambler, i. 201. _Prologue for the benefit of Milton's Grand-daughter, i. 227. 1751 Writing the Dictionary. The Rambler. Lauder's fraud exposed, i. 228. Life of Cheynel, i. 228. 1752 Writing the Dictionary. Ends The Rambler, i. 203. Death of his wife, i. 234. Miss Williams begins to reside with him, i. 232. Gets to know Reynolds, i. 245, n. 1. 1753 Writing the Dictionary. Writes for The Adventurer, i. 252. 1754 Writing the Dictionary. Life of Cave, i. 256. Visits Oxford, i. 270. Gets to know Murphy, i. 356, n. 2. 1755 Letter to Lord Chesterfield, i. 261. Becomes an M.A. of Oxford, i. 281. Publishes the Dictionary, i. 291. Projects a Biblithèque, i. 284. Gets to know Langton (about this year), i. 247, n. 1. 1756 Publishes an abridgement of the Dictionary, i. 305. Writes for The Universal Visitor, i. 306. Superintends and writes for The Literary Magazine, i. 307. Life of Sir Thomas Browne, i. 308. Proposals for an edition of Shakespeare, i. 318. 1757 Writes for the Literary Magazine, i. 320. Editing Shakespeare, i. 496, n. 3. 1758 Editing Shakespeare, i. 496, n. 3. Begins The Idler, i. 330. Gets to know Dr. Burney, i. 328. 1759 The Idler, i. 330. Death of his mother, i. 339. Rasselas, i. 340. Leaves Gough Square and goes into chambers, i. 350, n. 3; iii. 405, n. 6. Visits Oxford, i. 347. Gets to know Beauclerk, i. 248, n. 4. 1760 Ends The Idler, i. 330. Perhaps editing Shakespeare, i. 353. In Inner Temple Lane, iii. 405, n. 6. 1761 Visits Lichfield in the winter of 1761-2, i. 370. 1762 Pensioned, i. 372. Trip to Devonshire, i. 377. Cock Lane Ghost imposture exposed, i. 406. 1763 Gets to know Boswell, i. 391. Trip to Harwich, i. 464. Visits Oxford, iii. 451. Character of Collins, i. 382. Life of Ascham, i. 464. 1764 Visits Langton in Lincolnshire, i. 476. Literary Club founded, i. 477. Visits Dr. Percy at Easton Maudit, i. 486. 1765 Visits Cambridge, i. 487. Becomes an LL.D. of Dublin, i. 488. Suffers from a severe illness, i. 483, 520. Gets to know the Thrales (either this year or in 1764), i. 490, 520. Engages in politics with W. G. Hamilton, i. 489. Publishes his Shakespeare, i. 496. Takes a house in Johnson's Court, ii. 5; iii. 405, n. 6. 1766 Contributes to Mrs. Williams's Miscellanies, ii. 25. Spends more than three months at Streatham, ii. 25. Visits Oxford, ii. 25. 1767 Interview with the King, ii. 33. Spends near six months in Lichfield, ii. 30. 1768 Prologue to the Good-Natured Man. ii. 45. Visits Oxford, iii. 452. 1769 Appointed Professor in Ancient Literature to the Royal Academy, ii. 67. Visits Oxford, Lichfield and Ashbourne, ii. 67; iii. 452. Visits Brighton, ii. 68. Appears as a witness at Baretti's trial, ii. 96. 1770 The False Alarm, ii. 111. Visits Lichfield and Ashbourne, iii. 452. 1771 Falkland's Islands, ii. 134. Revises the Dictionary, ii. 143, n. 3. Visits Lichfield and Ashbourne, ii. 141. 1772 Revises the Dictionary, ii. 143, n. 3. Visits Lichfield and Ashbourne, iii. 452. 1773 Publishes the fourth edition of the Dictionary, ii. 203. Attempts to learn the Low Dutch language, ii. 263. Tour of Scotland, ii. 266; v. 1. Visits Oxford, ii. 268. Begins his Journey to the Western Islands, ii. 268. 1774 Death of Goldsmith, ii. 279, n. 2. Tour to North Wales, ii. 285; v. 427. Visits Burke at Beaconsfield, ii. 285, n. 3; v. 460. The Patriot, ii. 286. Finishes his Journey to the Western Islands, ii. 288. 1775 Publishes his Journey to the Western Islands, ii. 300. Taxation no Tyranny, ii. 312. Becomes an LL.D. of Oxford, ii. 331. Visits Oxford, Lichfield and Ashbourne, ii. 381; iii. 452. Tour to France, ii. 384. 1776 Visits Oxford, Lichfield, and Ashbourne with Boswell, ii. 438. Projected tour to Italy abandoned, iii. 6. Visits Bath, iii. 44. First dinner with Wilkes, iii. 64. Visits Brighton, iii. 92. 1777 Engages to write The Lives of the Poets, iii. 109. Exerts himself in behalf of Dr. Dodd, iii. 139. Meets Boswell at Ashbourne, iii. 135. 1778 Writing The Lives of the Poets, iii. 360. Visits Warley Camp, iii. 360. 1779 Publishes the first four volumes of the Lives, iii. 370. Writing the last six volumes, ib. Death of Garrick, iii. 371. Visits Lichfield and Ashbourne, iii. 395. 1780 Writing the last six volumes of the Lives, iii. 418. Death of Beauclerk, iii. 420. Visits Brighton, iii. 453. 1781 Publishes the last six volumes of the Lives, iv. 34. Death of Thrale. iv. 84. Second dinner with Wilkes, iv. 101. Visits Southill, iv. 118. Visits Oxford, Birmingham, Lichfield, and Ashbourne, iv. 135. 1782 Death of Levett, iv. 137. Visits Oxford, iv. 151. Takes leave of Streatham, iv. 158. Visits Brighton, iv. 159. 1783 Has a stroke of the palsy, iv. 227. Visits Rochester, iv. 233. Visits Heale, iv. 234. Death of Mrs. Williams, iv. 235. Threatened with a surgical operation, iv. 239. Founds the Essex Head Club, iv. 253. Attacked by spasmodic asthma, iv. 255. 1784 Confined by illness for 129 days, iv. 270, n. 1. Visits Oxford with Boswell, iv. 283. Projected tour to Italy, iv. 326. Mrs. Thrale's second marriage, iv. 339. Visits Lichfield, Ashbourne, Birmingham, and Oxford, iv. 353-377. Death of Allen, iv. 354. Death, iv. 417. JOHNSON, Samuel, abbreviations of his friends' names, ii. 258; iv. 273, n. 1; Aberdeen, freeman of, v. 90; abodes, list of his: see JOHNSON, habitations; absence of mind: see JOHNSON, peculiarities; abstinence easy to him, i. 103, n. 3, 468; iv. 72, 149, n. 3; absurd stories told of him, i. 464; abused in a newspaper, iv. 29; accounts, resolves to keep, iv. 177, n. 3; acquaintance, making new, iv. 374; ib., n. 4; widely-varied, iii. 21 (see JOHNSON, society); actors: see PLAYERS; Adversaria, i. 205; 'agreeable, extremely,' ii. 141, n. 3; alchymy, not a positive unbeliever in, ii. 376; alertness, no, v. 308; Alfred, Life of, projects a, i. 177; alms-giving, i. 302, n. 1; ii. 119; ambition, iii. 309; Americans, feelings towards the: see AMERICA; amused, easily, ii. 261; v. 249; amusements, his, iii. 398; ancestors, asked in the Highlands about his, v. 237, n. 2; [Greek: Anax andron], i. 47; anecdotes, love of: see ANECDOTES; Annales: see JOHNSON, diary; annihilation, horror of, iii. 295, 298, n. 1; anniversaries, observed, i. 483; anxiety about his writings, felt no, iii. 33; apology, ready to make an, iv. 321,409, n. 1, 431; Apophthegms, i. 190, n. 4; Appius, compared by Burke to, iv. 374, n. 2; Appleby School, applies for mastership of, i. 132; apprentice, talking to an, ii. 323; approbation, pleasure of, iv. 255, n. 2; Arabic, wishes to study, iv. 28; architecture and statuary, opinion of, ii. 439; arguing before an audience, iii. 331; iv. 111, 324, 429; Burke refers to it, iii. 24, n. 2; butt end of the pistol, ii. 100; iv. 274; v. 292; delight in it, ii. 452, n. 1; described by Burke, iv. 316, n. 1; Hamilton, iv. iii; Reynolds, ii. 100, n. 1; iii. 81, n. 1; Seaford, Lord, iv. 176, n. 1; either side indifferently, ii. 105; iii. 24; kick of the Tartar horse, ii. 100, n. 1; promptitude for it, ii. 365; iii. 24, n. 1; reasoned close or wide, iv. 429; v. 17; rudeness, iii. 81, n. 1; spirit of contradiction, v. 83, 222; thinking which side he should take, iii. 24; wrong side, on the, iii. 23; iv. iii, 429; see JOHNSON, talk; Argyll Street, room in, iv. 158, n. 4; Armiger, i. 489; ii. 332, n. i; art: see PAINTING; art of making people talk of what they know best, v. 130; assertions, love of contradicting, i. 410, n. 2; iii. 24, n. 2; attacked in the streets, ii. 299; attacks, never but once replied to, i. 314; enjoyed them, ii. 308, 363; iv. 55; looked on them as part of his consequence, iv. 422; v. 400, n. 4: see ATTACKS; attendance, required the least, ii. 474, n. 3; iv. 181, n. 1, 340, n. 3; v. 309, n. 2; Auchinleck, hopes again to see, iv. 156, 264; auction of his effects, i. 363, n. 3; austere, but not morose, ii. 122; author, an, without pen, ink, or paper, i. 350, n. 3; authors asking his opinion: see AUTHORS; autobiography, projects his, i. 26, n. 1; awe, admiration, love, regarded with, v. 272; awe of him, felt by Aberdeen professors, v. 92; Lord B——, iv. 116, n. 1; Englishmen of great eminence, iii. 85; Fox, iii. 267; at Mrs. Garrick's, iv. 99; by Glasgow professors, v. 371; at Allan Ramsay's, iii. 332; by Dr. Robertson, v. 371; by Scotch literati, ii. 63; by a Welsh parson, v. 450, n. 2; described, by Mdme. D'Arblay, v. 371, n. 2: see below, JOHNSON, feared; Bacon, Life of, projects a, iii. 194; ball, goes to a, iv. 159, n. 3; Baltic, wishes to go up the, ii. 288, n. 3; iii. 134, 454; bargainer, bad, Rasselas, i. 341; Lives of the Poets, iii. 111, n. 1; Barry's picture, introduced in, iv. 224, n. 1; beadle within him, the, iii. 81; bear, a, Boswell's bear, ii. 269, n. i; v. 39, n. 4; dancing bear, ii. 66; Gibbon's sarcasm, ii. 348: He-bear, iv. 113, n. 2; 'like a word in a catch,' ii. 347; 'nothing of the bear but his skin,' ii. 66; Ursa Major, v. 384; beats Osborne, the bookseller, i. 154; 'beat many a fellow,' i. 154, n. 2; belabours his confessor, iv. 281: belief, angry at attacks on his, iii. 111; 'believes nothing but the Bible,' i. 147, n. 2; benevolence, iii. 124, 222, 306, 368; iv. 278, 283; to an outcast woman, iv. 321; concealed, iv. 325; Bible, reads the whole, ii. 189, n. 3; reads the Greek Testament at 160 verses every Sunday, ii. 288; bigotry, freedom from it, i. 405; ii. 150; iii. 188; iv. 410-1; instance of it, v. 114, n. 2; Biographia Britannica, asked to edit the, iii. 174; biography, excellence in, i. 25, 256; love of it: see BIOGRAPHY; Birmingham Journal, writes for the, i. 85; birth and rank, respect for, ii. l30, l53, 26l, 328; v. 103, 353; birth and parentage, i. 34; birth-day, disliked mention of his, at Ashbourne, iii. 157; at Dunvegan, v. 222; escaped from Streatham on it, iii. 398, n. 1; cheerful entry in 1780, iii. 440; gave a dinner on it in 1781, iii. 157, n. 3; iv. l35. n. 1; in 1783, iv. 239, n. 2; reflected on it, v. 457; kept at Streatham, iii. 157, n. 3; bishop, looks like a, v. 363; bleeding, undergoes, iii. 104, 152, n. 3; blood, irritability of his, iv. 190; blushing, iii. 329; Bolt-court, house—ii. 427; drawing-room, iii. 316; kitchen, iii. 461; prints in his dining-room, iv. 202, n. 1; silver salvers, iv. 92; garden, ii. 427, n. 1; iii. 398; stone-seats, iv. 203; Boswell in it for the last time, iv. 337: see JOHNSON, household; bones, horror at, v. 169, 327; books, bidding them farewell, iv. 359; judgment as to their success, iv. 121; loan of them, iv. 371, n. 2; runs to them, ii. 365; tears out their heart, iii. 284; uses them slovenly, ii. 192: see BOOKS, and JOHNSON, library; book-binding, i. 56, n. 2; booksellers, in a company of, iii. 311; borrowed small sums, iv. 191; BOSWELL: see BOSWELL and JOHNSON, letters; bow to an Archbishop, iv. 198; bow-wow way, ii. 326, n. 5; v. 18, n. 1; boxing, conversant in the art of, v. 229, n. 2; breakfast, i. 243, n. 3; ii. 214, 376; iv. 171; in splendour, iii. 400; breeding, good, iii. 54, n. 1; brother, his pretended, v. 295; 'buck, a young English,' v. 184, 261; buffoonery, incomparable at, ii. 262, n. 2; iii. 24, n. 2; bull, made a, iv. 322; Burke content to have rung the bell to him, iv. 26-7; respect for him, iv. 318; attacked by him, v. 15, n. 1: see BURKE; burlesque, turns a dispute into, iv. 80, n. 4; business, love of, Clarendon Press, ii. 441; Dr. Taylor's law suit, iii. 44, n. 3; 51, n. 3; Thrale's brewery, iv. 85, n. 2; calculation, fondness for, i. 72; ii. 288-9, 344; iii. 207; error in, ib. n. 3; forgets to use it, iii. 226, n. 4; 'Caliban of literature,' ii. 129, 155, n. 2; called, iv. 94; candour, iv. 192, 239; cards, wished he had learnt, iii. 23; v. 404; careless of documents, v. 364; caricatured, glad to be, v. 400, n. 4; cat, Hodge, his, iv. 197; catalogue of his works: see JOHNSON, works; cathedrals, had seen most of the, iii. 107, 118, 456; ceremonies of life, attentive to the, iii. 54, n. 1; chambers: see JOHNSON, habitations; Chancellor, Lord, might have been, iii. 310; character, his, drawn by himself, iii. 398, n. 3; iv. 45, 168, n. 2, 239; by Baretti, iii. 429, n. 2; Boswell, iv. 420, n. 3, 424-30; v. 17-19; Burney, Miss, ii. 262, n. 2; iii. 440, n. 1; iv. 245, n. 2, 426, n. 2; Dodd, iii. 140, n. 2; Hamilton, iv. 420; Mickle, iv. 250; Parr, iv. 47, n. 2; at Ramsay's, iii. 331; Reynolds: see REYNOLDS, Johnson; Robertson, iii 331-2; Taylor, iii. 150; Towers, iv. 41, n. 1; like Baker's character of James I, v. 12; Bayle's of Menage, iv. 428, n. 2; Boerhaave's, iv. 430, n. 1; Clarendon's character of Falkland, iv. 428, n. 2; Dryden's, i. 264, n. 1; iv. 45; Harington's of Bishop Still, iv. 420, n. 3; Milton's, i. 97, n. 2, 131, n. 2, 199, n. 3; Savage's, i. 166, n. 4; character, said by Baretti to be ignorant of, v. 17, n. 2; characters, saw a great variety, iii. 20; drew strong yet nice portraits, ib.; too much in light and shade, ii. 306; overcharged, iii. 332; charity to the poor, iv. 132, 191: see JOHNSON, Almsgiving; Charles of Sweden, i. 153, n. 4; chastity in his youth, i. 94; Savage's example, i. 164; iv. 395-7; chemistry, love of, i. 140, 436; iii. 398; iv. 237; chief, would have made a good, v. 136, 143; child, never wished to have a, iii. 29; childhood, companions of his, iii. 131; children, books for, iv. 8, n. 3; children, love of little, iv. 196; Christianity, projected work on, v. 89; church, attendances due at, i. 67, n. 2; iii. 401; behaviour in it, ii. 214; lateness in arriving at it, ii. 476; iii. 302, n. 1, 313, n, 1; perturbation, without, at it, ii. 476; some radiations of comfort at it, iii. 17, n. 2, 25, n. l; reluctance to go to it, i. 67; ii. 142, n. 2, 214, n. 2; resolutions at it, i. 500; Church of England, devotion to the, iii. 331; iv. 426; v. 17; church preferment, offer of, i. 320, 476; ii. 120; civilized life in the Hebrides, longs for, v. 183; clergymen should not be taught elocution, iv. 206; Clerkenwell ale-house, i. 113, n. 1; climb over a wall at Oxford, proposes to, i. 348; Club, Literary, attendance, i. 480, n. 2; ii. 136; iii. 106, n. 4; dislike of some of the members, iii. 106; One of the founders, i. 477; coach, on the top of a, i. 477; cold, indifferent to, v. 306, 345; colloquial barbarisms, repressed, iii. 196; comfort, wants every, iv. 270; common things, well-informed in, iv. 206; 'companion, a tremendous,' iii. 139; companions of his youth, regrets the, iii. 180, n. 3; company, loves, i. 144; obliged to any man who visits him, i. 397; proud to have his company desired, ii. 375, n. 4; tries to persuade people to return, i. 490; complaints, not given to, ii. 67, 357; iii. 3; iv. 116,172, n. 4; complaisance, i. 82; compliment, pleased with a, iv. 275; v. 401; composition, dictionary-making and poetry compared, v. 47, 418; fair copies, never wrote, i. 71, n. 3; iii. 62, n. 1; iv. 36, 309; Johnsonese, v. 145, n. 2; reviewing, iv. 214; time for it, ii. 119; verses, counting his, iv. 219; wrote by fits and starts, iv. 369; only for money, i. 318, n. 5; iii. 19, n. 3; not for pleasure, iv. 219; rapidity, described by Courtenay, iv. 381, n. 1; shown in his college exercises, i. 71; Debates, i. 504; Hermit of Teneriffe, i. 192, n. 1; Idler, i. 331; Life of Savage, forty-eight pages at a sitting, i. 166; v. 67; Ramblers, i. 203; Rasselas, i. 341; sermons, v. 67; translation from the French, iv. 127; v. 67; Vanity of Human Wishes, i. 192; ii. 15; confidence in his own abilities, i. 186; conjecture, kept things floating in, iii. 324; conscience, tenderness of his, i. 152; consecrated ground, reverence for, v. 62, 170; constant to those he employed, iv. 319; Constantinople, wish to go to, iv. 28; constitution, strength of his, iv. 256, n. 3; Construction of Fireworks, v. 246, n. 1; contraction of his friends' names, ii. 258; v. 308; contradiction, actuated by its spirit, iii. 66; v. 387; exasperated by it, ii. 122; pleasure in it, in. 24; conversation, antique statue, like an, iii. 317; Bacon's precept, in conformity with, iv. 236; colloquial pleasantry, iv. 428; contest, a, ii. 450; iv. 111; described by Hogarth, i. 147, n. 2; Dr. King, ii. 95, n. 1; E. Dilly, iii. 110; Reynolds, iv. 184; Malone, ib. n. 2; Miss Burney and Mrs. Thrale, iv. 237, n. 1; Macaulay, ib.; Mrs. Piozzi, iv. 346; Boswell, ib.; elegant as his writing, ii. 95, n. 2; iv. 236, 428; essential requisite for it, in want of an, iv. 166; exact precision, ii. 434; happiest kind, his view of the, iv. 50; imaginary victories gained over him, iv. 168, n. 1; labours when he says a good thing, v. 77; 'literature in it, very little,' v. 307; 'music to hear him speak,' v. 246; old man in it, nothing of the, iii. 336; originality, iv. 421, n. 1; point and imagery, teemed with, iii. 260; rule to talk his best, i. 204; 'runts, would learn to talk of,' iii. 337; seldom started a subject, iii. 307, n. 2; iv. 304, n. 4; stunned people, v. 288; too strong for the great, iv. 117; witnesses, without, iii. 81, n. 1; conviviality in the Hebrides, v. 261; convulsions in his breast, iii. 397, n. 1; convulsive starts: see Peculiarities; cookery, judge of, i. 469; iii. 285; projected book on it, iii. 285; copper coins bearing his head, iv. 421, n. 2; cottage in Boswell's park, would like a, iv. 226; country life, knowledge of, iii. 450; mental imprisonment, iv. 338; pleasure in it, v. 439, n. 2; courage, anecdotes of his, ii. 298-9; Court of Justice, in a, ii. 96, 97, n. 1, 98; Cowley, projected edition of, iii. 29; credulity, iii. 331; iv. 426; v. 17; critic upon characters and manners, iii. 48; croaker, no, iv. 381, n. 1; Cromwell, projected Life of, iv. 235; curiosity, his, i. 89; iii. 450, 453-8; about the middle ages, iv. 133; dance, at a Highland, v. 166; dancing, iv. 79, 80, n. 2; dating letters, i. 122, n. 2; day, mode of spending his, i. 398; ii. 118; death, dread of, ii. 106; iii. 153, 295; iv. 253, n. 4, 259, 278, 280, 289, 299-300, 366, 394-5. 399-400; v. 380; no dread of what might occasion, ii. 298; dying with a grace,' iv. 300, n. 1; horror of the last, i. 331, n. 7; iii. 153, n. 2; keeping away the thoughts of, ii. 93; iii. 157; news of deaths fills him with melancholy, iv. 154; resigned at the end, iv. 414, n. 2, 416-9; death, his, Dec. 13, 1784, iv. 417-9; agitated the public mind, i. 26, n. 2; produced a chasm, iv. 420; a kind of era, iv. 421, n. 1; described by Boswell, iv. 399-419; David Boswell, iv. 417; Dr. Burney, iv. 410, n. 1; Miss Burney, iv. 377, n. 1, 438-9; Hoole, iv. 399, n. 1, 406, 410, n. 2; Langton, iv. 407, 418, n. 1; Nichols, iv. 407-10; Reynolds, iv. 414, n. 2; Windham's servant, iv. 418; spirit of the grammarian, iv. 401; characteristical manner shows itself, iv. 411; lines on a spendthrift, iv. 413; three requests of Reynolds, ib.; refuses opiates and sustenance, iv. 415; operates on himself, iv. 399, 415. n. 1, 418, n. 1; debate, chose the wrong side in a, i. 441; debts in 1751, i. 238, n. 2, 350, n. 3; in 1759 and 1760, i. 350, n. 3; under arrest, i. 303, n. 1; dedications, skill in, ii. 1; 224-5; never used them himself, i. 257, n. 2; ii. i, n. 2; to him, iv. 421, n. 2; defending a man, mode of, ii. 87; deference, required, iii. 24, n. 2; delicacy about his letter to Chesterfield, i. 260, n. 3; about Beauclerk, iv. 180; towards a dependent, ii. 155; depression of mind, i. 297, 358, n. 5; deserted, very much, iv. 140; 'déterré,' i. 129; dexterity in retort, iv. 185; Diaries, Annales, i. 74, 89, n. 3; Diary, burnt, i. 25, 35, n. 1, 251; iv. 405; fragments preserved, i. 27, 35. n. 1, 74; iv. 405, n. 2; v. 53, 427, n. 1; Boswell, seen by, i. 251, n. 3; iv. 405; left in his house, v. 53; 'Dictionary Johnson,' i. 385; Dictionary, cites himself in his, iv. 4, n. 3: see also under Dictionary; Dies irae, reciting the, iii. 358, n. 3; diffidence, i. 153; Dignity, 'a blunt dignity about him,' i. 461, n. 4; of character, i. 131, 264, n. 1; ii. 118; v. 103; of literature, iii. 310; dinners, 'dinner to ask a man to,' i. 470; house, at his own, ii. 215, 360, 375, 427, n. 1; iii. 241; iv. 92, 210; to members of the Ivy Lane Club, iv. 436; 'huffed his wife' about, i. 239, n. 2; on the way to Oxford, iv. 284; one in Devonshire, i. 379, n. 2; at the Pine Apple, i. 103; talked about them more than he thought, i. 469, n. 2; thought on them with earnestness, i. 467, n. 2; v. 342, n. 2: see under DINNERS, and JOHNSON, eating; discrimination, fond of, ii. 306; iii. 282; disorderly habits, i. 482, n. 2; iv. 110; dissenters and snails, ii. 268, n, 2; distilling, iv. 9; distressed by poverty, i. 73, 77, 121, 123, n. 2, 133, 137, 163, 238, n. 2, 303, 350, 488; Doctor of Laws of Dublin, i. 488; Oxford, ii. 318, n. 1, 331-3; did not use the title, i. 488, n. 3; ii. 332, n. 1; iv. 79, n. 3, 268; v. 37, n. 2; dogs, separated two: see JOHNSON, fear; Domine, title of, i. 488, n. 3; 'an auld dominie,' v. 382, n. 2; dramatic power, i. 506: see JOHNSON, tragedy-writer; draughts, played at, i. 317; ii. 444; dress, described by Beauclerk, ii. 406; Boswell, i. 396; v. 18; Colman, iii. 54, n. 2; Cumberland, iii. 325, n. 3; Foote, ii. 403; Langton, i. 247; Miss Reynolds, i. 246, n. 2, 328, n. 1; improved, iii. 325; on his tour in Scotland, v. 19; Boswell suggests for him velvet and embroidery, ii. 475; Court mourning, at a, iv. 325; dramatic author, as a, i. 200; v. 364; when visiting Goldsmith, i. 366, n. 1; in Paris, ii. 403, n. 5; dropsy, sudden relief from, iv. 271-2; operated on himself for it: see above, under death; Easter meetings with Boswell, iv. 148, n. 2; Easter-day, his placidity on it, iii. 25; resolutions on it, i. 483, 487; ii. 189, n. 3; iii. 99; East-Indian affairs, had never considered, ii. 294; eating, dislikes being asked twice to eat anything, v. 264; love of good eating, i. 467; iii. 69; at Monboddo's table, v. 81; mode, i. 267, 468, 470, n. 2; v. 206; unaffected by kinds of food, iii. 305; voracious, iv. 72, 330; v. 20; enemies, wonders why he has, iv. 168; envy, candid avowal of, iii 271, n. 2; possible envy of Burke, iii. 310, n. 4; epitaphs, his, iv. 424, ib., n. 2, 443-5; on his wife, i. 241, n. 2; iv. 351-2; on his parents and brothers, iv. 393; Essex Head Club, founds the, iv. 253-5, 275, 436-8; etymologist, a bad, i. 186, n. 5; evidence, a sifter of, i. 406; v. 388; evil spirit, the, affects Johnson politically, v. 36, n. 3; exaggeration, hatred of: see EXAGGERATION; excellence described by Mrs. Piozzi, ii. 263, n. 6; executor, Porter's, i. 95, n. 3; Thrale's, iv. 86; exhibited, refused to be, ii. 120; expedition, eager for an, iii. 131, 134; experiments, minute, iii. 398, n. 3; eyes: see Sight; fable, sketch of a, ii. 232; 'Faith in some proportion to fear,' iv. 299, n. 3; fancy, fecundity of, iii. 317; Fasting, ii. 214, n. 1, 352, 435, 476; iii. 24, 300; iv. 203, 397; fasted two days, i. 469; iii. 306; v. 284; fear, a stranger to, ii. 298, n. 4; separated two dogs, ii. 299; v. 329; never afraid of any man, iv. 327, n. 4; afraid to walk on the roof of the Observatory, ii. 389; feared at College, iii. 303; at Brighton, iv. 159, n. 3; by Langton, iv. 295: see above, JOHNSON, awe; Fearing in Pilgrim's Progress, like, ii. 298, n. 4; iv. 417, n. 2; female charms, sensible to, i. 92; female dress, critical of, i. 41; feudal notions, iii. 177; fictions, projected work on, iv. 236; fields, wishes to see the, iii. 435, n. 3, 441-2; flattery, somewhat susceptible of, iv. 427; v. 17, 440, n. 2; foenum habet in cornu, ii. 79; Foote describes him in Paris, ii. 403; foreigners, prejudice against, i. 129; iv. 15; described by Baretti and Reynolds, ib. n. 3, 169, n. 1; Boswell, v. 20: forgiving disposition, ii. 270; iv. 349, n. 2; shown to one who exceeded in wine, ii. 436; iv. 110; v. 259, n. 1; fortitude, iv. 240, 3 4; fox-hunting, i. 446, n. 1; v. 253; France, tour to, ii. 384-404; diary, ii. 389-401; would not publish it, iii. 301; French, knowledge of, i. 115; ii. 81-2, 208, n. 2, 385, 404; writes a French letter, ii. 404; fretful, iv. 170, 173, 283; friends, list of, in 1752, i. 241; friend, a most active, iv. 344; frisk, his, i. 250; frolic, his bitterness mistaken for, i. 73; iv. 304; fruit, love of, iv. 353; v. 455, n. 3; funeral, iv. 419, 439; Garagantua, iii. 255; garret in Gough Square, i. 328; Garrick's success, moved by, i. 167, 216, n. 2; ii. 69; gay and good-humoured, iii. 440, n. 1; iv. 101, n. 1; 'infinitely agreeable,' iv. 305, n. 1; bland and gay, v. 398; gay circles of life, pleased at mixing in the, ii. 321, 349; Gelaleddin, describes himself in, iv. 195, n. 1; general censure, dislikes, iv. 313; genius, always in extremes, i. 468, n. 4; iii. 307, n. 2; Gentleman's Magazine: see Gentleman's Magazine; gentleness, iv. 101, n. 1, 183, n. 2; want of it, v. 288; gentlewoman in liquor, helps a, ii. 434; gesticulating, averse to, iv. 322; gestures, see JOHNSON, peculiarities; ghost, like a, i. 6, n. 2; iii. 307; v. 73; ghosts: see GHOSTS; 'Giant in his den,' i. 396; gloomy cast of thought, i. 180; God, love predominated over by fear of, iii. 339; 'saw God in clouds,' iii. 98; Goldsmith, contests with, ii. 231; envy, i. 414, n. 4; Haunch of Venison, mentioned in, iii. 225, n. 2; proposal to review a work by, v. 274: see GOLDSMITH; Good Friday, would not look at a proof on, iii. 313: see JOHNSON, fasting; good-humour, iv. 245, n. 2; v. 132, 139; 'good-humoured fellow,' ii. 362; iii. 78; goodnatured, but not good-humoured, ii. 362; good in others seen by him, i. 161, n. 2; good things of this life, loved the, iii. 310, n. 4; good sayings, forgets his, iv. 179; Gordon Riots, iii. 428-30; gout due to abstinence, i. 103, n. 3: see JOHNSON, health; gown, Master of Arts, i. 347; graces, valued the, iii. 54; grandfather, could hardly tell who was his, ii. 261; gratitude, i. 487; grave, request about it, iv. 393, n. 3; in Westminster Abbey, iv. 419; close to Macpherson's, ii. 298, n. 2; great, never courted the, iii. 189; iv. 116; not courted by them, iv. 117, 326; 'greatest man in England next to Lord Mansfield,' ii. 336; v. 96; Greek, knowledge of, i. 57, 70; iii. 90; iv. 8, n. 3, 384-5; v. 458, n. 5; Greek Testament, his large folio, ii. 189; Green Room, in the, i. 201; iv. 7; grief, bearing, iii. 136, n. 2, 137, n. 1; Grosvenor Square, apartment in, iv. 72, n. 1; gun, rashness in firing a, ii. 299; habitations, list of his, i. 111; iii. 405-6; Hampton Court, applies for a residence in, iii. 34, n. 4; happier in his later years, i. 299; iv. 1, n. 1; happiness not found in this world, iv. 162, n. 2: see HAPPINESS; hasty, iii. 80-1; health, consults Scotch physicians, iv. 261-4; seldom a single day of ease, iv. 147; 1729, hypochondria, i. 63; 1755, sickness, i. 305; 1765-6, severe attack of hypochondria, i. 483, 487, 520-2; which left a weakness in his knee, v. 318, 446; 1767, hypochondria, relieved by abstinence, ii. 44, n. 2; 1768, hypochondria, ii. 45; severe illness at Oxford, ii. 46, n. 3; 1770, rheumatism and spasms, ii. 115, n. 2; 1771, better, ii. 142, n. 2; 1773, fever, ii. 263; mention of a dreadful illness, ii. 281; better in Scotland, v. 45, n. 3, 405, n. 1; 1774, illness, ii. 272; 1776, gout, iii. 82, 89; 1777, hypochondria, iii. 98; illness, iii. 210; 1779, better, iii. 397; 1780, better, iii. 435, 442; iv. 1, n. 1; 1781, better, iv. 101, n. 1; 1782, illness, iv. 141, 142, 144, 149; 1783, illness, iv. 163; palsy, iv. 227, 401, n. 2; threatened with an operation, iv. 239; gout, 241; 1783-4, asthma and dropsy, iv. 255, 256, n. 1, 259; sudden relief, 261, 271-2; confined 129 days, iv. 270, n. 1; projected wintering in Italy, iv. 326; his letters about his last illness, iv. 353-69; Aegri Ephemeris, iv. 381: see JOHNSON, melancholy; heard, pronunciation of, iii. 197; hearth-broom, his, iv. 134; Hebrides, first talk of visiting the, i. 450; ii. 291; v. 286; proposed tour, ii. 51, 201, 232, 264; v. 13-4; leaves London, ii. 265; v. 21; returns, ii. 268; account of the tour, ii. 266-7; v. 1-425; described in a letter to Taylor, v. 405, n. 1; acquisition of ideas, iv. 199; and of images, v. 405; hardships and dangers, v. 127, 283, n. 1, 313, n. 1, 392; uncommon spirit shown, v. 368; pleasantest journey he ever made, iii. 93; v. 405; pleasure in talking it over, iii. 131, 196; a 'frolic,' iv. 136; no wish to go again, iv. 199; received like princes, v. 317; 'roving among the Hebrides at sixty,' v. 278; box of curiosities from them, ii. 269-70: see Journey to the Hebrides, and SCOTLAND; Hercules, compared by Boswell to, ii. 260; Hervey, story of his ingratitude to, iii. 195, 209-11; high, his use of, iii. 118, n. 3; Highlander, shows the spirit of a, v. 324; hilarity, i. 73, 191, n. 5, 255, n. 1; ii. 261-2, 378; history, little regard for: see HISTORY; holds up his head as high as he can, iv. 256; home uncomfortable by jarrings, iii. 368: see JOHNSON, household; honest man, v. 264, 309; house at Lichfield: see LICHFIELD; for his habitations, see JOHNSON, habitations; household, account of it, i. 232, n. 1; iii. 461-2; iv. 169, n. 3; 'much malignity' in it, iii. 417, 461; losses by death, iv. 140; melancholy, iv. 142; more peace, iv. 233, n. 1; solitude, i. 232, n. 1; iv. 235, n. 1, 239, 241, 249, 253, n. 4, 255, 270; housekeeping, left off, i. 326, 350, n. 3; resumed it, ii. 4; hug, gives one a forcible, ii. 231; humility, iii. 380, n. 3; iv. 410, 427; humour, ii. 262, n. 2; iii. 244, n. 2; iv. 428; v. 17, 20; hungry only once in his life, i. 469; hypochondria: see JOHNSON, health; hypocrisy, not suspicious of, i. 418, n. 3; iii. 444; Iceland, projected voyage to, i. 242; iv. 358, n. 2; idleness in boyhood, i. 48; at College, i. 70; 'Desidiae valedixi,' i. 74; in writing the Plan, i. 183; 'Idle Apprentice i. 250; in Inner Temple lane, i. 350, n. 3; 'idle fellow all my life,' i. 465; idleness in 1760, i. 353; in 1761, i. 358; in 1763, i. 398; in 1764, i. 482; in 1767, ii. 44; in his latter years, i. 372, n. 1; claim upon him for more writings, i. 398; ii. 15, 35, 441; idleness exaggerated by himself, i. 446; ii. 263, 271: see JOHNSON, indolence; ignorance, covered his, v. 124, n. 4; illness: see JOHNSON, health; imitations of him often caricatures, ii. 326, n. 5; 'Imlac,' iii. 6; Impransus, i. 137; incredulity as to particular extraordinary facts, ii. 247; iii. 188; v. 331; 'incredulus odi,' iii. 229; independence, always asserted his, i. 443; indolence, his, described by Hawkins, iii. 98, n. 1; by Murphy, i. 307, n. 2; 'inclination to do nothing,' i. 463; justification of it, ii. 15, n. 2; time of danger, i. 268, n. 4; influence, loves, v. 136; inheritance from his father, i. 80; intoxicated, i. 94, 103, n. 3, 379, n. 2; used to slink home, iii. 389; 'invictum animum Catonis,' iv. 374; Irene: see Irene; Island Isa, v. 250; Islington, for change of air, goes to, iv. 271; Italian, knowledge of, i. 115, 156; mentions Ariosto, i. 278; v. 368, n. 1; Dante, ii. 238; purposes vigorous study, iii. 90; iv. 135; reads Casa and Castiglione, v. 276; Il Palmerino d'Inghilterra, iii. 2; Petrarch, iv. 374, n. 5; Tasso, iii. 330; Italy, projected book on, iii. 19; projected tour to, ii. 423, 424, 428; tour given up, iii. 6, 18, 27; eagerness to go, iii. 19, 28, 36, 456-8; v. 229; projected wintering there, iv. 326-8, 336, 338, 348-50; Jacobite tendencies, i. 43, 176; ii. 27, 220; iii. 162; iv. 314; never ardent in the cause, i. 176, n. 2, 429; never in a nonjuring meeting-house, iv. 288; James's Medicinal Dictionary, i. 159; Jean Bull philosophe, i. 467; John Bull, a, v. 20; 'Johnson's grimly ghost,' iv. 229, n. 4; Johnson's Court, house in, ii. 5; furniture, ib. n. 1, 376; Johnston, often called in Scotland, iii. 106, n. 1; v. 341; journal, attempt to keep a, i. 433, n. 2; ii. 217; Journey to the Western Islands, see Journey to the Western Islands; killing sometimes no murder in a state of nature, v. 87-8; kindness, Boswell, to, i. 410; Burney's testimony, i. 410, n. 2; iii. 24, n, 2; Goldsmith's testimony, i. 417; features, shown in his, ii. 141, n. 2; poor schoolfellow, to his, ii. 463; servants, to, iv. 197; small matters, in, iv. 201, 344; unthankful, to the, i. 84; iii. 368, 462; King's evil, touched for the, i. 42; kings, ridicules, i. 333; kitchen, his, ii. 215, n. 4; iii. 461; knee, takes a young Methodist on his, ii. 120; a Highland beauty, v. 261; knotting, tried, iii. 242; iv. 284; knowledge, at the age of eighteen, i. 445; exact, iii. 319; varied, iii. 22; iv. 427; v. 215, 246, 263; 'laboured,' iii. 260, n. 3; v. 77; ladies, could be very agreeable to, iv. 73; Langton's devotion to him in his illness, iv. 266, n. 3; will, ridicules, ii. 261; language, delicate in it, iii. 303; iv. 442; suits his to a 'blackguard boy,' iv. 184; zeal for it, ii. 28; large, love of the, v. 442, n. 4; late hours, love of, ii. 407; iii. 1, n. 2, 205; Latin, knowledge of, i. 45, 61, 62; testified to by De Quincey, i. 272, n. 3; by Dr. Parr, iv. 385, n. 3; colloquial, ii. 125, 404, 406; misquotes Horace, iv. 356, n. 2; modern Latin poetry, loves, i. 90, n. 2; verse, translates Greek epigrams into Latin, iv. 384; laugh, his, described, ii. 262, n. 2; hearty, ii. 378; like a rhinoceros, ib.; over small matters, ii. 261; v. 249; resounds from Temple Bar to Fleet Ditch, ii. 262; 'laughter, shakes, out of you,' ii. 231; law, knowledge of, iii. 22; lawyer, seeks to become a, i. 134; would have excelled, ib.; had not money, v. 35; laxity of talk, i. 476; ii. 735 iv. 211, n. 4; v. 352; laziness, trying to cure his, v. 231; lectured by Mrs. Thrale, iv. 65, n. 1; lemonade, his, v. 22, 72; letterwriting an effort, i. 473; letters may be published after his death, ii. 60; iii. 276; puts as little as possible into them, iv. 102; returns not answers, ii. 2, n. 3, 279; iii. 209; studied endings, v. 238, n. 6; publication by Mrs. Piozzi: See under Mrs. Thrale, Johnson, letters;—to Allen, Edmund, iv. 228; Argyle, Duke of, v. 363; Astle, Thomas, iv. 133; Bagshaw, Rev. T., ii. 258; iv. 351; Banks, Joseph, ii. 144; Barber, Francis, ii. 62, 115, 116; iv. 239, n. 2; Baretti, i. 361, 369, 380; Barry, James, iv. 202; B—d, Mr., ii. 207; Beattie, Dr., iii. 434; Birch, Dr., i. 160, 226; Boothby, Miss, i. 83, n. 2, 305, n. 2; iv. 57, n. 3; Boswell, James, i. 473; ii. 3, 20, 58, 70, 110, 140, 145, 201, 204, 264-6, 268, 271-3, 274, 276-7, 278, 279, 284, 287, 288, 290,292, 294, 296, 307, 309, 379, 381-4, 387, 411, 412, 415-424; iii. 44, 86, 88, 93, 94, 104, 105, 108, 120, 124, 127, 130-2, 135, 210, 214, 215, 277, 362, 368, 372, 391, 395, 396, 413, 416, 420, 435, 441; iv. 71, 136, 145, n. 2, 148, 151, 153, 154-6, 163, 231, 241, 248, 259, 261, 262, 264-5, 348, 351, 378-9, 380: for Boswell's letters to Johnson, See BOSWELL; Boswell, Mrs., iii. 85, 129; iv. 156; Boufflers, Mme, de, ii. 405; Brocklesby, Dr., iv. 234, 353-9; Burney, Dr., i. 286, 323, 327, 500; iv. 239, 360-1, 377; Bute, Earl of, i. 376, 380; Cave, Edward, i. 91, 107, 120-3, 136-8, I55-7; Chamberlain, the Lord, iii. 34, n. 4; Chambers, R., i. 274; Chapone, Mrs., iv. 247; Chesterfield, Earl of, i. 261; fictitious one, a, i. 238, n. 3; Clark, Alderman, iv. 258; clergyman at Bath, iv. 150; clergyman, young, iii. 436; Cruikshank,——, iv. 365; Davies, Thomas, iv. 231, 365; Dilly, Charles, iii. 394; iv. 257; Dilly, Edward, iii. 126 (really written to W. Sharp, ib., n. 1); Dodd, Dr., iii. 145, 147; Drummond, William, ii. 27-31; Edwards, Dr., iii. 367; Elibank, Lord, v. 182; Elphinstone, James, i. 210-2, 236, n. 3; iii. 364, n. 2; Farmer, Dr., to, ii. 114; iii. 427; General Advertiser, i. 227; Gentl. Mag. about Savage, i. 164; Goldsmith, ii. 235, n. 2; Green, the Lichfield apothecary, iv. 393; Grenville, George, i. 376, n. 2; about Gwynn the architect, v. 454, n. 2; Hamilton, W. G., iv. 245, 363; Hawkins, Sir John, iv. 435; Hastings, Warren, iv. 66, 68-70; Hector, Edmund, i. 64, n. 1; 87, n. 1, 189, n. 2, 340, n. 1, 370, n. 5; ii. 460, n. 3; iv. 145, n. 2, 146-7, 378; Heely, ——, iv. 371; Hickman, ——, i. 78, n. 2; Hoole, John, ii. 289; iv. 359-60; Humphry, Ozias, iv. 268-9; Hussey, Rev. John, iii. 369; Jenkinson, Charles (first Earl of Liverpool), iii. 145; Johnson, Mrs., his mother, i. 512, 513,514; Kearsley, ——, i. 214, n. 1; Lady, a, asking for a recommendation, i. 368; Langton, Bennet, i. 288, 324, 337, 338, 357; ii. 16, 17, 45, 135, 142, 146, 280, 361, 379; iii. 124, 365; iv. 132, 145, 240, 276-8, 352, 361; Langton, Miss Jane, iv. 271; Lawrence, Dr., ii. 296; iii. 419; iv. 137; Latin letter, iv. 143; Lawrence, Miss, iv. 144, n. 3; Leland, Dr., i. 489, 518; ii. 2, n. 1; Levett, ——, of Lichfield, i. 160; Levett, Robert, ii. 282, 385; iii. 92; Macleod, Laird of, v. 266, n. 2; Macpherson, James, ii. 298; Malone, E., iv. 141; Montague, Mrs., i. 232, n. 1; iii. 223, n. 1; iv. 239, n. 4; Mudge, Dr., iv. 240; Nichols, John, iv. 36, n. 4, 58, 160, 161, 163, n. 1, 369; Nicol, George, iv. 365; O'Connor, Charles, i. 321; iii. 111; Paradise, John, iv. 364; Parr, Dr., iv. 15, n. 5; Perkins, ——, ii. 286; iv. 118, 153, 257, 363; Porter, Miss, i. 212, n. 1, 346, n. 1, 513-6; ii. 387-8; iii. 393; iv. 89, 142-3, 145, n. 2, 203, 232, 256, 261, 394; Portmore, Lord, iv. 268, n. 1; Rasay, Laird of, v. 412; Reynolds, Sir Joshua, i. 486; ii. 141, 144; iii. 81, 82, 90; iv. 133, 161, 201, 219, 227, 253, 283, 348-9; 366-8; Richardson, Samuel, i. 303, n. 1; ii. 175, n. 1; Ryland, ——, iv. 352, n. 3, 357, n. 3, 369, n. 3; Sastres, iv. 368, n. 1, 374, n. 5; Sharp, V., iii. 126, n. 1; Simpson, Joseph, i. 346; Smart, Mrs., iii. 454; iv. 358, n. 2; Staunton, Dr., i. 367; Steevens, George, ii. 273; iii. 100; Strahan, W., iii. 364; Strahan, Mrs., iv. 100, 140; Taylor, Dr., i. 80, n. 1, 83, n. 2, 103, n. 3. 153. n. 4, 238, 472, n. 4; ii. 74, n. 3, 202, n. 2, 256, n. 1, 264, n. 1, 324, n. 1, 336, n. 1, 387, n. 2, 468, n. 2; iii. 120, n. 2, 136, n. 2, 180, n. 3, 326, n. 5, 397, n. 2; iv. 139. n. 4, 151, n. 1, 155, n. 4, 162, n. 2, 165, n. 1, 191, n. 4, 213, n. 1, 228, 249, n. 2, 260, n. 2, 270, 409, n. 1, 443; v. 52, n. 6, 217, n. 1, 226, n. 2, 405, n. 1; Thrale, Mrs., iii. 134, n. 1, 423, 428; iv. 229, 242, 245; See THRALE, Mrs.; Thrale, Miss, iv. 245; Thurlow, Lord Chancellor, iv. 349; v. 364, n. 1; Vice-Chancellors of Oxford, i. 282; ii. 333; Vyse, Rev. Dr., iii. 125; Warton, Dr. Joseph, i. 253, 276, n. 2, 496, n. 2; ii. 115; Warton, Rev. Thomas, i. 270, 275-280, 282-284, 289-291, 322, 335, 336; ii. 67, 114; Welch, Saunders, iii. 217; Wesley, John, iii. 394; v. 35, n. 3; Westcote, Lord, iv. 57, n. 1; Wetherell, Rev. Dr., ii. 424; Wheeler, Dr., iii. 366; White, Rev. Mr., ii. 207; Wilkes, John, iv. 224, n. 2; Wilson, Rev. Mr., iv. 162; Windham, Right Hon. William, iv. 227, 362; letters to Johnson from Argyle, Duke of, v. 363; Bellamy, Mrs., iv. 244, n. 2; Birch, Dr., i. 285; Boswell, Mrs., iv. 157; Croft, Rev., H., iv. 59, n. 1; Dodd, Dr., iii. 147; Elibank, Lord, v. 182; Thrale, Mrs., iii. 421; Thurlow, Lord, iii. 441; levee, i. 247, 307, n. 2; ii. 5, n. 1, 118; in Edinburgh, v. 395; liberality, i. 488; iii. 222; liberty, love of, i. 310, 311, 321, n. 1, 424; ii. 60, n. 3, 61, 118, 170; contempt of popular liberty, ii. 60, 170; of liberty of election, ii. 167, 340; library, described by Hawkins, i. 188, n. 3; by Boswell, i. 435; Johnson puts his books in order, iii. 7, 67; sale by auction, iv. 402, n. 2; Lichfield play-house, in the, ii. 299; lie, use of the word, iv. 49; life, balance of misery in it, iv. 300-304; dark views of it, iv. 300, n. 2, 427; more to be endured than enjoyed, ii. 124; struggles hard for it, iv. 360; would give one of his legs for a year of it, iv. 409; operates on himself, iv. 418, n. 1; light and airy, growing, iii. 415, n. 2; literary career in 1745-6, almost suspended, i. 176; Literary Club: see CLUBS and JOHNSON, club; literary reputation, estimated by Goldsmith, ii. 233; Lives of the Poets, proof of his vigour, iii. 98, n. 1; effect on his mind, iv. n. 1: see Lives of the Poets; London life, knowledge of, iii. 450; 'permanent London object,' v. 347: see LONDON; Lords, did not quote the authority of, iv. 183: see JOHNSON, great; lost five guineas by hiding them, iv. 21; love, in love with Olivia Lloyd, i. 92; Hector's sister, ii. 460; Mrs. Emmet, ii. 464; love, Garrick sends him his, v. 350; low life, cannot bear, v. 307; Lusiad, projected translation of the, iv. 251; machinery, knowledge of, ii. 459, n. 1; madness, dreaded, i. 66; melancholy, confounded it with, iii. 175; 'mad, at least not sober,' i. 35, 65; v. 215; often near it, i. 276, n. 2; iii. 99; majestic, v. 135; mankind, describes the general hostility of, iii. 236, n. 4; mankind less just and more beneficent, iii. 236; less expected of them, iv. 239; manners, disgusted with coarse, v. 307; total inattention to established manners, v. 70; his roughness, ii. 13. 66, 376; in contradicting, iv. 280; only external, ii. 362; iii. 80-81; partly due to his truthfulness, iv. 221, n. 2; rough as winter and mild as summer, iv. 396, n. 3; had been an advantage, iv. 295; Mickle never had a rough word, iv. 250; Malone never heard a severe thing from him, iv. 341; Miss Burney's account, iv. 426, n. 2; Macleods of Dunvegan Castle delighted with him, v. 208, n. 1; softened, iv. 65, n. 1, 220, n. 3; marriage, i. 95; Master of Arts degree, i. 132, 275, 278, n. 2, 279-283; medicine, knowledge of: see JOHNSON, physic; melancholy, confounds it with madness, iii. 175; constitutional, v. 17; exaggerated by Boswell, ii. 262, n. 2; inherited 'a vile melancholy,' i. 35; 'morbid melancholy,' i. 63, 343; proposes to write the history of it, ii. 45, n. 1; remedies against it, i. 446: see JOHNSON, health; memory, extraordinary, early instances, i. 39, 48; shown in remembering, Ariosto, v. 368, n. 1; Bet Flint's verses, iv. 103, n. 2; Greek hymns, iii. 318, n. 1; Hay's Martial, v. 368; letter to Chesterfield, i. 263, n. 2; Rowe's plays, iv. 36, n. 3; verses on the Duke of Leed's marriage, iv. 14; complains of its failure, iii. 191, n. 1; men as they are, took, iii. 282; men and women, his subjects of inquiry, v. 439, n. 2; mental faculties, tests his, iv. 21; metaphysics, fond of, i. 70; withheld from their study, v. 109, n. 3; method, want of, iii. 94; 'Methodist in a dignified manner,' i. 458, n. 3; military matters, interest in, iii. 361; militia, drawn for the, iv. 319; mill, compared to a, v. 265; mimicry, hatred of gesticular, ii. 326, n. 3; mind, his means of quieting it, i. 317; ready for use, i. 204; ii. 365, n. 1; iv. 428, 445; strained by work, i. 268, n. 4; 372, n. 1; moderation in his character, absence of, iv. 72; in wine, difficult, ii. 435: see JOHNSON, abstinence; modesty, iii. 81; monument in St. Paul's, i. 226, n. 1; iv. 423; subscription for it, ib., n. 1 and 3; epitaph, iv. 424, 444-6; mother, his death, i. 331, n. 4, 339, 512-15; ii. 124; debt, takes upon himself her, i. 160; dreads to lose her, i. 212, n. 1; letters, burns her, iv. 405, n. 1; wishes to see her, i. 288; music, account of his feelings towards it, ii. 409, n. 1; affected by it, iii. 197; iv. 22; bagpipe, listens to the, v. 315; flageolet, bought a, iii. 242; had he learnt it would have done nothing else, iii. 242; v. 315; insensible to its power, iii. 197; talks slightingly of it, ii. 409; wishes to learn the scale, ii. 263, n. 4; would be glad to have a new sense given him, ii. 409; musing, habit of, v. 73, n. 1; name, his, fraudulently used, v. 295; nature, affected by, iii. 455; description of a Highland valley, v. 141, n. 2; of various country scenes, v. 439, n. 2; neglect, dread of, iv. 137, n. 2; would not brook it, ii. 118; neglected at Brighton in 1782, iv. 159, n. 3; negligence in correcting errors, iii. 359, n. 2; iv. 51, n. 2; newspapers, accustomed to think little of them, iv. 150; constantly mentioned in them, iv. l27; 'maintained' them, ii. 17; reads the London Chronicle, ii. 103; nice observer of behaviour, iii. 54; night-cap, did not wear a, v. 268, 306; nights, restless, ii. 143, 202, n. 2, 215, n. 2; iii. 92, 99, n. 4, 109, n. 1, 218, 363, 369; when sleepless translated Greek into Latin verse, iv. 384; nil admirari, much of the, v. 111; notions, his, enlarged, v. 442; Novum Museum, ii. 17, n. 3; 'O brave we!' v. 360; oak-sticks for Foote and Macpherson, ii. 299, 300, n. 1; for his Scotch tour, v. 19, 82; lost, v. 318; oath, his pardon asked by Murphy for repeating an, iii. 41; obligation, drawn into a state of, iii. 345, n. 1; impatient of them, i. 246, n. 1; obstinacy in supporting opinions, i. 293, n. 2; 'Oddity,' iii. 209; offend, attentive not to, iii. 54, n. 1; 'oil of vitriol,' his, v. 15, n. 1; old, never liked to think of being, iii. 302, 307; old man in his talk, nothing of the, iii. 336; oracle, a kind of public, ii. 118; orange-peel, use of, ii. 330; oratorio, at an, ii. 324, 72. 3; original writer, ii. 35; Oxford undergraduate, an, i. 58; pain, courage in bearing, iv. 240; easily supports it, i. 157, n. 1, 215; never totally free from it, i. 64, n. 1; operates on himself, iv. 399; painting, account of his feelings towards it, i. 363, n. 3; allegorical, historical, and portrait painting, compares, i. 363, 72; v. 219, n. 3; Barry's pictures, praises, iv. 224; Exhibition, despises the, i. 363; laughs at talk about it, ii. 400, n. 3; prints, a buyer of, i. 363, n. 3; iv. 202, n. 1, 265; sale of his, i. 363, n. 3; Thrale's copper, asks Reynolds to paint, i. 363, n. 3; Treatise on Painting, reads a, i. 128, n. 2; palsy, struck with, iv. 168, n. 2, 227-33; pamphlets written against him, iv. 127; papers, burns his, i. 108; iii. 30, n. 1 iv. 405, 406, n. 1; papers, not to be burnt, ii. 420; Papist, if he could would be a, iv. 289; pardon, once begs, iv. 49, n. 3; Parliament, attacked and defended in it, iv. 318, n. 3; eulogised in it by Burke, iv. 407, n. 3; attempts made to bring him into it, ii. 137-139; projects an historical account of it, i. 155; parodies on Percy, ii. 136, n. 4, 212, n. 4; Warton, iii. 158, n. 3; party-opposition, averse to, ii. 348, n. 2; passions, his, iv. 396, n. 3; Passion-week, Johnson has an awe on him, ii-476; dines out every day, iii. 300, n. 1; dines with two Bishops, iv. 88; paper on it in The Rambler, i. 214; iv. 88; pastoral life, desires to study, iii. 455; pathos, want of, iv. 45; patience, iii. 26; v. 146-7; payment for his writings: see JOHNSON, works; peats, brings in a supply of, v. 303; peculiarities absence of mind, ii. 268, n. 2; iv. 71; avoiding an alley, i. 485; beating with his feet, v. 60, n. 3; blowing out his breath, i. 485; iii. 153; convulsive starts, i. 95; mentioned by Pope, i. 143; described, ib., i. 144, n. 1; astonish Hogarth, i. 146; alluded to by Churchill, i. 419, n. 1; astonish a young girl, iv. 183, n. 2; lose him an assistant-mastership, iv. 407, n. 4; described by Boswell, v. 18; by Reynolds, ib., n. 4; entering a room, i. 484; gesticulation, mimicked by Garrick, ii. 326; half-whistling, iii. 357; inarticulate sounds, i. 485; iii. 68; march, iv. 71, 425; pronunciation: see under JOHNSON, pronunciation; puffing hard with passion, iii. 273; riding, iv. 425; rolling, iii. 294, 357; iv. 109; v. 40; shaking his head and body, i. 485; striding across a floor, i. 145; talking to himself, i. 483; iv. 236, 399, n. 6; v. 306-7; touching posts, i. 485, n. 1; Boswell tells him of some of them, iv. 183, n. 2; he reads Boswell's account, v. 307, n. 2; Pembroke College: see under OXFORD, Pembroke College; penance in Uttoxeter market, iv. 373; penitents, a great lover of, iv. 406, n. 1; pension: see PENSION; personal appearance, described by Boswell, iv. 425; v. 18; by Miss Burney, i. 144, n. 1; ii. 141, n. 2; v. 23, n. 4; by Mrs. Piozzi and Reynolds, i. 94, n. 4; in The Race ii. 31; 'A labouring working mind, an indolent reposing body,' iv. 444; fingers and nails, iv. 190; 'ghastly smiles,' ii. 69, n. 1; v. 48, n. 1; 'majestic frame,' i. 472; robust frame, i. 462; youth, in his, i. 94; philology, love of, iv. 34; philosophy, study of, i. 302; physicians, pleasure in the company of, iv. 293; physick, knowledge of, i. 159; iii. 22; 'great dabbler in it,' iii. 152; physics himself violently, iv. 135, n. 1; 229, n. 1; writes a prescription, v. 74; picture of himself in [Greek: Gnothi seauton] i. 298, n. 4; piety, maintained the obligations of, v. 17; plagiarism, i. 334; players, prejudice against: see PLAYERS; please, seeking to, iii. 54, n. 1; poems of his youth, i. 50; poetical mind, iii. 151; iv. 428; v. 17; poetry, pleasure in writing, iv. 219; v. 418; Politian, proposal to publish the poems of, i. 90; politeness, his, acknowledged, i. 286; ii. 36; iii. 81, 331; iv. 126; v. 23, 82, 98-9, 363; thinks himself very polite, iii. 337; v. 363; political economy, ignorance of, ii. 430, n. 1; political principles, his, described by Dr. Maxwell, ii. 117-8; politician, intention of becoming a, i. 489; 518-520; 'Pomposo,' i. 406; poor, loved the, ii. 119, n. 4; Pope's Messiah turned into Latin, i. 61; porter's knot, advised to buy a, i. 102, n. 2; portraits, list of his, iv. 421, n. 2; Burney, Miss, finds him examining one, ii. 141, n. 2; Reynolds, portraits by,—one with Beauclerk's inscription, iv. 180, 444; 'blinking Sam,' iii. 273, n. 1; Doughty's mezzotinto, ii. 286, n. 1; one engraved for Boswell's Life, presented by Reynolds to Boswell, i. 392; v. 385, n. 1; one admired at Lichfield, ii. 141; one at Streatham, iv. 158, n. 1; other portraits, iv. 421, n. 2; Reynolds, Miss, by, ii. 362, n. 1; iv. 229. n. 4; post-chaise, delight in a: See POST-CHAISE; praise and abuse, wishes he had kept a book of, v. 273; praise, loved, but did not seek it, iv. 427; v. 17; disliked extravagant praise, iii. 225; iv. 82; prayers: See PRAYERS, and Prayers and Meditations; prefaces, skill in, i. 139; preference to himself, refused, iii. 54, n. 1; Presbyterian service, would not attend a, iii. 336; v. 121, 384; attends family prayer, v. 121; pride, described by Reynolds, iii. 345, n. 1; defensive, i. 265; no meanness in it, iv. 429, n. 3; princes, attacks, i. l49, n. 3; principles and practice: See PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE; prize-fighting, regrets extinction of, v. 229; profession, regrets that he had not a, iii. 309, n. 1; professor in the imaginary college, v. 109; promptitude of mind: See JOHNSON, mind; pronunciation—excellent, v. 85; provincial accent, ii. 159, 464; property, iv. 284, 402, n. 2; public affairs, refuses to talk of, iv. 173; public singer, on preparing himself for a, ii. 369; public speaking, ii. 139; punctuality, not used to, i. 211; Punic war, would not hear of the, iii. 206, n. 1; punish, quick to, ii. 363; puns, despises, ii. 241; iv. 316; puns himself, iii. 325; iv. 73, 81; questioning, disliked, ii. 472, n. 1; iii. 57, 268; iv. 439 (See, however, iii. 24, n. 2); quiet hours, seen in his, iii. 81, n. 1; quoting his writings against him, iv. 274; races with Baretti, ii. 386; Ranelagh, feelings on entering, iii. 199; rank, respect for: See Birth; rationality, obstinate, iv. 289; read to, impatient to be, iv. 20; reading, amount of his, i. 70; ii. 36; before college, i. 56, 445; at college, i. 70; ii. 36; read rapidly, i. 71; iv. 334, n. 3; ravenously, iii. 284; like a Turk, iv. 409; did not read books through, i. 71; ii. 226; reads more than he did, ii. 35, n. 3; iv. 218, n. 2; slight books, v. 313; when travelling, Pomponius Mela de situ Orbis, i. 465; Il Palmerino d'Inghilterra, iii. 2; Euripides, iv. 311; Tully's Epistles, v. 428; Martial, v. 429; recitation, described by Boswell, ii. 212; iii. 29; v. 115; Murphy, ii. 92, n. 4; v. 115, n. 5; Mrs. Piozzi, ii. 212, n. 3; v. 115, n. 5; Reynolds, v. 115; a great reciter, v. 43; 'recommending' the dead: See under DEAD; reconciliation, ready to seek a, ii. 100, n. 1; 109, 256; ib., n. 1; iii. 271; rectory, offer of a, i. 320, 476; ii. 120; refinement, high estimation of, iii. 54; relations on the father's side, i. 35, n. 1; iv. 401; religion, 'conversion,' his, iv. 272, n. 1; early indifference to it, i. 67; totally regardless of it, iv. 215; early training, i. 38, 67; 'ignorant of it,' ii. 476; a lax talker against it, i. 68; predominant object of his thoughts, i. 69; ii. 124; brought back by sickness, iv. 215; 'never denied Christ,' iv. 414, n. 2; remorse, i. 164; 398, n. 5; repetitions in his writings, i. 334, n. 2; reproved by a lady, v. 39; reputation, did not trouble himself to defend his, ii. 433; residences: See Habitations; resistance to bad government lawful, ii. 61, 170; respect due to him, maintained the, iii. 310; shows respect to a Doctor in Divinity, ii. l24; 'respectable Hottentot' not Johnson, i. 267, n. 2; respected by others: by Boswell and Mrs. Thrale loved, ii. 427; resolutions, 'fifty-five years spent in resolving,' i. 483; rarely efficacious, ii. 113; neglected, iv. 134; reveries, i. 144, n. 1, 145; Reynolds's pictures, 'never looked at,' ii. 317, n. 2; riding, v. 131, 285, 302: See JOHNSON, foxhunting; ringleader of a riot, said to have been the, iv. 324; rising late, i. 495, n. 3; ii. 17, 143, 410, 477; v. 210; 'roarings of the old lion,' ii. 284, n. 2; roaring people down, iii. 150, 290; roasts apples, iv. 218, n. 1; robbed, never, ii. 119; romances, love of, i. 49; iii. 2; roughness: See JOHNSON, manners; Round-Robin, receives the, iii. 83-5; Royal Academy, Professor of the, ii. 67; iv. 423, n. 2; rumour that he was dying, iii. 221; rural beauties, little taste for, i. 461; v. 112; sacrament, not received with tranquillity, ii. 115, n. 2; instances of his receiving it at other times but Easter, ii. 43, n. 3; iv. 270, 416; same one day as another, not the, iii. 192; sarcastic in the defence of good principles, ii. 13; Sassenach More, ii. 267, n. 2; satire, explosions of, iii. 80; ignorant of the effect produced, iv. 168, n. 2; Savage, effects of intimacy with, i. 161-4; v. 365; saying, tendency to paltry, iv. 191; sayings not accurately reported, ii. 333; scenery, descriptions of moonlight sail, v. 333, n. 1; of a ride in a storm, v. 346, n. 1; schemes of a better life, i. 483; iv. 230; scholar, preferred the society of intelligent men of the world to that of a, iii. 21, n. 3; 'school,' his, described by Courtenay, i. 222; by Reynolds, i. 245, n. 3; iii. 230; distinguished for truthfulness, i. 7, n. 1; iii. 230; Goldsmith, one of its brightest ornaments, i. 417; taught men to think rightly, i. 245, n. 3; schoolmaster, life as a, i. 97, n. 2, 98, n. 2, 488, n. 3; Scotch, feelings towards the: See under SCOTLAND; Scotland, tour in, ii. 266-8; v. 1-416; scottified, v. 55; screen, dines behind a, i. 163, n. 1; scruple, troubled with Baxter's, ii. 477; not weakly scrupulous, iv. 397: See SCRUPLES; seal, cut with his head, iv. 421, n. 2; seasons, effect of: See WEATHER; second sight: See under SCOTLAND, HIGHLANDS, second sight; 'seducing man, a very,' iv. 57, n. 3; Seraglio, his, iii. 368; an imaginary one, v. 216; sermons composed by him, i. 241; iii. 19, n. 3, 181; iv. 381, n. 1; v. 67; severe things, how mainly extorted from him, iv. 341; Shakespeare, read in his childhood, i. 70; See under SHAKESPEARE; shoes worn out, i. 76; sight, account of it by Boswell, iv. 425; v. 18; by Miss Burney, iv. 160, n. 1, 304, n. 4; actors' faces, could not see, ii. 92, n. 4; acuteness shown in criticising dress, v. 428, n. 1; in his French diary, ii. 401; in observing scenes, i. 41; iii. 187; iv. 311; v. 141; Baretti's trial, at, ii. 97, n. 1; Blinking Sam, iii. 273, n. 1; difficulty in crossing the kennel when a child, i. 39; eyes wild and piercing, i. 94, n. 4, 464, n. 1; only one eye, i. 41; restored to its use, i. 305; inflamed, ii. 263-4; short-sighted, called by Dr. Percy, iii. 273; silence, fits of, ii. 213; iii. 307; v. 73; silver buckles, iii. 325; cup, i. 163, n. 2; plate, ii. 5, n. i; iv. 92; singularity, dislike of, ii. 74, n. 3; iv. 325; sins, never balanced against virtues, iv. 398; slavery, hatred of: See SLAVES; sleep: See Nights; smallpox, has the, v. 435; Smith, Adam, compared with, iv. 24, n. 2; Sober, Mr., of The Idler, iii. 398, n. 3; social, truly, iv. 284; society, mixing with polite, i. 80, 82, 496, n. 1; ii. 467; iii. 272, n. 3 424; iv. 1, n. 1, 89, 108, n. 4, 109, 116-17, 147, 326, 357; v. 43, 98, 207, 358. 371, 374, 394, 455,457; solitude, hatred of, i. 144, n. 2, 297, 339, n. 3, 515; iii; 405; iv. 427; suffers from it, iv. 163, n. 1: See under JOHNSON, household; 'soothed,' ii. 113; sophistry, love of, ii. 61; recourse to it, iv. iii; sought after nobody, iii. 314; Southwark election, ii. 287, n. 2; speaking, impressive mode of, ii. 326; spelling incorrect, i. 260, n. 2; iv. 36, n. 4; v. 124, n. 1; spirit, lofty, iv. 374; spirit, wishes for evidence for, ii. 150; iii. 298, n. 1; iv. 298: See JOHNSON, super-natural; splendour on, £600 a year, iv. 337; spurs, loses his, iv. 407, n. 4; v. 163; St. Clement Danes, his seat in, ii. 214; St. James's Square, walks with Savage round, i. 163, n. 2, 164; St. John's Gate, reverences, i. III; St. Vitus's dance, v. 18; stately shop, deals at a, iv. 319; straggler, a, iii; 306; Streatham, 'absorbed from his old friends,' i. 495, n. 2; ii. 427, n. 1; iii. 225; Miss Burney describes his life there, iv. 340, n. 3; his 'home,' i. 493, n. 3; ii. 77, 141, n. 1; iii. 451; iv. 340; his late hours there, ii. 407; his farewell to it, iv. 158; studied behaviour, disapproves of, i. 470; study, advice about, i. 428; iv. 311; style, account of it, i. 217-25; Addison's, compared with, i. 224, 225, n. 1; affected by his Dictionary, i. 221, n. 4; 'Brownism,' i. 221, 308; caricatures of it, by Blair, iii. 172; Colman, iv. 387, 388, n. 1; Lexiphanes, ii. 44; Maclaurin, ii. 363; in a magazine, v. 273; man Ode to Mrs. Thrale, iv. 387; changes in it, iii. 172, n. 2; criticises it himself, iii. 257, n. 3; easier in his poems than his prose, v. 17; female writing, ill-suited for, i. 223; formed on Temple and Chambers, i. 218; on writers of the seventeenth century, i. 219; Gallicisms, dislikes, iii. 343, n. 3; imitations of it, by Barbauld, Mrs., iii. 172; Burney, Miss, iv. 389; Burrowes, Rev. R., iv. 386; Gibbon, iv. 389; Knox, Rev. Dr., iv. 390; Mackenzie, Henry, iv. 390, n. 1; Nares, Rev. Mr., iv. 389; newspapers, iv. 381, n. 1; Robertson, iii. 173; iv. 388; Young, Professor, iv. 392; Lives of the Poets, iii. 172, n. 2; Lobo's Abyssinia, translation of, i. 87; Monboddo, criticised by, iii. 173; parentheses, dislikes, iv. 190; Plan of the Dictionary, i. 184; Rambler, i. 217; iii. 172, n. 2; talk, like his, iv. 237, n. 1; 'the former, the latter,' dislikes, iv. 190; Thrale, Mrs., described by, iii. 19, n. 2; translates a saying into his own style, iv. 320; Warburton attacks it, iv. 48; subordination: see SUBORDINATION; Sunday: see SUNDAY; superiority over his fellows, i. 47; supernatural agency, willingness to examine it, i. 406; v. 18; superstition, prone to, iv. 426; v. 17: see GHOSTS, and JOHNSON, spirit; 'surly virtue,' iii. 69; swearing, profane, dislikes, ii. 338, n. 2; iii. 189; falsely represented as swearing, ii. 338, n. 2; 'swore enough,' iv. 216; uses a profane expression, v. 306; swimming, i. 348; ii. 299; iii. 92, n. 1; Latin verses on it, ib.; talk—, alike to all, talked, ii. 323; best, rule to talk his, iv. 183, 185, n. 1; books, did not talk from, v. 378; calmly in private, iii. 331; 'his little fishes would talk like whales,' ii. 231; loved to have his talk out, iii. 230; not restrained by a stranger, ii. 438; iv. 284; ostentatiously, talks, v. l24; 'talked their best,' his phrase, iii. 193, n. 3; victory, talks for, ii. 238; iv. 111; v. 17, 324; writing, like his, iv. 237, n. 1: see JOHNSON, conversation; talking to himself: see JOHNSON, peculiarities; tanti men, dislike of, iv. 112; taste in theatrical merits, ii. 465; tea, Careless, Mrs., told him when he had enough, ii. 460, n. 1; cups, a dozen, i. 313, n. 3; fifteen, ii. 268, n. 2; sixteen, v. 207, n. 1; claudile jam rivos pueri, v. 279; effects of it on him, i. 313; misses drinking it once, v. 443; 'shameless tea-drinker,' i. 103, n. 3; drank it at all hours, i. 313; v. 23; takes it always with Miss Williams, i. 42l; teachers, his, Dame Oliver, i. 43; Tom Brown, ib.; Hawkins, ib.; Hunter, i. 44; Wentworth, i. 49; teaching men, pleasure in, ii. 101; temper, easily offended, iii. 345; iv. 426; v. 17; violent, iii. 81, 290, 300, 337, 384; iv. 65, n. 1; 'terrible severe humour,' iv. 159, n. 3; violent passion, iv. 171; on Rattakin, v. 145-7; tenderness of heart, shown about Dr. Brocklesby's offer, iv. 338; friendship with Hoole, iv. 360; his friends' efforts for an increase in his pension, iv. 337; pious books, iv. 88, n. 1; on hearing Dr. Hodges's story, ii. 341, n. 3; kissing Streatham church, iv. 159; and the old willow-tree at Lichfield, iv. 372, n. 1; in reciting Beattie's Hermit, iv. 186; Dies Irae, iii. 358, n. 3; Goldsmith's Traveller, v. 344; lines on Levett, iv. 165, n. 4; Vanity of Human Wishes, iv. 45, n. 3; terror, an object of, i. 450, n. 1; theatres, left off going to the, ii. 14; thinking, excelled in the art of, iv. 428; thought more than he read, ii. 36; thoughts, loses command over his, ii. 190; 202, n. 2; Thrales, his 'coalition' with the, i. 493, n. 3; his intimacy not without restraint, iii. 7; gross supposition about it, iii. 7; supposed wish to marry Mrs. Thrale, iv. 387, n. 1: see THRALES, and under JOHNSON, Streatham; toleration, views on, ii. 249-254; Tory, a, 'not in the party sense,' ii. 117; his Toryism abates, v. 386; might have written a Tory History of England, iv. 39; 'tossed and gored,' ii. 66; tossed Boswell, iii. 338; town, the, his element, iv. 358: see. LONDON; 'tragedy-writer, a,' i. 102; reason of his failure, i. 198, 199, n. 2; translates for booksellers, i. 133; travelling, love of, Appendix B., iii. 449-459; 'tremendous companion,' i. 496, n. 1; 'true-born Englishman,' i. 129; ii. 300; iv. 15, n. 3, 191; v. 1, n. 1, 20; truthfulness, exact precision in conversation, ii. 434; iii. 228; Rousseau, compared with, ii. 434, n. 2; truth held sacred by him, ii. 433, n. 2; iv. 305, n. 3; all of his 'school' distinguished for it, i. 7, n. 1; iii. 230; scrupulously inquisitive to discover it, ii. 247; talked as if on oath, ii. 434, n. 2; tutor to Mr. Whitby, i. 84, n. 2; 'un politique aux choux et aux raves,' iii. 324; uncle, account of an, v. 316; unobservant, iii. 423, n. 1; unsocial shyness, free from, iv. 255; Ursa Major, v. 384; utterance, slow deliberate, ii. 326; iv. 429; v. 18; verse-making, ii. 15; made verses and forgot them, ib.; youthful verses, i. 92; Vesey's, Mr., surrounded by great people at, iii. 425; Virgil, quoted 'Optima quceque dies,' ii. 129; reads him, ii. 288; iv. 218; Vision of Theodore, thought by him the best thing he ever wrote, i. 192; vocation to public life, iv. 359; to active life, v. 63; Wales, tour to: see WALES; walk, his, in a court in the Temple, i. 463; wants, fewness of his, ii. 474, n. 3; warrants said to be issued against him, i. 141; watch, dial-plate of his, ii. 57; watched, his door, v. 248; water, lectures on, v. 64; water-fall, at Dr. Taylor's, iii. 190-1; weather, influence of: see WEATHER; Westminster Police Court, attendance at the, iii. 216; whisky, tastes, v. 346; 'Why, no Sir!' iv. 316, n. 1; wife, affection for his, i. 96, 234-241; ii. 77; disagreements, i. 239; reported estrangement, i. 163, n. 2; death, her, i. 234, 238, 277; alluded to in his letter to Chesterfield, i. 262; anniversary of the day, i. 236; iii. 98, n. 1; 317, n. 1; funeral sermon, i. 241; iii. 181, n. 3; grave and epitaph, i. 241; iv. 351, 369, n. 3, 394; 'resolves on Tetty's coffin,' i. 354, n. 2; grief, his, i. 235-241; almost broke his heart, iii. 305, 419; 'recommended,' i. 190, n. 2, 240, n. 5; ii. 476-7; saucer, her, iii. 220, n. 1; wishes for her in Paris, ii. 393; at Brighton, ib., n. 8; wig, his, a bushy one, i. 113, n. 1; Paris-made, ii. 403, n. 5; iii. 325; fore-top burnt, ib., n. 3; Wilkes, compared with, iii. 64, 78; will, averse to execute his, iv. 402; makes it, ib., n. 2; wine, use of, i. 103, n. 3; wisdom, his trade was, iii. 137, n. 1; wit, extraordinary readiness, iii. 80; Garrick's account of it, ii. 231; woman, rescues an outcast, iv. 321; talks with others of the class, i. 223, n. 2; iv. 396; wonders, distrust of, iii. 229, n. 3; words, charged with using hard and big words, i. 184, 218, n. 2; iii. 190; sesquipedalia verba, v. 399; in the Rambler, i. 208, n. 3; in Lives of the Poets, iv. 39; needs words of larger meaning, i. 218; iii. 173; 'terms of philosophy familiarised,' i. 218; words added to the language, i. 221; iv-39, n. 3; v. 130; work, did his, in a workmanlike manner, iii. 62; Works, those ascertained marked *, conjectured +, i. 112, n. 4; Booksellers' edition, edited by Hawkins and Stockdale, i. 190, n. 4; iii. 141 5 iv. 324; right reserved by him to print an edition, i. 193; iv. 409; catalogue of his Works, i. 16-24; asked for by his friends, i. 112; iii. 321; Historia Studiorum_, ib.; one made by Boswell, iii. 322; iv. 383, n. 1; projected works, ib.; payments received, Translation of Lobo's Abyssinia, five guineas, i. 87; London, ten guineas, i. 124; translation of part of Sarpi's History, £49, i. 135; Historical Account of Parliament, part payment, two guineas for a sheet of copy, i. 156; Life of Savage, fifteen guineas, i. 165, n. 1; Dictionary £1575 (heavy out-payments to amanuenses), i. 183; Rambler, two guineas a number, i. 208, n. 3; Vanity of Human Wishes, fifteen guineas, i. 193, n. 1; Irene, theatre receipts, £195, copyright, £100, i. 198, n. 2; Introduction to London Chronicle, one guinea, i. 317; Idler, first collected edition, £84 2s. 4d., i. 335, n. 1; Rasselas, £100, + £25, i. 341; Lives of the Poets, 200 guineas (? pounds) agreed on, iii. 111; iv. 35; £100 added, ib.; £100 more for a new edition, ib., n. 3; world, knowledge of the, iii. 20; 'a man of the world,' i. 427; had been long 'running about it,' i. 215; never complained of it, iv. 116, 171; never sought it, iv. 172; respected its judgment, i. 200, n. 2; worshipped, iii. 331; writings, criticised his own, iv. 5; never wrote error, iv. 429; v. 17: see JOHNSON, composition; youth, pleasure in talking of the days of, iv. 375. JOHNSON, Sarah (Johnson's mother), account of her, i. 34, 35, n. 1, 38; counted the days to the publication of the Dictionary, i. 288; debt, in, i. 160; death, i. 331, n. 4, 339, 512-5; epitaph, iv. 393; funeral expenses and Rasselas, i. 341; Harlcian Miscellany, subscribes to the, i. 175, n. 1; Johnson, teaches, i. 38; encourages him in his lessons, i. 43, n. 4; hears her call Sam, iv. 94; letters to her, i. 5I2, 5I3, 514; marriage, i. 95; London, visits, i. 42, 110; receipts for bills, i. 90, n. 3. JOHNSON, Thomas (Johnson's cousin), iv. 402, n. 2, 440. Johnson in Birmingham, i. 85, n. 3; 95, n. 3. JOHNSON BUILDINGS, iii. 405, n. 6. JOHNSON'S COURT, Johnson removes to it, ii. 5; Boswell and Beauclerk's veneration for it, ii. 229, 427; 'Johnson of that Ilk,' ib., n. 2; iii. 405, n. 6. Johnsoniana, or Bon-Mots of Dr. Johnson, ii. 432; iii. 325. Johnsoniana (by Taylor), iv. 421, n. 2. Johnsonianissimus, i. 7, n. 2. Johnsonised, 'I have Johnsonised the land,' i. 13. Johnston, the Scotch form of Johnson, iii. 106, n. 1. JOHNSTON, Arthur, Johnson desires his portrait, iv. 265; Poemata, i. 460; i 104; v. 95. JOHNSTON, Sir James, iv. 281. JOHNSTON, W., the bookseller, i. 341. JOHNSTONE, Governor, i. 304, n. 1. JOKES, a game of, ii. 231. JONES, Miss (The Chantress), i. 322. JONES, Phil., ii. 444. JONES, Rev. River, i. 323, n. 4. JONES, Sir William, Garrick's funeral, iii. 371, n. 1; 'Harmonious Jones,' i. 223; Johnson's admiration of Newton, anecdote of, ii. 125, n. 4; Journey, commends, iii. 137; use of scrupulosity; 'Jones teach me modesty and Greek,' iv. 433; languages, knowledge of, v. 108, n. 9; Literary Club, member of the, i. 479 ii. 240; v. 109, n. 5; account of the black-balling, iii. 311, n. 2; Persian Grammar, iv. 69, n. 2; portrait, ii. 25, n. 2; professor in the imaginary college, v. 108; Shipley, Miss, marries, iv. 75, n. 3; study of the law, iv. 309, n. 6; Thurlow's character, iv. 349, n. 3; mentioned, iii. 386. JONSON, Ben, Alchemist, iii. 35, n. 1; Fall of Mortimer, iii. 78, n. 4; at Hawthornden, v. 402, 414; Kitely acted by Garrick, ii. 92, n. 3; Leges Convivales, iv. 254, n. 4. JOPP, Provost, ii. 291; v. 90. JORDEN, Rev. William (Johnson's tutor), i. 59, 61, 79, 272. JORTIN, Rev. Dr. John, attacked by Hurd, iv. 47, n. 2; Johnson desires information about him, iv. 161; Sermons, iii. 248. JOSEPH EMANUEL, King of Portugal, iv. 174, n. 5. Jour, derivation of, ii. 156. JOURNAL, how it should be kept, ii. 217; kept for a man's own use, iv. 177; record to be made at once, i. 337; iii. 218; v. 393; state of mind to be recorded, ii. 217; iii. 228; v. 272; trifles not to be recorded, ii. 358; Johnson advises Baretti to keep one, i. 365; and Boswell, i. 433, 475; ii. 358; mirror, like a, iii. 228; regularity inconsistent with spirit, i. 155: See JOHNSON, Journal, and BOSWELL, Journal. Journal des Savans, ii. 39. Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides. See under BOSWELL. Journey to London. See The Provoked Husband. Journey into North Wales, ii. 285; v. 427-460; Mrs. Piozzi's account of its publication, v. 427, n. 1; suppressions and corrections, ib.; inscription on blank leaf, iv. 299, n. 3. Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland, first thought of in a valley, v. 141, n. 2; composition of it, ii. 268-9, 271; in the press, ii. 278-9, 281, 284, 287-8; v. 443; published, ii. 290, 292; sale, ii. 310; iii. 325; second edition, ii. 291, n. 4; iii. 325, n. 5; note added to it, v. 412, n. 2; translation, ii. 310, n. 2; errors, ii. 291, 301, 303; v. 412; attacked by 'shallow North Britons,' ii. 305, 307; in McNicol's Remarks, ii. 308; supposed attack by Macpherson, ib., n. 1; in Scotch newspapers, ii. 363; misapprehended to rancour, v. 20; Boswell projects a Supplement, ii. 300, n. 2; Burke, Jones and Jackson commend it, iii. 137; Burney's Travels in Johnson's view as he wrote, iv. 186; composed from very meagre materials, v. 405; copy sent to the King, ii, 290; to Warren Hastings, iv. 69; to various other people, ii. 278, 285, 288, 290, 309, 310; iii. 94, 102; criticised by Dempster, ii. 303; iii. 301; v. 405, 407-9; Dick, iii. 103; Hailes, v. 405-7; Hermes Harris, ii. 265; Knox, ii. 304; Tytler, ii. 305; Highlanders like it more than Lowlanders, ii. 308; Iona, description of, iii. 173; v. 334; Johnson anxious to know how it was received, ii. 290, 292, 294; goes where nobody goes, v. 157, n. 3; had much of it in his mind before starting, iii. 301. letters to Mrs. Thrale, ii. 303, 305; v. 145, n. 2; saw a different system of life, iv. 199; v. 112, 405; shows gratitude and delicacy, ii. 303; Macaulay, quoted by, iii. 449; new, contains much that is, iii. 326; Orme, described by, ii. 300; v. 408, n. 4; route, choice of a, v. 120; talked of in the Literary Club and London generally, ii. 318. JOWETT, Rev. Professor Benjamin, Master of Balliol College, ii. 338, n. 2. JUBILEE. See SHAKESPEARE. JUDGE, an eminent noble, iv. 178. JUDGES, afraid of the people, v. 57; engaging in trade, ii. 343; farming, ii. 344; in private life, v. 396; partial to the populace, ii. 353; places held for life, ii. 353. JUDGMENT, compared with admiration, ii. 360; source of erroneous judgments, ii. 131. Julia or the Italian Lover, i. 262, n. 1. Julia Mandeville, ii. 402, n. 1. JULIEN, the Treasurer of the Clergy, ii. 391. JULIEN, of the Gobelins, v. 107. JULIUS CAESAR, iii. 171. JUNIUS, Francis, i. 186. Junius, Burke, not, iii. 376; Burke, Hamilton and Wilkes most suspected, ib., n. 4; Samuel Dyer, iv. 11, n. 1; concealment of the author, iii. 376; duty of authors who are questioned about the authorship, iv. 305-6; impudence, his, ii. 164; Johnson attacks him, ii. 135; Norton, Sir Fletcher, attacks, ii. 472, n. 2. JURIES, guards afraid of them, iii. 46; judges of law, iii. 16, n. 1. JUSTICE, a picture of, iv. 321. JUSTICE HALL, ii. 98. JUSTICES OF THE PEACE. See MAGISTRATES. JUSTITIA HULK, iii. 268. JUVENAL, Third Satire, Johnson's imitation, i. 118 (see London); Boileau's, ib.; Oldham's, ib.; Tenth Satire, Johnson's imitation, i. 192 (see Vanity of Human Wishes); intention to translate other Satires, i. 193; quotations, Sat. i. 29, iv. 179, n. 4; Sat. i. 79, v. 277, n. 4; Sat. iii. 1, i. 325, n. 1; Sat. iii. 2, ii. 133; Sat. iii. 149, i. 77, n. 1; Sat. iii. 164, i. 77, n. 3; Sat. iii. 230 (unius lacertae), iii. 255; Sat. viii. 73, iv. 114, n. 1; Sat. x. 8, iv. 354, n. 2; Sat. x. 180, ii. 227; Sat. x. 217, iv. 357, n. 2; Sat. x. 356, iv. 401, n. 1; Sat. x. 365, iv. 180, n. 1; Sat. xiv. 139, iii. 415, n. 3.
K.
KAMES, Lord (Henry Home), coarse language in Court, ii. 200, n. 1; Elements of Criticism, i. 393; ii. 89-90; Eton boys, on, i. 224, n. 1; Hereditary Indefeasible Right, v. 272; Johnson, attacks, ii. 317, n. 1; prejudiced against, i. 148; 'keep him,' ii. 53; Sketches of the History of Man Charles V celebrating his funeral obsequies, iii. 247; Clarendon's account of Villiers's ghost, iii. 351; interest of money, iii. 340; Irish export duties, ii. 131, n. 1; Lapouchin, Madame, iii. 340; Paris Foundling Hospital, mortality in the, ii. 398, n. 5; schools not needed for the poor, iii. 352, n. 1; virtue natural to man, iii. 352; Smollett's monument, v. 366; 'vicious Intromission,' ii. 198, 200; mentioned, iii. 126. KAUFFMANN, Angelica, iv. 277, n. 1. KEARNEY, Michael, i. 489. KEARSLEY, the bookseller, letter from Johnson, i. 214; publishes a Life of Johnson, iv. 421, n. 2. KEDDLESTONE, iii. 160-2; v. 431-2. KEEN, Sir Benjamin, v. 310, n. 3. KEENE, ——, ii. 397. KEITH, Admiral Lord, v. 427, n. 1. KEITH, Mrs., v. 130. KEITH, Robert, Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops, i. 309. KEITH, ——, a collector of excise, v. 128-31. KELLY, sixth Earl of, v. 387. KELLY, Hugh, account of him, iii. 113, n. 3; displays his spurs, iv. 407, n. 4; False Delicacy, ii. 48; Johnson's Prologue, iii. 113, 118. KEMBLE, John, visits Johnson, iv. 242-4; anecdote of Johnson and Garrick, i. 216, n. 3; affected by Mrs. Siddons' acting, iv. 244, n. 1. KEMPIS, Thomas à, editions and translations, iii. 226; iv. 279; Johnson quotes him, iii. 227, n. 1; reads him in Low Dutch, iv. 21. KEN, Bishop, connected by marriage with Isaac Walton, ii. 364, n. 1; a nonjuror, iv. 286, n. 3; rule about sleep, iii. 169, n. 1. KENNEDY, Rev. Dr., Complete System of Astronomical Chronology, i. 366. KENNEDY, Dr., author of a foolish tragedy, iii. 238. KENNEDY, House of, v. 374. KENNICOTT, Dr. Benjamin, Collations, ii. 128; edition of the Hebrew Bible, v. 42; meets Johnson, iv. 151, n. 2. KENNICOTT, Mrs., iv. 151, n. 2, 285, 288, 298, n. 2, 305. KENNINGTON COMMON, iii. 239, n. 2. KENRICK, Dr. William, account of him, i. 497; Epistle to James Boswell, Esq., ii. 61; Garrick libels, i. 498, n. 1; Goldsmith, libels, i. 498, n. 1; ii. 209, n. 2; Johnson, attacks, i. 497; ii. 61; v. 273; made himself public, i. 498; iii. 256; mentioned, ii. 44. KENT, militia, i. 307, n. 4. KEPLER, i. 85, n. 2. KEPPEL, Admiral, iv. 12, n. 6. KERR, James, v. 40. KESWICK, iv. 437. KETTLEWELL, John, iv. 286, n. 3. KEYSLER, J. G., Travels, ii. 346. KIDGELL, John, v. 270, n. 4. KILLALOE, Bishop of. See DEAN BARNARD. KILLINGLEY, M., iii. 208. KILMARNOCK, Earl of, i. 180; v. 103, n, 1; 105. KILMOREY, Lord, i. 83, n. 3; v. 433. KIMCHI, Rabbi David, i. 33. KINCARDINE, Alexander, Earl, and Veronica, Countess of, v. 25, n. 2; 379, n. 3. KINDNESS, duty of cultivating it, iii. 182. KING, Captain, iv. 308, n. 3. KING, Lord Chancellor, i. 359, n. 3. KING, Henry, Bishop of Chichester, ii. 364, n. 1. KING, Rev. Dr., a dissenter, iii. 288. KING, Thomas, the Comedian, ii. 325, n. 1. KING, William, Archbishop of Dublin, Essay on the Origin of Evil, ii. 37, n. 1; iii. 13, n. 3, 402, n. 1; troubles Swift, ii. 132, n. 2. KING, Dr. William, Principal of St. Mary Hall, Oxford, account of him, i. 279, n. 5; his greatness, i. 282, n. 2; English of Atterbury, Gower, and Johnson, ii. 95, n. 2; Jacobite speech in 1754, i. 146, n. 1; in 1759, i. 348; Pretender in London, meets the, v. 196, n. 2; describes his meanness, v. 200, n. 1; Pulteney and Walpole, v. 339, n. 1. King, The, v. Topham, iii. 16, n. 1. KING'S EVIL, Johnson touched for it, i. 42; account of it, ib., n. 3. 'KING'S FRIENDS,' iv. 165, n. 3. KING'S LIBRARY, i. 108. KING'S PAINTER, iv. 368, n. 3. KING'S Printing-house, ii. 323, n. 2. KINGS, conversing with them, ii. 40, n. 3; flattered at church and on the stage, ii. 234; flatter themselves, ib.; great kings always social, i. 442; ill-trained, i. 442, n. 1; Johnson ridicules them, i. 333; minister, should each be his own, ii. 117; oppressive kings put to death, ii. 170; praises exaggerated, ii. 38; reverence for them depends on their right, iv. 165; resistance to them sometimes lawful, i. 424; servants of the people, i. 321, n. 1; 'the king can do no wrong,' i. 423; want of inherent right, iv. 170. KINGSNORTON, i. 35, n. 1. KINNOUL, Lord, ii. 211, n. 4. KINVER, v. 455. KIPPIS, Dr. Andrew, edits Biographia Britannica, iii. 174; his 'biographical catechism,' iv. 376; mentioned, iv. 282; v. 88, n. 2. KNAPTON, Messieurs, the booksellers, i. 183, 290, n. 2. KNELLER, Sir Godfrey, as a Justice of the Peace, iii. 237; his portraits, iv. 77, n. 1. KNIGHT, Captain, i. 378, n. 1. KNIGHT, Joseph, a negro, account of him, iii. 214, n. 1; Cullen's answer, iii. 127; Maclaurin's plea, iii. 86, 88; Johnson offers a subscription, ib.; interested in him, iii. 95, 101, 129; argument, iii. 200, 202-3; decision, iii. 212, 216, 219. KNIGHTON, i. 132, n. 1. KNITTING, iii. 242. KNIVES not provided in foreign inns, ii. 97, n. 1. KNOLLES, Richard, Turkish History, i. 100. KNOTTING, iii. 242; iv. 284. KNOWLE, near Bristol, i. 353, n. 2. KNOWLEDGE, all kinds of value, ii. 357; desirable per se, i. 417; desire of it innate, i. 458; diffusion of it not a disadvantage, iii. 37, 333; question of superiority, ii. 220; two kinds, ii. 365. See EDUCATION and LEARNING. KNOWLES, Mrs., the Quakeress, courage and friendship, on, iii. 289; death, on, iii. 294; Johnson, meets, in 1776, iii. 78; in 1778, iii. 284-300; her account of the meeting, iii. 299, n. 2; describes his mode of reading, iii. 284; liberty to women, argues for, iii. 286; proselyte to Quakerism, defends a, iii. 298; sutile pictures, her, iii. 299, n. 2. KNOX, John, the Reformer, Cardinal Beaton's death, v. 63, n. 3; his 'reformations,' v. 6l; burial-place, ib., n. 4; set on a mob, v. 62; his posterity, v. 63. KNOX, John, bookseller and author, ii. 304, 306. KNOX, Rev. Dr. Vicesimus, Boswell's Life of Johnson, praises, iv. 391, n. 1; Johnson's biographers, attacks, iv. 330, n. 2; imitates his style, i. 222, n. 1; iv. 390; Oxford, attacks, iii. 13, n. 3; iv. 391, n. 1; popularity as a writer, iv. 390, n. 2. KRISTROM, Mr., ii. 156.
L.
Labefactation, ii. 367. LABOUR, all men averse to it, ii. 98-99; iii. 20, n. 1. LABRADOR, iv. 410, n. 6. LA BRUYÈRE. See BRUYERE. LACE, a suit of, ii. 352. Laceration, ii. 106; iii. 419, n. 1. Lactantius, iii. 133. LADD, Sir John. See LADE. LADE, Sir John, account of him, iv. 412, n. 1; Johnson's advice to him about marriage, ii. 109, n. 2; lines on him, iv. 413. LADIES OF QUALITY, iii. 353. LADY AT BATH, an empty-headed, iii. 48. LAFELDT, battle of, iii. 251. LAMB, Charles, account of Davies's recitation, i. 391, n. 2; Methodists saying grace, v. 123, n. 1; no one left to call him Charley, iii. 180, n. 3. LANCASHIRE, militia, i. 307, n. 4. LANCASTER, Boswell at the Assizes, iii. 261, n. 2. LANCASTER, Dr., Provost of Queen's College, Oxford, i. 61, n. 1. LANCASTER, House of, iii. 157. LAND, advantage produced by selling it all at once, ii. 429; entails and natural right, ii. 416; investments in it, iv. 164; v. 232; part to be left in commerce, ii. 428. LAND-TAX in Scotland, ii. 431. LANDLORDS, leases, not giving, v. 304; rents, raising, ii. 102; right to control tenants at elections, ii. 167, 340; Scotch landlords, high situation of, i. 409; tenants, their dependancy, ii. 102; difficulty of getting, iv. 164; to be treated liberally, i. 462; under no obligation, ii. 102. LANDOR, W. S., Johnson's geographical knowledge, i. 368, n. 1. LANG, Dr., ii. 312, n. 3. LANGBAINE, Gerard, iii. 30, n. 1. LANGDON, Mr., iii. 207, n. 3. LANGLEY, Rev. W., ii. 324, n. 1; iii. 138; v. 430. LANGTON, Bennet, account of him, i. 247; acceptum et expensum, iv. 362; Addison and Goldsmith, compares, ii. 256; Addison's conversation, iii. 339; Aristophanes, reads, iv. 177, n. 3, 362; Barnes's Maccaronic verses, quotes, iii. 284; Beauclerk, his early friend, i. 248: makes him second guardian to his children, iii. 420; leaves him a portrait of Garrick, iv. 96; birth and matriculation at Oxford, i. 247, n. 1, 337; Blue stocking assembly, at a, v. 32, n. 3; Boswell, letter to, iii. 424; Boswell's obligations to him, ii. 456, n. 3; Burke and Johnson, comparing Homer and Virgil, iii. 193, n. 3; v. 79, n. 2; Burke's wit, i. 453, n. 2; carpenter and a clergyman's wife, anecdote of a, ii. 456, n. 3; children, his, too much about him, iii. 128; mentioned, ii. 146; iii. 89, 93, 104, 130; Clarendon's style, praises, iii. 257; coach, on the top of a, i. 477; collection of Johnson's sayings, iv. 1-34; daughters to be taught Greek, iv. 20, n. 2; dinners and suppers at his house, ii. 259; iii. 279, 280, 338; economy, no turn to, iii. 363, n. 2; expenditure and foibles criticised, iii. 48, n. 4, 93, 104, 128, 222, 300, 315, 317, 348, 362, 379; iv. 362; frisk, joins in a, i. 250; Greek, knowledge of, iv. 8, n. 3; Clenardus's Greek Grammar, iv. 20; recitation, ib., n. 2; professor in the imaginary college, v. 108; Hale, Sir Matthew, anecdote of, iv. 310; Idler, anecdote of the, i. 33l; introduces subjects on which people differ, iii. 186; Johnson, afraid of, iv. 295; at fairest advantage with him, i. 248, n. 3; bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; and Burke, an evening with, iv. 26; conversation before dinner, repeats, iii. 279; confessor, iv. 280-1; death, unfinished letter on, iv. 418, n. 1; deference to, iv. 8, n. 3; devotion to, when ill, iv. 266, n. 3; when dying, iv. 406-7, 414, n. 2, 439; dress as a dramatic author, describes, i. 200; estimate of Spence, v. 317, n. 1. first acquaintance with him, i. 247; iv. 145; friendship with him, iv. 132, 145, 352; rupture in it, ii. 256, n. 2, 261, n. 2, 265, 282; v. 89; reconciliation, ii. 292; funeral, at, iv. 419; gives him a copy of his letter to Chesterfield, i. 260; imitates, iv. 1, n. 2; Jacobitism, i. 430; letters to him: see under JOHNSON, letters; levee, attends, ii. 118; loan to him, ii. 136, n. 2; iv. 402, n. 2; repaid in an annuity to Barber, ib.; Ode on Inchkenneth, alters, ii. 295, n. 2; and Parr, an evening with, iv. 15; poemata, edits, ii. 295, n. 2; iv. 384; v. 155, n. 2, 326, n. 2; portrait, removes the inscription on, iv. 181; praises his worth, iii. 161; exclaims, 'Sit anima mea cum Langtono,' iv. 280; Prologue, criticises, iv. 25; rebuked by, ii. 254; urges him to keep accounts, iv. 177, n. 3; visits him at Langton, i. 476, 477, n. 1; at Rochester, iv. 8, n. 3, 22, 232-3; at Warley Camp, iii. 360-2; King, gives the sketch of Irene to the, i. 108; and the catalogue of Johnson's projected works, iv. 381, n. 1; 'Lanky,' ii. 258; v. 308; laughed at, iii. 338, n. 3; Lincoln, highly esteemed in, iii. 359; literary character, his, i. 248, n. 3; Literary Club, original member of the, i. 477; marries Lady Rothes, ii. 77, n. 1; militia, in the, iii. 123, 130, 360, 362, 368, 397; appointed Major, iii. 365, n. 1; navigation, his, ii. 136; Nicolaida visits him, ii. 379; orchard, has no, iv. 206; Paoli visits him at Rochester, iv. 8, n. 3; Paris, visits, i. 381; pedigree, his, i. 248, n. 1; personal appearance, i. 248, n. 3, 336; Pitt's neglect of Boswell, blames, iii. 213, n. 1; Pope reciting the last lines of the Dunciad, ii. 84, n. 2; religious discourse, introduces, ii. 254; iv. 216; v. 89; Richardson, introduced to, iv. 28; Round-Robin, refuses to sign the, iii. 84, n. 2; Royal Academy, professor of the, ii. 67, n. 1; iii. 464; ruining himself without pleasure, iii. 317, 348; Rusticks, writes, i. 358; school on his estate, establishes a, ii. 188; silent, too, iii. 260; sluggish, iii. 348; story, thought a story a, ii. 433; table, his, iii. 128, 186; talks from books, v. 378, n. 4; Traveller, praises the, iii. 252; Vesey's, Mr., an evening at, iii. 424; iv. i, n. 1; will, makes his, ii. 261; 'worthy,' iii. 379, n. 4; Young, account of, iv. 59; mentioned, i. 336, 418, n. 1; ii. 34, n. 1, 63, 124, 141, n. 1, 186, 192, 232, 247, 279, 318, 338, 347, 350, 362, n. 2, 379; iii. 41, 119, 221, 250, 282, 326, 328, 354, 386, 417; iv. 71, 78, 197, 219, n. 3, 284, 317, 320, 344; v. 249, 295. LANGTON, Cardinal Stephen, i. 248. LANGTON, old Mr. (Bennet Langton's father), canal, his, iii. 47; exuberant talker, an, ii. 247; freedom from affectation, iv. 27; Johnson's Jacobitism, believes in, i. 430; in his being a Papist, i. 476; offers a living to, i. 320; picture, would not sit for his, iv. 4; stores of literature, his, iv. 27; mentioned, i. 357; ii. 16. LANGTON, Mrs. (Bennet Langton's mother), i. 325, 357, 476; ii. 146; iv. 4, 268. LANGTON, George (Bennet Langton's eldest son), i. 248, n. 1; ii. 282; iv. 146. LANGTON, Miss Jane (Bennet Langton's daughter), Johnson's goddaughter, iii. 210, 11. 3; iv. 146, 268; his letter to her, iv. 271. LANGTON, Miss Mary (Bennet Langton's daughter), iv. 268. LANGTON, Peregrine (Bennet Langton's uncle), ii. 17-19. LANGTON, in Lincolnshire, Johnson invited there, i. 288; ii. 142; visits it, i. 476, 477, n. 1; ii. 17; describes the house, v. 217. LANGUAGES, formed on manners, ii. 80; origin, iv. 207; pedigree of nations, ii. 28; v. 225; scanty and inadequate, iv. 218; speaking one imperfectly lets a man down, ii. 404; writing verses in dead languages, ii. 371. LANGUOR, following gaiety, iii. 199. LANSDOWNE, Viscount (George Granville), Drinking Song to Sleep, i. 251. LAPIDARY INSCRIPTIONS, ii. 407. LAPLAND, i. 425; ii. 168, n, 1. LAPLANDERS, v. 328. LAPOUCHIN, Madame, iii. 340. LASCARIS' Grammar, v. 459. LAST, horror of the, i. 331, n. 7. LATIN, beauty of Latin verse, i. 460; difficulty of mentioning in it modern names and titles, iv. 3, 10; essential to a good education, i. 457; few read it with pleasure, v. 80, n. 2; modern Latin poetry, i. 90, n. 2; pronunciation, ii. 404, n. 1. See EPITAPHS. Latiner, a, iv. 185, n. 1. LA TROBE, Mr., iv. 410. LAUD, Archbishop, assists Lydiat, i. 194, n. 2; Diary quoted, ii. 214; his Scotch Liturgy, ii. 163. LAUDER, William, account of his fraud about Milton, i. 228-231; deceives Johnson, i. 229, 231, n. 2. LAUDERDALE, Duke of, Burnet's dedication to him, v. 285. LAUGHERS, time to be spent with them, iv. 183. LAUGHTER, a faculty which puzzles philosophers, ii. 378; Chesterfield, Johnson, Pope and Swift on it, ib., n. 2; laughing at a man to his face, iii. 338. See JOHNSON, laugh. LAUREL, the, i. 185. LAUSANNE, iv. 167, n. 1. LA VALLIÈRE, Mlle, de, v. 49, n. 3. LAVATER'S Essay on Physiognomy, iv. 421, n. 2. LAW, Archdeacon, iii. 416. LAW, Edmund, Bishop of Carlisle, Cambridge examinations, iii. 13, n. 3; parentheses, loved, iii. 402, n. 1; remarks on Pope's Essay on Man, ii. 37, n. 1; iii. 402, n. 1. LAW, Robert, Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, i. 489. LAW, William, Behmen, a follower of, ii. 122; each man's knowledge of his own guilt, iv. 294; Johnson's Dictionary, cited in, iv. 4, n. 3; Serious Call, praised by Johnson, i. 68; ii. 122; iv. 286, n. 3, 311; by Gibbon, Wesley and Whitefield, i. 68, n. 2; by Psalmanazar, iii. 445. LAW, Coke's definition of it, iii. 16, n. 1; honesty compatible with the practice of it, ii. 47, 48, n. 1; v. 26, 72; laws last longer than their causes, ii. 416; manners, made and repealed by, ii. 419; particular cases, not made for, iii. 25; primary notion is restraint, ii. 416; reports, English and Scotch, ii. 220; writers on it need not have practised it, ii. 430. LAW-LORD, a dull, iv. 178. LAWRENCE, Chauncy, iv. 70. LAWRENCE, Sir Soulden, ii. 296, n. 1. LAWRENCE, Dr. Thomas, account of him, ii. 296, n. 1; President of the College of Physicians, ii. 297; iv. 70; death, iv. 230, n. 2; illness, iv. 143-4; Johnson addresses to him an Ode, iv. 143, n. 2; learnt physic from him, iii. 22; long friendship with him, i. 82; iv. 143,144, n. 3 (for his letters to him, see JOHNSON, letters); wife, death of his, iii. 418; mentioned, i. 83, 326; iii. 93, 123, 436; iv. 355. LAWRENCE, Miss, i. 82; iv. 143; Johnson's letter to her, iv. 144, n. 3. LAWYERS, barristers have less law than of old, ii. 158; 'nobody reads now,' iv. 309; chance of success, iii. 179; Johnson's advice, iv. 309; Sir W. Jones's, ib., n. 6; Sir M. Hale's, iv. 310, n. 3; bookish men, good company for, iii. 306; Charles's, Prince, saying about them, ii. 214; consultations on Sundays, ii. 376; honesty: see under LAW; knowledge of great lawyers varied, ii. 158; multiplying words, iv. 74; players, compared with, ii. 235; plodding-blockheads, ii. 10; soliciting employment, ii. 430; work greatly mechanical, ii. 344. LAXITY OF TALK. See JOHNSON, laxity. LAY-PATRONS. See SCOTLAND, Church. LAYER, Richard, i. 157. LAZINESS, worse than the toothache, v. 231. LEA, Rev. Samuel, i. 50. LEANDRO ALBERTI, ii. 346; v. 310. LEARNED GENTLEMAN, a, ii. 228. LEARNING, decay of it, i. 445; iv. 20; v. 80; degrees of it, iv. 13; difficulties, v. 316; giving way to politics, i. 157, n. 2; important in the common intercourse of life, i. 457; 'more generally diffused,' iv. 217; trade, a, v. 59: see AUTHORS. LEASOWES, v. 267, n. 1, 457. LECKY, W.E.H., History of England, ii. 130, n. 3. LE CLERK, i. 285. LECTURES, teaching by, ii. 7; iv. 92. LE DESPENCER, Lord, ii. 135, n. 2. Ledger, The, iv. 22, n. 3. LEE, Alderman, iii. 68, n. 3, 78, 79, n. 2. LEE, Arthur, iii. 68, 76, 79, n. 2. LEE, John (Jack Lee), account of him, iii. 224, n. 1; at the bar of the House of Commons, iii. 224; on the duties of an advocate, ii. 48, n. 1. LEECHMAN, Principal William, account of him, v. 68, n. 4; Johnson calls on him, v. 370; writes on prayer, v. 68; answered by Cumming, v. 101. LEEDS, iii. 399, 400. LEEDS, Duke of, verses on his marriage, iv. 14. LEEDS, fifth Duke of, member of the Literary Club, i. 479; mentioned, ii. 34, n. 1. LEEK, in Staffordshire, i. 37; iii. 136. LE FLEMING, Bishop of Carlisle, i. 461, n. 4. LE FLEMING, Sir Michael, i. 461, n. 4. Leeward, i. 293. LEEWARD ISLANDS, ii. 455. LEGITIMATION, ii. 456. LEGS, putting them out in company, iii. 54. LEIBNITZ, controversy with Clarke, v. 287; on the derivation of languages, ii. 156; mentioned, i. 137. LEICESTER, iii. 4; iv. 402, n. 2. LEICESTER, Robert Dudley, Earl of, v. 438. LEICESTER, Mr. (Beauclerk's relation), iii. 420. LEISURE, for intellectual improvement, ii. 219; sickness from it, a disease to be dreaded, iv. 352. LELAND, Counsellor, iii. 318. LELAND, John, Itinerary, v. 445. LELAND, Dr. Thomas, History of Ireland, ii. 255; iii. 112; Hurd, attacked by, iv. 47, n. 2; Johnson's letters to him, i. 489, 518; ii. 2, n. 1; mentioned, iii. 310. LEMAN, Sir William, i. 174, n. 2. LEMAN, Lake, iv. 350, n. 1. LENDING MONEY, influence gained by it, ii. 167. LENNOX, Mrs., character by Mrs. Thrale, iv. 275, n. 2; lived to a great age, ib., n. 3; English version of Brumoy, publishes an, i. 345; Female Quixote, i. 367; Goldsmith advised to hiss her play, iv. 10; Johnson cites her in his Dictionary, iv. 4, n. 3; writes Proposals for publishing her Works, ii. 289; gives a supper in her honour, i. 255, n. 1; Shakespeare Illustrated, i. 255; superiority, her, iv. 275; Translation of Sully's Memoirs, i. 309. LEOD, v. 233. LEONI, ——, the singer, iii. 21, n. 2. Leonidas, v. 116. LE ROY, Julien, ii. 390, 391. LESLEY, John, History of Scotland, ii. 273. LESLIE, Charles, the nonjuror, iv. 286, n. 3. LESLIE, C. R., anecdote of the Countess of Corke, iv. 108, n. 4. LESLIE, Professor, of Aberdeen, v. 92. LESSEPS, M. de, v. 400, n. 4. Let ambition fire thy mind, iii. 197. Lethe, i. 228. Letter to Lord Chesterfield published separately, i. 261, n. 1. Letter to John Dunning, Esq., i. 297, n. 2. LETTER-WRITING, iv. 102. LETTERS, none received in the grave, iv. 413; studied endings, v. 238. See DATES. Letters from Italy, iii. 55. See SHARP, Samuel. Letters of an English Traveller, iv. 320, n. 4. Letters on the English Nation, v. 113. Letter to Dr. Samuel Johnson occasioned by his late political Publications, ii. 316. Letters to Lord Mansfield, ii. 229. See ANDREW STUART. Letters to the People of England, iv. 113, n. 1. Lettre de cachet, v. 206. Lettres Persanes, iii. 291, n. 1. LETTSOM, Dr., iii. 68. LEVEE, Johnson's. See under JOHNSON. LEVEES, Ministers', ii. 355. LEVELLERS, i. 448. LEVER, Sir Ashton, iv. 335. LEVETT, John, of Lichfield, i. 81; Johnson's letter to him, i. 160; unseated as member for Lichfield, i. 161, n. 1. LEVETT, Robert, account of him, i. 243; awkward and uncouth, iii. 22; brothers, his, iv. 143; brutality in manners, iii. 461; complains of the kitchen, ii. 215, n. 4; death, iv. 137, 142, 145; Desmoulins, hates, iii. 368; 'Doctor Levett,' ii. 214; Johnson's birth-day dinners, present at, iii. 157, n. 3; iv. 135, n. 1; companion, i. 232, n. 1; ii. 5, n. 1; iii. 220; iv. 145, 233, 249, n. 2; introduced Langton to, i. 47; iv. 145; letters to him: See under JOHNSON, letters; lines on him, iv. 137, 165, 274, 303, n. 2; questioned about, iii. 57; his recommendation to, i. 417; writings, makes out a list of, iii. 321; Johnson's Court, garret in, ii. 5; marriage, i. 370, 382; mentioned, i. 81, n. 1, 435; iii. 26, 93, 363, 373; iv. 92. LEWIS LE GROS, iii. 32, n. 5. LEWIS XIV, celebrated in many languages, i. 123; charges accumulated on him, ii. 341, n. 4; discontent and ingratitude, on, ii. 167, n. 3; King of Siam sends him ambassadors, iii. 336; La Vallière, Mlle. de, v. 49, n. 3; manners, ii. 41; torture used in his reign, i. 467, n. 1; why endured by the French, ii. 170. LEWIS XVI, execution, ii. 396, n. 1; Hume, when a child makes a set speech to, ii. 401, n. 4; Johnson, seen by, ii. 385, 394-5; Paoli, gives high office in Corsica to, ii. 71, n. 1; torture used in his reign, i. 467, n. 1. LEWIS XVIII, when a child makes a set speech to Hume, ii. 401, n. 4. LEWIS, David, verses to Pope, iv. 307; Miscellany, ib., n. 3. LEWIS, Dean, i. 370, n. 1, 382. LEWIS, F., translates mottoes for the Rambler, i. 225. LEWSON, Mrs., iii. 425. LEXICOGRAPHER, defined, i. 296; Bolingbroke's anecdote of one, ib., n. 3; referred to in the Rambler, i. 189, n. 1. LEXIPHANES, ii. 44. LEYDEN, iv. 241; v. 376. LIBELS, actions for them, iii. 64; dead, on the, iii. 15; England and America, in, i. 116, n. 1; Fox's Libel Bill, iii. 16, n. 1; juries, judges of the law, iii. 16, n. 1; refuse to convict, i. 116, n. 1; pulpit, from the, iii. 58; severe law against libels, i. 124, n. 1. LIBERTY, all boys love it, iii. 383; clamours for it, i. 131, n. 1; iii. 201, n, 1; conscience, of, ii. 249; iv. 216; destroying a portion of it without necessity, iii. 224; liberty and licentiousness, ii. 130; luxury, effects of, ii. 170; political and private, ii. 60, 170; press, of the: See PRESS; pulpit, of the, iii. 59; taedium vitae, kept off by the notion of it, i. 394; teaching, of, ii. 249; iv. 216; thinking, preaching, and acting, of, ii. 252. LIBERTY and Necessity. See FREE WILL. LIBRARIES, Johnson helps in forming the King's library, ii. 33, n. 4; describes the Oxford libraries, ii. 35, 67, n. 2; key of one always lost, v. 65; Stall Library, iii. 91. LICENSING ACT for plays, i. 141, n. 1. LICHFIELD, ale, ii. 461; iv. 97; antiquities, iv. 369; Beaux Stratagem, scene of the, ii. 461, n. 3; Bishop's palace, ii. 467; Boswell and Johnson visit it in 1776, ii. 461; Boswell shown real 'civility,' iii. 77; Boswell visits it in 1779, iii. 411-2; boys dipped in the font, i. 91, n. 1; Cathedral, i. 81, n. 2; ii. 466; v. 456; Johnson in the porch, ii. 466, n. 3; city of philosophers, ii. 464; city and county in itself, i. 36, n. 4; coach-journey from London, i. 340, n. 1; postchaise, iii. 411; Darwin's house, v. 428, n. 3; drunk, all the decent people got, v. 59; English spoken there, purity of the, ii. 463-4; Evelina not heard of there, ii. 463, n. 4; Friary, The, ii. 466; iii. 412; George Inn, iii. 411; Green's museum, ii. 465; iii. 412; v. 428; Hospital, v. 445; Hutton describes the town in 1741, i. 86, n. 2; Jacobite fox-hunt, iii. 326, n. 1; Johnson, Michael, a magistrate, i, 36; ii. 322, n. 1; Johnson, his barber, ii. 52, n. 2; beloved in his native city, ii. 469; respect shown him by the corporation, iv. 372, n. 2; defines it in his Dictionary, iv. 372; hopes to set a good example, iv. 135; house, i. 75; ii. 461; iv. 372, n. 2; 402, n. 2; Latin verses to a stream, iii. 92, n, 1; as Lord Lichfield, iii. 310; loses three old friends, iv. 366; monument in the Cathedral, iv. 423; portrait admired there, ii. 141; saucer in the Museum, iii. 220, n. 1; theatre, tosses a man into the pit of the, ii. 299; in love with an actress, ii. 464; praises an actor, ii. 465; attends it with Boswell, ii. 464-5, 471; visits the town for the first time after living in London, i. 370; last visit, iv. 372; (for his other visits see iii. 450-3); weary of it, ii. 52; willow tree, iv. 372, n. 1; lecture on experimental philosophy, v. 108; manufactures, ii. 464; oat ale and cakes, ii. 463; people sober and genteel, ii. 463; population in 1781, iii. 450; Prerogative Court, i. 81, 101; Sacheverell preaches there, i. 39, n. 1; Salve, magna parens, iv. 372; school, account of it in Johnson's time, i. 43-9; compared with Stourbridge School, i. 50; buildings dilapidated, i. 45, n. 4; endowment, v. 445, n. 3; famous scholars, i. 45; service for a sick woman, v. 444; Seward's, Miss, verses on it, iv. 331; St. Mary's Church repaired, i. 67; Johnson attends it in 1776, ii. 466; St. Michael's Church, graves of Johnson's parents and brother, iv. 393; Stowhill, ii. 470; iii. 412; Swan Inn, v. 428; Thrales, the, visit it in 1774 with Johnson, v. 428, 440, n. 2; Three Crowns Inn, ii. 461; iii. 411; Warner's Tour, iv. 373, n. 1. LICHFIELD, fourth Earl of, iii. 309. LICHFIELD, Leonard, an Oxford bookseller, i. 61, n. 3. LIDDELL, Sir Henry, ii. 168, n. 1. LIES, 'Consecrated lies,' i. 355; disarm their own force, ii. 221; Johnson's Adventurer on lying, ii. 221, n. 2; use of the word lie, iv. 49; lying to the public, ii. 223; servants 'not at home,' i. 436; to the sick, iv. 306; of vanity, iv. 167: See FALSEHOOD and TRUTH. LIFE, changes in its form desirable at times, iii. 128; changes in its modes, ii. 96: See under MANNERS; choice, few have any, iii. 363; just choice impossible, ii. 22, 114; climate, not affected by, ii. 195; composed of small incidents, i. 433, n. 4; ii. 359, n. 2; domestick life little touched by public affairs, i. 381; Dryden's lines, ii. 124; iv. 303; every season has its proper duties, v. 63; expecting more from it than life will afford, ii. 110; happiest part lying awake in the morning, v. 352; imbecility in its common occurrences, iii. 300; method, to be thrown into a, iii. 94; miseries, i. 299, n. 1, 331, n. 6; 'balance of misery,' iv. 300; 'nauseous draught,' iii. 386; none would live it again, ii. 125, iv. 301-3; pain better than death, iii. 296; iv. 374; progress from want to want, iii. 53; progression, must be in, iv. 396, n. 4; state of weariness, ii. 382; studied in a great city, iii. 253; system of life not easily disturbed, ii. 102; a well-ordered poem, iv. 154. Life of Alfred, Johnson projects a, i. 177. LILLIBURLERO, ii. 347. LILLIPUT, Senate of, i. 115. LILLY, William, iii. 172. LINCOLN, a City and County, i. 36, n. 4; visited by Boswell, iii. 359. LINCOLN'S INN, Society of, iv. 290, n. 4. LINCOLNSHIRE, militia, i. 36, n. 4; iii. 361; orchards very rare, iv. 206; reeds, v. 263; mentioned, v. 286. Line, the civil, iii. 196. LINEN, v. 216. Linguae Latinae Liber Dictionarius, i. 294, n. 6. LINLEY, Miss, ii. 369, n. 2. LINLITHGOW, Earl of, v. 103, n. 1. LINTOT, Bernard, the bookseller, quarrels with Pope, i. 435, n. 4; mentioned, ii, 133, n. 1; iv. 80, n. 1. LINTOT the younger, Johnson said to have written for him, i. 103; his warehouse, i. 435. LIQUORS, scale of, iii. 381; iv. 79. LISBON, earthquake, i. 309, n. 3; parliamentary vote of £100,000 for relief, i. 353, n. 2; packet boat to England, iv. 104, n. 3; persecution of Malagrida, iv. 174, n. 5; postage to London, iii. 22; mentioned, ii. 211, n. 4. Literary Anecdotes, Nichols's, iv. 369, n. 1. LITERARY CLUB. See CLUBS. LITERARY FAME, ii. 69, n. 3, 233, 353. LITERARY friend, a pompous, iv. 236. LITERARY IMPOSTORS. See IMPOSTORS. LITERARY JOURNALS, ii. 39. Literary Magazine or Universal Review, i. 307, 320, 328, 505. LITERARY man, life of a, iv. 98. LITERARY PROPERTY. See COPYRIGHT. LITERARY REPUTATION, ii. 233. LITERARY REVIEWS. See Critical and Monthly. LITERATURE, amazing how little there is, iii. 303, n. 4; dignity, its, iii. 310; England, neglected in, ii. 447, n. 5; before France in it, iii. 254; general courtesy of literature, iv. 246; generally diffused, iv. 217, n. 4; how far injured by abundance of books, iii. 332; respect paid to it, iv. 116; wearers of swords and powdered wigs ashamed to be illiterate, iii. 254. LITTLE THINGS, contentment with them, iii. 241; danger of it, iii. 242. LITTLETON, Adam, i. 294, n. 6. LIVELINESS, study of, ii. 463. LIVERPOOL, iii. 416. LIVERPOOL, first Earl of. See JENKINSON, Charles. LIVERPOOL, third Earl of, iii. 146, n. 1. LIVES OF THE POETS, account of its publication advertised, iii. 108; Advertisement, iv. 35, n. 1; Johnson's engagement with the booksellers, iii. 109; design greatly enlarged, iv. 35; payment agreed on, iii. 111; extraordinarily moderate, ib., n. 1; £100 added, iv. 35; payment for a separate edition, ib., n. 3; progress of their composition, iii. 313, 317, n. 1; first four volumes published, iii. 370, 380, n. 3; Johnson's indolence in finishing the last six, iii. 418, 435; iv. 34, 58, n. 3; published, iv. 34; printed separately, iv. 35, n. 3, 63; additions, ib., n. 1. reprinting, iv. 153; new edition, iv. 157; attacks expected, iii. 375; attacked, iv. 63-5; booksellers, impudence of the, iv. 35, n. 3; Boswell has the proof sheets, iii. 371; and most of the manuscript, iv. 36, 71, 72; his observations on some of the Lives, iv. 38-63; commended generally, iv. 146; contemporaries, difficulty in writing the Lives of, iii. 155, n. 3; copies presented to Mrs. Boswell, iii. 372; to the King, ib., n. 3; to Wilkes, iv. 107; to Langton, iv. 132; to Bewley, iv. 134; to Rev. Mr. Wilson, iv. 162; to Cruikshank, iv. 240; to Miss Langton, iv. 267; to Johnson's physicians, iv. 399, n. 5; Dilly's account of the undertaking, iii. 110; Johnson's anger at an indecent poem being inserted, iv. 36, n. 4; collects materials, iii. 427; not the editor of this Collection of Poets, iii. 117, n. 8, 137, 370; iv. 35, n. 3; inattention to minute accuracy, iii. 359, n. 2; letters to Nichols the printer, iv. 36, n. 4; portraits in different editions, iv. 421, n. 2; recommends the insertion of four poets, iii. 370; iv. 35, n. 3; trusted much to his memory, iv. 36, n. 3; Nichols, printed by, iv. 36, 63, n. 1, 321; piety, written so as to promote, iv. 34; Rochester's Poems castrated by Steevens, iii. 191; rough copy sent to the press, iv. 36; Savage, many of the anecdotes from, i. 164; titles suggested, iv. 36, n. 4; words, learned, iv. 39. Lives of the Poets (Bell's edition), ii. 453, n. 2; iii. 110. Lives of the Poets, by Theophilus Cibber, i. 187; iii. 29-30. LIVINGS, inequality of, ii. 172. LIVY, i. 506; ii. 342. LLANDAFF, Bishopric of, iv. 118, n. 2. LLOYD, A., Account of Mona, v. 450. LLOYD (Llwyd), Humphry, v. 438. LLOYD, Mrs., Savage's god-mother, i. 172. LLOYD, Olivia, i. 92. LLOYD, Robert, the poet, account of him, i. 395, n. 2; Connoisseur, i. 420, n. 3; ii. 334, n. 3; Odes to Obscurity, ii. 334. LLOYD, Mr. and Mrs. Sampson, Boswell and Johnson dine with them, ii. 456, 457; Barclay's Apology, ii. 458; observance of days, ii. 458. LLOYD, William, Bishop of St. Asaph, his learning in ready cash, ii. 256, n. 3; his palace, v. 437. LLOYD, ——, of Maesmynnan, v. 445. LLOYD, ——, schoolmaster of Beaumaris, v. 447. LOAN, government, raised at eight per cent, in 1779, iii. 408; n. 4. Lobo's Abyssinia, Johnson translates it, i. 78, n. 2, 86-9, 340, n. 3; sees a copy in his old age, iii. 7. Loca Solennia, Boswell writes to Johnson from, ii. 3, n. 1. LOCAL, attachment, ii. 103; consequence, ii. 133; histories, iv. 218, n. 1; sanctity, ii. 276. LOCHBUY, Laird of, Johnson visits him, v. 341-3; his dungeon, v. 343. LOCHBUY, Lady, v. 341-3. LOCHIEL, Chief of, v. 297, n. 1. LOCKE, John, anecdote of him and Dr. Clarke, i. 3, n. 2; Common-Place Book, i. 204; exportation of coin, on the, iv. 105; last words to Collins, iii. 363, n. 3; Latin Verses, v. 93-5; style, iii. 257, n. 3; Treatise on Education, cold bathing for children, i. 91, n. 1; the proper age for travelling, iii. 458; whipping an infant, ii. 184; Watts, Dr., answered by, ii. 408, n. 3. LOCKE, William, of Norbury Park, iv. 43. LOCKHART, Sir George, v. 227, n. 4. LOCKHART, J. G., Captain Carleton's Memoirs, on the authorship of, iv. 334, n. 4; Johnson on the Royal Marriage Bill, ii. 152, n. 2; Scott and the Vanity of Human Wishes, i. 193, n. 3. LOCKMAN, J., i. 115, n. 1; 'l'illustre Lockman,' iv. 6. LODGING-HOUSE LANDLORDS, i. 422. LOFFT, Capel, account of him, iv. 278; his Reports quoted, iii. 87, n. 3. LOMBE, John, iii. 164.