Vol. i. p. 229, note. For "fair" read "fan."
Vol. i. p. 280, note. For "Harry" read "Hans."
Vol. ii. p. 420. For "petulantium" read "petulantiam."
Vol. iii. p. 266, l. 9. For "surpass" read "suppress."
Vol. iv. p. [154], note. For "Anglia" read "Angliæ."
Vol. iv. p. [294], note. For "Notitiæ" read "Notitia."
[INDEX]
- Abchurch Lane, iii. 95 note; iv. [152] note, [360] note, [381]
- Abercorn, Earl of, ii. 20 note
- Abigail, Mrs., i. 89 note; iv. [167]
- Abingdon, Countess of, i. 325 note
- Absolute power satirised, i. 100 seq.
- Abstinence the best physic, iv. [227] seq.
- Ace, a sharper, ii. 177
- Achilles, his shade rejoices in the virtue of his son, iii. 203, 204:
- referred to, i. 57, 58, 59, 60, 256; ii. 129, 232; iii. 172; iv. [160]
- Acorn, an honest Englishman, i. 107
- "Act, an," a meeting for conferring degrees, i. 366 and note
- Acting, as taught by Hamlet, i. 288, 289
- Actæon under enchantment of the sharpers, ii. 69:
- fair prey to sharpers, ii. 195
- Actors should not gag, ii. 280, 281:
- advice to, iv. [42], [43]
- Adagia, the, of Erasmus, i. 360 note
- Adam, puppet, i. 140; iii. 188, 189:
- as a husband, iv. [116], [117], [126], [127]:
- referred to, i. 55, 56, 330, 381; ii. 358, 424; iv. [211], [249], [340]
- Addison, his age and position at starting of The Tatler, i. vii, viii:
- his share in the work, i. xiii, xiv, xv:
- called in and found indispensable, i. 4:
- author of characters of men and women under names of musical instruments, the distress of the news-writers, the inventory of the play-house, description of thermometer, ibid.:
- credited Steele with wit, i. 5:
- against opera, i. 40 note:
- on Dryden, i. 56 note:
- his Remarks on several parts of Italy, and Dialogues on Medals, i. 152 note:
- his The Drummer, i. 155 note, 158 note, 192 note; iii. 227 note:
- on witches, i. 180 note:
- plea for D'Urfey, i. 348 note:
- his The Campaign, i. 353 and note:
- on the fan, ii. 21 note:
- on absurd fuss over dresses on stage, ii. 33 note:
- account of Switzerland, ii. 299, 300:
- his Rosamund, iii. 276 note:
- his treatment of death, iii. 351 note:
- a tribute to his assistance, iv. [376]
- Referred to, i. 22 note, 32 note, 36 note, 41 note, 49 note, 57 note, 112 note, 136 note, 155 note, 192 note, 217 note, 265 note, 291 note, 292 note, 350 note, 362 note, 371 note, 382 note; ii. 92 note, 146 note, 171 note, 201 note, 331 note, 349 note, 423 note; iii. 5 note, 44 note, 55 note, 111 note, 113 note, 178 note, 218 note, 227 note, 299 note, 332 note, 389 note; iv. [32] note, [93] note, [94] note, [116] note, [142] note, [154] note, [201] note, [210] note, [264] note, [374] note
- Author of Tatler, Nos. 24, 96, 97, 100, 108, 116, 119-122, 129, 131, 133, 146, 148, 152-158, 161-163, 165, 192, 216, 218, 220, 221, 224, 226, 239, 240, 249, 250, 255, 267
- Author (?) of Nos. 36, 37, 38, 50, 51, 77, 78, 118, 130, 136, 151, 219, 222, 237
- with Steele, author of Nos. 42, 75, 81, 86, 93, 101, 103, 110, 111, 114, 147, 160, 253, 259, 260, 262, 265
- (?) Editor of No. 223
- Part author of Nos. 18 (?), 59 (?), 214
- Articles by, i. 344; ii. 27, 35, 273, 282 seq.
- Addison, Gulston, brother of Joseph, Governor of Fort George, iv. [204] note
- ---- Dorothy, wife of Dr. Sartre, and later of Daniel Combes, iv. [204] note
- ---- Lancelot, of Magdalen, iv. [204] note
- ---- Dr. Lancelot, a model father, iv. [204] and note:
- referred to, iv. [201] note
- "Address to the cock-killers," iii. 113 note
- Admiralty, the, ii. 125 note
- Adonis, ii. 5; iii. 341; iv. [250]
- Adroit, Major, a very topping fellow, i. 320
- Advancement of Learning, by Bacon, quoted, i. 145; ii. 392, 393
- Advertisements, in Tatler, increased, i. 182 note:
- concerning, iv. [147] seq.:
- a scheme for, iv. [170], [171]:
- from original edition of Tatler, iv. [379] seq.
- Advice, the danger of giving, i. 210, 211
- Advice to a Daughter, by Halifax, iv. [363] and note
- Advice to a Painter, by Waller, i. 34 and note
- Advice to the Poets, by Sir Richard Blackmore, i. 122 and note
- Ælia, iii. 86
- Æneas, marriage with Lavinia, ii. 281 note:
- visits the shades, iii. 211 seq., 235:
- referred to, i. 52, 57; ii. 129, 232; iii. 105; iv. [262]
- Æneid quoted, i. 215 and note, 257; ii. 142, 146, 308, 332, 405; iii. 22, 105, 330 and note; iv. [104]:
- a sequel to, ii. 281 and note:
- referred to, iii. 263
- Æschines, ii. 119; iii. 360
- Æschylus, i. 367
- Æsculapius (i.e. Dr. John Radcliffe), disappointed in love at the age of sixty, i. 355 note and seq., 376, 384; ii. 4, 128
- ---- iv. [160], [374]
- Æsop, his Fables imitated, ii. 68 seq., 315; iii. 11:
- referred to, ii. 232
- Æthiopians, i. 58
- Affectation condemned, i. 8:
- a budget of, ii. 202 seq.
- Affection, the government of, ii. 35 seq.
- Affliction, strange causes of, iii. 171
- Africanus, i.e. Sir Scipio Hill, i. 296 seq.
- Afterday, Will, a man of expectations, iv. [18], [19]
- "After-life," an, iv. [351] and note
- Afterwit, Solomon, ii. 236 note:
- letter from, ii. 243, 244
- Agamemnon, i. 58, 59; iii. 202, 203
- Age, old, the keenest pleasure of, iv. [69]:
- the follies of, iv. [350] seq.
- Agesilaus, ii. 412 and note
- Agincourt won on beef and mutton, iii. 179
- Aglaura, destined for second wife of Duumvir, ii. 38
- Agreda, iv. [158]
- Agrippa, ii. 286; iii. 137
- Aisne, the, ii. 133
- Aitken, G. A., on "Steele and some English Grammars," iv. [196] note
- Ajax, i. 59, 60; iii. 104, 204, 205
- Alba, Duke d', i. 97
- Albemarle, Earl of, i. 399
- Albergotti, iii. 333 and note
- Alchemist, The, by Ben Jonson, i. 125, 126
- Alcmena, iii. 202
- Aldersgate Street, i. 334 seq.; iii. 234 note
- Aldobrandini, iii. 364
- Aldrich, Dr. Henry, Dean of Christchurch, i. 281 note; ii. 171
- Aldus, ii. 218; iii. 234, 249
- Alethes, the guardian spirit of conscience, i. 389 seq.
- Aletheus, a gentleman of too much virtue for the age he lives in, ii. 50
- Alexander the Great; or, The Rival Queens, by Lee, Mrs. Bracegirdle in, i. 17 note:
- George Powell in, i. 36:
- burlesque of, iii. 398 note and seq.:
- referred to, i. 139, 140, 141
- Alexander, set a fashion in wry necks, ii. 202:
- at table of Fame, ii. 228:
- and his physician, iv. [78] seq.:
- his character, iv. [81]:
- referred to, i. 74 note, 257, 270; ii. 135 and note, 207, 297; iii. 299
- Alexander and Cæsar compared to Prince Eugène and Marlborough, i. 62, 63
- Alicante, i. 61, 72, 95, 184, 333
- Alice, Mrs., a goddess to her lover, iii. 136 seq.
- All for Love; or, The World Well Lost, Dryden's version of Antony and Cleopatra, i. 93 and note
- Allestree, Richard, probably author of The Whole Duty of Man, ii. 184.
- Alleyn, Edward, actor, founded Dulwich Hospital, i. 172 and note
- Allies, the, i. 27, 28, 52, 61, 130, 151, 155, 164, 197, 204, 205, 213, 237, 291, 354; ii. 34, 97, 105, 107, 109; iii. 82, 316 note
- Almanacs, Poor Robin's, i. 169
- Almanza, iii. 141
- Almanzor and Almahide, by Dryden, quoted, i. 114, 115:
- prologue to, i. 311 note:
- attacked and defended, i. 367 and note
- Almeira, the disconsolate, iv. [257], [258]
- Alonzo, Don, his epitaph, ii. 256
- Alost, i. 20, 43, 229
- Alps, iii. 250, 251
- Alsace, i. 51, 94
- Alsatia, in Whitefriars, a refuge for debtors, ii. 126 and note
- ---- i. 174
- Alva, Duke of, i. 156
- Amanda, the wife of Florio, i. 396
- ---- a confidante, i. 186 seq.
- ---- of Kent, summoned for a toast, iv. [16]
- Amaraga, Don Joseph Hartado de, i. 106
- Amazons, i. 257; ii. 103; iv. [160]
- Ambitions, fruitless, iv. [44] seq.
- America, i. 44, 106, 174; ii. 91
- Amherst, his Terræ-Filius; or, Secret History of the University of Oxford, i. 366 note
- Aminadab (Swift?), a letter from, iii. 391, 392
- Amoret, courted by Sir Scudamore, iv. [7]
- Amsterdam, account of a theatre in, i. 171, 172:
- referred to, iii. 82
- Amusements, Serious and Comical, by Tom Brown, ii. 348 and note; iii. 139 note
- Amyntas, iv. [250]
- Anatomy of Melancholy, by Burton, i. 23 note; iii. 63 note
- Ancaster, Duke of, i. 34 note
- Anchises, i. 52; iii. 217
- Anderson, Dr., inventor of famous "Scots Pills," i. 83 and note; iv. [149] and note, 150 note
- Androgyne, too learned, ii. 245
- Angelica, in Love for Love, played by Mrs. Bracegirdle, i. 17 note
- Angelo, Michael, his "Last Judgment," iii. 223
- Angliæ Notitia; or, The Present State of England, by Chamberlayn, iv. [154] and note, 294 note
- Anjou, Duchess of, i. 332
- ---- Duke of, i. 60, 71, 73, 97, 106, 198, 237, 362; ii. 188; iii. 86; iv. [86], [87], [158]
- Annals of Queen Anne, ii. 106 note
- Anne, Queen, her mourning for Prince George, i. 79:
- referred to, i. 84 note, 188 note, 206, 305 note, 353; ii. 42 note; iii. 84 note, 91, 283 note, 299 note; iv. [288]
- Annotations on the "Tatler," by M. Bournelle (W. Wagstaff), i. 52 note; ii. 211 note; iii. 396 note; iv. [127] and note, [172], [173] note
- Anticlea, mother of Ulysses, iii. 200 seq.
- Anticyra, the Bedlam of the Roman Empire, iii. 63
- Antilochus, iii. 202
- Antiochus, the story of his love, iii. 369, 370
- Antiope, iii. 203
- Antony, Mark, i. 18, 70, 93; iii. 128
- Antony and Cleopatra, Dryden's version of, i. 93 and note
- Antwerp, i. 205, 354
- "Any card-matches or save-alls," a London cry, i. 41 note
- Ap Rice, iv. [301]
- Ap Shenkin, iv. [301]
- Ap Shones, iv. [301]
- Apes. To lead apes in hell, the curse of old maids, iv. [84] and note
- Apollo, the great room at the Devil Tavern, ii. 215
- Apollo, i. 58, 59; ii. 293; iii. 341; iv. [160], [224]
- Apologia, by Apuleius, i. 360 note
- Apology by Cibber quoted, i. 110 note; ii. 413 note; iii. 1 note
- Apology for himself and his writings, by Steele, i. 48 note; ii. 118 note
- Apothecaries, great orators, iv. [227]
- Apparition of Mrs. Veal, iv. [316] note
- Appearances, the love of, universal, iii. 371 seq.
- Appetites, the two principal human, iv. [58] seq.
- Appius and Virginia, by Dennis, i. 346 note
- Apprentices, rising of the, iii. 99 and note
- Apuleius' Apologia, i. 360 note
- Araminta, will not see her husband without a hood, iv. [93]
- Arbeau, Thoinet, inventor of orchesography, ii. 275 note
- Arbiter, Petronius, his Saturæ, ii. 14 note
- Arcadia, Sir Philip Sidney's, ii. 313 note
- Archias, the poet, iii. 142
- Archibald (i.e. Lord Archibald Hamilton), ii. 20 and note
- Archimedes in Chamber of Fame, ii. 231 and note
- Arco, Marshal d', i. 269
- Aremberg, Duke of, ii. 109
- Argyle, John, Duke of, his character, i. 379:
- referred to, i. 102 note, 291, 378 and note
- Ariadne, iii. 202
- Aristocritus, iii. 241
- Aristotle, Problems of, ii. 136:
- in chamber of Fame, ii. 229, 239:
- referred to, ii. 187; iv. [221], [356]
- Armstrong, Tobias, i. 233
- Arne, Edward (the Political Upholsterer?), iii. 218, 244 seq., 333 seq.
- ---- Thomas (of Covent Garden), host of Indian kings, iii. 218 note, 299 note
- ---- Dr. Thomas, musician, son of Thomas, iii. 299 note
- Arria and Poetus, two notable lovers, ii. 168 seq.
- Arrian, ii. 228
- Ars Poetica of Horace quoted, ii. 141, 153, 154, 359
- Arsinöe, by Mr. Clayton, iii. 276 and note
- Art of Living and Dying, by Jeremy Taylor, iv. [350]
- Arthur, King, ii. 189: first who sat down to a whole roasted ox, iii. 180
- ---- Mr., Keeper of White's, i. 12 note
- Artillery Company, i. 333 seq.; ii. 88:
- satire on, ii. 79, 80
- ---- ground, i. 232 note, 355; ii. 80
- Arundel Street, i. 161
- As You Like It, quoted, i. 338, 339
- Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, i. 282 note
- Ashton, Social Life in the Reign of Queen Anne, by, iii. 56 note
- Aspasia (i.e. Lady Elizabeth Hastings), her character, i. 342 note and seq., 394
- Astell, Mrs. Mary (Madonella), her Serious proposal to Ladies, &c., i. 265 note and seq.:
- not at home, iii. 273 note, 274 note:
- forewoman of jury of Court of Honour, iv. [284]:
- referred to, i. 343 note; ii. 103 seq.
- Aston, Tony, on Mrs. Verbruggen, i. 31 note:
- referred to, i. 15 note
- Astrea, victim of drunken husband, iv. [231]
- Astrological speculation useful to a news-writer, i. 28
- Asturias, Prince of, i. 51, 105
- Atalantis, the New, by Mrs. Manley, ii. 104; iii. 330; iv. [172], [173] note, [242]
- Athenæ Oxonienses, by Wood, i. 87 note
- Athenian Mercury, i. 127 note
- Athenians, a story illustrating their character, iii. 46 seq.:
- referred to, i. 100, 181; iii. 360
- Athens, i. 220; ii. 24, 25, 119
- Atterbury, Dr. Francis, the character of, i. 5:
- controversy with Hoadley, i. 5 note:
- an orator, ii. 120 note and seq.:
- verses on a white fan borrowed from Miss Osborne, iv. [222] and note:
- referred to, ii. 118 note and seq., 171 note; iv. [94] note
- Audacity, the man of, iii. 284 seq.
- Audley Inn, ii. 181 note
- Augustan age, iii. 142
- Augustus, King, i. 27, 51, 129, 204, 236, 304; ii. 133, 135 note, iii. 218, 219, 247; iv. [186], [187]
- Augustus Cæsar in chamber of Fame, ii. 230:
- playing at marbles, ii. 412:
- referred to, iii. 311, 312, 330; iv. [236]
- Aurengezebe (i.e. Tom Colson), his scimitar, i. 346:
- referred to, i. 371 note and seq.; ii. 4
- Austin, John, M.P., ii. 19 note
- Author turned dealer, ii. 377 note and seq.
- Autumn, Lady, of Epsom, i. 293 seq.; iii. 144; iv. [78]
- Avarice, the temple of, iii. 52: alluded to, iii. 54:
- counteracted by I. B., iii. 60, 61
- Avaro (Heathcote, of the City), character of, i. 211 seq.
- Ayme, Henry, iv. [380]
- Ayres, writing-master, iv. [329] note
- Babies, i.e. dolls, ii. 313 and note
- Babylon, iii. 223, 392; iv. [308]
- Bacchus, i. 200, 352
- Bachelor's scheme for governing his wife, i. 90 seq.
- Bacon, Sir Francis, his Advancement of Learning, i. 145; ii. 392:
- on marriage, iii. 186 and note:
- his legacy, iii. 106, 107:
- his agreeable talk on "Impudence," iii. 285:
- his Of Simulation and Dissimulation, iv. [97] note:
- a prayer by, iv. [356] seq.:
- referred to, iv. [220]
- Badajos, i. 73, 106, 149, 253, 261
- Baden, i. 70, 204; ii. 47
- Baggs, Zachary, treasurer of Drury Lane, ii. 164 note
- Bagshot Heath, a purse lost on, iii. 171
- Baird, Mrs., iv. [382]
- Bajazet, i. 345
- Baker, Sir James (Sir Hannibal), Knight of the Peak, iii. 9 note, 23
- ---- Admiral, i. 276
- ---- Honora, i. 38 note
- ---- John, Consul at Algiers, i. 38 note
- ---- Sir Richard, his Chronicle of the Kings of England, iv. [342] and note
- ---- Thomas, author of a Female Tatler, ii. 290 note, 387 note; iv. [172] note
- Balagueir, ii. 200; iv. [85], [86]
- Baldwin, a bookseller, iv. [169] note:
- printer of a Female Tatler, iv. [173] note
- Ballance, Mr., a happy merchant, iii. 120
- Ballard, his Memoirs of British Learned Ladies, iii. 274 note
- Baltic, the, i. 205 note, 362; iii. 84 note
- Bamburgh Castle Library, i. 147 note
- "Band of Lovers, the," iii. 33
- Banister, John, i. 301:
- violinist of Drury Lane, iv. [139] and note
- Bank, the, of England, iii. 55:
- founding of, iv. [3] note, [132]
- Banks, John, his Earl of Essex, i. 125
- Banquet of Trimalchio, by Petronius Arbiter, ii. 14 and note
- Banqueting House at Whitehall, iii. 296
- Barbadoes, the, i. 235 note
- Barbers, their foolish desire to do everything, i. 282
- Barbican, i. 334
- Barcelona, i. 50, 72, 94, 95, 182, 213; ii. 19:
- snuff, ii. 309, 352
- ---- the most esteemed of women, ii. 46
- Barebones, Lovewell, his sorrows, ii. 196, 197
- Barn Elms, i. 258 note
- Barnard, Thomas, his Character of Lady Elizabeth Hastings, i. 343 note
- Barnes, Joshua, Greek Professor at Cambridge, his edition of Homer, iii. 159 and note, 160 and note:
- "Knew as much Greek as a Greek cobbler," iii. 160 note
- Barry, Mrs., some notice of, i. 15 note, 16 note:
- acts before the Queen, i. 16 note:
- requested to act as I. B.'s widow, i. 67:
- referred to, iii. 282 note
- ---- Edward, father to Mrs. Barry, i. 15 note
- Barrymore, Earl of, i. 150
- Bartholomew babies, ii. 313 note
- Bartholomew Fair, by Ben Jonson, i. 280 note
- Bartholomew Fair, i. 42 note
- ---- Lane, ii. 15 note
- Bart'lemy Fair; or, An Enquiry after Wit, by Mr. Wotton, by Mrs. Astell, i. 265 note, 266 note
- Bartlet, John, of Goodman's Fields, quack, iv. [148] and note
- Bartlet, Christopher, the late, iv. [148] note
- ---- S., quack, iv. [148] note
- Bartolus, Lawyer, in Beaumont and Fletcher's Spanish Curate, iv. [199]
- Basset Table, The, by Pope, iv. [337] note
- Bastile, the, i. 218; iii. 336
- Bateman, of the City (Paulo), i. 211 and note
- Bath, some account of, i. 138 seq.:
- origin of the word Toast, i. 202 seq.:
- complaint of the sharpers at, ii. 114 seq.:
- referred to, i. 360, 361 note, 365; ii. 111 note, 205, 378; iv. [189]
- Bathillus, an affected creature, ii. 17
- Battle critic, a, ii. 112, 113; iii. 379
- Bavaria, i. 269
- ---- Duke of, ii. 134
- ---- Elector of, i. 144, 184, 299; ii. 322; iii. 83 note, 333
- Bavius, writer of rejected comedies, ii. 291, 292
- ---- iv. [235]
- Bay, Marquis de, i. 73, 88, 106, 149, 261
- Bayes, in The Rehearsal, i. 63 and note; iv. [7], [309] note
- Bayle's Dictionary, iv. [22] note
- Bayne, Alexander, ii. 244 and note;
- a letter from, on the Beauties of the Royal Exchange, iii. 169, 170
- Bayonne, i. 51, 73; iv. [158]
- Beadlestaff, Ben, letter from, i. 366 seq.; ii. 165, 166
- "Bear," to sell the, i. 307, 308
- ---- -garden in "Hockley in the Hole," i. 234 and note, 256
- ---- the, at the Bridge Foot, iii. 147
- Bearskin, The Tatler's, i. 65 and note
- Beatrice, Mrs., iv. [313]
- Beaufort Buildings, i. 229 note; ii. 298, 309, 323, 351, 359; iii. 71 note, 129
- Beaufort, Henry, first Duke of, ii. 35 note
- Beaumont and Fletcher, ii. 281: their Maid's Tragedy, iii. 279 note:
- a comedy of theirs adapted by Buckingham, iii. 400 note:
- The Spanish Curate, iv. [199]
- Beauty, its influence on every temper, i. 91:
- how far should it be considered by women, ii. 85 seq.:
- made a new test of character by the Mirror of Truth, ii. 355 seq.:
- how to make it last, ii. 368 seq.:
- the birth of, ii. 283 seq.
- Beaux' Stratagem, by Farquhar, i. 36 and note
- Becket, Thomas à, i. 103, 214 note
- Bedford Street, i. 219 note
- Bedlam (or Bethlem) Hospital, referred to, i. 247 and note, 318; ii. 15; iii. 62, 63, 64, 73, 134, 318, 336, 377; iii. 314 note:
- see Moorfields
- Bedstaff, Ephraim, letter from, i. 179-181
- Beech Lane, i. 335
- Beef, defence of, iii. 179 seq., 257
- Beefeaters, the order of, iii. 180
- Beefsteak Club, i. 169
- Beggar's Opera, by Gay, i. 234 note
- Belgrave Square, i. 280 note
- Belial, his talk, iii. 103 and note
- Belinda (i.e. Mary, daughter of Baron Spanheim), an old lady on "Birth," iii. 76
- Bell Yard, iii. 147
- Bellfrey, Tom (Dr. Blackall), his voice, i. 302:
- referred to, i. 300 and note, 301
- Bellianis, Don, of Greece, ii. 315; iii. 81
- Bellum Grammatical, iv. [196] note
- Belvidera in Venice Preserved, i. 16 note
- ---- a beauty without affectation, iii. 66 seq.
- "Ben" in Congreve's Love for Love, created by Doggett, i. 17 note
- Bender, ii. 47 note; iii. 219, 247; iv. [186], [187] note
- Benjamin, iv. [191]
- Bennet, Madam, a notorious character, ii. 246 and note
- Ben's Club, ii. 215
- Benskin, Will, overseer, ii. 43 note
- Bentivolio (i.e. Dr. Bentley), i. 66 and note
- Bentley, Dr. Richard (Bentivolio), i. 66 and note:
- on Barnes' "Homer," iii. 160 and note
- Berg, i. 174
- Berkeley, i. 343 note:
- Earl of, i. 137 and note
- Berlin, letters from, i. 27, 72, 129, 236, 304; ii. 47:
- referred to, i. 213
- Bermuda Mission, i. 343 note
- Bernard, M., the banker, i. 36, 50, 88, 246 note
- Berne, letters from, i. 76, 94, 204; ii. 47, 100
- Berry, Duke of, ii. 54
- ---- Duchess of, ii. 54
- Bertamont, ii. 222
- Berwick, Duke of, i. 51, 94, 182, 237, 332; ii. 48; iii. 317
- Béthune, i. 19 note
- Betony, iv. [353] and note
- Betterton, actor, i. 15 note and seq.; ii. 389:
- his Hamlet, ii. 163:
- some account of, ii. 163 and note, 164 note:
- his new theatre, ii. 334 note:
- notice of a benefit for, iii. 233:
- criticism of, iii. 279 seq.:
- some account of his death, iii. 279 note:
- referred to, iii.; 384, iv. [42]
- Betty, ii. 6
- ---- Mrs., not charming, but very winning, ii. 316; iv. [201]
- Beuil, Chevalier de, i. 95
- Bevis, of Southampton, ii. 316
- Bezons, Count de, i. 95, 237, 299
- Bickerstaff, Isaac, sometime pen-name of Swift, now adopted by Steele, i. ix, 3, 8:
- genealogy of, i. 3 seq.:
- his attack on Partridge, 21 and note, 22 note:
- playful quarrel between Swift and Steele as to the name, 22 note:
- his Vindication, 21 note:
- his Predictions for the Year, 22 note:
- asks patronage for his cousin John, 36 note:
- some account by Mrs. Distaff of the papers in his closet, 89 seq.:
- alias Biggerstaff, 103:
- his guardian-angel, Mr. Pacolet, 116, 122, 131:
- his Difference between Scandal and Admonition, his Prophecy of Things Past, and "choice sentences for the company of masons and bricklayers," 151:
- at Merchant Taylors' School, 152:
- tragedies in MS., 189:
- accredited a doctor, 191:
- letter to Lewis XIV., 194 seq.; iii. 394:
- the answer, 217 seq.:
- hates giving advice, 210, 211:
- takes three lads round London, 247 seq.:
- his designs for the said lads, his nephews, the scholar, the merchant, the page, 249, 250; iv. [70]:
- will not tolerate extravagance in dress, 253, 254:
- takes universities under his charge, 262:
- his "circumspection water," 277:
- favourite with the fair sex, 278:
- acknowledges his own faults, ii. 102:
- a profession of love to, 240, 241:
- his reply, 242, 243:
- proposed for the chamber of Fame, 232:
- receives company, 257 seq.:
- his upbringing, 279:
- determines to learn fencing, 303, 371; iii. 308, 309:
- his own sufferings from a cruel mistress, 385 seq.:
- his interest in mankind, iii. 16 seq.:
- his early love, 19, 20;
- his prescription for grief, iii. 39 seq.:
- his reception at the play, 44 seq.:
- his letter to Dr. Sacheverell, 140 note:
- compared to Cato, 256:
- ill with toothache, 320:
- promises to be wittier, 118 and note:
- grammars issued under his approval, 194 note, 195 note:
- his farewell, 374
- Referred to, i. 11, 31, 55, 64, 66, 77 note, 80 note, 89 note, 92, 97 note, 101, 106 note, 115, 130, 135 and note, 166, 167, 168, 184 note, 191, 210, 214 note, 247, 253, 261, 262 and note, 314 note, 327, 359, 366, 368, 369, 388; ii. 12, 32, 71, 80, 93, 114, 123, 129, 150, 151, 157, 161, 163, 165, 167, 177, 184, 185, 200, 205, 223 note, 249, 277, 286, 289, 306, 311, 314, 320, 347 note, 359, 368, 377, 381, 389 note, 395, 401, 405; iii. 2 note, 8, 21 note, 27, 67, 71 note, 80, 83, 130, 133, 145, 228, 235, 236, 259, 261, 262, 267 note, 277, 296, 303, 328, 348, 366 note, 374, 375 note, 380; iv. [20], [25], [39], [41], [73], [82], [85] note, [164], [167], [172] note, [189], [206] note, [233], [242], [243], [256], [283], [286], [300], [317], [334], [335], [348], [375] note
- Bickerstaff, John, performance for the benefit of, i. 36:
- acted Captain in Mrs. Centlivre's A Bickerstaff's Burying; or, Work for the Upholders, i. 36 note
- ---- Sir Isaac, a Knight of the Round Table, ii. 189, 190
- ---- Ralph, eldest son of Sir Isaac, ii. 190
- ---- Philip, in reign of Richard III., ii. 190
- Bickerstaff, Sir Walter, ii. 191
- ---- Maud, the milkmaid, wife of Sir Walter, ii. 191
- ---- Harry, the facetious, iv. [69]
- ---- William, the prudent, iv. [69]
- ---- Dame Deborah, iii. 27
- ---- Mrs. Pyramid, iii. 27
- ---- Sir Jacob, grandfather of I. B., iii. 197
- ---- Simon, brother of Margery, iii. 198
- ---- Mrs. Margery, wealthy great-aunt of I. B., the family devices to keep her single, iii. 197, 198, 266
- ---- Nehemiah, reign of Henry II., ii. 72
- ---- Frank, on charms of the country and courtesy of his noble landlord, iii. 292, 293
- ---- Samuel, and his family, a branch of the Bickerstaff family, iii. 387 seq.:
- Sam, his son, iii. 388 seq.:
- Mary, his daughter, iii. 388 seq.
- ---- family, their care in alliances, ii. 189 seq.:
- their women never change their names, ii. 193 note, 409:
- referred to, iv. [206]
- Bickerstaff’s Burying, A; or, Work for the Upholders, by Mrs. Centlivre, i. 36 note
- Bicknell, Mrs. See Mrs. Bignell
- Biddy, Mrs., not very commendable, but very desirable, iv. [202]
- Bignell, Mrs., benefit for, i. 29:
- history of, i. 29 note
- Billingsgate, "the freshest oysters and the plainest English," ii. 175, 176:
- referred to, i. 42; ii. 214; iv. [55]
- Biographia Britannica, i. 355 note
- Birching Lane, i. 232
- Birdcage Walk, ii. 420 note
- Birmingham, ii. 88
- Birth, folly of pride at, i. 101
- Bishopsgate, i. 247 note
- Bishopsgate Street, iv. [39] and note
- Biskett in Shadwell's Epsom Wells, i. 69
- Bisset, Brigadier, iii. 9 note
- "Bite," A, a new way of being witty, i. 107 and note
- Black Horse, the Major at the, iii. 19
- ---- Lion, iv. [149] note
- ---- Prince, professed lover of the brisket, iii. 180
- Black Raven Court, i. 335
- ---- Sea, the, iii. 220
- Blackall, Dr., Bishop of Exeter (Tom Bellfrey), his controversy with Hoadley on passive obedience, i. 359 note and seq.; ii. 8 seq., 17 seq.:
- supported by Oxford, i. 365 and note:
- referred to, i. 300 and note, 301 note
- Blacking, true Spanish, iv. [153] and note
- Blackmore, Sir Richard, his Advice to the Poets, i. 122 and note:
- his Instructions to Vanderbank, i. 32 and note
- Blaregnies, the battle of, i. 102 note; ii. 269
- Blaugies, ii. 107, 108
- Blenheim, battle of, Addison's The Campaign on, i. 353 and note:
- won on beef, iii. 181:
- Prior's poem on, iii. 163 note:
- referred to, i. 28 and note, 54 note; ii. 269; iii. 141, 162 note
- Blessings, real and imaginary, iii. 173, 174
- Blind, a strange cure of the, ii. 41 seq.
- Blockheads always secretly admire one another, iv. [22]
- Bloomsbury, i. 258 note
- ---- Square, i. 161
- Blount (Miss), Pope's epistle to, iv. [336] note
- Bluff, Oliver, indicted for duelling, iv. [349]
- Bluffe, Capt., in Congreve's Old Bachelor, ii. 62 and note
- Blunder, Major, a most expert officer, ii. 88, 89
- Boccalini, Trajan, his Parnassus, iv. [341], [342] note:
- notice of, iv. [341] note, [342] note
- Bodegrave, i. 76
- Bœotians, i. 285
- Bogg, Beau, a sharper, ii. 115, 116
- Bohea, dishes of, ii. 210
- Boileau, i. 218:
- on pedants, iii. 237
- Bolingbroke, iii. 2 note
- Bolton, Duke of, i. 355 note
- ---- Duchess of (? Hebe), i. 355 note and seq.
- "Bombardier, the," ii. 270, 271
- Boneval, General, i. 50, 71
- Boniface, Mr. Ezekiel, gallant of Mrs. Will Rosin, ii. 374
- Book of Martyrs, the, i. 382
- Book for a Corner, by Leigh Hunt, iii. 75 note
- Books, a scheme for regulating the price of, ii. 218
- Bordeaux, President of, iii. 95 note
- ---- letters from, i. 96
- Boristhenes, ii. 47 and note, 134; iii. 336
- "Bos," iv. [363] and note
- Bosnage, M., i. 120
- Bossiney, ii. 1 note
- Bossu, iii. 270
- Boston, iii. 299 note
- Bosworth, the battle of, ii. 285
- Bouchain, iii. 316, 317
- Boufflers, Marshal de, i. 88; ii. 105, 204
- Bouhours, Dominic, a critic, ii. 265
- Bourbon, the House of, i. 88, 246; iv. [87]
- Bourignon, Antoinette de, foundress of the Pietists, iii. 68 and note
- Bournelle, M., author of Annotations on the "Tatler," i. 52 note
- Boutheiller, Nicolas de, a bachelor, ii. 54
- Bow Street, i. 13 note
- Boxing, the noble art of, ii. 303, 304
- Boyer, Abel, Whig journalist, i. 157 and note:
- his Political State of Great Britain, i. 157 note:
- compiled French and English Dictionary, i. 157 note:
- the spurious "Tatler," ii. 347 note
- Boyle, Mr. Secretary, ii. 106 note
- Brabant, i. 229, 354; ii. 254 note
- Bracegirdle, Mrs., described by Cibber, i. 16 note, 17 note:
- left money for maintenance of decayed wits, i. 173 and note:
- referred to, i. 30 note; iii. 282 note
- ---- Justinian, father of Mrs. Bracegirdle, i. 16 note
- Bradfield, i. 32 note
- Bradley, Sir Arthur de (i.e. Sir Ambrose Crowley), his address as alderman, ii. 178 note and seq.
- Braganza, iv. [158]
- Bramhall, Bishop, his answer to Eachard, iv. [294] note
- Brandenburg, Elector of, iv. [227]
- Brasenose College, iv. [324]
- Bray, the Vicar of, iv. [129]
- Bread, the staff of life, not one of the Staffs, i. 105:
- his verses to Louis XIV., i. 206
- Breeding, good, supplanted by a little invention, i. 109
- Brennoralt, by Suckling, i. 329
- Brentford, i. 201 note; iv. [28]
- Bretagne, i. 73
- Brett, Colonel (? Colonel Ramble), i. 68 and note:
- arranged reunion of actors, ii. 334 note
- Briançon, i. 182, 332, 399; ii. 48
- Bribery, i. 340, 341; iii. 53
- Bridewell Hospital, ii. 120 note; iii. 42
- Bridge Foot, iii. 147 note
- Brief Relation, by Luttrell, i. 38 note, 325 note
- Brightland, John, author of A Grammar of the English Tongue, &c., iv. [194] note, [196] note
- Brightly, Lady, iv. [73]
- Briseis, i. 58
- Brisk, Sir Liberal, and the sharpers, ii. 176 seq.
- Bristol, i. 371 note; ii. 171 note
- "Bristol, the," a man-of-war, i. 137
- Brisac, i. 174
- ---- New, to be destroyed, i. 174
- Britain, Great (Felicia), its prosperity, i. 44 seq.; iii. 89 seq.:
- what it owes to Marlborough, i. 54
- Referred to, i. 51, 102, 120, 123, 152, 156, 161, 174, 191, 217, 256, 372, 373; ii. 6, 108, 119, 122, 127, 146 note, 150, 151, 155, 189, 291, 304, 327, 331, 351; iii. 2, 44, 81, 84, 170, 259, 264, 276 note, 290, 299, 376, 377, 390; iv. [132], [195], [233], [302], [303], [328], [353] and note
- British Apollo, The, i. x, 36 note, 280 note, 293 note; ii. 42 note, 155 note; iii. 26 note
- British Mercury, iii. 306 note
- British Museum, ii. 156 note
- British Perfumer, by Charles Lillie, ii. 20 note; iv. [354] note
- British race, the true stock unfit for travel, ii. 302:
- character of, iv. [138]
- Britons, no true, left, ii. 193
- Broad, Mr., i. 317
- ---- Street, i. 334
- Bromeo, a rival of Tabio, ii. 99 seq.
- Brookfield, site of May Fair, i. 42 note
- Broomstaff, i. 102, 104, 290
- Broomstick, Nathaniel, i. 97 note
- Browbeat, Benjamin, indicted for duelling, iv. [349]
- Brown, a print-seller, i. 33 note
- ---- Andrew, a watchmaker, iv. [383]
- ---- Tom, his Amusements, Serious and Comical, ii. 348 note and seq.; iii. 139 note:
- quoted, ii. 121 note
- ---- Will, i. 346
- Browne, Sir Thomas, his Religio Medici, i. 267 note
- Bruges, i. 28
- Brumars, M., died for love of his wife, ii. 54
- Brunett, Colonel, a very pretty fellow, i. 199 seq.
- Brussels, letter from, i. 19, 88, 97, 151, 183, 197, 213, 229, 236, 290, 332; ii. 34
- Brussels Postscript, The, i. 376, 377, 378, 384
- Brutus, i. 70; ii. 140, 141, 223 note; iii. 89, 281
- ---- Junius, ii. 223 note
- Bruyère, his satirical account of the French, ii. 59
- Bubbleboy, Charles (i.e. Charles Mather), a toyman, i. 228; ii. 418
- Buckhurst, Lord, afterwards Earl of Dorset, iv. [235] and note
- Buckingham Court, ii. 125 and note
- Buckingham, Duke of, his The Rehearsal, i. 63 and note; ii. 300 note, 301 note:
- his The Chances, iii. 400:
- referred to, i. 145; ii. 16 note, 285
- Bucklersbury, iv. [381]
- Buckley, Sam, printer of London Gazette, &c., i. 157 note
- Budgell, Dr. Gilbert, iii. 389 note
- ---- Eustace, his son, iii. 275 note, 389 note, 390 note
- Buen Retiro, i. 51
- Bullock, Will, comic actor, his talent for looking like a fool, i. 70:
- compared to Will Penkethman, iii, 385:
- referred to, i. 67 and note, 68 note; ii. 281
- Bull-baiting, i. 235 note; iii. 111 seq.
- Bull-beggar, a, iv. [95] and note
- Bull Inn, iv. [150] note
- Bunhill Row, i. 335, 336
- Buononcini, Giovanni, composer of Camilla, ii. 373 and note
- ---- Giovanni Maria, musician, ii. 373 note
- Burgess, merry Daniel, an Independent minister, ii. 121 and note; iv. [172], [222]
- Burgundy, Duke of, i. 35; ii. 54
- ---- Duchess of, i. 20, 96
- ---- i. 354
- Burnet, Bishop, his History of his Own Time, ii. 294 note:
- referred to, i. 265 note; ii. 154 and note:
- his Travels and Letters, ii. 272 note
- ---- Thomas, his History of Robert Powell the Puppet-Showman, iv. [335] note
- Burney, his History of Music, i. 345 note
- Burridge (or Borago), a cordial, i. 259 note
- Burton, his Anatomy of Melancholy, i. 23 note; iii. 63 note
- Business men allowed to look in the "Mirror of Truth," ii. 344
- Busy, Benjamin, complaint of interruption, iv. [347] seq.
- Busybody, The, by Mrs. Centlivre, i. 135 seq., 163
- Butcher Row, ii. 264 and note
- Butler's Hudibras quoted, iii. 179 note
- Buttler, Captain John, i. 334
- Button's Coffee-house, i. 350 note; ii. 277 note
- Buzzard, Benjamin, indicted for rudeness, iv. [319]
- Byng, Admiral, i. 61, 182
- Byron, Christopher, ii. 317 note
- ---- Captain, i. 87 note
- Cabe, Sergeant, of the Coldstreams, ii. 264
- Cacus, a deer stealer, i. 256
- Cadaroque, a fort of the Troquois, iii. 300, 301
- Cadiz, ii. 19 note
- Cadogan, Lieut.-General, i. 19 and note; ii. 133, 200
- Cadwallader, King, iv. [301]
- Cælia, the history of, iv. [25] seq., [30]
- ----, requests advice in choice between two suitors, iv. [35]-37
- Cæsar, Julius, his modesty at his death, ii. 263:
- in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 228:
- and Alexander compared to Marlborough and Prince Eugène, i. 62, 63
- Referred to, i. 54, 252, 303 note, 304 note, 345; ii. 7 note, 33 and note, 110, 129, 140, 141, 152, 177, 207, 230, 239; iii. 89, 330, 385
- Caius Marius, i. 16 note
- Calais, ii. 27; iv. [249] note
- Calamanco for the waistcoat, ii. 254 and note, 322
- Calamities, real and imaginary, iii. 173, 174
- Calatayud, iv. [158]
- Callicot, Edward, foreman of Cambric's shop, iv. [318]
- Calpurnia, Pliny's letters to, iii. 187 seq.
- Cambric, Charles, indicted for obscene conversation, iv. [317]
- Cambridge, i. 350 note; iii. 159 note, 160 note
- Camilla (Mrs. Tofts), i. 171 and note
- Camilla, opera by Buononcini, i. 171 note, 345 note; ii. 373 note; iii. 6 note
- Camillo (i.e. Lord John Somers), i. 44
- Camomile, Lady, an old fop, iv. [352] seq.
- Campaign, The, by Addison, i. 353 and note
- Campbell, Duncan, a dumb fortune-teller, i. 126 and note:
- Defoe's History of, i. 126 note; iii. 100 note:
- referred to, ii. 125 note
- Cancaon, i. 253
- Cancrum, a very pretty fellow, i. 201
- Candaules, King, iv. [238]
- Canes, not of the family of Staff, i. 104:
- commonly hung from buttons by a ribbon, i. 217 and note:
- persons permitted to wear them, ii. 221, 222:
- clouded canes, ii. 418:
- as necessary as a limb, ii. 360:
- their use defended, ii. 363:
- perfect canes, iii. 153, 154:
- referred to, i. 367; ii. 165, 202, 298, 321, 359, 417
- Canvy Island, iv. [380]
- Capitol, the, ii. 263
- Card-matches, i. 41 and note
- Careless, Frank, a coxcomb, i. 128
- ---- Jack, a love-letter from, i. 251:
- referred to, i. 253
- Careless Husband, by Cibber, i. 91 note
- Carellis, Captain Robert, i. 334
- Carey Street, Lincoln's Inn, ii. 121 note; iii. 98 note
- Carignan, Prince de, i. 95
- Carlisle, Dean of, ii. 120, 171 note
- Carminative Wind-dispelling Pills, iv. [152]
- Carrol, Mr., i. 136 note
- Carry, Joe, a very pretty fellow, i. 201
- Cartail, Robert, of Bucks, i. 301
- Carthage, ii. 229; iii. 361, 379, 392
- Carthaginians, i. 54; ii. 229
- Cartwright, Mr., iii. 6 note
- Case, Dr., his Compendium Anatomicum, i. 169 note:
- referred to, i. 127 note, 168 note; iv. [226]
- Cash, Tom, i. 218
- ---- Sir Tristram (i.e. Sir Francis Child), ii. 58 seq., 75, 76, 77
- Caska, an impudent fellow, iv. [280]
- "Cashu," iv. [250] and note
- Cassander in the Faërie Queene, iv. [16]
- Cassio in Othello, iv. [240] note
- ----, a rich man of excellent understanding, iv. [260]
- Cassius, i. 70; ii. 140, 141; iii. 281
- Castabella, letter to, i. 130, 142
- ---- a prude, iii. 67
- Castel Gandolpho, iii. 375
- Castille, iv. [158]
- Castle Rackrent, by Miss Edgeworth, iv. [261] note
- Castle Street, iv. [329]
- Castlemaine, Earl of, ii. 7 note
- ---- Lady, Pepys on, iii. 296 note
- Caswell (i.e. Dr. Will Taswell), ii. 43 and note
- Catalonia, i. 76, 95; ii. 200
- Cathcart, Lord Charles, third husband of Elizabeth Malyn, iv. [261] note
- Catholic, Roman, a custom in nunneries, ii. 318
- ---- Majesty, her, i. 213
- ---- Majesty, his, ii. 19, 188
- Catiline, Sallust's History of, i. 75; ii. 94, 95; iv. [97] note
- Catinat, i. 234
- Cato, i. 54, 98; ii. 51, 413; iii. 89, 274 note, 385:
- compared to I. B., iii. 256:
- would rather be, than appear good, iii. 132:
- the Censor, iv. [194] note
- Cato of Utica, the younger, ii. 223 note:
- in chamber of Fame, ii. 230
- ---- junior, iv. [13], [14]
- Catullus, his "Lesbia," i. 387:
- his De Suffeno, iii. 259
- Cavaliers on duelling, i. 319, 320
- Cavallier, James, leader of French Protestants, i. 244 note
- Caya, the, i. 149
- "Cebes, the Table of," iii. 250 and note
- Cecil Street, ii. 54, 156 note
- Celamico, iv. [330]
- Celania, a shepherdess in Davenant's The Rivals, iv. [140] note
- Celia, i. 46
- Cenis, Mount, i. 399
- Censor, the, of Great Britain (i.e. I. B.), necessity for, in a free nation, iii. 160:
- defence of I. B.'s way of acting the part, iii. 255:
- accused of partiality, iii. 343:
- referred to, iii. 144, 149, 159, 248, 255 seq., 284; iv. [14], [17], [96], [127], [145], [195], [254], [312]
- Centaur, Lady, in Ben Jonson's Silent Woman, ii. 29 and note
- Centlivre, Mrs. Susannah, her A Bickerstaff's Burying, i. 36 note:
- her The Busybody performed, i. 135 and note, 163:
- notice of her life, &c., i. 136 note
- ---- Joseph, i. 136 note
- Ceres, iii. 341
- Cervantes, his Don Quixote, iii. 331 seq.; iv. [279]
- Cevennes, the, i. 244 and note, 301 note, 332
- Chalcas, i. 58
- Chalmers quoted, i. 102 note
- Chamade, the, defended, i. 362 and note
- Chamberlain, Lord, closes theatre, i. 344 note:
- referred to, i. 16 note, 37 note, 110 note, 250 note; ii. 334 note
- Chamberlayn, Edward and John, authors of Angliæ Notitia; or, The Present State of England, iv. [154] note, [294] note
- Chamillard, M., i. 229, 244
- Chancery Lane, i. 228 note; iii. 147
- Chances, The, by the Duke of Buckingham, iii. 400 and note
- Chanticleer, Job, petition from, iii. 110
- Chapel Clerk, a, ii. 150, 172, 173
- Character of the Present set of Whigs, by J. Trapp, ii. 121 note
- Character of Don Sacheverello, Knight of the Firebrand, in a letter to Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq., iii. 141
- Charing Cross, i. 154, 219 note, 261 note; ii. 125, 126 note, 150; iii. 26 note, 100, 209; iv. [149] note, [150] note, [254], [329] note
- Charlemagne, ii. 300
- Charles Street, i. 342 note
- Charles I., i. 15 note, 83 note; ii. 294 note, 334 note
- ---- II., i. 83 note, 126 note, 127 note, 153 note, 157, 202, 310 note, 317; ii. 246 note, 320 note, 413 note; iii. 113 note; iv. [109] note, [140] note, [150] note, [207], [372] note
- ---- XII., ii. 47 note, 135 note
- ---- King of Spain, i. 49, 60, 61, 67, 71, 73, 94, 174
- Charlettus Percivallo Suo, by Edmund Smith, i. 158 note
- Charlton, Mr. Thomas, his story, ii. 178 note
- Charmont, i. 174
- Charon, the ferryman, iii. 212, 223
- Charterhouse yard, ii. 156 note
- ---- school, ii. 331 note; iv. [201] note
- Chastity, bequeathed by I. B., i. 66:
- to be valued in men as in women, ii. 62:
- more difficult for a young man than generosity, ii. 64
- Chaucer, ii. 425 note
- Cheapside Conduit, ii. 192
- ---- i. 334; ii. 373; iii. 55; iv. [149] note, [153] note, [370]
- Chelsea, some account of the coffee-houses, &c., i. 280 seq.:
- referred to, i. 349 note; ii. 244, 267; iii. 302; iv. [163]
- ---- Hospital, room for news-writers, i. 159:
- referred to, iv. [172]
- ---- fields, i. 389
- Chequers, common name for public houses, ii. 264 note
- Chesterfield, Lord, i. 100 note
- Chetwine, Mrs. (see Clarissa), her history, i. 38 note:
- her marriage, ii. 255 seq.:
- referred to, i. 259, 286; ii. 62
- Chetwynd, William Richard, third Viscount, i. 38 note
- Chetwynd, Walter, M. P. for Stafford, Master of the Buckhounds, i. 38 note
- Cheyne Walk, i. 280 note
- Chicheley, Mrs. Sarah, her beauty and fidelity, ii. 369 and note, 370 note, 379
- ---- Sir Thomas, her husband, ii. 370
- ---- Sir John, one of King William's admirals, her son, ii. 369
- Chichester, Bishop of, i. 124 note
- Child, Sir Francis, banker, i. 349 note; ii. 58
- Children in the Wood, iv. [163]
- Child's Coffee house, iv. [131]
- China, craze for collecting, i. 192 and note
- Chiswell Street, i. 334, 335
- Chloe (i.e. Mrs. Hales), her character, i. 38 note and seq., 64, 259
- ---- advised against the lottery, iv. [53], [72], [73]
- ---- beloved of Philander, ii. 306, seq.
- ---- asks I. B. whether he is quite as good as he seems, iii. 145:
- referred to, ii. 6
- Chloes, the, i. 138
- Chloris, i. 81
- Choice Sentences for the Company of Masons and Bricklayers, by I. B., i. 151
- Christchurch, i. 7 note, 281; ii. 171
- Christian Man's Vocabulary, The, iv. [308]
- Christianity not Mysterious, by Toland, ii. 417 note
- Christ's Hospital, ii. 97, 156 note; iii. 160 note
- Chromius, who sighed for Laura, ii. 37
- Chronicle of the Kings of England, by Baker, iv. [342] and note
- Chryses, King of Chryseis, i. 58 seq.
- Church, bad manners in, iii. 144; iv. [315], [316]
- ---- preferment, a problem in, iv. [167], [168]
- Churchill, Brigadier-General Charles, i. 90 note, 91 note
- Cibber, Caius Gabriel, a sculptor, ii. 14 note; iii. 65 note
- ---- Colley, acknowledges service of Steele to the stage, i. 15 note:
- on Betterton, ibid.:
- on Mrs. Barry, ibid. and 16 note:
- on Mrs. Bracegirdle, i. 17 note:
- on Mrs. Verbruggen, i. 30 note:
- on Underhill, i. 188 note:
- on Sandford, iii. 113 note:
- on John Mills, iv. [42] note:
- on Mrs. Oldfield, iv. [94] note:
- his Careless Husband, i. 91 note; iii. 357:
- his Apology, i. 110 note; iii. 1 note, 355 note:
- complains of money given to singers, &c., i. 110 note:
- his salary, ii. 164 note:
- his Double Gallant; or, Sick Lady's Cure, ii. 201 and note; iv. [262]:
- on Charles II., ii. 413 note:
- his Rival Queens, iii. 399 and note:
- his excellences, iii. 355 note and seq.:
- manager of Drury Lane, iii. 355 note:
- his Love's Last Shift, iii. 356:
- his Lives of the Poets, iii. 390 note
- Referred to, i. 37 note, 358 note; ii. 334 note; iii. 283 note, 384
- Cibber, Mrs., iii. 299 note
- Cicereius, his modesty, ii. 262
- Cicero, two orations of, ii. 152, 153:
- his De Oratore quoted, ii. 155; iv. [219]:
- De Amicitia, ii. 410, 412 note; iii. 45:
- De Officio, ii. 323:
- his Disp. Tusc., ii. 231 note; iii. 62, 116 note; iv. [228]:
- De Sen., iii. 98, 114:
- Pro Archia Oratio, iii. 280; in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 229:
- letters to his wife, iii. 239 seq.
- Referred to, ii. 94, 230; iii. 61, 89, 115, 116; iv. [151], [220], [221], [239], [356]
- ---- the younger, iii. 239, 240, 243
- Cineas, the orator, iv. [45]
- "Cits" distinguished from citizen, i. 211, 212; iii. 256
- City, a fine city widow, i. 127, 128
- City train-bands subject of ridicule, i. 232 and note
- City Shower, The, by Swift, iii. 38 note
- "Civil Husband, The," ii. 27 seq.
- Civil Wars, the, iv. [267]
- Civility, injudicious, a nuisance, iv. [74]
- Clapper, Mr., a great talker, iv. [203]
- Clare Market, a butcher of, attempts to bribe I. B., iii. 178, 179:
- referred to, iii. 110
- Clarence, Duke of, ii. 285
- Clarendon Press, i. 317
- Clarinda, loving Philander, ii. 306 seq.
- Clarinda, caught cold at a masquerade, iii. 171
- ---- beloved of Philander, iii. 297, 298
- ---- her folly, iv. [260]:
- referred to, iv. [142]
- Clarissa (Mrs. Chetwine), her character, i. 39 seq., 48
- ---- the divine, her cruelty, iii. 170
- Clarissas, the, i. 138
- Clark, Dr., oculist, iv. [150] and note
- ---- Joseph, a young posture master, ii. 389 note
- Claviger, i. 256
- Clay Hill, i. 262 note
- Clayton, Thomas, author of Arsinöe, his pastoral masque, iii. 276 and note:
- introduced Italian opera into England, iii. 276 note
- Clement XI., Pope, ii. 142
- ---- Thomas, iv. [315], [327] seq.
- Cleomilla, "a female miner," ii. 271
- Cleomira, an old "fine lady," ii. 86, 87
- Cleontes politely ridiculous, ii. 111
- Cleopatra, i. 93, 346
- ---- her eyes more beautiful than any ear-ring, iii. 195
- Cleora, friend and rival of Diana Doubtful, ii. 328 seq.
- Clergy, the, advised to read celebrated sermons instead of their own, ii. 59:
- poor speakers and readers, ii. 119 seq., 151 seq., 170, 171:
- their language and subjects complained of, iii. 149, 150:
- degradation of, iv. [293] seq., [313], [314]:
- their periwigs, iv. [372] seq.
- Clergy, The Contempt of the, by Dr. John Eachard, ii. 143 note:
- appendix to the same, ii. 143
- Clerkenwell Green, i. 235 note
- Cleveland, Barbara, Duchess of (Villaria), mistress of Charles II., ii. 4, 5 note, 7 note and seq., 14, 87
- Clidamira, a pretty lady, i. 278, 279
- Clinch of Barnet, imitator, ii. 15 and note
- Clod, Colonel, i. 141
- Clodius, iii. 62
- Clogher, Bishop of, iv. [175] note, [176] note, [215] note, [216] note
- Clotilda, rival of Maria, ii. 288
- Club, a, some account of, iii. 98 seq.
- Clubs and Club Life in London, by Timbs, i. 12 note, 280 note; ii. 260 note
- Clubs frequented about 6 P.M., i. 224 note
- ---- not family of Staffs, i. 104
- Clumsy, Sir Tunbelly, in Vanbrugh's Relapse, i. 67 note
- Clytus, iii. 399
- Cock Hall, iii. 110
- ---- fighting, Hogarth's picture of, iii. 111 seq., 112 note
- Cockpit, the, iii. 127 and note
- Codrus, iii. 359, 380
- Coell, Sir John, i. 41 note
- Coffee-houses, different ones for retailing news of different subjects, i. 12, 13:
- the histories of, i. 12 note, 13 note:
- natural resort after plays, i. 32:
- politicians of the, i. 92; ii. 321; iv. [360] seq.:
- frequented at about 6 P.M., i. 224 note:
- of Edinburgh, iv. [383]
- Referred to, ii. 110, 149, 353; iii. 65, 109, 147; iv. [254]
- See Smyrna, White's, Will's, Button's, Young Man's, the Crown, the Chelsea, the Grecian, Morris's, St. James's, Tom's, Garraway's, Mandoe's, the Rainbow, Dick's, Child's, Jacob's, Denis's, Lloyd's, The Old Man's, Union, Jack's.
- Coggan, Henry, translator of Mendez Pinto's travels, iv. [288] note
- Coke, Mr., i. 38 note
- ---- Justice, his Institutes of the Laws of England, iii. 107 note, 389
- Colbert, i. 74 note, 174 note
- Coldstream Guards, ii. 315 note
- Coleman Street, i. 334
- Coleridge on Steele, i. xx
- Collier, William, M.P., seizes Drury Lane, ii. 334 note:
- his struggle with Rich, ii. 336 note and seq.
- ---- Jeremy, his attack on the immorality of the stage, ii. 336 note:
- his Essays upon several Moral Subjects, iv. [275] note:
- on fortitude, iv. [275]:
- referred to, i. viii
- Collins, his Discourse of Free-Thinking, iii. 115 note
- Colloquies of Luther, iv. [52] note
- Colmar, i. 174 note
- Cologne, Elector of, i. 339
- Colson, John, a punning Cambridge scholar, ii. 39 and note
- Colt, Sir Henry (Trick Track), i. 124 and note
- "Colt's Tooth," a, iii. 198 and note
- Coltstaff, i. 130
- Comber, James, a churchwarden, ii. 43 note
- Combes, Daniel, second husband of Dorothy Addison, iv. [204] note
- Comedians-in-ordinary to his Majesty, i. 16 note
- Comedies reflect the taste of the age, i. 341 seq.:
- subscription for the encouragement of new, i. 189
- Comma, Jack, a man of learning without sense, ii. 65-67
- ---- Mrs. (Mary Astell). See Astell, Mary
- Commachio, i. 50, 61, 72
- "Commodes" as head-dresses, iii. 192 and note
- Commonwealth, the interests of the, i. 11
- Comparison between Two Stages, by Gildon, ii. 334 note
- Compendium Anatomicum, &c., by Dr. Case, i. 169 note
- Competency, iii. 52
- Complacency, iii. 36
- Complete Gamester, by Strutt, iv. [250] note
- Compostella, iii. 63 note
- Compter (or Counter), debtor's prison, i. 233 and note
- Comus, Milton's, quoted, ii. 332, 333
- Condé, i. 174, 291, 299, 339; ii. 97, 109
- Condoling Letter to "The Tatler," A, iv. [172], [173] note
- Confederacy, by Vanbrugh, i. 111 note
- Congreve, his Love for Love performed, i. 15 and note, 16 note:
- his Old Bachelor, i. 81 and note; ii. 62 note:
- The Drummer dedicated to, i. 155 note; iii. 227 note, 292 note:
- his The Way of the World, iv. [367] and note:
- referred to, i. 17 note, 29 note, 395 note; iv. [310] note
- Coniers, John, an apothecary, i. 179 note
- Conjectura Cabalistica, by Henry More, i. 262 note
- Consbruck, i. 95
- Conscience, the Court of, iv. [286]
- Constant, Col., love-letter from, i. 252, 253
- Constant Couple, The; or Trip to the
- Jubilee, by Farquhar, i. 125, 163; iii. 356 note
- Constantia, iii. 400
- Constantine, founder of "The Grecian," i. 13 note
- Constantinople, i. 61; iii. 222
- Contention, iii. 36
- Conversation, perplexed by pretenders, i. 7:
- the decay of, i. 109:
- the art of, iv. [154] seq.
- Cook, a fencing-master, i. 42 note
- Cooke, translator of A Reprehension of Naked Breasts and Shoulders, iv. [109] note
- Cooper, John, a constable, i. 42 note
- Copenhagen, i. 72, 112
- Copper Office, ii. 84
- Coppersmith, Harry, money-lender, his character, ii. 57, 58, 84
- ---- Will, of great credit among the Lombards, ii. 57
- Copswood, Mrs. Alse (Archbishop of York), i. 300 and note
- Copyright Act, ii. 217 note
- Coquette, a converted, i. 86, 87:
- character of, i. 225 seq.:
- the humour of a, iii. 69 seq.
- Cordwainers' Hall, ii. 339
- Corelli, Archangelo, violinist, ii. 373 and note
- Coriana, a faithful lover, ii. 40, 41
- Corinna, mistress of Limberham (i.e. Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas), i. 55 note, 396 note
- ---- complains of flatteries in a stage-coach, iv. [107]
- ---- i. 46
- Cornhill, i. 387 note, 390; ii. 373; iii 169
- "Cornwall, the lovers of," ii. 234
- Correggio, iv. [322]
- Correspondence, all over the world arranged for, i. 12
- Correspondents, contributions from unknown, i. 4
- Corvix for Cervix, iii. 87 note
- Corydon, iv. [250]
- Cosmelia, the divine, iv. [352]
- Costume, a cyclopædia of, iii. 192 note
- Coulson, Tom (Aurengezebe), i. 371 note and seq.
- Country, the lasting pleasures, iii. 337 seq.
- ---- gentlemen, their strange habits, ii. 321 seq.:
- town terms explained to, i. 175 seq., 198 seq., 201 seq., 223 seq.:
- the genuine, a fine character, iii. 291:
- fashion in coats, iv. [82]
- Country Wife, The, by Wycherley, performed, i. 29 seq.
- Coupler, honest, iv. [31]
- Couplet, Josiah, letter from, ii. 121
- Courage, bequeathed by I. B., i. 66
- Courant, The, i. 347. See Daily Courant
- ---- the Scots, iv. [383]
- Court of Requests, the, iv. [176]
- Courtier, a letter from a, ii. 207
- Courtley, Will, a model of breeding, i. 250
- Courtly, Lady, a fine talker, ii. 93 seq.
- ---- Tom, the pink of courtesy, iv. [57]
- Courtray, i. 73, 88, 229, 237
- Courts, their effect on character, iii. 259 seq.
- Courtwood, Mrs., her visiting list, ii. 397
- Covent Garden, i. 42 note, 355, 373; iii. 299 and note, 336:
- iv. [327] note, [335] note
- Coventry, Earl of, i. 42 note
- Coverley, the Roger de, i. 158 note; iv. [342] note
- Covetous man, a mad man, iii. 65
- Cowley as a critic, iv. [199]:
- quoted, iv. [278]
- Cowper, his John Gilpin, i. 232 note
- ---- Spencer, Judge of Common Pleas, i. 317 and note
- ---- William Lord, Baron of Wingham, vol. iii. dedicated to, iii. 1 and note, 90
- Coxcomb, a, his goods sold by auction, ii. 401, 402, 416 seq.
- Coxcombs, a new kind of, ii. 61, 70:
- allowed to retain their fashions, ii. 320 seq., 359 seq.:
- concerning various, i. 309 seq.:
- men saved from being, iv. [24]:
- a fool of parts, iv. [77]:
- the worst kind—professed wits, iv. [124] seq.
- Crabtree, Captain, haberdasher, i. 232, 233
- ---- the, iii. 385
- "Crack, a," iii. 332 and note
- "Crackers," &c., ii. 272; iii. 258
- Craftsman, The, iv. [195] note
- Crassau, General, i. 71, 204
- Crassus, Maria's wealthy suitor, ii. 286 seq.:
- his woods and forests, iii. 355
- Crawley, his show, i. 140 note
- Cream, beautifying, iv. [153] and note
- "Creation of the World," a puppet-show, i. 140 and note
- Cressy won on beef and mutton, iii. 179
- Cripplegate, i. 335 note
- Critic, a, character of, i. 241 seq.; iii. 269 seq.:
- sort of Puritan in the polite world, i. 242
- Critical Specimen, The, iii. 249 note
- Cromwell, Henry (Sir Jaffety Trippet, the fortune hunter; Squire Easy, the amorous bard; Sir Timothy Tittle, the critic; and (?) Tom Spindle), i. 380 note and seq., iii. 263 note, 270 seq.
- ---- Oliver, i. 153 note, 179 note; ii. 14 and note, 279; iv. [268]:
- his coins, iv. [249] and note, [269] note
- Crooked Lane, i. 275
- Cross, Thomas, ii. 275
- Cross-grain, Nick, a writer of anagrams, ii. 65
- Cross-stitch, Mrs. Catherine, inventor of a new fashion in petticoats, ii. 418
- Crowdero in Hudibras, i. 377
- Crowley, Sir Ambrose (Sir Arthur de Bradley), ii. 179 and note
- Crown and Cushion, the, iii. 299 note
- ---- Coffee house, i. 293 note
- Crowther, Colonel Thomas, i. 146 note and seq.:
- verses by, i. 377 note
- Cudgels not of the family of Staffs, i. 104
- Culverin (or Gun) of Wapping, i. 200, 201 and note
- Cunning condemned, i. 8
- Cupid, i. 46, 225, 395; iii. 36, 78; iv. [223], [250]:
- a perverse, iv. [321], [322]
- ---- a dog, iii. 39 seq.
- Curatii, i. 319
- Curll, i. 15 note
- Curtius, Quintus, quoted, i. 74; iv. [80] seq.
- Custom, force of, i. 239, 240
- ---- House, i. 390
- Cutter, a sharper, ii. 177
- Cutts, Lord, his verses quoted, i. 47 and note:
- referred to, i. vii
- Cyder, by John Philips, iii. 23 note; iv. [270] note
- Cymon, a young fellow grown sprightly, ii. 22
- Cynthia, a coquette, ii. 382 seq.
- Cynthio (i.e. Viscount Hinchinbroke), the story of, i. 14, 15 and note:
- absorbed by passion for a lady who passed his window in a coach, i. 14, 15:
- the only true lover of the age, i. 47 and note:
- on love, i. 184 seq.:
- a letter from his mistress, i. 186 seq.:
- gives up Clarissa, his letter to Elizabeth Popham (i.e. Steele's to Prue), i. 286, 287:
- his passion for Clarissa, ii. 62 seq.:
- his reflections on the story of Scipio, ii. 64:
- his death and epitaph, ii. 255, 256
- Referred to, i. 47, 48
- Cyrus the Great, i. 345, 358
- Czar, the, ii. 47 and note, 67; iii. 336
- Dacier, the critic, iii. 272; iv. [139]
- Dactile, Little Mr. Jasper, at work on a poem of advice to a young virgin who knits, i. 34, 35:
- a wit, i. 243:
- on ridicule, ii. 100 seq.
- Daily Courant, i. 36 note, 157 note, 159 and note, 293 note; ii. 42 note, 182 note, 211 note; iii. 220, 277 note, 335; iv. [150] note, [152] note, [154] note
- Daintry, innkeeper, i. 156 note
- Dainty, Lady, refuses to eat, ii. 201
- ---- Dame Winifred, her reputation, iv. [318]
- ---- Richard, husband of Dame Winifred, iv. [318]
- ---- of Soho, i. 302
- Dale, Will, churchwarden, ii. 43 note
- Damasippus, a victim of vanity, iii. 372
- Damia, a very pretty lady, i. 278, 279
- Damon, his courtship, ii. 299:
- lover of Clarinda, iv. [260]
- ---- i. 300
- Dampier, Will, his fat boatswain, ii. 95, 96
- Danae, iv. [216] note
- Dancing-master, a, ii. 273 seq.
- Daniel, Cromwell's mad porter, ii. 14 and note
- ---- Samuel, the historian, iii. 180; iv. [180], [181]
- Danish blood in England, ii. 193
- Dantzic, the plague at, ii. 324 and note:
- referred to, i. 77, 236
- Dapper, Tim, a very inconsiderable fellow, ii. 254
- ---- a, ii. 321; iii. 256
- ----, Parson (i.e. Joseph Trapp), his character, ii. 121 seq.
- Dares, i. 257
- Darius, iii. 400; iv. [78], [79]
- Dashwell, Nehemiah, i. 162
- Dassapas, Tom, his potion, i. 393
- Dathan, a peddling Jew, iv. [301] seq.
- Dauphin, the, i. 144, 305; ii. 54
- Dauphiné, i. 51, 94, 182, 354; ii. 48
- Davenant, Sir William, his Siege of Rhodes, i. 172 note:
- his alterations of Shakespeare, ii. 141 note:
- his theatrical company, ii. 163 note:
- his Rivals, iv. [140] note:
- referred to, i. 37 note
- ---- Lady, i. 15 note
- Davenport, Major-General Sherington, iii. 9 note; iv. [376] and note
- David, iii. 391; iv. [308]
- Davis, Edward, ii. 179 note
- ----, Mrs. Mary, dancer, mistress of Charles II., iv. [140] note
- Dawks, Ichabod, a news-writer, i. 158 and note:
- his Letter printed to imitate handwriting, iii. 334 and note, 335:
- his character, iii. 335
- De Duello, by Selden, i. 255 note
- De Poematum Cantu et Viribus Rhythmi, by Vossus, i. 282 note
- De Usu Partium, by Galen, iii. 28
- Dean Street, iv. [148] note
- Death, considerations on, iii. 350 seq.:
- as treated by Swift, Addison, and Steele, iii. 351 note
- Decius, the abandoned, i. 364, 365
- Dedication, an ideal, i. 348, 349:
- some thoughts on, iii. 327 seq.
- Defence of the Awkward Fellows against the Smarts, &c., ii. 80
- Defoe, Daniel, his Life of Campbell, the fortune-teller, i. 126 note; iii. 100 note:
- wrongly supposed author of Memoirs of the Life and Adventures of Signor Rozelli, i. 83 note:
- on the storm of 1703, i. 353 note:
- his Journey through England, i. 387 note:
- regret at Steele answering his critics, iv. [173] note:
- his Apparition of Mrs. Veal, iv. [316] note:
- his (?) Groans of Great Britain, iv. [335] note
- Referred to, i. 31 note; 158 note, ii. 135 note
- Delamira (Lady Jane Hamilton?) resigns her fan, ii. 20 seq.
- Deleau, Mrs., a widow, ii. 4 note
- Delia, ii. 6; iii. 190
- ----, a beauty within the power of art, ii. 56
- Demosthenes, ii. 94, 119, 120, 153; iii. 360; iv. [221]
- Denham, his Directions to a Painter, i. 34 and note
- Denis's Coffee-house, iv. [252] note
- Denmark, King of, i. 50, 51, 60, 61, 72, 76, 129, 183, 204, 213, 236, 276, 304; iii. 85 note
- Dennis, John (Rinaldo Furioso, "Critic of the Woful Countenance"), his Essay on Operas, i. 40 note:
- his invention of stage thunder, i. 346 and note:
- his Appius and Virginia, i. 346 note:
- referred to, iii. 249 note
- Dentifrice, Mrs., i. 118
- D'Epingle, Madame, a doubtful character, i. 68 seq., 273 note, 278
- Derision. See Ridicule
- Derwentwater, Earl of, iv. [140] note
- Description of the Morning, by Wagstaff (i.e. Swift), i. 3, 82, 111; iv. [216] note
- Desdemona, iii. 281:
- her character, iii. 383
- D'Estain, Count, i. 73
- Deucalion, preserved at the destruction of mankind, iii. 173
- Devereux Court, a duel at, i. 13 note
- Devil, the Old, at Temple Bar, ii. 215
- Devillier (or Duvillier), a hairdresser, iii. 275
- D'Harcourt, M., i. 88; ii. 73
- Dialogues on Medals, by Addison, i. 152 note
- Dialogue, a, on the present wits, i. 107 seq.
- Diana, i. 42; iii. 341; iv. [262]
- Dick's Coffee-house (also called Richard's), ii. 260 and note, 279
- Dicky, a cruel boy, ii. 411, 412, 415
- Dictinna, her character, i. 116 seq.
- Didapper, Mr., persists in red-heeled shoes, ii. 127
- Dido, i. 57; iii. 105:
- the shade of, iii. 215
- Diego, Don. See Don Diego Dismallo
- Diego, the sexton in Beaumont and Fletcher's Spanish Curate, iv. [199]
- Diet of the City considered by Tatler, iii. 179 seq.:
- beef and mutton recommended, ibid.:
- foolish custom in, iii. 181 seq.
- Dieuport assisted to introduce Italian operas to England, iii. 276 note
- Difference between Scandal and Admonition, by I. B., i. 151
- Dimple, Jack, a pretty fellow, i. 176, 177
- ---- Mrs. Winifred, betrothed to Mr. Ezekiel Boniface, ii. 374
- ---- Lady, iii. 273
- Dioclesian, i. 346
- Diogenes the Laertian, ii. 231
- Diomedes, i. 59, 60
- Dipple, Mrs., i. 118
- Directions to a Painter, by Denham, i. 34 and note
- Directions to the Waiting-Maid, by Swift, iv. [294] note
- Discourse of Free-Thinking, iii. 115 note
- Discourse on Satire, by Dryden, ii. 425 note
- Discretion, iii. 36
- Disguises of Cunning, Vanity, and Affectation stripped off, by I. B., i. 8
- Dismallo, Don Diego (name afterwards given to the Earl of Nottingham), i. 184, 259, 323 and note
- Dispensary, The, by Sir Samuel Garth, i. 127 note; ii. 208 note, 376
- "Dissertation on Bath Waters," i. 133 note
- Dissimulation distinguished from simulation, iv. [97] seq.
- Distaff, Mrs. Jenny, half-sister to I. B., letters from, i. 89 seq., 270 seq., 291 seq., 300 seq.; iv. [256]:
- meaning of the name, i. 104:
- her instructive autobiography, i. 272 seq.:
- devoted to the interests of her own sex, i. 305:
- consulted about the Chamber of Fame, ii. 136:
- a husband for, ii. 188 seq.:
- her lover Tranquillus, ii. 250 seq.:
- as a wife, ii. 366 seq.:
- should not be called madam, iii. 143:
- a visit from, iii. 155 seq.:
- her gay equipage, iii. 156, 157
- Distaff, Mrs. Jenny, referred to, i. xvi, 93 note, 97 note, 290, 313, 314 note, 329; ii. 247; iii. 284, 365
- "Distress of the News-Writers," by Addison, i. 4
- Divination, the gift of, possessed by I. B., i. 14
- Divito (i.e. Christopher Rich), his management of the theatre, ii. 336 note:
- referred to, i. 110 and note
- Dockwra, William, established Penny Post in London, ii. 130
- Dodwell, Henry, A. M., the Nonjuror, his Epistolary Discourse, proving that the Soul is a Principle naturally Mortal, iii. 23 and note, 375
- Doelittle, Mrs. Mary, her scoured petticoat, iv. [316]
- Dog, a fine lady's, his illness and cure, iii. 39 seq.
- Doggett, Thomas, in Love for Love, i. 17 note:
- managed Drury Lane with Steele, i. 17 note:
- in the Old Bachelor, iii. 405, 406, 407:
- referred to, iii. 38, 282 note
- Dogood, Mr., his foolish story, iv. [368]
- Dogs (or curs), i.e. sharpers, ii. 125 seq., 142, 143, 157 seq., 175 seq.:
- of the feminine gender, ii. 137
- Doll, i. 89 note
- Domestic news from St. James's Coffee-house, i. 13
- Domitian, i. 257; iv. [236]
- Dompre, Lieut.-General, i. 229
- Don Diego. See Dismallos
- ---- de Miranda, in Don Quixote, ii. 148 note
- ---- John, iii. 400
- Don Quixote, Comical History of, i. 36 note:
- translated by Jervas, i. 39 note:
- the barber in, i. 282:
- translated by Motteux, ii. 377 note:
- reflections on, iii. 331 seq.:
- said to destroy spirit of gallantry, iv. [126]:
- referred to, i. 239, 258; ii. 148
- Don Quixote, by D'Urfey, i. 36 note; iv. [102] note
- Donauwerth, battle of, i. 20 note
- Donne, his Sermons, iv. [342] note
- Dorchester, the coach to, iii. 158
- Dorinda and Sylvia, dialogue between, by Mrs. Singer, i. 92 and note
- Dorinda (in Spectator), i. 216 note:
- referred to, iv. [25] and note
- Dorset, Earl of, i. 112 and note:
- a dedication to, iv. [102] note
- Dorset Gardens, comedians at, i. 36 note, 37 note:
- Theatre Royal in, iii. 58 note:
- referred to, ii. 163 note
- Douay, i. 19 note, 174, 205, 269, 339; iii. 245, 316 and note, 321, 333 note, 379
- Double, Peter, indicted for discourtesy, iv. [348], [349]
- Double Gallant, The; or, The Sick Lady's Cure, by Cibber, ii. 201 and note; iv. [262]
- Doubt, Mr. Nicholas, of the Inner Temple, ii. 257 seq., 290
- Doubtful, Diana, her distresses, ii. 328 seq.:
- I. B.'s cure, ii. 329 seq.
- Dover, Henry Lord, i. 41 note
- Dover Cliff, in Shakespeare's King Lear, iii. 20
- Downes, the prompter, an Epistle from, i. 4; iii. 343 note, 408 seq.:
- his Roscius Anglicanus; or, Historical Review of the Stage, iii. 408 note:
- (? J. Osborne, Duke of Leeds), iii. 407 note
- Dozers, the, their character, iv. [61] seq.
- Drachm, the learned Dr., i. 383
- Dragon, of Wantley, the, i. 239 note
- ---- a kind of cane, iii. 154 and note
- Drake, Sir Francis, iv. [266]
- Drawcansir, in The Rehearsal, i. 157 note
- Dresden, i. 50, 51, 183, 204, 213, 276
- Dress, simplicity in, recommended, i. 8:
- extravagance in, condemned, i. 253, 254:
- in house, rules for, iv. [93] seq.
- Driden, John, of Chesterton, Dryden's Epistle to, ii. 166 and note
- Drinking, the vice of the country, iii. 289 seq.:
- the habit of, iv. [229] seq., [278] seq.
- Dromio, a sharper, ii. 51
- Drummer, The, dedicated to Congreve, i. 155 note, 292 note; iii. 227 note:
- referred to, i. 158 note
- Drumstick, Dorothy, iii. 143, 144
- Drury Lane, under Steele and Doggett, i. 17 note:
- closed, i. 250 and note:
- sale of its goods and movables, i. 344 seq., 358:
- its monopoly broken, ii. 334 note
- Referred to, i. 24 note, 36 note, 42 note, 110 note, 188 note, 373; ii. 336, 420; iii. 276 note
- Drybones, Tom, a very pretty fellow, i. 201
- Dryden, John, at Will's, i. 13 note:
- his state of Innocence and Fall of Man compared to Paradise Lost, i. 55, 56:
- referred to, ii. 92 note:
- as Bayes in The Rehearsal, i. 63 note:
- his Miscellany Poems, i. 92 and note:
- his All for Love, i. 93 and note:
- his Almanzor and Almahide, i. 114, 115 and note:
- translation of Helen's Epistle to Paris (Ovid), i. 117 note:
- on a critic, i. 242:
- his Of Heroic Plays, i. 367 note:
- his The Kind Keeper, i. 396 note:
- on Duke of Buckingham, ii. 16 and note:
- his definition of art, ii. 92 note and seq.:
- note on Bishop Burnet, ii. 154 note:
- his Epistle to John Driden of Chesterton, ii. 166 and note:
- his Discourse on Satire, ii. 424 note, 425 note:
- his Translation of Virgil recommended, iii. 217:
- his Hind and Panther parodied by Prior and Montague, iv. [3] note:
- his Translation of Juvenal, iv. [136] note
- Referred to, i. 7 note, 18, 303 note; ii. 249 note, 334 note; iv. [226]
- Dublin, theatre at, i. 33 note:
- referred to, iv. [208], [209]
- Duck Island, Governor of, ii. 413 note
- Duel over meaning of a Greek word, i. 13 note
- Duelling, to be extirpated with gaming, i. 5:
- prompted by a false sense of honour, i. 6:
- the folly of, i. 207 seq.:
- the spirit of, i. 220 seq.:
- a subtle question on, i. 230 seq.:
- thoughts on, i. 231 seq.:
- effect on men of the city, i. 233 seq.:
- survival of knight-errantry, i. 239:
- kept up by force of custom, i. 239, 240:
- history of, i. 254 seq.:
- not known in countries of the South or East, i. 255:
- a place for, i. 258 and note:
- a bloodless duel, i. 307, 308:
- a dialogue on, i. 318 seq.:
- duellists not men of honour, iii. 256:
- opposed, iv. [59] note
- Duke (now Sardinia) Street, iii. 410 note
- Duke of Marlborough's Head in Fleet Street, iii. 82 note, 83 note
- Duke's company, the, ii. 163 note; iii. 408 note
- Dull, the art of being, iv. [193] seq.
- Dulwich Hospital founded by the actor Alleyn, i. 172 note
- Dunciad, The, i. 346 note; ii. 261 note
- Dunkirk, i. 20, 173, 206, 362; iii. 336
- Dunton quoted, iii. 332 note
- D'Urfey, Tom, his character, i. 18, 19 and note:
- his Modern Prophets, i. 18 note, 42 note, 100 note, 348 and note:
- his Wit and Mirth, a song in, called "The Young Maid's Portion," iii. 192 note:
- his The Old Mode and the New; or, Country Miss with her Furbelow, iii. 196 note:
- that "ancient lyric," iv. [102] and note:
- his "Second Part of Don Quixote," i. 36 note; iv. [102] note
- Quoted, iii. 66
- Durham Street, i. 219 note
- ---- Yard, i. 219; iv. [379]
- Dursley, James, Viscount, i. 137 and note
- Dutch, character of the, iii. 82:
- mails, iii. 218:
- nightingales (i.e. frogs), iv. [207]
- Duumvir (i.e. Duke of Ormond?), ii. 35 note and seq.
- Duvillier, i.e. a full-bottomed wig, i. 238 and note, 239
- D'Uzeda, Duke, i. 71
- Dyctinna, a country beauty, iv. [262], [263]
- Dyer's Letter, i. 158 and note; ii. 261; iv. [103]
- Eachard, Dr. John, his Contempt of the Clergy and Religion Inquired into, ii. 143 note:
- referred to, iv. [294] note
- Earl of Essex, a play by John Banks, i. 125 and note
- Earl's Court, iii. 302
- Early hours, in praise of, iv. [336] note and seq.
- East India Company founded, iv. [3] note
- ---- Indies, iii; 154 iv. [204] note
- Easy, Dick (? Henry Cromwell), his ambition to be a poet, i. 380 note; iii. 263
- ---- Lady, her visiting on the wrong days, ii. 397
- ---- Sir Charles, in Careless Husband, iii. 357 note
- Eaters, the, distinguished from swallowers, iv. [61]
- Eaton Square, i. 280 note
- Ebenezer, an ill-used lover, iv. [365] seq.
- Eboracensis (i.e. Robert Hunter), a wise governor, ii. 145 seq.
- Ecclesiastical thermometer, iv. [128] seq.
- Edgeworth, Miss, her Castle Rackrent, iv. [261] note
- Edgworth, Colonel Ambrose, a dandy, iv. [254] and note
- Edinburgh, fops in, iii. 165: referred to, iv. [260], [382], [383]
- ---- reprint of Tatler, iv. [382]
- Editions, beautiful, dying out, ii. 351
- Edward, Prince, ii. 285
- ---- IV., his sons, ii. 285
- Egerton, his Memoirs of Gamesters, ii. 14 note, 178 note
- Eitherside, Bridget, a letter from, ii. 147
- Elector, the, ii. 73
- ---- Palatine, i. 183
- Electuary, an, iv. [150] and note, 353 and note
- Eleonora would conceal her grey hairs, ii. 131
- Elizabeth, Queen, a speech by, quoted, ii. 180;
- her maids of honour allowed three rumps of beef at breakfast, iii. 180
- Referred to, iii. 149; iv. [103], [180], [266], [267], [305]
- ----, Mrs., her youth, iii. 319
- Elliot, Mr., of St. James's Coffee-house, scheme to keep the lottery, iv. [43];
- referred to, iv. [48], [52], [72]
- Elmira, a faithful spouse, ii. 27 seq.
- Eloquence and graceful action, ii. 118 seq.
- Elow Oh Kaom, Iroquois Chief of River Sachem and the Ganajohhom Sachem, iii. 299 note, 301
- Elpenor among the shades, iii. 200
- Elscrikius, Dr. Johannes, Professor in Anatomy, iv. [112]
- Elstob, Elizabeth, author of Anglo-Saxon Grammar, ii. 104 and note
- Elvas, i. 106, 150
- Elysian Fields, i. 77, 78
- Elysium, ii. 308; iii. 216, 226
- Elzevir, ii. 218, 347 note; iii. 234, 249
- Emilia, a letter from, ii. 55:
- a town wit not appreciated in the country, ii. 56 seq.
- Emma, Queen, ii. 104
- Emmanuel College, iii. 160 note
- Emperor, the German, i. 54 note, 70, 72, 95, 145, 174; iv. [148]
- "Empire of Beauty," an essay contemplated by I. B., i. 90 seq.
- Empty, Tom, iii. 154
- Encheiridion of Epictetus, ii. 145
- Enfield Chase, iv. [261]
- England, papers published for the use of the people of, i. 11:
- duels in, conducted with good breeding, i 235:
- mixed blood in, ii. 193:
- referred to, iii. 335, 337
- ---- Sir George, on the victory at Malplaquet, ii. 113, 114
- English, the, love blood in their sport, iii. 113 and note:
- character of, iv. [97] seq.
- English Grammar, an, by M. Maittaire, iv. [196] note
- English Mirror, The, by George Whetstone, i. 340
- English Post, The, iii. 220
- English Rudiments of Grammar for the Anglo-Saxon Tongue, ii. 104 and note
- Entellus, i. 257
- Entertainment, articles of, under White's Chocolate-house, i. 12:
- means of, will never fail The Tatler, i. 14
- Envious man, a madman, iii. 65
- Envy, its cause and cure, iv. [163] seq.
- Epaminondas, ii. 223 note
- Epicene gender, the, i. 225
- ---- (Mrs. Manley), her Memoirs from the Mediterranean, ii. 104:
- her Secret Memoirs and Manners of Several Persons of Quality of both Sexes, from the New Atalantis, and her Memoirs of Europe towards the close of the Eighth Century, ii. 104 note
- Epictetus, his Encheiridion, ii. 145:
- referred to, iii. 346; iv. [363]
- Epicurus, iv. [21]
- Epistles of Phalaris, the controversy on, i. 66 note
- Epistolarum Obscurorum Virorum, dedicated to Steele, iv. [21] seq.
- Epistolary Discourse concerning the Soul's Immortality, by Henry Dodwell, iii. 23 note, 375
- Epitaph of Don Alonso, ii. 256
- Epithets of Virgil more judicious than those of Homer, i. 57
- Epsom, the waters of, i. 293:
- news from, i. 379 seq.:
- referred to, i. 381; ii. 111
- Epsom Wells, by Th. Shadwell, i. 70, 293 note
- Equanimity, the virtue of, iii. 321 seq.
- Equipages, the folly of gay, iii. 156, 157, 161 seq.
- Erasmus, his Adagia, i. 360 note
- Eriphyle, iii. 202
- "Error," the den of, in the Faërie Queene, iv. [173]
- Esquire, the title, its uses and abuses, i. 160 seq.; iii. 256
- Essay on the Invention of Samplers, by Mrs. Arabella Manly, school-mistress, i. 41 and note
- ----, concerning the Human Understanding, by Locke, i. 328 and note
- ----, on Modern Education, by Swift, i. 12 note
- Essays, Divine, Moral, and Political, iii. 407 note
- Essays upon several Moral Subjects, by J. Collier, iv. [275] note
- Essex, Earl of, i. 346
- ---- manners in, i. 162
- ---- the Hundreds of, ii. 32
- ---- Street, i. 161; ii. 132
- Estcourt, Richard, comedian (Tom Mirrour), as Sergeant Kite in Farquhar's Recruiting Officer, i. 169 and note:
- anecdote of, ii. 15 seq.:
- his salary, ii. 164 note:
- referred to, iii. 92 note; iv. [20]
- Este, Marquis d', ii. 34
- Esteem of others the principal desire of mankind, iv. [64] seq.
- Eucrates, a man of ill-regulated benevolence, iii. 322 seq.
- Eugène, Prince, and Marlborough, compared to Cæsar and Alexander, i. 62, 63:
- referred to, i. 44, 51, 72, 97, 143, 155, 157, 197, 213, 214, 234, 237, 269, 290; ii. 4, 9, 108, 109; iii. 316
- Eugenio, his criticism of bad plays, i. 74, 75:
- on pictures, iii. 355
- Euphusius, too good-natured, ii. 195 seq.
- Euripides, a tragedy of, iii. 47 seq.
- Eusebius, understands familiarity, iv. [156], [157]
- Eustace, Francis, the terrible effects of his passion, iii. 306 note and seq.
- Eutrapelus, a humourist mentioned by Horace, iii. 198
- Evance, Sir Stephen, banker, i. 349 and note
- Evander, iii. 21
- Evans, i. 29
- Eve, a puppet, i. 140:
- tempted by toad, iv. [211]:
- as a wife, ii. 424; iii. 188, 189; iv. [116], [117], [126], [127]:
- referred to, i. 56, 330, 381; iv. [249]
- Everbloom, Lady, compliment to, iv. [319]
- Every Man out of his Humour, by Ben Jonson, i. 341
- Examiner, The, i. 7 note, 84 note, 121 note, 126 note, 184 note, 201 note, 245 note, 300 note; ii. 417 note; iii. 2 note, 71 note, 218 note, 343 note, 366 note, 395 note, 396 note, 407 note; iv. [13] note, [85] note, [118] note, [173] note, [187], [219] note, 222 note
- Exchange, the Royal, an angel in, iii. 169:
- referred to, i. 65, 170 note, 293 note, 390; ii. 15 note, 42 note, 139, 156 note, 420; iii. 25, 120, 133, 147; iv. [132], [241], [252] note, [259], [300]
- ---- the New, some account of, i. 219 and note:
- three goddesses in, iii. 139, 169:
- referred to, i. 170 note
- Exchange Alley, i. 387 note, 390; ii. 156 note; iii. 178
- Exchequer bills, first issue of, iv. [3] note
- Exercise at arms, an, i. 333 seq.
- Exeter, ii. 389 note; iii. 401
- ---- College, ii. 187
- Exilles, i. 174; ii. 48
- Extortion, iii. 53
- Fabio, beloved of Diana Doubtful, ii. 328 seq.
- "Fable of the Worlds," i. 350, 351
- Fabulous histories, moral satisfaction in, iii. 17
- Faërie Queene, iv. [7], [14], [16]
- Fair, Mayfair, i. 41 note, 42 note:
- Bartholomew, i. 42 note:
- at Southwark, i. 140 note
- Fair sex, the, to be entertained in the Tatler, i. 12, 142, 143:
- title chosen in their honour, i. 12:
- usually love those who look the other way, i. 47:
- how to prevail with them, i. 128:
- outdone by a lazy fellow, i. 91, 92:
- skill in addressing them, i. 117 seq.:
- a squire is one born for their service, i. 163:
- to be won by graceful ogling, i. 185 seq.:
- lesson to the voluntary invalids of, i. 191-193:
- love a "very pretty fellow," i. 199 seq.:
- Tatler always courteous to, i. 218:
- a lady wooed through her parrot, i. 226, 227:
- to be "come at" only be "survivorship," i. 240:
- letters of gallantry to, i. 250 seq.:
- to be won by flattery, i. 264, 364:
- their frailties due to men's admiration of coquetry, i. 271 seq.:
- folly of their taking snuff, i. 285:
- their chief interest, in love, i. 292:
- do not talk scandal more than men, i. 300:
- their interests in charge of Mrs. Distaff, i. 305:
- not won by gravity, i. 251:
- of small importance in Shakespeare's days, i. 341 seq.:
- always approve those whom their friends abuse, i. 382:
- their place in the front box, ii. 6 note:
- prevailed on by nonsense, ii. 77 seq.:
- how far and to what age should they make beauty their first care, ii. 85 seq.:
- letters finding fault with them, ii. 131 seq.:
- accomplices of the "sharpers," ii. 137:
- being made of men and not of earth have a more delicate humanity, ii. 139:
- how moved to tears, ii. 139:
- modesty their most becoming quality, ii. 246:
- running after puppet-shows, iii. 7:
- proper ornaments suitable to, iii. 16:
- tendency to lavish affection on animals, iii. 42 seq.:
- Virgil translated for, iii. 107 seq.:
- amenable to advice, iii. 135:
- their vanity encouraged by our foolish style of wooing, iii. 136 seq.:
- proper education for, iii. 146, 165 seq.:
- proper way to manage them, iii. 156:
- how to avoid oglers, iii. 166 seq.:
- the attractions of, typified in Venus's girdle, iii. 176:
- advice to, on matrimony, iii. 177:
- seen at their best in mourning, iii. 194 seq.:
- carried away by what is showy, iii. 196:
- the shades of the finest women of all ages appeared to Ulysses, iii. 202:
- the talkers among them compared to different musical instruments, iii. 228 seq., 248:
- difficulties of reducing them to any tolerable order, iii. 256, 257:
- at the Government lottery, iii. 296:
- at Moorfields, iii. 318 seq.:
- a scheme for, iv. [15] seq., 37 seq., 142:
- an amicable contribution for raising the fortunes of ten young ladies, iv. [38], [39]:
- treated with impertinence, iv. [39]:
- affection and esteem for, generally go together, iv. [68]:
- abused for fault-finding, &c., iv. [82] seq.:
- advice in dress, iv. [93] seq.:
- their affectation of nakedness condemned, iv. [109] seq.:
- grown political, iv. [187], [188]:
- a grammar for, iv. [195] note, [196] note:
- their conduct in love, iv. [257] seq.:
- different education desired for, iv. [261] seq.:
- their follies in old age, iv. [351] seq.
- Fairlove, Joshua, claims to the title of Esquire, iv. [127], [128]
- Falstaff, Sir John, i. 67, 102, 103, 156; ii. 264 note; iii. 281
- "Fame, a chamber of," the idea started by Swift, ii. 223 note:
- a vision of, ii. 223 seq.:
- plans changed, ii. 224 note:
- the guests in, ii. 228 seq.:
- the fabulous apartment, ii. 231 seq.:
- a table for the ladies, ii. 247 note:
- those whose claims to enter therein may have been overlooked, ii. 248 seq.:
- referred to, ii. 128 seq., 135 seq., 175, 186, 206 seq., 239; iii. 159 note
- Familiar, I. B.'s., iii. 28.
- See Pacolet, Mr.
- Familiars, their habits, i. 388 seq.
- Fan, the virtues of, ii. 20 seq.:
- Gay and Addison on, ii. 21 note:
- "Fluttering of the Fan," ii. 22 and note
- Farthingale, Lady, a catalogue of her private possessions, iv. [247] seq.
- Farloe, Richard, M.A., an acute dissector, ii. 97
- Farquhar, his Beaux' Stratagem, i. 36:
- his Constant Couple; or, A Trip to the Jubilee, i. 125, 163; iii. 356:
- his Recruiting Officer, i. 169 seq.
- Farr, James, a barber, of the Rainbow Tavern in Fleet Street, iv. [131] note
- Farrier's Dictionary quoted, iii. 157 note
- Fashion, Sir Novelty, in Cibber's Love's Last Shift, iii. 350
- Fashionable folk, follies of, iii. 343 seq.
- "Fat Dogs'," the, ii. 125
- Fatal Marriage, Mrs. Barry in, i. 16 note
- Father, a wise, ii. 75-77:
- a good, his children's truest friend, iii. 385 seq.:
- a model, iv. [204], [205]
- Fault-finding, letters of, sent privately, but published if no heed is taken of their complaints, ii. 130 seq.:
- subject of conversation, iv. [252] seq.
- Faustus, Dr., the puppet, iii. 8
- Favonius (i.e. Dr. Smalridge), a model clergyman, i. 5 and note; ii. 171, 421
- Feeble, Mrs., an old fop, iv. [353]
- ---- Tom, of Brasenose, iv. [353]
- Feilding, Beau Robert (Orlando the Fair), i. 124 note; ii. 4 note, 5 note and seq., 8 and note, 13 seq.
- Felicia (i.e. Great Britain), i. 44 seq., 123; ii. 145
- "Fellows" different from men, ii. 26:
- of a great deal of fire, ii. 81 seq.
- See also Pretty Fellows, Very Pretty Fellows, Smart Fellows, Honest Fellows, Merry Fellows
- Female Tatler, The, ii. 247 note, 290 note, 387 note:
- two papers so named, iv. [172] and note, 173 note
- Fenchurch Street, iv. [153] note
- Fénélon, his Télémaque, iii. 222 seq.
- Fescue, Mrs., iv. [332]
- Fidelia, her strange passion for an old rake, i. 190
- Fidget, Lady, the general visitant, iii. 315 seq.
- ---- Mrs., i. 118; iv. [332]
- Filmer, on Patriarchal Government, ii. 10 note
- Final, i. 72, 75, 182
- Finch Lane, i. 334; iv. [252] note
- Fine ladies of the present day very inferior to those of I. B.'s youth, ii. 87, 88
- Fire, the quality of, in man, ii. 81 seq., 117, 166:
- men of, iii. 256
- Firebrand, Lady, her temper, iv. [118]
- Fits, a story of, i. 191-193
- Fitzherbert, Sir Anthony, his Grand Abridgement, i. 255
- Five Fields, the, of Chelsea, i. 280 and note
- Flambeau, Mrs., indicted for not calling, iv. [334]
- Flanders, i. 19, 73, 77, 105, 144; ii. 254 note, 348; iii. 265, 320, 334
- Flatterer, a knave of parts, iv. [77]:
- and jester, iv. [107]
- Flavia, a sonnet on, ii. 377, 378:
- an eminent coquette, iii. 167:
- loss of her parrot, iii. 171:
- not altered by smallpox, iii. 315
- ---- a young mother, iv. [67]
- ---- (Miss Osborne?) well dressed, iv. [94] and note, 223
- Fleet Bridge, ii. 150
- ---- Street, ii. 88 note, 228 note; iii. 61 note, 82, 126, 152 note; iv. [379], [382]
- Fleming, General, i. 27
- Flora, her character, i. 117
- Florence, i. 50, 76
- Florimel, a vain creature, i. 69
- ---- an ambitious lady in the autumn of life, i. 139 seq.
- ---- Mrs., ii. 196, 197
- Florinda, a living woman, ii. 381
- Florio, a good talker, i. 369
- ---- the generous husband, i. 396
- Florio, happiness centred in a tulip root, iii. 171
- ---- John, his Montaigne, ii. 239 note
- Florus, his account of Scipio, ii. 62 note
- Floyer, Sir John, his Inquiry into the Right Use and Abuses of Hot, Cold, and Temperate Baths, i. 133 note
- Flyblow, a coxcomb, i. 312, 313
- Flying Post, The, i. 133 note, 156 note, 293 note
- Folio, Tom (i.e. Thomas Rawlinson), a broker in learning, iii. 234 seq.:
- his protest, iii. 248, 249
- "Fondlewife," in Congreve's The Old Bachelor, i. 81 note
- Fontive, editor of Postman, iii. 332 note
- Fool distinguished from a madman, i. 328, 329
- Foote, at "the Grecian," i. 13 note
- Foppington, Lord, in the Careless Husband, iii. 357 note
- Fops, charming to certain sort of women, i. 381
- "For," the particle, its meaning, ii. 65
- Forbes, Lord, (Marinus?) ii. 83 and note:
- his defence of Steele from the sharpers, iii. 9 note; iv. [377] note
- Ford, Edward, his Tewin-Water; or, The Story of Lady Cathcart, iv. [261]
- ----, James, the speaking doctor, ii. 115, 156 and note
- Forecast, Diana, eager to see scheme for the fair sex, iv. [37]
- Foreign news, not musty edicts or dull proclamations, i. 12:
- from St. James's Coffee-house, i. 13
- Forester, brother-in-law of Vanderbank, i. 33 note
- Forster, his Historical and Biographical Essays quoted, i. 49 note; ii. 142 note, 315 note, 349 note, 423 note; iii. 75 note, 407 note; iv. [68] note
- Fort George, in India, iv. [204] note
- Fortunate Isles, The, masque by Ben Jonson, i. 84 note
- Fortune-hunter, a letter from, iii. 75-79
- Fortune Hunters, The, a play, i. 311 note
- Foster Lane, iv. [149] note
- Fountain Tavern, the, ii. 298
- Fox, The; or, Volpone, by Ben Jonson, i. 177 seq.
- Fox-Hall or Vauxhall, i. 219 and note
- Fox-hunters, their voices, i. 301
- Foxon, Captain, i. 88
- Fracastorius, Hieronymus, physician, his Syphilis, iv. [322] note
- Fraga, ii. 188
- Frail, Mrs., in Love for Love, i. 16 note
- France, i. 27, 28, 51, 61, 76, 88, 120, 121, 129, 130, 154, 164, 173, 174, 184, 204, 213, 214, 219, 237, 240, 244 note, 354; ii. 9, 27, 54, 106, 107, 211, 222, 249; iii. 73, 92, 123, 223, 318, 336, 337
- ---- King of, i. 155, 194, 214, 237, 244 note, 245; ii. 48
- See also Louis XIV.
- Frances, Madam, ii. 402, 403
- Francis I., iv. [162]
- Franeker, iii. 68 note
- Freedom and ease, the men of, iii. 284
- Freeland, Jack, i. 187
- Freethinkers not philosophers, ii. 390 seq., 406; iii. 115, 256:
- ancient and modern, iii. 114 seq.
- Freind, Col., iii. 55 note
- French, the History of, i. 19 note:
- their valour, i. 54:
- their prophets attacked by D'Urfey, i. 100 note:
- Bruyère on, ii. 59 seq.:
- referred to, ii. 105, 158
- ---- Elizabeth, wife of Tillotson, ii. 350 note
- ---- Dr. Peter, father of Elizabeth F., ii. 350 note
- Friendly, Mr., a reasonable man of the town, i. 107
- Friendly Courier, The, by Way of Letters from Persons in Town to their Acquaintance in the Country, containing whatever is Curious or Remarkable at Home or Abroad, iv. [375] note
- Friends, necessity for consideration between, iii. 304 seq.
- Friendship, of worthy men a greater benefit than accomplishments, i. 4, 5
- Friendship in Death, in Twenty Letters from the Dead to the Living, by Mrs. Singer, i. 93 note
- Fringe Glove Club, iii. 197 note
- Frise, iii. 68 note
- Frisk, Beau, i. 185, 187, 188
- ---- Betty, iv. [353]
- Frogs, the migration of, to Ireland, iv. [206] seq.
- Frontera, Marquis de, i. 149
- Frontinett, Mrs., a good dancer, iv. [203]
- Frontlet, Mrs., a famous toast, i. 203
- Frontley, Tom, a guide for the 'Town,' iv. [189]
- Frontly, Mrs., iv. [332]
- Frozen voices, iv. [289] seq.
- Fuller, Dr., the facetious divine, iv. [132]
- ---- Samuel Partiger, M.P., author of No. 205, some history of, iv. [58], [59] notes
- Fulvius, happiness centred in a blue string, iii. 171
- Fulwood's Rents, iii. 99 note
- Furbelow, the, iii. 196 and note
- Furbish, Mrs., iv. [352]
- Gad, Lady, i. 278
- Gadbury, Job, astrologer, ii. 54 and note
- ---- John, master of Job G., ii. 54 note
- Gainly, Jack, a good fellow, iv. [66], [67]
- ---- Gatty, iii. 67
- Gaisford, his Parœmiographia Græci, i. 360 note
- Galen, his De Usu Partium (a Hymn to the Supreme Being), iii. 28
- Gallantry, account of, from White's Chocolate-house, i. 12:
- modern, pretenders to, i. 46:
- a low kind, i. 67 seq.:
- letters of, i. 250 seq.:
- an act of true gallantry, ii. 62 seq.:
- the effects of, ii. 305
- "Galloon," iv. [371] and note
- Gallus, a letter from Pliny to, iii. 338
- Galway, Earl of, i. 87, 88, 149, 150
- Gambling houses, ii. 89 note and seq.
- Gamester, the, determination to extirpate, i. 5:
- his evil effects on English gentlemen, i. 6:
- "a coward to man and a brave to God," i. 6:
- his amusements take the place of songs and epigrams, &c., i. 18:
- I. B. no gamester, i. 37:
- a day with, i. 119:
- a tale of, i. 134, 135:
- a pickpocket with the courage of a highwayman, i. 208:
- his sense of justice like Louis XIV.'s, i. 218:
- sharpers not all gamesters, ii. 57:
- Memoirs of Gamesters, by Egerton, ii. 14 note, 178 note:
- gets money from men's follies as money-lenders do from their distresses, ii. 57:
- to be found in Suffolk Street, ii. 89 and note:
- spoken of as dogs or curs, ii. 89 seq.:
- a new style of, ii. 143:
- madman, iii. 65:
- referred to, ii. 50 seq., 159 seq.; iii. 256.
- See also Dogs and Sharpers
- Gantlett, old, iii. 101, 102
- Gardening, strange terms of, iv. [120], [121]
- Garraway's Coffee-house in Cornhill, i. 137 and note; iii. 178, 352 and note; iv. [184], [300]
- Garth, Dr. (? Hippocrates), his Dispensary quoted, i. 127 note; ii. 208 and note, 376; iv. [222]
- Garway, Thomas, founder of Garraway's, i. 387 note
- Gascar the painter, i. 32 note
- Gascoigne, George, his The Glass of Government, ii. 264 note
- Gascon of quality, a, his undoing, iii. 69 seq.
- Gastrel, friend of Swift, iv. [294] note
- Gatty, Mrs., a famous toast, i. 203; ii. 22
- Gay, John, his Present State of Wit, an account of Steele's influence, i. xvi, xvii, xviii:
- his Beggar's Opera, i. 234 note:
- his Trivia, i. 234 note, 327 note; ii. 204 note; iii. 102 note:
- his Mr. Pope's Welcome from Greece, i. 380 note:
- on the Fan, ii. 21 note:
- his Shepherd's Week, iv. [250] note, [344] note
- Gazette, The, iv. [85] note, [148]
- Gazette à la Mode; or, Tom Brown's Ghost, iv. [172] and note
- General Postscript, The, ii. 247 note, 290 note
- Geneva, i. 50, 76:
- the lake of, iii. 251
- Genius, men of, to be esteemed as considerable agents in the world, i. 12:
- defined, i. 54 note
- Genoa, i. 35, 60, 76; ii. 200
- Genteel Conversation, by Swift, iii. 100 note
- Gentle, Patience, iv. [374]
- Gentleman, an English, a prey to gamesters, i. 6:
- defined, i. 175 seq.:
- the history of a pretty, i. 14, (see Cynthio):
- the difficulty of becoming a fine, ii. 122 seq.:
- any one may be a, iv. [72]
- Gentleman's Journal i. x; ii. 134 and note
- Gentlemen's Magazine i. 211 note, 343 note, 358 note
- George I., i. 39 note, 42 note; ii. 1 note, 35 note, 42 note; iii. 1 note; iv. [85] note
- ---- Prince of Denmark, a vision of, i. 78, 79:
- death of, ii. 164 note:
- long mourning for, i. 79 note; iii. 194 and note:
- referred to, i. viii
- George Court, i. 219 note
- "George and the Dragon" at Billingsgate, ii. 176
- Gerhumhena, i. 261
- Germany, i. 158, 354; ii. 73; iv. [271], [322], [325]:
- a waxwork of English religions in, iv. [303] seq.
- Gertruydenberg, iii. 123, 318
- Ghent, i. 20, 28, 43, 73, 77, 78, 144, 205, 214, 229; ii. 90, 91, 158; iii. 162 note, 163 note
- Giddy, Mistress, pretty company, i. 260
- Gildon, his Comparison between Two Stages, ii. 334 note:
- ? author of Life of Betterton, iii. 279 note:
- quoted, i. 42 note, 67 note
- Gimball, Anne, born blind, iv. [379], [380]
- ---- Ezekiel, father of Anne, iv. [379], [380]
- Gimcrack, Sir Nicholas, a virtuoso, his will, iv. [112], [113], [133]
- ---- Lady, widow of Sir Nicholas, iv. [134] seq.
- Gingivistæ, or tooth-drawers, i. 281 and note
- Gladiators, i. 256
- Glare, Will, the self-conscious man, iii. 131
- Glass of Government, The, by George Gascoigne, ii. 264 note
- Globe, this, not trodden upon merely by business drudges, i. 12:
- interesting news from, i. 12
- ---- the sign of the, iii. 24
- Goathan, petition from the inhabitants of, iii. 149
- Goddard, Dr. Jonathan, physician to Cromwell, i. 179 and note
- Godolphin, Sidney, Lord (Horatio), i. 7 note, 45 and note
- Goes, Count de, i. 61, 95
- Golden Ball in Goodman's Fields, iv. [148] note
- ---- Buck, the, iv. [379]
- ---- Comb, the, iv. [382]
- ---- Cupid in Piccadilly, the, iv. [148] note
- ---- Half Moon, iv. [150] note
- ---- Head, iv. [150] note
- ---- Key, iv. [152]
- ---- Lion, the, near St. George's Church, i. 140 note:
- near St. Paul's Church, iii. 133 note
- ---- Pen, the, iv. [329] note
- ---- Sugar Loaf, iv. [149] note
- ---- Unicorn, iv. [150] note
- Golden Sayings, by Pythagoras, ii. 392
- Goldsmith, Oliver, at the Grecian, i. 13 note:
- referred to, iv. [206]
- Goldsmiths' Hall, i. 334
- Goltz, General, i. 183; ii. 47
- Good Husband, A, for 5s.; or, Squire Bickerstaff's Lottery for the London Ladies, iii. 277 note
- Goodday, Lady, famous for her recipes, iv. [263]
- Goodenough, Ursula, indicted for libel, iv. [318], [319]
- Goodly, Lady, a proud mother, iv. [203]
- Goodman, Cardell, an actor patronised by the Duchess of Cleveland, ii. 7 and note
- Goodman's Fields, iv. [148] and note, 150 note
- Goosequill, Esq., Degory, i. 162
- Gorman, a prize fighter, i. 256
- Goths, the, i. 257; ii. 337; iv. [22]
- Gough, Deputy, ii. 179 note
- ---- Jeremy, ii. 179 note
- Gourdon, Mother, i. 368
- Government of the Tongue, ii. 184
- Grafton, Isabella, Duchess of, ii. 313 note; iv. [93] note
- Graham, Lieutenant-Colonel, ii. 106 and note
- Grammar of the English Tongue, a, iv. [194] note
- Grammar, a, needed, iv. [195] seq.
- Granard, Earl of, iv. [377] note
- Grand Abridgement, The, by Sir Anthony Fitzherbert, i. 255
- Grand Magazine, The, iii. 390 note
- Grand Pensioner, i. 120, 198:
- Pensioner of Holland, i. 129, 143
- ---- Monarch, the, of France, i. 323; iii. 336
- Grant, Roger, an oculist, cures a man born blind, ii. 41 note and seq.:
- account of his cure from other sources, ii. 43 note
- Grave-Airs, Lady, in church, iv. [315]
- Grave-digger, the, played by Cave Underhill, i. 188 note, 189
- Gray, murdered by Richard III., ii. 285
- ---- George, a prize fighter, i. 234 note, 235 note
- ---- John, vendor of pills, iv. [149] note
- Grayhurst, Captain Will, i. 334
- Gray's Inn, iii. 148, 234 note
- ---- Lane, i. 127 note, 234
- Great Bedwyn, i. 371 note
- ---- Marlborough Street, iii. 61 note
- Greber, a German musician, brought over Margarita, iii. 192 note
- Grecian, the, learning from, i. 13:
- a history of, i. 13 note:
- resort of scholars, i. 13 note:
- a duel at, i. 13 note:
- must drink Spanish wine there, i. 13:
- referred to, i. 161; iv. [131]
- Greeks, the, i. 59; ii. 1, 2, 52; iii. 104, 125:
- their patriotism, iii. 358:
- wedding, the ceremonial at, iii. 364:
- poetry of their language, iv. [178]
- Green, Sir Benjamin (Sir Humphry Greenhat), ii. 179 note
- Greenhat, Obadiah (i.e. Swift), a letter from, ii. 70, 71:
- a design by, ii. 125:
- on Hamlet, ii. 163:
- referred to, ii. 103, 112, 113, 121, 123, 193
- ---- Zedekiah, his character, ii. 71 seq.
- ---- Tobiah, a letter from, ii. 102 seq.
- ---- Sir Humphry (Sir Benjamin Green), alderman, ii. 179 note, 180
- Greenhats, the, a family with small voices and short arms, ii. 71, 72:
- related to the Staffs, ii. 72
- Greenhouse, a winter Paradise, iii. 338 seq.:
- criticisms on, iii. 380, 381
- Greenland, iii. 14, 221; iv. [140]
- Greenwich, a theatre at, i. 42 and note; iii. 327
- ---- Hospital, ii. 19 note
- Greenwood, James, a letter from, iv. [194] seq.:
- his Essay towards a Practical English Grammar, iv. [195] note:
- some notice of, iv. [196] note:
- his The London Vocabulary, iv. [196] note:
- his Virgin Muse, iv. [196] note
- Gregg, Will, detected in treasonable correspondence with the French, ii. 198 and note
- Gregorian computation of time, i. 316
- Gregory, Mr. (Major Touchhole), a train-band major, ii. 79 and note
- Gresham College, i. 179 note; ii. 309; iv. [39] note
- Grey, Zachary, his Hudibras, ii. 317 note
- Griffin, the, iv. [153] note, [381]
- Grimaldi, Cavalier Nicolini, singer, i. 171 note; iii. 5 note and seq., 6 note, 150:
- benefit for, iii. 129
- Grimani, Cardinal, i. 75
- Grimston, William, Lord Viscount, his Love in a Hollow Tree; or, The Lawyer's Fortune, i. 178 and note
- Grissel, the patient, i. 42
- Groaning Board, the, i. 360 and note; iv. [304] and note
- Groans of Great Britain, by Defoe (?), iv. [335] note
- Groggram, Jeffery, surrenders as one of the walking dead, ii. 381
- Grounds and Occasion of the Contempt of the Clergy and Religion Inquired into, by Dr. John Eachard, ii. 143
- Grub Street, i. 334, 335 and note; iv. [172], [176]
- Gruel, Miss, i. 89 note:
- must not wear her hair in modern fashion, iv. [94]
- Guam, ii. 95 note
- Guardeloop, M., I. B.'s tailor, i. 68 seq.
- Guardian, The, quoted, i. 29 note, 84 note, 184 note, 201 note, 268 note, 279 note, 348 note; iii. 115 note, 395 note, 407 note; iv. [62] note
- Gubbin, Sir Harry, in Steele's Tender Husband, iv. [32] note
- Guicciardini, Francis, his History of Italy, iv. [342] and note
- Guildhall, the, i. 325:
- the lottery at, iii. 55 and note
- Guinea, an elephant from, i. 170 and note
- Guiscard, Marquis, i. 244 and note
- Guiscard Abbé, his attack on Harley, i. 244 note
- Gules, Hon. Thomas, his case against Peter Plumb, merchant, iv. [298] seq.
- Gun of Wapping, iv. [85] note.
- See Musket
- Gunner, a, the term explained, ii. 269 seq.
- Gunster, a, the term explained, ii. 269 seq., 272, 273
- Gutter Lane, i. 334
- Guy of Warwick, ii. 315; iii. 179 and note
- Gyges and his ring of invisibility, iii. 131, 137; iv. [238] seq.
- Habits and Cries of the City of London, by Lauron, i. 41 note
- Hackney, ii. 244
- Hæredipetes, i.e. usurers who rob minors, ii. 126 and note
- Hague, the, letters from and referred to, i. 19, 20, 43, 44, 51, 72, 76, 79 note, 83 note, 88, 96, 97, 120, 129, 143, 155, 173, 183, 197, 198, 205, 206, 213, 229, 269, 276, 331, 354, 398, 399; ii. 96, 244; iii. 318
- Hair, a fine lady entreated not to wear it natural, ii. 131
- Hal, Prince, iii. 198 note
- Hales, Mrs. (Chloe), her history, i. 38 note
- Halifax, Lord, ii. 85 note:
- an epigram by, iii. 192 note:
- as Philander, i. 45 note, 117 note and seq.
- Hall, Sergeant, of the Foot Guards, ii. 264 seq.; iv. [100] note
- ---- Mr., an auctioneer, i. 358
- Hallet, James, ii. 179 note
- Hamburg, i. 77, 204, 236
- Hamilcar, father of Hannibal, iii. 392
- Hamilton, Col. Fred., i. 52
- ---- Lord Archibald (Archibald), ii. 20 and note
- ---- William, Duke of, ii. 20 note
- ---- Lady Jane (Delamira), wife of Archibald, ii. 20 note and seq.
- Hamlet on acting, i. 288:
- quoted, with criticism, ii. 379 seq.:
- a performance of, ii. 163 seq.:
- referred to, i. 18, 188 note; ii. 138 note, 406; iv. [42], [378]
- Hamond, John, a letter from, iii. 60, 61
- Hampstead as a health resort, ii. 61 and note:
- a raffling-shop at, ii. 68
- Hampton Court, iv. [251] note
- Hand and Star, the, iii. 61 note
- Hanmer, Sir T., his Correspondence, ii. 313 note; iv. [93] note
- Hannibal in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 229:
- a very pretty fellow in his day, ii. 62 note:
- referred to, iii. 378 and note, 379 and note, 392
- ---- Sir (i.e. Sir James Baker), iii. 9 note and seq.
- Hanno, iii. 378 and note, 379 and note
- Hanover, Elector of, i. 43
- ---- i. 72, 105, 129
- Happiness, a name claimed for herself by Pleasure, ii. 325:
- to be found in a cottage, iii. 173:
- true sources of, iv. [274] seq.
- Harcourt, Mareschal, i. 51
- Hard words not to be spoken in good company, ii. 65
- Hark, Deborah, a waiting-maid, iii. 124
- Harley, Robert, Earl of Oxford, stabbed by Guiscard, i. 245 note:
- as Polypragmon (?), iii. 395 note, 396 note:
- an elaborate ridicule of his ministry, iii. 406 note and seq.:
- satirised as Powell, iv. [335] note:
- referred to, i. 8 note; ii. 198 note; iv. [177] note
- ---- Thomas, cousin of Robert H., iv. [177] note
- Harper, Robin, iv. [366] note
- Harrack, Count, i. 95
- Harris, Benjamin, compiler of almanacs, ii. 319 note
- ---- James, prize-fighter, i. 235 note
- Harrison, William, his The Medicine, i. 23 seq.:
- friend of Swift and Addison, i. 22 note:
- he and Swift continue The Tatler, iii. 406 note
- ---- & Lane, Messrs., iii. 352 note
- Hart, Charles, actor, ii. 334 and note:
- a rule for actors, iii. 130
- Harwich, iii. 128
- Hastings, Lord, ii. 285
- ---- Lady Elizabeth (Aspasia), her life and character, i. 342 note and seq.:
- "to love her is a liberal education," i. 395:
- referred to, i. xxi, 265 note, 394; iii. 283 note
- Hastings, Charles, her brother, i. 342 note
- ---- George, her brother, i. 343 note
- ---- Theophilus, her father, i. 342 note, 343
- Haughty, Lady, her strange conduct, ii. 218, 219:
- an explanation of the same, ii. 220, 221
- ---- Jack, his ways, ii. 117,118
- "Haut Brion," iii. 95 note
- Havre, ii. 107, 133, 199
- Hawes, W., iv. [169] note
- Hawkers forbidden to take more than 1d. for The Tatler, i. 12
- Hawkins, Sir John, his History of Music, i. 311 note; ii. 275 note, 294 note, 372 note; iii. 192 note
- Hawksly, Signior, keeper of a raffling-shop at Hampstead, ii. 68, 69
- Haym, assisted to introduce Italian opera into England, iii. 276 note
- Haymarket, the theatre at, built by Vanbrugh, i. 110 note:
- referred to, i. 40, 358; ii. 90 note, 310, 334 note, 420; iii. 45, 233; iv. [335], [348]
- Hazzard, Will, iv. [177], [184]
- Heathcote (Avaro) of the City, i. 211 and note
- Hebe (i.e. the Duchess of Bolton, or Miss Tempest), i. 355 note and seq.
- Hebrews, the, ii. 318
- Hector, i. 59, 256; ii. 129, 232; iii. 299
- Hedington, near Oxford, scene of King's Joan of Hedington, i. 368 and note:
- referred to, ii. 166
- Heedless, Henry, Esq., indicted for assault, iv. [346] seq.
- Heidegger, John James, director of opera-houses, i. 111 and note, 154; ii. 118
- Heinsius, M., i. 97
- ---- Daniel, his edition of Virgil, iii. 235
- Heirs, concerning, i. 132
- Heister, Marshall, i. 71, 183, 236
- Helchin, i. 155, 229
- Helen, i. 117; iv. [249] note
- Helen's Epistle to Paris (Ovid), translated by Mulgrave and Dryden, i. 117 and note
- Hellebore, iii. 63 and note
- Henin-Lietard, iii. 320
- Henley, Anthony, i. 83 note, 99 note:
- probable author of a letter on "Pretty Fellows," i. 215 note and seq.,
- and of part of No. 193, iii. 406 note and seq.
- Henry II., i. 103; ii. 72
- ---- IV., i. 83 note
- ---- VII., ii. 190
- ---- VIII., i. 84 note; ii. 190; iii. 127 and note; iv. [128]
- Henry IV., Shakespeare's, i. 125 note, 385; ii. 315; iii. 198 note
- Henry V., Shakespeare's, iii. 128 note, 356
- Henry VI., Shakespeare's, ii. 285
- Henry VIII., Shakespeare's, i. 18, 345; iii. 198 note
- Heralds' Office, the, i; 101, 105, 130, 162; ii. 40; iv. [254]
- Hercules, i. 256, 352; ii. 5, 129, 231, 293:
- courted by Virtue and Pleasure, ii. 324 seq.
- Heroic Plays, Of, by Dryden, i. 367 note
- Heroic virtue possible to every one, iv. [47]
- Herod, i. 288; ii. 375
- Hesiod, his Works and Days, ii. 326; iv. [58]
- Hesse, Prince of, ii. 107, 108
- Hessen, M. Van, i. 204
- Hewson, said to be real name of Partridge, ii. 320 note
- Heyday, Jack, a sharper, ii. 52
- Heylin, his Little Description of the Great World, iv. [289] note
- Heywood, Mrs. Elizabeth, i. 55 note
- ---- Thomas, on marriage, quotation from, i. 398
- Hibernians, the, great takers of snuff, i. 285
- Hiddaspes, the opera, iv. [382]
- Hickathrift, John (usually called Thomas), ii. 316 and note
- High Holborn, iv. [150] note
- ---- life, a short skit on, i. 131 seq.
- Hill, Captain, i. 30 note
- ---- Sir Scipio (Africanus), i. 296 note and seq.
- Hills, H., bookseller in Blackfriars, ii. 347 note
- Hinchinbroke, Viscount (Cynthio), his character, i. 14, 15:
- only true lover, i. 47 and note:
- history of, i. 47 note:
- his marriage, i. 286 note:
- referred to, ii. 255 note
- Hind and Panther, by Dryden, iv. [3] note
- Hinksey, near Oxford, ii. 166
- Hippocrates (? Sir Samuel Garth), ii. 153, 208, 209; iv. [122], [162]
- Historians to act as ushers in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 130
- Historical Character, An, &c., being the Life of the Right Hon. Lady Elizabeth Hastings, by Thomas Barnard, i. 343 note
- Historical and Biographical Essays, by Forster, ii. 315 note, 349 note, 423 note
- History and poetry compared, ii. 392, 393
- History of England in Eighteenth Century, by Lecky, iii. 112 note; iv. [294] note
- History of Hannibal and Hanno, &c., by Arthur Maynwaring, iii. 379 note
- History of his Own Time, by Bishop Burnet, ii. 294 note
- History of Lilly's Life and Times, by himself, iv. [226] note
- History of Robert Powell, by Thomas Burnet, iv. [335] note
- History of the Civil War, by Clarendon, i. 87 note
- History of the Life and Adventures of Mr. Duncan Campbell, &c., by Defoe, i. 126 note
- Hive, Rebecca, iv. [372]
- Hoadly, Benjamin (Bishop of Winchester), advocate for episcopacy of the Church and liberty of the people, i. 5 and note:
- controversy with Dr. Atterbury, i. 5 and note:
- controversy with Dr. Blackall on Passive Obedience, i. 359 note and seq.; ii. 8 note and seq.:
- probably wrote the letter in No. 50, ii. 9
- ---- Dr. John, son of the above, i. 361 note
- Hochsted, Scene of Battle of Blenheim, i. 28, 266 note
- Hockley-in-the-Hole, its Bear-garden, i. 234 note, 235 note, 255, 256
- Hogarth, his Rake's Progress, i. 12 note, 247 note:
- his picture of a theatre at Oxford, i. 366 note:
- his picture of a cock-fight, iii. 112 note
- Hogshead (or Tun) of Wapping, i. 200, 201 and note
- Holborn, i. 335; iii. 119; iv. [44]
- ---- Bars, iv. [152]
- Holland, i. 80 note, 89, 105, 106, 120, 151, 154, 174, 200, 205, 229, 269, 299, 354, 362; ii. 222; iii. 81, 101, 123, 246, 316, 318
- Holt, Sir John (Verus), magistrate, i. 123 and note, 158 note
- ---- Lady, iv. [381]
- Homer compared to Virgil, i. 57 and note:
- the action of the Iliad related in form of a journal, i. 58 seq.:
- in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 228:
- his "Works," by Barnes, iii. 159 note, 160 note:
- on Immortality, iii. 199 seq.:
- referred to, ii. 52, 70, 71, 230, 412, 424 note; iii. 159, 222, 223, 270; iv. [288]:
- Iliad, iii. 103, 104, 172, 175 seq.:
- Odyssey, iii. 104
- Honest Fellows, i. 368, 369
- Honest Ned, i. 99 and note
- Honey Lane Market, i. 235 note, 334
- Honeycomb, Will, iv. [339] note
- Honour, a false sense of, leads to duels, i. 6:
- the temple of, iii. 49, 50:
- a court of, iv. [271] seq., 281 seq., 283 seq., 293, 298 seq., 312, 315 seq., 331 seq., 364 seq., 371
- Honour and titles, the historical origin of, iii. 298 seq.
- Hood, Robin, ii. 232
- Hoods, the fashion of, iv. [93] and note
- Hooker, a model of style, iv. [180]
- Hopson, Charles, Esq., i. 334
- Horace, a master of satire, iv. [235] seq.:
- Ep. quoted, ii. 125, 241, 293, 333; iii. 21, 198 note, 273, 298, 308, 353; iv. [17], [44], [49], [110], [119], [128], [154], [189], [201], [242], [369]:
- Odes quoted, i. 93; ii. 94, 175, 212, 382; iii. 198, 293, 303, 311 and note, 362, 385, 400; iv. [139], [171], [196], [278], [287], [341]:
- Sat., ii. 366, 377, 394; iii. 32, 49, 61, 72, 87, 120, 140, 218, 264, 289, 312, 327; iv. [54], [123], [166], [228], [252], [274], [364]:
- Ars Poetica quoted, ii. 141, 153, 154, 359; iii. 160, 261, 279, 358, 405; iv. [219], [225], [365]:
- Ode to Pyrrha, iii. 309, 310:
- referred to, i. 77; ii. 296 note; iii. 270, 309; iv. [220], [222] 235
- Horatio (i.e. Sidney Lord Godolphin), i. 45 and note
- Horner, a character in Wycherley's Country Wife, i. 30
- Horse Guards, the, i. 235 note; iv. [283], [377] note
- Hotspur, iii. 281
- Howard, the Hon. Edward, i. 178 and note
- How'-d'-Call, Mr., i. 184
- Howd'ee, Bridget, iv. [247]
- Howdees, ii. 396 and note
- Hows, J., apothecary, iv. [153] note
- Howth, the Hill of, iv. [207]
- Hoyden, Miss, in Vanbrugh's The Relapse, played by Mrs. Bignell, i. 29 note
- Hudibras, ii. 317 note; iii. 100, 101 and note, 179 note; iv. [142], [289], [320], [324]
- Huet, Lord George, iii. 162 note
- Hughes, Jabez (brother of John H.), his Miscellanies in Verse and Prose, i. 97 note:
- verses by, i. 98 seq.:
- as "Sam Trusty," iv. [351]
- ---- John, his Correspondence, ii. 9 note; iii. 5 note:
- letters from (?), ii. 125, 126, 197 seq.:
- a letter from, as Will Trusty, ii. 175 seq.:
- his edition of Spenser, iv. [7] note:
- perhaps author of No. 113, ii. 416,
- of No. 194, iv. [7],
- under name Cælicola, iv. [90]:
- his Siege of Damascus, iv. [90] note:
- referred to, i. 97 note; ii. 402 note; iii. 1; iv. [351] note
- Human instinct a most important quality for success, i. 248
- Human nature, its proper dignity, ii. 263, 390:
- its three chief passions, iii. 32:
- a vision of, iii. 33 seq., 49 seq.
- Humdrum, Nicholas, iii. 210, 211
- Hungarian twins, iii. 26 and note
- Hungary, i. 51, 71, 95, 183, 204, 236
- ---- water, iii. 63 and note; iv. [354] and note
- Hunger considered, iv. [60] seq.
- Hunt, Leigh, his The Town, i. 136 note:
- his Book for a Corner, iii. 75 note
- Hunter, Col. Robert (Eboracensis), Governor of New York, ii. 146 and note:
- (? Col. Ramble), i. 68 and note
- Hunting, the folly of, iii. 289 seq.
- Hunting Cock, The, iv. [372]
- Huntingdon, Earl of, father of Lady Elizabeth Hastings, i. 342 note, 343 note
- "Husband, the Civil," ii. 27 seq.
- Husbands, ill-natured, the barbarous cruelty of, iii. 184 seq.
- Hyde, Lord, ii. 35 note
- Hyde Park, fine equipages in, ii. 125:
- referred to, i. 258 note; iii. 207
- Hymn to the Supreme Being, by Galen, iii. 28
- "I die," meaning of the phrase in love-letters, ii. 401
- Iago, iv. [240] note
- Ida, Mount, iii. 175, 177
- Idleness a destructive distemper, ii. 323, 324:
- the virtue of, ii. 412 seq.:
- the hurry of, iii. 325, 326
- Iliad of Homer, its actions told in form of a journal, i. 58 seq.
- Immortality of the soul, iii. 199 seq.:
- Homer on, iii. 199 seq.:
- Virgil on, iii. 211 seq.:
- Fénélon on, iii. 222 seq.
- Impudence, to mankind what action is to orators, iii. 285:
- its value, iii. 285 seq.
- Impudent and absurd, the, much alike, iii. 285
- Inamoratos not rakes, i. 225
- Incense, the Rev. Ralph, iv. [374]
- Index Expurgatorius, suggested, iv. [179]
- India Company, the, ii. 4
- Indian kings, an anecdote of, iii. 299 seq.
- Indibilis, the lover of Scipio's fair captive, ii. 63, 64
- Infallible Astrologer, The, iv. [169] note
- Infidelity, the spread of, ii. 407 seq.
- Infland, General, i. 183
- Inglish, J., vendor of pills, iv. [150] note
- Inner Temple Gate, iv. [131] note
- Innocence, iii. 54
- Inoff, Baron, i. 273
- Inquiry into the Right Use and Abuses of Hot, Cold, and Temperate Baths in England, by Sir John Floyer, i. 33 note
- Insipids, the Order of, iii. 274
- Institutes of the Laws of England, by Justice Coke, iii. 107
- Instructions to a Painter, by Waller, i. 34 and note
- Instructions to Vanderbank, &c., by Blackmore, i. 32 and note
- Intelligence, letters of, i. 7
- "Inventory of the Playhouse," by Addison, i. 4
- Iphimedia, iii. 202
- Ipres, i. 174; ii. 34
- Ireland, I. B.'s natural affection for, iv. [206]:
- referred to, i. 244 note; ii. 122 note
- Irishtown, iv. [208] note
- Iroquois chiefs, iii. 299 note
- Isaac, a dancing-master, i. 279 note; ii. 394
- Isaacstaff, i. 104
- Isabella, in A Fatal Marriage, played by Mrs. Barry, i. 16 note
- Isez-Esquerchien, iii. 317
- Islington, ii. 289; iii. 8
- Isobel, the, boat, of Kinghorn, iv. [382]
- Israel (Jacob), iv. [190] seq.
- Issachar, iv. [301]
- Italy, letters from and references to, i. 49, 60, 72, 95, 110 note, 129; ii. 9:
- serenades originate from, iv. [140]
- Ithuriel, his spear, iv. [211], [213]:
- needed by a lady, iv. [312], [313]
- Ivy Bridge, iii. 299 note
- Ix, an older family than the Staffs, i. 290:
- a catalogue of their members, i. 290
- "Jack," nephew of I. B., i. 247 seq.
- ----, ii. 241
- Jacks, Harry, ii. 92, 93
- ---- the, iv. [177]
- Jack's Coffee-house, iv. [369]
- Jacob's Coffee-house, iv. [149] note
- Jacobstaft, an astronomer, i. 102, 104
- ---- Dorothy, his wife, i. 102
- Jacques in As You Like It, i. 338, 339
- Jaffier in Venice Preserved, iii. 105
- Jamaica, i. 234 note; ii. 146 note; iv. [208] note
- Jambee, a kind of cane, iii. 154 and note
- James I., ii. 126 note; iv. [103], [104]
- ---- II., i. 41 note, 188 note; iv. [150] note
- Jansart, ii. 108, 109, 127
- Janus of the age (i.e. Swift), i. 268
- Jealousy, iii. 36
- Jeffery, old Sir, iv. [77]
- Jennings, Admiral Sir John, ii. 19 and note
- Jervas, Charles, portrait-painter, i. 39 and note, 64
- Jessamine Hair Powder, ii. 20 and note
- Jesting, an abuse of, iv. [366]-368
- Jesuits break down bashfulness in their disciples, iii. 287:
- their statement that Christ was born in France and crucified in England, and that all nations were vassals to France, iii. 299 note:
- referred to, iii. 274
- Jesuits' Powder, iii. 40
- Jesus College, Oxon., ii. 187
- Jew of Venice, The, i. 256 note
- Jingle, Will, coachman, his invention of a new chair, ii. 418, 419
- Joan of Hedington, by Dr. William King, i. 368 note
- Joannes de Peyrareda completed Virgil, ii. 281 note
- Jocelyn, Colonel, iv. [376] note
- John Gilpin, by Cowper, i. 232 note
- Johnson, Mrs. (Stella), i. 107 note; iv. [93] note
- ---- Samuel, on Lady Elizabeth Hastings, i. 343 note:
- on William Walsh, ii. 249 note:
- his Poets, iv. [217] note
- Jones, William, a young man born blind, ii. 41 seq., 42 note
- Jonson, Ben, his masque The Fortunate Isles, i. 84 note:
- his Alchemist, i. 125, 126:
- his Bartholomew Fair, i. 280 and note:
- his Every Man out of his Humour, i. 341:
- his Volpone, or, The Fox, i. 177 seq.:
- his Silent Woman, ii. 29 note; iii. 92:
- his Leges Convivales, ii. 215 and note:
- at the "Devil" Tavern, ii. 215:
- referred to, i. 83 note, 84 note, 110
- Joseph, Sir, in Congreve's Old Bachelor, ii. 62 note
- ---- of Holy Writ, the story of, iv. [190] seq.
- Journal of a Modern Lady, by Swift, iv. [338] note
- Journey through England, by Defoe, i. 387 note
- Judicium Vocalium, by Lucian, iv. [339] and note
- Julian computation, the, i. 316
- Julius Cæsar, Shakespeare's, iii. 128
- Juno, i. 57, 59; iii. 175 seq.
- Jupiter, i. 58, 351; ii. 283, 412; iii. 172 seq., 175 seq., 204; iv. [221]
- Just and Reasonable Reprehension of Naked Breasts and Shoulders, translated by Ed. Cooke, iv. [109] note
- Justice, a vision of, ii. 341 seq., 353 seq.:
- her edicts, ii. 357
- Juvenal, a master of satire, iv. [235] seq.:
- Sat. quoted, i. 11; ii. 346; iii. 39, 55, 77, 81, 135, 170, 179, 255, 321, 395; iv. [73], [87], [215], [234], [310], [315], [336]:
- Dryden's translation of, ii. 424; iv. [146] note
- Katherine in Taming of the Shrew, iv. [181] note
- Kaye, Lady, a letter to, iii. 9 note, 10 note
- Kensington, gravel-pits at, iii. 163 note: referred to, ii. 155; iv. [317]
- Kent, a yeoman of, on the folly of love matches, iii. 382, 383
- Kidney, Mr., a waiter, i. 1, 13, 20, 93, 214; ii. 55, 149, 150; iii. 316; iv. [360] and note
- Killigrew's company, ii. 334 note
- Kind Keeper, The, by Dryden, i. 396 note
- King, Dr., his Works, ii. 15 note:
- his Anecdotes, i. 13 note:
- his Joan of Hedington, i. 368 note:
- his Voyage to the Island of Cajamai, iv. [208] note
- ---- the, actor, i. 301
- ---- picture-seller, iv. [379]
- ---- Sir P., iv. [142] note
- ---- Street, iii. 299; iv. [329] note
- ---- Edward's Stairs, iv. [154] note
- King's Bench Walk, i. 161
- ---- at Arms, i. 130
- ---- Company, theatrical, ii. 163 note
- ---- Head Stairs, i. 42
- ---- Head Court, i. 334, 335
- Kingston, Duke of, ii. 1 note
- Kirleus, Dr. Thomas, the unborn doctor, i. 126 and note, 127 note, 169 note, 337, 338; iv. [159], [226]
- ---- Susannah, his widow, i. 126 note
- Kirleus, John, his son, i. 126 note
- ---- Mary, widow of John, i. 126 note
- Kit, Isabella, iii. 248, 288
- Kit Cat Club, Arthur Maynwaring admitted to, i. 7 note:
- founded by Tonson, i. 92 note:
- a dedication to, i. 266 note:
- toasts at, i. 203 note; iii. 76 note
- Kite, Sergeant, in Farquhar's Recruiting Officer, played by Estcourt, i. 169 note
- Kneller, Sir Godfrey, portrait-painter, ii. 370 note
- Knight-errant, story of an, iii. 18, 19
- Knight-errantry, the ideal of, survives in duelling, i. 239
- ---- of the Peak, iii. 9 note
- Knights in romance, the Tatler compared to, in his crusade against gamblers and duellists, i. 5
- Knightsbridge, iv. [317]
- Knocking at doors, the art of, ii. 376
- Knowledge, men of, allowed to look in the "Mirror of Truth," ii. 344
- Konsbruch, Van, i. 61
- La Bassée, i. 269, 399
- La Bruyère, i. 84
- La Hogue, i. 45 note; iii. 84 note
- Labyrinth of Coquettes, the, iii. 34
- Lacker, Harry, to become a dancing-master, ii. 124
- Lad Lane, i. 334
- Ladies, letters from, will be inserted, i. 106 note:
- who love their dogs better than men, i. 331:
- the design of two ladies to cement their friendship by marrying the same man, ii. 147 seq.
- Ladies' Library, by Steele, i. 266 note
- Læelius, Sapiens, his friendship for Scipio, ii. 412 and note:
- authority on rural life, iii. 292
- Lais, victim to the tyranny of false sense of honour, i. 392, 393
- Lake, Mr., i. 124 note
- "Lake of Love," i.e. Rosamond's Pond, ii. 79 note
- Lalage, iii. 311
- Lalo, Colonel, ii. 109
- Lamoignon, M. Chrestien de, ii. 54
- Lampoons, strange delight to mankind, ii. 294:
- their authors condemned, ii. 295, 296
- Landbadernawz (i.e. ? Llanbadarn Vawr), i. 254 and note
- Landlord, Alexander, his wooing, ii. 181, 182
- Land's End, ii. 236 note:
- a journey to, iii. 400 seq.
- Lane & Harrison, Messrs., iii. 352 note
- Langbaine, Giles, i. 346 note
- Langham, Dr., an astrologer, his prices, iii. 313
- Languages, Swift on the abuse of, iv. [175] seq.:
- reply to, iv. [194] seq.
- "Langteraloo," iv. [249] and note
- Lanistræ, the people chiefly employed in the Roman Bear-garden, i. 257
- Lansdowne, Lord, his Epilogue to the Jew of Venice, i. 256 note
- Laplanders, a custom of theirs in dwelling, i. 255
- Lately, Sarah, her humble petition, iii. 287
- Latinus, King, iii. 167
- Latius, ii. 293
- Laughter, some considerations on, ii. 101 seq.
- Laura, the wife of Duumvir, ii. 36 seq.
- Lauron, his Habits and Cries of the City of London, i. 41 note
- Lavender, an advertisement of, iv. [152]
- Lavinia, her marriage with Æneas, ii. 281 note
- ---- reduced to despair, iii. 170
- Law, a point of, iii. 393
- Law Courts, the New, iii. 99 note
- Lawrence's Toy Shop, iv. [153] note, [381]
- Lawyer, a, consulted on duelling, i. 254, 255
- Lawyer's Fortune; or, Love in a Hollow Tree, by Viscount Grimston, i. 178 and note
- Lawyers, resort to the Grecian, i. 13 note
- Le Brun, Charles, some account of, i. 74 and note, 75
- Leadenhall Street, ii. 377 note
- Leake, Sir John, i. 362
- Lear, Winifred, in a Breach of Promise, iv. [334], [335]
- Learned Annotations on "The Tatler," iv. [154] and note
- Learning, from the Grecian, i. 13:
- I. B.'s left to the Royal Society, i. 67 and note:
- only improves our natural endowments, ii. 67:
- the cause of, betrayed by pirates, ii. 349
- Lecky, his History of England in the Eighteenth Century, iii. 112 note; iv. [294] note
- "Led friend, a," iv. [73] seq., 74 note
- Ledger, Lemuel, a citizen, ii. 208
- Lee, Nathaniel, his Alexander the Great, i. 17 note, 139:
- his verses on Dryden, i. 56 note:
- referred to, ii. 334 note
- Leeds, i. 343 note; iii. 112 note
- Leeward Islands, iii. 221
- Leges Convivales, by Ben Jonson, ii. 215 and note
- Leghorn, i. 50, 61, 72, 182
- Leicester, Robert, Earl of, ii. 87 note
- Lely, Sir Peter, iv. [109] note
- Lemon Street, iv. [150] note
- Lens, i. 197, 205, 229, 269, 299, 332, 399; iii. 317, 320 333
- Lerida, i. 73; iv. [85], [87]
- Lesbia, i. 46
- ---- of Catullus, i. 387
- Lethe, ii. 104, 211; iii. 217
- Letter of intelligence, the form adopted by the Tatler, i. 7
- Letter to I. B., A, by Lord Cowper, iii. 2 note
- Letter to the Examiner, by Bolingbroke, iii. 2 note
- Letter to the Rev. Dr. Henry Sacheverell, by I. B., iii. 140 note
- Letter writing, the civilities of, ii. 210, 211
- Letters, the study of, commended, iii. 142, 143
- Letters describing the Character and Customs of the English and French Nations, by Murault, iii. 112 note
- Letters of gallantry, i. 251 seq.
- ---- men of, become men of business, iv. [4], [5]
- Letters Moral and Entertaining, by Mrs. Singer, i. 93 note
- Letters sent to "The Tatler" and "Spectator." See Original Letters, &c.
- Levis, of a mercurial disposition, iv. [254] seq.
- Levity, iii. 36
- Lewenhaupt, General, ii. 47 and note
- Liar, said by South to be a coward to man and a brave to God, i. 6
- Liberty, iii. 54: a vision of, iii. 251 seq.
- Liberties, of the Tower, iii. 264:
- of Westminster, iii. 283
- Lichenstein, Prince of, i. 183
- "Lie," the word, its use and abuse, iv. [302]
- Life, on the enjoyment of, ii. 98:
- the true philosophy of, iii. 293 seq.
- Life in the English Church, by Overton, iv. [293] note
- Lightfoot, Nokes, to be a huntsman, ii. 124
- Lights, great effect of, on temper, ii. 388
- Lille, or Lisle, i. 19 note, 34, 73, 77, 174, 237, 299, 354; iii. 68 note, 317
- Lillie, Charles, perfumer, on Snuff, i. 299 note:
- printer of Original Letters to "Tatler" and "Spectator," i. 89 note, 136 note; ii. 314 note; iii. 113 note, 130 note, 264 note, 375 note; iv. [13] note, [366] note:
- his British Perfumer, ii. 20 note; iv. [354] note:
- I. B. not his partner, ii. 322, 323:
- his assistance in dealing with coxcombs, ii. 359 seq., 399 seq.:
- his desire to be exposed, ii. 298:
- recommended, ii. 351, 352:
- his perfumed lightning, iii. 129:
- his Reports of "The Court of Honour," iv. [271], &c.:
- referred to, iii. 71 note, 82, 133, 140, 152, 277; iv. [38], [101], [287], [303], [319], [345], [349], [372]
- Lilly, William, astrologer, his History of Lilly's Life and Times, iv. [266] and note, 249
- Lilly's Head, i. 169 note
- Limbard, his Mirror, iii. 99 note
- Limberham, the kind keeper, i. 396 seq.
- Lincoln's Inn Fields, i. 119; ii. 163 note, 334 note; iii. 410 and note
- ---- Walks, i. 115; iv. [66]
- ---- Gardens, ii. 340
- Lindamira, i. 86, 185
- Linen must be clean at St. James's, i. 13
- Linger, Harry, a man of expectations, iv. [19]
- Lintott, Bernard, bookseller, i. 52 note; iii. 249 and note; iv. [154] and note
- Lions at the Tower, i. 247 and note
- Lis, i. 198, 205
- Lisbon, letters from, i. 106, 149, 253, 261; ii. 19, 187
- Little Description of the Great World, by Heylin, iv. [289] note
- Little Piazza, Covent Garden, i. 42 note
- ---- Britain, iv. [381]
- ---- Turnstile, iv. [150] note
- ---- St. Bernard, ii. 48
- Littleton, Coke on, iii. 107, 389
- Liverpool, iv. [209]
- Livy, ii. 63 note; iii. 329
- Llanbadern Vawr, i. 254 note
- Lloyd, Edward, founder of Lloyd's Coffee-house, iv. [359] and note
- Locke, John, his Essay Concerning Human Understanding, i. 328 and note:
- referred to, i. 316; iv. [166]
- Lofty, Colonel, iv. [68]
- Lombard Street, iii. 323, 352 note; iv. [359] note, [381]
- Lombards, the, ii. 57, 84
- London, i. 7 note, 12 note, 31 note, 362, 371, 392; ii. 12 note, 91, 150, 209, 236; iii. 92, 95, 110, 162, 257; iv. [95], [339] note
- ---- Bridge, a test of a man's fitness for travel, ii. 301
- ---- Daily Post, ii. 15 note
- ---- House, iii. 234 note
- ---- cries, i. 41 and note
- ---- Vocabulary, The, by Greenwood, iv. [196] note
- ---- Cuckolds, by Edward Ravenscroft, i. 73 and note
- ---- Gazette, i. 83 note, 157 note; ii. 260 note; iii. 112 note; iv. [154] note
- ---- Wall, i. 247 note
- Long, Major, his wine vaults, iii. 178
- Long Acre, iii. 345; iv. [380]
- Longinus, i. 148; ii. 70; iii. 105
- Longstaff, i. 102, 103, 104
- Longtail, Anthony, of Canterbury, i. 214 note
- Long-tails, i. 103
- Lord, Rev. Mr., curate, iv. [380]
- Lord Mayor's Day, i. 73 note
- Lorio, beloved of Maria, ii. 287 seq.
- Lorrain, Paul, the Ordinary of Newgate, ii. 102 and note
- Lothbury, i. 334
- Lottery, the Million, ii. 268 and note
- ---- scheme for getting ladies fortunes, iv. [38] seq., 48, 49 seq.:
- the first state, iii. 55, 296 seq.:
- I. B.'s help requested, iii. 59, 60:
- the penny, iii. 58 and note:
- referred to, iii. 77
- Lottume, General, i. 362
- Lotius, inconsistencies of his character, iv. [90]
- Lotus, the, iii. 177 and note
- Louis, Duke of Bourbon, son of the Dauphin, iii. 194 note
- Louis XIII., ii. 54
- ---- XIV., his character, i. 193 seq.:
- a letter to, i. 194; iii. 394:
- verses to, i. 206:
- a letter from, i. 217:
- referred to, i. 20 note, 54 note, 74 note, 165, 197, 219, 244 note, 246, 313, 322, 332, 372; ii. 166, 204, 322; iii. 23, 33 note; iv. [187]
- Love, its power over Cynthio, i. 14, 15 and note, 184 seq.:
- now in disgrace, i. 46:
- not blind but squinting, and a thief, i. 47, 48:
- a story of rivalry in, i. 52 seq.:
- resolutions always inspired by, i. 90 seq.:
- its power illustrated by Dryden's All for Love, i. 93 and note:
- craft in, natural to woman, i. 163:
- safety in following the judgment of others, i. 187:
- the tyranny of, i. 371 seq.:
- compared to lust, i. 394 seq.:
- the passion of, ii. 281 seq.:
- a parable of, ii. 283 seq.:
- grows in marriage, ii. 312 seq.:
- a victim of unrequited, ii. 382 seq.:
- disappointments in, iii. 368 seq.:
- an allegory of, from Spenser, iv. [7]-12:
- the passion condemned in every aspect, iv. [15] seq.:
- case of heroic love in the city, iv. [99] seq.
- Love for Love, by Congreve, i. 15 and note, 16 note, 17 note, 29 note; ii. 163 note; iii. 38
- Love in a Hollow Tree; or, The Lawyer's Fortune, by Viscount Grimston, i. 178 and note
- Love in a Wood, by Wycherley, i. 311 note
- Love's Last Shift, by Cibber, iii. 356
- Lovely, Lady, iv. [71]
- Lovemore, a happy husband, iii. 193 seq.
- Lover, The, Steele's, quoted, i. 192 note; ii. 255 note; iii. 161 note
- Lovers, plain language recommended in place of usual perplexity and rapture, i. 287:
- advice to, ii. 250 seq.:
- difficulties in classing, iii. 257
- Low Countries, the, i. 156, 205, 229, 299
- Lucca, i. 50, 61, 72
- Lucia, jealous of her mother, iv. [67]
- Lucian, his Judicium Vocalium, iv. [339] and note
- Lucinda, the charming, iv. [352]
- Lucippe, admired of the fops, i. 395, seq.
- Lucius, a play by Mrs. Manley, iv. [242] note
- Lucretia, worthy of a place in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 246, 247:
- her character, ii. 247:
- the story of, iii. 19
- Lucy, Mrs. (i.e. Mrs. Warren), i. 286 note
- Ludgate Church, i. 168 note
- ---- Hill, iii. 72
- ---- Street, iv. [169] note
- Lust compared to love, i. 394 seq.:
- the Temple of, iii. 36
- Luther, his Colloquies quoted, iv. [52] note
- Luttrell, his Brief Relation, i. 38 note, 124 note, 325 note:
- his Diary, ii. 5 note, 19 note
- Luxemburg, Chevalier de, ii. 200
- Lydia, beloved of one born blind, ii. 46
- ---- a finished coquette, iii. 66 seq.
- ---- on manners in church, iii. 144
- ---- the plains of, iv. [238], [239]
- Lydians, the, ii. 53
- Lying Lover, Steele's, quoted, i. 219 note; ii. 145 note
- Lyons, i. 35, 94, 154
- Lysander, a faithful lover, ii. 40, 41
- ---- his happiness spoilt by flattery, iv. [105] seq.
- Lysetta, iv. [142]
- Macbeth, i. 125 note, 346 note; ii. 140; iii. 282, 334 note; iv. [277]
- Macguire, Colonel Hugh, fourth husband and gaoler of Elizabeth Malyn, iv. [261] note
- Machiavel, iii. 51; iv. [103]
- Mackinnon, his History of the Coldstream Guards, ii. 315 note
- Mackworth, Sir Humphrey, wrongly taken for Coppersmith, ii. 84 and note
- Macrinus, ii. 423
- M'Swiney, Owen (King Oberon), translated Pyrrhus and Demetrius from Italian of Scarlatti, i. 40 note:
- manager of Drury Lane and Haymarket, i. 110 and note; ii. 334 note
- "Madam," used by town ladies, i. 89 note:
- its use complained of, iii. 143
- Madmen distinguished from fools, i. 328, 329:
- proposals for dealing with them, iii. 61 seq.
- Madonella (Mary Astell), founder of a nunnery for single women, i. 265 seq.:
- and of a college for young damsels, ii. 103 seq.
- Madonnas, the lodgings of, iii. 153
- Madrid, i. 50, 51, 73, 106, 332; iv. [148], [158]
- Mæcenas, a second, iv. [4] note
- Mævius, a vain author, ii. 291
- ----, iv. [235]
- Magdalen College, Oxford, iv. [204] note
- Maggot, Major-General, cheesemonger, i. 232, 233
- Mahon, Port, i. 50, 61, 72
- Maids, beautiful, in the "Mirror of Truth," ii. 356 seq.
- Maid's Tragedy, by Beaumont and Fletcher, iii. 279 note
- Maintenon, Madame, an imaginary letter from, i. 164 seq.
- Maittaire, Michael, his edition of Epistles to Ortuinus, &c., iv. [22] note:
- his English Grammar, iv. [196] note
- Makebate, Elizabeth, indicted for theft, iv. [315] seq.
- Malacca, Straits of, iii. 154 note
- Mall, the, i. 311 note; ii. 322; iii. 220, 246; iv. [185]
- Malplaquet, battle of, i. 19 note, 378 note; ii. 105, 106, 113, 149, 265
- Malyn, Elizabeth, the unfortunate, iv. [261] and note
- Man, every worthless man a dead man, ii. 317 seq.:
- above all things, should respect himself, ii. 392:
- desire for esteem, iv. [64] seq.
- ---- Mrs., vendor of pills, iv. [150] note
- Manchester, first Earl of, iv. [3] note
- Mandeville, Sir John, his Travels, iv. [288]:
- pretended additions to, iv. [288] seq.
- Manilius (Lord Cowper), iii. 1 note
- Mankind, the pleasurable and busy part to be noticed in Tatler, i. 7
- Manley, Mrs. de la Rivière (Epicene and Sappho?), her New Atalantis, i. 55 note; iv. [172], [173] note, [242]:
- her Narrative of Guiscard's Examination, i. 245 note:
- her Memoirs, &c., ii. 104 and note; iii. 330 note:
- her apologies to Steele, iv. [242] note:
- her Lucius, iv. [242] note:
- referred to, i. 285 note
- Manly, Mrs. Arabella, school-mistress at Hackney, on samplers, i. 41 and note
- Manners, insisted on in the Tatler, i. 7:
- societies for the reform of, i. 31 and note:
- of the age influenced by the theatre, i. 111:
- discussions on, i. 336 note
- Mansion House, i. 153 note
- Manufactures, suggested improvement in, i. 34
- Mapheus Vegius continued the Æneid, ii. 281 and note
- Margarita de l'Epine, Francesca, of Tuscany, a famous singer, iii. 191 and note
- Margery, the milkmaid, on May Day, iii. 275 note
- Maria (? Duchess of Montagu), sorrow for loss of her lap-dog, i. 386, 387:
- her profession of love to I. B., ii. 240, 241:
- I. B.'s answer, ii. 242, 243:
- one of the "top toasts" of the town, ii. 286 seq.
- Mariana, letter from, i. 330, 331
- Marines, an honest lieutenant of the, ii. 216, 217
- Marinus (? Lord Forbes), a naval officer of lively intelligence, ii. 83 and note
- Mark, Sir, in dialogue on duelling, i. 318 seq.
- ---- Antony, i. 18
- Marlborough, Duke of, his character, i. 54 and note:
- and Prince Eugène compared to Cæsar and Alexander, i. 62, 63
- Referred to, i. 19 note 20, 44 51, 62, 72, 80 note, 88, 89, 91 note, 97, 106, 120, 143, 151, 155, 166, 183, 198, 205, 213, 214, 229, 236, 269, 290, 299, 305 note, 353, 379, 399; ii. 48, 49, 96, 106 note, 107, 108, 109, 110, 113 note, 126, 127, 133; iii. 1 note, 6 note, 89, 129, 162 note, 316, 320, 378 note; iv. [271]
- Marlborough, Duchess of, ii. 178 note; iii. 2 note, 6 note
- Marow, Lady, a letter from, iii. 9, 10 note
- Marriage, married persons to be avoided, i. 69:
- a miserable, i. 68:
- verses on, by Heywood, i. 398:
- happiness of, is in our own hands, ii. 212:
- beware of small provocations in, ii. 213; iii. 402, 403, 404:
- the duties of, ii. 251 and seq.:
- its blessings and its distresses, iii. 189 seq.:
- not a fit subject for ridicule, iii. 238 seq.:
- the proper conduct of, iii. 304 seq.:
- old customs in, iii. 362 seq.:
- indifference, happiness, or misery in, iii. 382, 383 seq.
- Mars, i. 42, 59, 232, 351, 352; iv. [321]
- Mars Triumphant; or, London's Glory, ii. 79, 80
- Marseilles, i. 60, 182
- Marshalsea, the, ii. 315 note
- Marston Moor, iii. 99
- Marten, Mr. John, i. 215 and note
- Martial, an epigram of, ii. 169:
- the death of, iii. 329:
- quoted, iii. 44, 86, 92; iv. [163], [320]
- Martio (i.e. Earl of Oxford), i. 45 and note
- Martius, a brisk entertaining fool, ii. 65-67
- ---- (? Cornelius Wood), a brave invalid, iii. 324, 325
- Marvell, Andrew, his Satires, i. 153 note
- Mary, Queen (and William), i. 188 note
- ---- (or Miss Molly), her attentions to I. B., ii. 289 seq.:
- recommended to I. B., ii. 311:
- a fine, but scornful woman, iv. [201]
- Marylebone, a house in, described, i. 154:
- referred to, i. 234 note; iv. [54] note
- ---- Gardens, iv. [54] and note
- Massey, his Origin and Progress of Letters, iii. 133 note; iv. [329] note
- Massy, Dame Claude de, ii. 54
- Match, a, expected, but will not come off, i. 69 seq.:
- made for the sake of estates, iv. [31] seq.
- Matchlock, Major, of the Club, iii. 99
- Mather, Charles (Charles Bubbleboy), a toyman, i. 228 note; ii. 418:
- some account of his stock in trade, iii. 152 seq.
- Matrimony, a letter on, i. 330, 331
- Maubeuge, i. 174; ii. 109
- Maud, the milkmaid, who spoilt the blood but mended the constitutions of the Bickerstaffs, ii. 191; iii. 266
- Maudlin, ancestress of the Greenhats and left-hand wife of Nehemiah Bickerstaff, ii. 72
- Maurice, Edward, of Nassau, iv. [86], [87]
- Maximilian, Prince of Lichenstein, i. 95
- Mayfair abolished, i. 41 and note:
- its history, i. 41 note:
- referred to, i. 169, 170, 228 note; ii. 416
- Maynwaring, Arthur, vol. i. dedicated to, i. 7:
- his descent and life, i. 7 note:
- his contempt for fame, i. 8:
- his Life and Posthumous Works, published by Oldmixon in 1715, i. 8 note:
- his History of Hannibal and Hanno, &c., collected from the best authors, iii. 379 note:
- a letter from (?), iii. 407 note, 408 seq.
- "Maypole," the, iv. [150] note
- Mazeppa, General, i. 213
- Medals, Addison on, i. 152 and note
- Meddle, Mrs., a confidante, i. 48
- Medical science, a discovery in, i. 384
- Medicine, The, poem by Harrison, i. 23 seq.
- Medley, The, paper set up by Maynwaring in opposition to the Examiner, i. 7 note; ii. 372 note
- Medlicot, Mr., i. 124 note
- Melantius, in The Maid's Tragedy, played by Betterton, iii. 279 note
- Mellos, Count de, i. 94
- Memoirs of Gamesters, by Egerton, ii. 14 note; iii. 100 note
- Memoirs of British Learned Ladies, iii. 274 note
- Memoirs from the Mediterranean, by Mrs. Manley, ii. 104
- Memoirs of Europe towards the close of the Eighth Century, by Mrs. Manley, ii. 104 note, 330 note
- Memoirs of Bartholomew Fair, by Henry Morley, ii. 313
- Memoirs of what passed in Christendom from 1672 to 1679, by Temple, ii. 351 note
- Memoirs of the Life and Adventures of Signor Rozelli, i. 83 note
- Memoirs of the Wars of the Cevennes, by Cavallier, i. 244 note
- Men, would rather be in pain and appear happy, than happy and thought miserable, ii. 99
- Menelaus, i. 59
- Menmius on the passion of love, ii. 282 seq.
- Menzikoff, Prince, ii. 47 and note; iii. 85 note, 221
- Mercer, a young, so spruce he fears he shall never be genteel, ii. 122 seq.
- Mercers' Company, iii. 133 note
- Mercett, Tom (i.e. Thomas Tickell), a professed wit, iv. [123] note, [124] seq.
- Merchant, the, nephew of I. B., iv. [70] seq., 99 seq.
- Merchant Taylors' School, i. 152
- Merci, Count de, i. 129, 144; ii. 73
- Mercure Galant, ii. 134 and note; iii. 336
- Mercure Scandale, i. xi
- Mercury, God of thieves, ii. 53, 281; iii. 51, 223:
- his endeavours to teach Cupid, iv. [322]
- Meriden, Mr., a sword cutler, ii. 156 note
- Merlinus Liberatus, Partridge's Almanac, ii. 319 note, 320 note; iv. [153] note
- Merlinus Redivivus, ii. 320 note
- Merry Christ Church Bells, by Dr. Aldrich, i. 281 and note
- "Merry Fellows" the saddest fellows in the world, i. 371:
- described, i. 368, 369, 370; ii. 166
- Merry Wives of Windsor quoted, ii. 264 note
- Mesgrigny, M. de, i. 399
- Messalina, professed mistress of mankind, i. 397
- "Mettled fellow, a," ii. 321
- Meursius, iii. 376
- Meyerfeldt, General, ii. 135 note
- Microscopes, the wonders of, iii. 28 seq.
- Middle age devoted to ambition, iii. 32
- Middle Temple, i. 161; iii. 192 note
- ---- Gateway, ii. 260 note
- Middlesex, bribery in, ii. 19 note:
- referred to, ii. 91
- Midgley, John, ii. 179 note
- Midriffe, Rebecca, a letter from, iv. [108], [109]
- Milan, i. 35, 76, 182; iv. [85]
- Mildenheim, Prince of, title given to the Duke of Marlborough after battle of Blenheim, i. 54 note
- Mile End, iv. [44]
- Milk Street, iv. [370]
- Millamant, played by Mrs. Bracegirdle, i. 17 note
- Miller's Herbal, iv. [353] note
- Mills, John, the actor, his salary, ii. 164 note; iv. [42] and note
- Milo, ii. 152
- Milton, his Paradise Lost compared to Dryden's State of Innocence and Fall of Man, i. 55, 56:
- on love, i. 329, 330:
- Paradise Lost quoted, ii. 7 and note; iii. 103 note, 188, 189; iv. [116], [117], [119], [210] note and seq., 140, 141, 340, 341:
- quoted at a wedding, ii. 216:
- Comus quoted, ii. 332, 333:
- referred to, i. 263 and note; iv. [166]
- Milton Street, formerly Grubb Street, i. 335 note
- Minas, Marquis des, i. 261
- "Miner, the," defined, ii. 271
- Minerva, i. 59; ii. 294
- Mint, the, i. 229
- Minucio, a small philosopher, iii. 301
- Mirandola, Duchess of, iii. 221
- Mirrour, Tom (i.e. Estcourt), comic actor, ii. 15 seq.
- Mirtillo, a learned "ogler," iii. 167 seq.
- Miscellanies in Verse and Prose, by Jabez Hughes, i. 97 and note
- Miscellany Poems, ed. by Dryden, i. 92 and note, 112, 380 note
- "Miss," title confined to young girls under twenty-one, or "giddy women," i. 89 note
- Mision, his Travels in England, iii. 275 note
- Mitre Tavern, i. 188 note
- Modely, Tom, on the fashions, iii. 273 seq.
- Moderator, The, iii. 378 note; iv. [187]
- Modern Poets, projected by D'Urfey, i. 100
- Modern Prophets, by D'Urfey, i. 18 note, 42 note, 100 and note
- Modesty not pretended to by Tatler, i. 4:
- a conversation on, ii. 23 seq., 261 seq.:
- in a man should be as a shade in a picture, ii. 24:
- a modest fellow and a modest man, ii. 26, 27:
- becomes a woman, ii. 246:
- true and false, iv. [114], [115]
- Modish, Lady Betty, character in Cibber's Careless Husband drawn for and acted by Mrs. Oldfield, i. 90 and note, 91 note; iii. 357 note; iv. [94] note
- ---- Cornet, an anecdote of, i. 320 seq.
- Mohocks, the, i. 327 note:
- the Emperor of, iii. 299 note, 300, 301
- Mohun, Michael, actor, a notice of, ii. 334 and note
- ---- Lord, i. 30 note
- Molière, his L'Avare, ii. 126 note:
- referred to, iv. [162]
- Molly, Miss. See Mary
- Monceaux, Peter de, ii. 54
- Monck, General, ii. 267 and note
- Monimia, in The Orphan, played by Mrs. Barry, i. 16 note
- Monmouth, Duke of, iii. 100 note; iv. [372] note
- Monoculus (i.e. Sir Humphrey Monoux), a sharper, i. 298 and note; ii. 51, 206:
- letters to and from, ii. 173-175
- Monoux, Sir Humphrey. See Monoculus
- Mons, i. 4, 19 note, 144, 174, 184, 269, 291; ii. 97, 106, 107, 133, 134, 199, 222, 232, 244, 266 note
- Monstrosities noticed, iv. [159] seq.
- Montagu, Edward Wortley, Esq., second volume Tatler dedicated to, ii. 1 and note, 2 note:
- supplied material for No. 223, iv. [142] note
- Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley, letters of, ii. 2 note:
- referred to, i. 38 note; ii. 1 note
- ---- Edward, first Earl of Sandwich, ii. 1 note
- ---- Edward W., junior, ii. 1 note
- ---- Mary, ii. 1 note
- ---- Duke of, i. 47 note
- ---- Duchess of (? Maria), i. 386 and note
- Montague, Charles, a second Mæcenas, vol. iv. dedicated to, iv. [3] and note, 4 note:
- referred to, i. vii
- ---- Mr. Chancellor, i. 124 note
- Montague House, i. 258: fields behind it a favourite place for duelling, iv. [349]
- Montaigne quoted, ii. 239; iv. [320]
- Montandre, Marquis de, iii. 76 note
- Monthly Chronicle, iv. [195] note
- Monthly Miscellany; or, Gentleman's Journal, ii. 134 and note
- Montpellier, iii. 63; iv. [204] note
- Monument, the, i. 233
- Moore, T., apothecary, iv. [152] note, 382
- Moorfields, French prophets in, i. 100 note:
- plans for a college at, i. 247 note; iii. 64, 73 seq., 134, 149, 258, 313 seq., 318 seq., 336:
- candidates for, iii. 313 seq.
- Moorgate, i. 334
- Mopsa, a young country wench, iii. 58, 77, 78, 79
- ---- in despair at neglect at a masquerade, iii. 171
- Mopstaff, Humphrey, Bachelor of Queen's College, Oxon., i. 153
- ----, i. 102, 104
- Morality, life without its rules is a wayward, uneasy being, i. 398
- More, Sir Thomas, ii. 223 note
- ---- Henry, the Platonist, his Conjectura Cabalistica, i. 262 and note
- ---- Mr., writing-master, iv. [329] and note
- Morforio, iii. 87, 91
- Morley, Professor Henry, his Memoirs of Bartholomew Fair, ii. 313 note:
- his Life of Girolamo Cardano, iv. [103] note
- ---- John, on Guicciardini, iv. [342] note
- Morning, Swift's lines on, i. 111.
- See Description of the Morning
- ---- gowns, iv. [149] and note
- Morocco, ambassador of, iii. 38 and note
- Morphew, John, printer of the Tatler, referred to, i. 64 and note, 106 note, 218, 222 note, 261, 299 note; ii. 129, 167, 207, 222, 248, 360, 365; iii. 57, 71 note, 77, 133, 249, 255, 277, 336, 346, 374; iv. [13], [14], [38], [128], [186], [233], [380]
- Morris' Coffee-house, i. 161
- Mortagne, i. 290, 299
- Mortar, Hon. Colonel, ii. 88
- Mortlake, ii. 320 note
- Motteux, Peter Anthony, dramatist, ii. 377 note and seq.:
- published Gentleman's Journal, ii. 134 and note
- "Mount of Restitution," the, ii. 343, 353 seq.
- Mountford, the actor, i. 30 note
- ----, Mrs, i. 30 note
- Mourning, the æsthetic advantages of, iii. 194 seq.
- Moving pictures, iii. 82 and note, 83 and note, 283
- Mr. Pope's Welcome from Greece, by Gay, i. 380 note
- "Mrs.," title used for country gentlewomen, i. 89 note
- Muffen, Mr., keeper of a china shop, i. 83 note
- Mulgrave, Earl of, i. 117 note
- Mum, a bottle of, ii. 261; iii. 23 and note
- Mundon, Admiral, i. 280 note
- Muralt, his Letters describing the Character and Customs of English and French Nations, iii. 112 note
- Musæus, ii. 232; iii. 216
- Muscovites, i. 72, 236; ii. 67; iii. 220, 246
- ---- Czar of, iii. 221; iv. [153] note, [186], [227]
- Museum Tradescantianum, a collection of rarities preserved at South Lambeth, near London, by John Tradescant, i. 282 note
- Muses' Mercury, i. x
- "Musical Instruments," by Addison, i. 4:
- male characters illustrated by, iii. 206 seq., 258:
- female characters illustrated by, iii. 228 seq., 248
- Musket (or Pistol) of Wapping, i. 200, 201 and note
- Musty, a kind of snuff, i. 229; ii. 214, 352
- Myrmidons, the, of Homer, ii. 52, 74, 81, 117
- Nab, Ralph, haberdasher, humble petition of, iv. [371]
- Naboharzon, King of Babylon, iii. 223
- Naked Boy, the, iv. [148] note
- Naked Truth, The, by Colonel Crowther (?), sarcasms on, i. 146 note and seq., 178 seq.
- Nakedness, an affectation of, iv. [109] seq.
- Namur, i. 52, 174
- Nando's Coffee-house, i. 228 note; iii. 152, 348
- Naples, i. 50, 75, 94, 213; iii. 86; iv. [321]
- Narrative of Guiscard's Examination, by Mrs. Manley, i. 245 note
- Nassau, Prince of, i. 105, 290; ii. 149
- Nations led to revolution by extraordinary genius, not by general bent of feeling, i. 54
- Naturalisation, act of, i. 84 and note, 121 note, 162
- Naunton, Sir Robert, iv. [180]
- Nayler, James, the Quaker, a place claimed for him in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 207 and note
- Nectar and ambrosia, iv. [153] and note
- Nero, Life of, by Suetonius, i. 257 and note:
- referred to, ii. 167, 168
- Nestor, i. 59, 60:
- the talk of, iii. 103
- ---- (Sir Christopher Wren), ii. 24 and note, 25 and note
- Neuhausel, i. 183, 236
- Neverout, Mr., ii. 6 note
- New Atalantis, by Mrs. Manley, whom see
- Newcomb, Ellin, iv. [381]
- Newgate, iii. 306 note
- ---- Market, i. 235 note; iv. [304] note
- ---- Street, ii. 97
- Newington, ii. 41, 42 note
- ---- Green, ii. 156 note
- Newman, Richard, indicted for the use of the word "perhaps," iv. [302]
- Newmarket, ii. 181 note
- News from Parnassus, by Boccalini, iv. [341], [342] note
- News, foreign and domestic, from St. James's Coffee-house, i. 13:
- the news in the Tatler is for most part only of slight interest, i. 19 note:
- Tatler will supply such news as has escaped public notice, i. 52:
- to be given up in the Tatler, i. 182 note
- "News-writers, the Distress of," by Addison, i. 4, 156 seq.:
- helped by a knowledge of astrology, i. 28:
- shifts they are reduced to, i. 347:
- excluded from the Chamber of Fame, ii. 187
- Newspapers as pernicious to people of England as books of chivalry to those of Spain, iii. 335 seq.
- Newton, Sir Isaac, his philosophy, i. 350 note:
- referred to, iv. [121]
- Nice, Will, a fop, i. 128
- Nicholas, Master, barber in Don Quixote, i. 282 and note
- Nichols, his Select Collection of Poems, i. 47 note, 203 note:
- quoted, i. 126 note, 146 note, 201 note, 245 note, 265 note, 283 note, 291 note, 305 note, 310 note, 343 note, 350 note; ii. 3 note, 5 note, 19 note, 25 note, 43 note, 102 note, 187 note, 199 note, 201 note, 223 note, 264 note, 272 note, 317 note, 410 note; iii. 21 note, 26 note, 58 note, 76 note, 84 note, 85 note, 87 note, 100 note, 163 note, 192 note, 278 note, 343 note, 390 note; iv. [123] note, [138] note, [201] note, [210] note, [376] note
- "Nickers," their habits, ii. 204
- Nicknack, Jeffry, a letter from, i. 228
- Nicolini, Cavalier Grimaldi, his benefit-night delayed at request of ladies of quality, iii. 150:
- referred to, i. 171 note; iii. 5 note and seq., 6 note, 129
- "Night-cap wig," i. 216 and note
- Night-cap presented to I. B., iii. 130, 148, 149
- "No," the difficulty of saying, ii. 243
- No Duke, by Nahum Tate, iii. 409
- Noah's Flood, in puppet-show, i. 140 note
- Noailles, Duke of, i. 95
- Nobilis, his unsuccessful attempts to be a rake, i. 224, 225
- Noble Street, i. 334
- "Nock," iv. [320] and note
- Nocturnus, the keeper of Messalina, i. 397
- Nonsense the prevailing part of eloquence, ii. 77
- Norfolk Street, i. 161
- Norris, John, the divine, his Theory and Regulation of Love, i. 262 and note, 263 note
- ---- Admiral Sir John, i. 205 and note
- North Briton, Mr., or Mr. William Scott, iv. [310], [311]
- Norton, Richard (? the gentleman of Hampshire), the author of Pausanias, i. 358 and note
- Norwich crape, ii. 195 note
- Noses, a paper on, iv. [320] seq.
- Notch, Sir Jeffrey, a foreman of the Club, iii. 99
- Nottingham, Daniel, Earl of, called Don Diego Dismallo, i. 184 and note; iii. 192 note
- Nova Zembla, iv. [289], [314]
- Novel, a coxcomb, in the Plain Dealer, i. 243 and note
- "Novelists," iii. 327, 332 note
- Nowhere, Lord, a coxcomb, i. 310
- Noye, William, his strange will, i. 87 and note
- ---- Edward, i. 87 note
- Numps, i. 82
- Oberon, Platonne's footman, i. 263
- ---- King (i.e. Owen M'Swiney), i. 110 and note
- Observator, The, iii. 377 note
- Oceanus, iii. 176
- Ogle, Jack, iii. 100 and note
- Ogling, the art of, i. 86; iii. 166 seq.
- Oh Nee Zeath Ton No Prow, Iroquois chief of the River Sachen and the Ganajohhom Sachen, iii. 299 note, 301
- Old age, the follies of, i. 376; iv. [350] seq.:
- devoted to avarice, iii. 32
- Old Bachelor, The, by Congreve, i. 81 and note; ii. 62 note
- Old Bailey, The, ii. 4 note, 244 seq.; iii. 42
- Old Devil, the, ii. 299
- Old Fox Inn, the, iv. [317]
- Old Man's Coffee-house, iv. [150] note
- Old Mode, The, and the New; or, Country Miss with her Furbelow, by D'Urfey, iii. 196 note
- Old Southampton Buildings, iv. [150] note
- Oldfield, Mrs., contention with Mrs. Bracegirdle, i. 17 note:
- as Lady Betty Modish, i. 90, 91 note; iii. 357 note; iv. [94] note:
- her salary, ii. 164 note:
- executress to Arthur Maynwaring, i. 7 and 8 note:
- not as Flavia, iv. [94] note
- Oldfox, Major, in The Plain Dealer, i. 243 and note
- Oldham, his Satire addressed to a friend that is about to leave the University, iv. [296], [297]:
- his translation of Horace, iv. [364]
- Oldmixon, published Maynwaring's Life and Posthumous Works in 1715, i. 8 note:
- (? the unborn poet), ii. 97 and note
- Oldys, i. 346 note
- "Olive Tree and Still," iv. [149] note
- Olivenza, i. 253, 261, 332; ii. 19
- Oliver (Cromwell), his porter, ii. 14 and note; iii. 65
- Oliver, William, M.D., F.R.S., his Dissertation on Bath Waters, i. 133 note
- "Ombre," a game of cards, ii. 29 and note
- Omicron (? John Oldmixon), the unborn poet, ii. 97 note, 161
- "One Bell" Inn, the, iii. 158
- Open-breasted waistcoats, a fashion, ii. 314 note; iii. 197
- Opera, the, discouraged by supporters of the theatres, i. 40 seq.:
- Addison and Dennis on, i. 40 note:
- one in which hero sang Italian and the heroine English, i. 171 note:
- given up to acrobats, ii. 388 seq.; iii. 5
- Orange, Prince of, i. 174; ii. 105, 133; iii. 162 note
- Oranienburg, i. 72; iv. [57]
- Oraison, M. d'André, Marquis d', ii. 54
- Oratory, the art of, ii. 155: graceful, iii. 373
- Orestea, the friend of Piledea, ii. 148
- Origin and Progress of Letters, by Massey, iii. 133 note; iv. [329] note
- Original Letters to the "Tatler" and "Spectator," i. 89 note, 136 note; ii. 314 note; iii. 113 note, 130 note, 264 note, 375 note; iv. [13] note, [366] note
- Orkney, Lord, i. 290, 291; ii. 109
- Orlando the Fair (i.e. Beau Feilding), ii. 3 note and seq., 4, 13 seq.
- Ormond, James Butler, Duke of, supposed original of Lord Timon, i. 84 note:
- as Duumvir, ii. 35 note and seq.:
- referred to, iii. 163 note, 299 note
- Orontes, a letter from, iii. 375 note
- Orphan, The, Monimia in, played by Mrs. Barry, i. 16 note:
- the Page in, played by Mrs. Bracegirdle, i. 17 note
- Orrery, Roger Boyle, Earl of, i. 145 and note
- Ortuinus Gratius, a doctor of divinity, iv. [21] note
- Osborne, Th., Duke of Leeds (? Downes), iii. 407 note and seq.
- ---- Miss (? Flavia), afterwards wife of Bishop Atterbury, iv. [94] and note, 222 note
- Oscitation, very different from laughter, ii. 102
- Osmyn, a civil husband, ii. 27 seq.
- Ostend, i. 244; ii. 105
- Osyris, correspondent from Scotland, iii. 165
- Othello, his handkerchief, i. 345:
- referred to, ii. 344 note, 375; iii. 281, 380, 383, 384; iv. [42]
- Otway, his Venice Preserved, iii. 105
- Oudenarde, i. 19, 34, 378 note
- Overdo, Mr. Justice, in Bartholomew Fair, i. 280 and note
- ---- Mrs. Arabella, her low dresses, iv. [109], [110]
- Overton, Mr., his Life in the English Church, iv. [293] note
- ---- Mr., picture seller, iv. [379]
- Ovid, Met. quoted, i. 359; ii. 388; iii. 238, 375, 367; iv. [147], [210], [219], [224], [290], [291]:
- Ep. quoted, i. 117 and note; iv. [206]:
- Rem. Am. quoted, iii. 12, 189; iv. [25], [181]:
- Amor. El., iv. [324]:
- Ars Am., iii. 175:
- referred to, i. 77; iii. 19, 310
- Oxenstern, Count of, ii. 109
- Oxford, helps a man to find his level, i. 249:
- superior way of reckoning time at, i. 315, 316:
- home of virtue and knowledge, i. 314 seq.:
- almanac of, i. 315 seq., 351:
- supports Powell or Dr. Blackall, i. 365 and note:
- Terræ-Filius; or, The Secret History of, i. 366 note:
- Hogarth's "Theatre at," i. 366 note:
- a letter from, ii. 165:
- bad manners at, ii. 165, 166:
- an Oxford scholar, ii. 363:
- a habit at, iv. [24]:
- referred to, i. 7 note, 210, 281 note, 282 note; ii. 171 note, 187, 269; iii. 357; iv. [130], [204] note, [237], [324]
- Oxford, Earl of (Martio), i. 45, 305 note
- Packington, Sir John, i. 325 note
- Pacolet, Mr., I. B.'s "familiar," his history, i. 131 seq.:
- referred to, i. 115, 116, 122, 135, 186, 219, 220, 221, 222, 235, 327, 355, 357, 375, 387; ii. 16, 107, 157, 176, 206, 225 seq.; iii. 283
- Pætus and Arria, two notable lovers, ii. 167 seq.
- Page, the, I. B.'s nephew, iv. [70] seq.
- Paget, Colonel, iv. [376] note
- Painter, Advice to a, by Waller, i. 34 and note
- Painter, Directions to a, by Denham, i. 34 and note
- Painter, Instructions to a, by Waller, i. 34 and note
- Palace Yard, iii. 127
- Palamede of the Temple, lover of Cælia, iv. [26] seq.
- Palatinates, i. 43, 337; ii. 19, 146 note, 410; iii. 57
- Palatine, Elector of, i. 183
- Palestris, a victim of the spleen, iv. [263]
- Pall Mall, i. 14, 82, 92; ii. 91 note, 111, 210
- Pallas, i. 336, 352
- Pall-bearers chosen for I. B.'s funeral, i. 66, 67
- Palmer, Roger, made Earl of Castlemaine, ii. 7 note
- Palmes, Major-General, i. 61
- Pandarus, a purveyor, i. 374
- ---- a myrmidon, ii. 52 seq.
- Pantheon, the, "The Temple of the Heathen Gods," i. 42 note
- Panton, Brigadier, iv. [376] note
- Paradise, iv. [166], [340]
- Paradise Lost compared to Dryden's State of Innocence, i. 55, 56:
- referred to, i. 263 note, 330; ii. 7 note; iii. 103 and note; iv. [116], [117], [119], [140], [141], [210] seq., 340, 341:
- quoted, ii. 216, 358, 424, 425; iii. 188, 189
- Parents, their foolish preferences, iv. [201] seq.
- Paris, want of bread in, i. 95, 96, 154, 206:
- referred to, i. 28, 73, 74, 85, 95, 105, 121, 144, 183, 204, 229, 237, 305; ii. 12 note, 54, 90, 158, 275 note, 322; iii. 333; iv. [207]
- ---- Helen's epistle to, i. 117 and note
- Parisatis, her cure of a coquette, i. 86
- Parker, Richard, ii. 410 note
- Parmenian, ii. 135 note
- Parœmiographia Græci, by Gaisford, i. 360 note
- Parrot, Michael, his advertisement, iv. [152] and note
- Parsimony, iii. 52
- Parsons, the Jesuit, a model of style, iv. [180]
- Parthenope in The Rehearsal, i. 72 and note
- Partlett, Mrs., a widow, iv. [332]
- Partridge, John, his supposed death and defence, i. 21 and note, 22 and note:
- his Almanac, i. xi. 21 note; ii. 319 note and seq.:
- some account of, ii. 320 note:
- news from the dead, iii. 23:
- the genuine is dead, iv. [113]:
- Tit for Tat issued under his name, iv. [172] note:
- referred to, i. 64, 102, 126, 127 note, 168 note, 298, 361; ii. 54, 72, 127, 200, 323, 339; iii. 59; iv. [153] note
- Party does not influence I. B. so much as opinion, i. 5:
- impartiality shown by his treatment of all parties, ibid.
- Pasquin of Rome, letters to I. B, iii. 83 seq., 375 seq.:
- referred to, iii. 82 note, 91, 379 note, 391 note
- Passion, its dangers, iii. 303, 305 seq.
- Passive obedience, the doctrine of, i. 359 note and seq.; ii. 8 seq., 17 seq.
- Pastor Fido, by Tasso, iii. 236
- Pastorals, by Philips and by Pope, i. 112 note:
- the season and place for writing, iii. 157, 158
- Pastorella, her conversion for coquetry, i. 85, 86, 87:
- called "Miss," i. 89 note:
- referred to, i. 117, 196
- Patches, concerning, ii. 132
- Paté, General, i. 75
- Patience, Mrs., i. 89 note
- Patkul, Jean Reinhold de, of Livonia, ii. 135 and note
- Patricia (i.e. Ireland) i. 45
- Patriotism, the decay of, iii. 358 seq.
- Patroclus, iii. 203
- Patrons, iv. [17] seq.
- Paulo (i.e. Bateman) of the City, his character, i. 211
- Paulucci, Cardinal, i. 49
- Pausanias, by Richard Norton, i. 358 note
- Peace means death to news-writers, i. 158 seq.:
- the terms of, i. 173
- Peachum, Mrs., in The Beggar's Opera, i. 234 note
- Peak, Knight of the, iii. 9 note, 10
- Pedant, a learned idiot, ii. 65 seq.; iii. 234, 235, 256, 269 seq.; iv. [246], [247]
- Peggy, Mrs. (Dr. Young), iii. 160
- Pendergrass, Sir Thomas, ii. 109
- Penny Post, some account of, ii. 130 note
- Pensioner, the Grand, i. 51
- Pepin, Betty, a kept mistress, i. 201 and note; ii. 19 and note
- ---- King, ii. 300
- Pepusch, Dr., married Margareta, iii. 192 note
- Pepys quoted, i. 219 note:
- on Lady Castlemaine, iii. 296 note
- Percival, Miss. See Mrs. Verbruggen, i. 31 note
- Percy, his Reliques of Ancient Poetry, i. 239 note
- ----, his Anecdotes quoted, i. 244 note, 310 note
- Peregrine, Will, ii. 22
- Persia, ii. 412 note; iii. 196; iv. [78]
- Pert, Beau, a sharper, ii. 115, 116
- Peskad, Madge, a bonnet-maker near Bedford, i. 283
- "Pestle and Mortar," the, iv. [170], [381]
- Peter, in The Tale of a Tub, i. 209
- Petruchio in Taming of the Shrew, iv. [181] note and seq.
- Petticoats, a fashion in, ii. 404:
- invented by Mrs. Cross-stitch, ii. 418:
- "chairs" must be accommodated to, ii. 418, 419:
- attempt to reform, iii. 12 seq., 257:
- a scoured, iv. [316] and note
- Petticum, M., iii. 123
- Petty, Sir William, iii. 12
- Petulant, Betty, i. 141
- ---- Mrs., i. 141
- ---- Lady, i. 278
- Phædra and Hippolitus, by Edmund Smith, i. 158 note
- Phædrus quoted, iv. [284]
- Phæton, i. 99
- Phalaris, Epistles of, the controversy on, i. 66 note:
- referred to, ii. 232
- Phidias, ii. 281
- Philander, a brave lover, ii. 306 seq.
- ---- a faithful lover, iii. 367 seq.
- ---- threatens suicide, iii. 297
- ---- suitor to Cælia, iv. [35]-37
- ---- (i.e. Lord Halifax), i. 45 and note:
- his skill in address towards women, i. 117 seq.
- Philanders, overstocked with, iii. 382; iv. [44]:
- referred to, iii. 190; iv. [250], [251]
- Philanthropes (John Hughes?), a letter from, ii. 125, 126
- Philip, King of Spain, i. 246
- Philips, Ambrose, a poem by, i. 112 seq.:
- notice of, i. 112 note:
- his Pastorals, i. 112 note
- ---- John, his Cyder, iii. 23:
- his Splendid Shilling, iv. [270] and note
- Philippus, Alexander's physician, iv. [78] seq.
- Phillis, i. 81
- Philolaus, iii. 250 note
- Philomath, his Almanac, iv. [168], [169], [253]
- Philosophers, a wise sect of, iii. 61 seq.
- Philotas, general of Alexander, ii. 135 and note
- Phyllis, mistress of Duumvir, ii. 36 seq.
- Phys, King, in the Rehearsal, iv. [160]
- Physicians, the most useful members of a community, ii. 209:
- the College of, appealed to, iv. [39]:
- usually poets, iv. [224] seq.
- Piazza, the, of Covent Garden i. 355; iv. [335] note
- Piccadilly, i. 41, 346;
- ii. 182 note;
- iii. 302;
- iv. [148] and note
- Picket, Col., an admirer of Florimel, his character, i. 69
- Picture, subject for an historical, iv. [78] seq.:
- an allegorical, iii. 82:
- a moving, iii. 83 note, 283
- Pierre, in Venice Preserved, iii. 105
- Pierrepoint, Lady Mary, ii. 1 note
- Piety characteristic of all the greatest men, iv. [356] seq.
- Pikestaff, Timothy, i. 89 note, 102, 104
- Piledea, the friend of Orestea, ii. 148
- Pilgrim's Progress, The, i. 382
- Pilgrimstaff, i. 104
- Pimlico, iii. 302
- Pincent, Captain, i. 52
- Pindarics, a receipt for, ii. 378
- Pindust, Mrs. Rebecca, for whom many lovers have died, ii. 400 seq.
- Pinkethman, his company of strollers, i. 42 and note:
- compared to Bullock, iii. 384, 385:
- referred to, i. 67, 68 note, 70, 170, 346;
- ii. 281;
- iii. 327
- Pin-money, the curse of, iv. [32] and note
- Pinto, Ferdinand Mendez, a Portuguese traveller, iv. [288] and note
- Pip, a man made at cards, i. 107
- Piper, Count, i. 399; ii. 67
- Pipestaff, i. 104
- Pippe, Mrs. Mary, iv. [332]
- Pirates, literary, ii. 347 note and seq.
- Pistol of Wapping, iv. [85] note. See Musket
- Plagius, a preacher, iv. [368]
- Plain Dealer, The, by Wycherley, i. 243 note;
- ii. 246 note
- Plain English, letters from, iv. [92] seq., 158
- Plaistow, Mr., iii. 61 note
- Planché, his Cyclopædia of Costume, iii. 192 note
- Plantwell, Lady, ii. 87
- Plato, conductor of Socrates in Chamber
- of Fame, ii. 228: a parable on love by, ii. 283 seq.:
- a fable of, iii. 131;
- iv. [238], [239]: on suicide, iii. 214:
- referred to, ii. 70, 71, 390;
- iii. 116 and note;
- iv. [21], [221]
- Platonne, a professed, i. 262 seq.
- Plautus, iv. [326]
- Playhouse, the inventory of, by Addison, i. 4
- Plays, will revive and drive out the present passion for dress and noise, i. 18:
- the morality of, defended, i. 31:
- immoral ones condemned, i. 74
- Pleasure, accounts of, directed from White's Chocolate-house, i. 12:
- and virtue, a fable of, ii. 324 seq.:
- claims to be called happiness, ii. 325:
- or vice, ii. 327:
- depraved men of, i. 107:
- true art of, not understood, i. 136
- Plenty, the god of, ii. 283
- Pliny, ii. 80, 169 note:
- on a good husband, ii. 189:
- Epistles of, quoted, ii. 420, 423:
- letters to his wife, iii. 186 seq., 238:
- letters to Gallus, iii. 338:
- referred to, iii. 87, 186, 326, 329
- Plow Yard, i. 127 note
- "Plum," a, i. 326; ii. 57; iii. 56
- Plumb, Peter, a merchant, his case against the Hon. Thomas Gules, iv. [298] seq.
- Plumbeus, iv. [254] seq.
- Plume, Colonel, in dialogue on duelling, i. 318 seq.
- ---- Sir, his clouded cane, iii. 154 note
- Plutarch, ii. 228, 412 note;
- iv. [45], [220], [221]
- Pluto, King of Shades, iii. 213, 224
- Poetical vapours, i. 384
- ---- justice destroys moral effect of tragedies, ii. 233
- Poetry, accounts of, from Will's Coffee-house, i 12:
- its influence for virtue, ii. 331 seq.:
- for sale, ii. 377 seq.:
- compared to history, ii. 392, 393:
- faults and virtues of English poets, iii. 260
- Poets, advice to young, an essay on the methods of work, i. 33, 34, 35
- "Point of war," a, ii. 315 and note
- Pointer, his Chronicle History, i. 147 note
- Poland, i. 43, 183, 204; ii. 47, 133;
- iii. 218, 219:
- ---- King of, i. 213
- Polite Conversation, by Swift, ii. 6 note
- Political Barometer. See State weather-glass
- Political State of Great Britain, by Abel Boyer, i. 157 note
- Politicians, of the Mall, iii. 220 seq.:
- of the coffee-house, iv. [360] seq.:
- referred to, i. 327; iii. 256
- Politics, complaint of I. B.'s incursions into, iv. [13] note
- Poluglossa, her character, i. 344
- Polybius, a just historian, ii. 229
- Polyglottes, a pedant, iv. [25]
- Polypragmon (? Harley), his character, iii. 395 note and seq.
- Pompey in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 229:
- his modesty, ii. 262:
- referred to, iii. 89
- ---- a blackamoor boy, iv. [251]
- Pontack, son of President of Bordeaux, iii. 95 note
- Pontius Pilate, his wife's chambermaid's sister's hat, i. 283
- Poor Robin's Almanac, i. 169; iv. [169] and note
- Pope, Alex., his Pastorals, i. 112 note:
- his Epitaph on Withers, i. 378 note:
- his Rape of the Lock, ii. 29 note, 79 note; iv. [353]:
- his Epistle to Miss Blount on her leaving the town after the Coronation, iv. [336] note:
- his The Basset Table, iv. [337] and note:
- referred to, i. 8 note, 38 note, 112 note, 380 note; ii. 6 note, 249 note
- ---- the, i. 49, 50, 60, 61, 71, 73, 94, 102, 155, 316; iii. 85, 86, 375; iv. [128]
- ---- Clement XI., ii. 142
- Popham, Elizabeth, wife of Viscount Hinchinbroke, i. 47 note, 286 note
- ---- Alexander, of Littlecot, father of Elizabeth, i. 47 note, 286 note
- Poplar, ii. 372 note
- Porcia, ii. 141
- Portland, Duchess of, ii. 104 note
- Portocarrero, Cardinal, i. 51, 88
- Portugal, i. 87, 149, 253; iv. [323]
- ---- Row, iii. 410 note
- ---- King of, i. 94, 106, 149, 261
- "Porus," battle of, by Le Brun, i. 74
- ---- an Indian king, i. 74 note
- Pory, Dr. Robert, a pluralist, iv. [169] note, [382]
- "Posnet," a, iv. [284] and note
- Post, days of leaving London, i. 11, 12 and note
- Post-Boy, The, i. 156 and note, 347; ii. 211 note, 347 note; iii. 112 note, 220, 279 note; iv. [151] note, [152] note, [187]
- Postman, The, i. 293 note, 347, 349 note; ii. 156 note, 211 note, 272 note; iii. 83 note, 218, 220, 332 and note, 333; iv. [56], [57], [96], [97], [148] note, [149] note, [150] note, [169] note, [186]
- Posture-master, ii. 389 seq.
- Potatrix, Elizabeth, letter from, i. 290
- Potsdam, i. 72, 213, 276, 305
- Poultry, the, iv. [153] note, [379], [381]
- Poverty, an unhappy female, ii. 283:
- referred to, iii. 53, 54
- Povey, Charles, started halfpenny post in London, ii. 130 note
- Powell, George, i. 36 and note, 37 note; iii. 409
- ---- Martin, the puppet-show man, i. 100 note, 140 note, 359 seq., 365, 366; ii. 8 note and seq., 205; iii. 7, 158, 335 and note:
- letters from, ii. 9 seq., 17 seq.
- Prælections Physicæ Mathematicæ, by Whiston, i. 350 note
- Pre-Adamite, a, ii. 150; iv. [301]
- Precedence, the difficulties of, ii. 258 seq.:
- among women in Vision of Justice, ii. 353 seq.
- Predictions for the Year 1712, by I. B., i. 22 note
- Predictions of Bickerstaff (i.e. Swift), i. 8, 102
- Pretender, the, i. 35, 173, 206, 371 note; iii. 377
- Pretty Fellow, a, imitation gentleman, i. 175:
- not a rake, i. 225:
- Hannibal and Scipio, in their days, ii. 62 and note:
- Virgil translated for, iii. 107 seq.:
- referred to, i. 239, 322, 366; ii. 398, 399; iii. 256:
- Very Pretty Fellow (which see), i. 198 seq.
- Priam, iii. 172
- Pride, some thoughts on, iii. 72 seq.:
- examples of, iii. 74 seq.
- Prie, Marquis de, i. 49, 71, 94
- Prim, Mrs., i. 118
- ---- Beau, ii. 72
- ---- Penelope, a clear-starcher, petition of, iii. 25
- Prior, Mat., at the Smyrna, i. 92 note:
- his poem on Blenheim, iii. 163 note:
- referred to, iv. [216], [249] note, [310] note
- Privy Garden, the, iii. 296 and note
- Proctorstaff, of Clare Hall, kinsman of I. B., iv. [374]
- Prodicus, a fable by, ii. 324 seq.
- Professions, the lower the understanding, the greater the capacity for success in, ii. 58
- Project for the Advancement of Religion; by a Person of Quality, dedicated to the Countess of Berkeley (by Swift), i. 48 and note, iv. [294] note
- Properties of Drury Lane on sale, i. 344 seq., 358
- Prophecy, I. B. will use his powers of, sparingly, i. 14
- —— of Things Past, &c., by I. B., i. 151
- "Prophets, the French," attacked by D'Urfey, i. 100 note:
- referred to, i. 244 note, 301 note
- Prospect of Peace, The, by Tickell, i. 382 note
- Protestants, French, struggle against Louis XIV., i. 244 note
- Provence, i. 94; ii. 48
- Prudely, Lady, her defence, iv. [333]
- Prudence, the goddess of, ii. 283
- Prudentia, an ambitious lady, in the autumn of life, i. 139 seq.
- Prudes, their true character, ii. 357; compared to coquettes, iii. 67 seq.
- Prue, Mrs., i. 89 note
- ---- i.e. a prude, i. 141 and note
- ---- Steele's wife, i. 141 note, 142 note
- Prussia, King of, i. 27, 174, 213, 236, 304
- ---- Queen of, i. 129
- ---- Prince Royal of, i. 105, 151
- Public good, those interested in, profess disinterestedness, i. 37
- Public-spirited persons, newspapers designed for, i. 11:
- their characteristics, of strong zeal and weak intellects, ibid.:
- none in this age, i. 152:
- their difficulties, ii. 127
- Pudding, Jack, the mountebank, i. 163
- Pultowa, battle of, ii. 47 and note
- "Punch Nag," a, iii. 157 and note
- Punch turned prophet, i. 100 and note:
- a pretty fellow, i. 366:
- his scandalous behaviour, i. 170:
- out of place in the Ark, i. 140, 141:
- referred to, ii. 10, 11; iv. [335] note
- Punchinello, i. 366, 367; iii. 7
- Punning, letter from an expert in the art of, i. 268, 289 seq.
- Punto, Major, his indictment against Richard Newman, iv. [302]
- Purbeck, Countess of, ii. 5 note
- Puzzlepost, Ned, his handwriting, iii. 153
- Pylades, iii. 46
- Pylades and Corinna, by Mrs. Thomas, i. 380 note; ii. 19; iii. 263 note
- Pyrrha, preserved at the destruction of mankind, iii. 173
- ----, in Horace, iii. 309
- Pyrrhus and Demetrius, opera, translated from the Italian of Scarlatti, i. 40 and note
- Pythagoras, his theory reversed, i. 369:
- turned out of the Chamber of Fame, ii. 231 and note:
- his school, ii. 317 seq.:
- his Golden Sayings quoted, ii. 392:
- referred to, ii. 239; iii. 109; iv. [228]
- Quacks to be exposed, iv. [15]:
- she-quacks, iv. [160] seq.:
- concerning, iv. [327]
- Quakers, letters from, ii. 170, 206:
- protest from, iii. 390:
- their speech defended, iv. [57]
- Quarterstaff, Mr., i. 80 note, 102, 103
- Queenhithe, ii. 178, 187 note
- Queen's Bagnio, iv. [380]
- Queen's College, Humphry Mopstaff, a scholar at, i. 152; referred to, ii. 187
- Quesne, Marquis de, ii. 129
- "Questions and Commands," the game of, iii. 161 and note
- Quickset, Sir Harry, of Staffordshire, ii. 228
- ---- young, a handsome heir, ii. 383
- Quintus Curtius, a false guide, ii. 228; iv. [130]
- Rabelais, translated by Motteux, ii. 377 note:
- a paper suggested by, iv. [289] note:
- referred to, ii. 153
- Raby, Lord, Earl of Strafford, i. 146 note, 293 note, 297 note, 325 note, 343 note, 371 note, 377 note, 386 note; ii. 5 note; iv. [204] note
- Radcliffe, Dr. (Æsculapius), crossed in love at sixty, i. 355 note and seq., 376, 384
- "Raffling shop" at Hampstead, ii. 68 seq.
- Raggedstaff, i. 102, 104
- Rainbow Coffee-house, ii. 156 note; iv. [131]
- ---- and Dove, the, iii. 299 note
- Rake, a, character of, i. 223 seq.
- ---- (a sharper), his attack on a nunnery, i. 265 seq.:
- referred to, ii. 115
- Rakes, natural and affected, iii. 256
- "Rake's Progress," by Hogarth, i. 12 note; 247 note
- Ralph, James, his Touchstone quoted, ii. 335 note
- Ram-Head Inn Yard, iv. [153] note
- Ramble, Colonel (i.e. Colonel Hunter), i. 67 seq.
- Ramilies, i. 20 note, 28, 266 note, 378 note; iii. 162 note:
- won on beef, iii. 181, 334
- Ranter, Colonel, i. 90
- Rape of the Lock, by Pope, ii. 29 note, 79 note; iv. [353] note
- Rape, women should be on the juries for trials of, ii. 245
- Rapin, Nicholas, ii. 265; iii. 112, 270, 272:
- on the English, iii. 112, 113 note
- Rapine, iii. 52
- Rascals, ii. 49, 114 seq.
- Ratcliff, in the city, ii. 372 note
- Ratcliffe, Francis Lord, Earl of Derwentwater, iv. [140] note
- Ravenscroft, Edward, author of London Cuckolds, i. 73
- Ravignan, Major-General, ii. 34, 48
- Ravilliac, i. 96
- Rawlinson, Tom (Tom Folio), book collector, iii. 234 note and seq.
- Rayner, writing-master of St. Paul's, iii. 133 and note
- Read, Sir William (Queen's Oculist), i. 83 and note; ii. 42 note; iii. 169; iv. [150], [379], [380]
- Reading is to the mind what exercise is to the body, iii. 175
- Reasons for an English Education, by teaching the youths of both sexes the arts of grammar, rhetoric, poetry, and logic, in their own mother tongue, iv. [195] note
- Recruiting Officer, by Farquhar, i. 169
- Red Cross, the Knight of, in Faërie Queene, iv. [173], [222], [288]
- Red Cross Street, i. 334
- Red Lettice (or Lattice), a public-house, ii. 264 and note
- Red Lion Court, i. 334
- ---- Square, iv. [148] note, [382]
- ---- Market, i. 334, 335
- Reflections on Aristotle's Treatise of Poetry, by Rapin, quoted, iii. 113 note
- Reformers of manners, societies of, i. 31 and note
- "Refreshment," a, iii. 335 and note
- Rehearsal, The, by the Duke of Buckingham, i. 63 and note, 157 note; ii. 300, 301 note; iv. [7], [160], [309] and note:
- Parthenope in, i. 172 and note
- Relapse, The, by Vanbrugh, i. 29 note
- Religio Medici, by Thomas Browne, i. 267 note
- Religion, considerations on, i. 48, 49; ii. 340 seq., 405; iv. [87] seq.:
- a waxwork of English, iv. [303] seq.
- Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, by Percy, i. 239 note
- Remarks on several parts of Italy, by Addison, i. 152 note
- Remorse, iii. 37
- Renault, old, i. 327
- Renne, General, i. 72
- Rentfree, Thomas, Esq., J.P., ii. 257 seq.
- Reptile, Honest Dick, on abuse of language, iii. 125:
- referred to, iii. 100; iv. [19], [52], [256]
- "Restitution, the Mount of," ii. 343 seq., 353 seq.
- Reynard, character adopted by Partridge, ii. 54
- Rhebindar, General, ii. 48
- Rheinsfeldt, Count, ii. 67
- Rhine, i. 43, 129, 183, 304 note; ii. 134:
- Lower, i. 183:
- Upper, i. 71, 183
- Rich, Christopher (Divito), manager of Drury Lane, i. 100 and note; ii. 336 seq.:
- referred to, i. 250 note, 345, 358 and note; iii. 408 note and seq., 410 note
- Richard III., ii. 190
- ----, Shakespeare's, ii. 284 seq.; iii. 356
- Richards, Major-General, i. 184
- Riches usually given to asses, iv. [52] and note
- Ridicule, of offenders, defended, ii. 83 seq.:
- the dangers of, ii. 100 seq.:
- a letter of, ii. 131 seq.
- Ridpath, George, publisher of the Flying Post, i. 156 note
- Rigadoon, the dance described, i. 279 and note
- Rights of the Christian Church, by Dr. Tindal, ii. 12 note
- "Rigid men," the, iv. [101] seq.
- Rinaldo Furioso, "Critic of the Woful Countenance," iii. 249 note
- Ring, the, in Hyde Park, ii. 125 and note
- "Ring's End Car," an Irish, iv. [208] and note
- Rival Queens; or, Alexander the Great, i. 17 note, 139 and note
- Rivals, The, by Sir William Davenant, iv. [140] note
- Rivet, Colonel, killed at Malplaquet, ii. 113 and note
- Roarers, the, i. 327 and note
- Robinson, Jonathan, bookseller, iii. 133 note
- Rochefoucault, a modish French author, ii. 391
- Rochester, Earl of, patron of Mrs. Barry, i. 16 note; iv. [235] and note, 295
- ---- Dean of, iv. [294] note
- Rochford, Earl of, iv. [85] note, [86]
- Roger de Caubly (Coverley), dance tune, i. 281 and note
- Roman, causes of greatness, i. 54:
- triumphs, ii. 98, 99, 106:
- patriotism of, iii. 358:
- purity of language, iv. [178]
- Romana chooses Careless rather than Constant, i. 253
- Romans never fought duels, i. 255, 309
- Rome, Emperor of, esteem for his horse, iii. 43:
- news from, iii. 83, 84, 375:
- referred to, i. 27, 49, 60, 71, 73, 94; ii. 337, 373 note; iii. 62, 87, 89, 243, 257, 258, 359, 361, 364, 378, 380, 392
- Romeo, the father of Chloe, ii. 306
- Ronquillo, Don Pedro, i. 95
- Rope-dancing popular in the theatres, ii. 335
- Roper, Abel, publisher of the Post-Boy, i. 156 note
- Roquelaure, Duke of, i. 332
- Rosamond's Pond or Pool, "Lake of Love," a favourite place of assignation, ii. 79 and note, 420; iii. 297; iv. [99]
- Roscius, iii. 280
- Roscius Anglicanus; or, An Historical Review of the English Stage, by Downes, iii. 408 note
- Roscommon, his translation of Horace's Ars Poetica, iii. 261
- Rose, the sign of the, iii. 310; iv. [169] note
- Rose tavern i. 24 note
- Rosehat, Jonathan, on orators, ii. 154, 155
- Roses, the town, i. 173
- Rosicrucian lore, iv. [239]
- Rosin, Will, the Corelli of Wapping, ii. 372 seq.
- Rotherhithe, iii. 265
- Rotterdam, i. 43, 120, 205
- Rough Diamond, an honest blunt wit, ii. 243
- Rouillé, M., i. 20 and note, 44, 51, 76, 96, 120, 197, 204, 213, 305
- Rowe, i. 83 note; iv. [310] note
- Roxana, her nightgown, i. 345
- Royal pastime of cock-fighting, &c., by R. H., iii. 112 note
- Royal Society, members of, resort to "the Grecian", i. 13 note:
- I. B.'s learning bequeathed to, i. 66 and note:
- their Philosophical Transactions, iii. 26 note:
- referred to, i. 349; ii. 309 note; iii. 30; iv. [39], [134], [135], [207], [210] and note, 321
- Rozelli, M., his cure for the gout, i. 83 note:
- his adventures at the Hague, i. 83 note
- Rubicon, the, i. 303 note, 304 note
- Russell Street, i. 12 note, 13 note, 24 note; iv. [327] and note
- ----, Admiral, iii. 84 note
- Rycant, Sir Paul, on the Ottoman Empire, iii. 111 note
- Ryves, Jerome, Dean of Killaloe, iv. [206] note
- S.P.C.K. founded by Mackworth, ii. 85 note
- Sa Ga Zean Qua Prah Ton, an Iroquois chief of the Maquas, iii. 299 note, 301
- Saar, ii. 105
- Sabbath, the advantages of, iv. [87] seq.
- Saccharissa (i.e. Lady Dorothy Sidney), ii. 87 and note
- ----, i. 46
- Sacheverell, Dr., his trial, i. 317 note; ii. 121 note; iii. 140 note, 145 note; iv. [4] note:
- cause of ladies' early rising, iii. 151:
- a popular subject, iii. 228:
- his handkerchief, iii. 376:
- ovations for, iii. 377 and note, 378 note
- Sacred College, the, i. 71
- Saffold, Dr., i. 168 note, 169 note; iv. [226] and note
- Sage, Mr., in the "Dialogue on Duelling," i. 318 seq.
- Sagissa betrayed by snuff, i. 285, 286
- St. Alban's, i. 156 note, 178 note
- St. Anne's Lane, i. 334
- St. Botolph, i. 247 note
- St. Catherine by the Tower, ii. 372 and note
- St. Catherine's Dock, ii. 372 note
- St. Christopher's Court, ii. 42 note
- ----, Fort, i. 149
- St. Clement's, ii. 264 note; iii. 127, 389
- St. David's, celebration of, iii. 140
- St. Dunstan's in the West, ii. 171 note
- ----, in Fleet Street, iv. [379], [382]
- St. Evremond, Governor of Duck Island, ii. 413 note
- St. Gall, Abbot of, ii. 48
- St. George, i. 257; ii. 316
- St. George's Church, i. 140 note
- St. Gile's i. 335
- St. James', too refined for rope-dancing, ii. 335 note:
- referred to, ii. 91
- St. James's Coffee-house, foreign and domestic news, i. 13:
- history of, i. 13 note:
- clean linen required at i. 13:
- referred to, i. 91, 92, 93, 214, 216; ii. 123, 277, 419; iii. 9 note, 276; iv. [43] and note, 131
- ----, Park, duel in, i. 124 note:
- Rosamond's Pond in, ii. 79 and note:
- referred to, ii. 126 note, 413 note; iii. 219, 244, 271; iv. [370]
- ---- Street, i. 12 note, 13 note; iii. 276
- ---- Church, iv. [335]
- St. James, patron saint of Spain, i. 323 note
- St. John, convent of, i. 76
- St. Juan, Conte de, i. 150
- St. Margaret's Westminster, ii. 104 note
- St. Martin's, i. 334
- ---- Westminster, i. 42 note
- St. Mary's, i. 71
- ---- at Oxford, i. 315
- St. Patrick as rat-catcher, iv. [207]:
- his well, iv. [209]
- St. Paul's Alley, i. 336
- ---- Cathedral, ii. 24 and note, 38, 39, 40, 85; iii. 13; iv. [26], [169] note, [232], [233]
- ---- Churchyard, ii. 39; iii. 133 note; iv. [329] note
- ---- School, iii. 133 and note; iv. [196] note
- St. Pear, Colonel, iii. 55 note
- St. Peter de Albigni, ii. 48
- St. Peter's, i. 71; ii. 85
- Salisbury Street, iii. 24
- Sallust, his Bell. Cat., i. 53 and note, 76, 273 note; ii. 94, 95, 229, 317; iii. 128, 347; iv. [97] note
- Salsine, Abbey of, i. 53
- Salter, a barber, founder of Chelsea Coffee-house, the Don Saltero of the British Apollo, i. 280 note and seq.; iv. [15], [163]
- Saltzburg, Archbishop of, i. 95
- Sampler, Will, ii. 22
- Samplers, an essay on, by Mrs. Manly, i. 41 and note
- San Diego, i.e. Santiago, i.e. St. James, i. 323 note
- Sandford, Sam., iii. 113 and note, 384
- Sands, Lord, iii. 198 note
- Sandwich, Edward, Earl of, i. 47 note
- Santiago (i.e. St. James), i. 323 note
- Sapho (? Mrs. Manley), character and anecdotes of, i. 55 note:
- referred to, i. 329, 331
- Sapicha, the, a Polish family, i. 305
- Saraband, Mrs., her puppet-show, i. 170
- Sarkey, Major-General, i. 150
- Sart, ii. 108, 109, 127
- Sartre, M., first husband of Dorothy Addison, iv. [204] note
- Satire addressed to a friend that is about to leave the University, by Oldham, iv. [296], [297]
- Satire, best friend to Reformation, ii. 197:
- true and false, iv. [234] seq.
- Satires, by Marvell, i. 153 note
- "Satisfaction," defined, i. 208:
- not a case for, i. 231:
- demanded from Bickerstaff, ii. 303
- Saturæ, by Petronius Arbiter, ii. 14 note
- Saturn, i. 290, 351; iv. [129]
- Saunderson, Maria, wife of Betterton, iii. 282 and note, 283
- Savile, George, Marquis of Halifax, his Advice to a Daughter, iv. [363] and note
- Savoy, Duke of, i. 71, 174, 182, 229, 337, 400; ii. 96, 108
- ---- ii. 48, 73, 200
- Saxe-Zeits, Cardinal of, i. 183
- Saxony, i. 43, 44, 51, 73, 204, 255; ii. 193
- Scævola, iii. 329, 359
- Scarecrow, Humphrey, Recorder to the Bear-garden, i. 256
- Scarlatti, an opera of, translated, i. 40 and note
- Scarp, the, i. 291; ii. 49; iii. 245, 317, 320
- Scawen, Sir William, i. 348 and note
- Schelt, the, i. 198, 205, 291, 299, 313
- Scholar, the, I. B.'s nephew, iv. [70] seq.
- Scholars made from men of barren geniuses and fertile imaginations, iv. [23]
- Schomberg, Marshal, iii. 162 note
- School for Scandal, Sheridan's, quoted, ii. 315 note
- Schottus, Andrew, i. 360 note
- Schuylenburg, General, i. 339, 362
- Scipio Africanus, his self-restraint and generosity illustrated, ii. 62 seq.:
- his friendship for Lælius, ii. 412 and note:
- an authority on the charms of country life, iii. 292
- Scipio, Cneius, preferred by his rival, ii. 262
- Scoggan, or Skogan, Mr., M.A., some account of, i. 83 and note
- Scolds, iv. [114] seq., 136 seq.
- Scotland, decay of simplicity in, iii. 165:
- referred to, i. 43
- Scots Pills, iv. [149] note
- Scotus, his divisions of mankind, iii. 312
- Scourge of Venice and Mercury, by Sintelaer, i. 215 note
- Scowrers, the, i. 327
- Scowrers, The, a play, by Shadwell, i. 327 note
- Scrape, Tom, the Buononcini of Redriffe, ii. 373
- "Screens" defined, iii. 303
- Scrip, Sir William, i. 248
- Scudamore, Sir, his courtship of Amoret, iv. [7], [14]
- Scurlock, Miss, i. viii, 286, 287
- Sea-ball, a, ii. 372 seq.
- Secret Memoirs and Manners of several persons of quality of both sexes, from the New Atalantis, by Mrs. Manley, ii. 104 note
- Sefachoe, a singer, iii. 6 note
- Segra, the, ii. 200; iv. [85]
- Selden, his De Duello, i. 255 note
- Select Collection of Poems, by Nichols, i. 47 note, 203 note
- Seleucus, a generous father, iii. 369, 370
- Self-defence, the noble art of, i. 234 and note
- Sempronia (i.e. Madame d'Epingle), her deceitful conduct, i. 273, 394
- Seneca, ii. 375; iii. 46, 57, 64, 115, 294, 295, 323
- Senecio, a good-natured old man, i. 370, 371
- Seraglio of Great Britain, i. 373 seq.
- Serenading, the custom of, iv. [138] seq.
- Sergeant, Thomas, letter from, quoted, ii. 9 note
- Serious Proposal to the Ladies, by Mrs. Astell, i. 265 note
- Serpentine, the, ii. 125 note
- "Serpents," ii. 272
- Sesotris, his dwelling among the shades, iii. 226
- Settlements, the invention and history of, iv. [32], [142] seq.:
- a model settlement, iv. [34]
- Seven Champions, the, ii. 315
- Sexes, both to be attended to by the Tatler, i. 7:
- the unfair difference between, i. 271:
- separation between, at public assemblies, ii. 22
- Seymour, Sir Edward, i. 371 note
- Shadwell, his Epsom Wells, i. 70, 293 note:
- his The Scowrers, i. 327 note
- ----, ii. 372 note
- Shaftesbury, Lord, his letter on Enthusiasm answered, i. 266 note
- Shakespeare, wholesome influence of, i. 74:
- his women trivial, i. 341:
- a master of tragedy, i. 385; ii. 33:
- of the race of Staffs, ii. 4:
- criticised by Steele, ii. 141 and note, 142 note:
- I. B.'s Quotations from Davenant's alterations, ii. 141 note:
- his The Taming of the Shrew retold, iv. [181] seq.:
- his As You Like It, i. 338, 339:
- his Hamlet, i. 18, 188 note, 288; ii. 138 note, 163 seq., 379 seq., 406; iv. [42], [378]:
- his Henry IV., i. 125 note, 385; ii. 315; iii. 198 note:
- his Henry V., iii. 128 note, 356:
- his Henry VI., ii. 285:
- his Henry VIII., i. 18, 345; iii. 198 note:
- his Julius Cæsar, ii. 140; iii. 128:
- his King Lear, iii. 20:
- his Othello, i. 345; ii. 334 note, 375; iii. 281, 380, 383 seq.; iv. [42], [240]:
- his Richard III., ii. 284 seq.; iii. 356:
- his The Tempest iii. 409:
- referred to, i. 110; ii. 334 note; iii. 212, 281
- ---- Joan, ii. 334 note
- Shallow, Sir Timothy, and his cane, iii. 154
- ---- Justice, an ignoramus, iv. [318]
- ---- Ralph, a clever talker on nothing, iv. [23]
- Shapely, Rebecca, indicted for scandal, iv. [332], [333]
- Sharpe, Dr. John (Mrs. Alse Copswood) Archbishop of York, i. 300 and note
- Sharpers defined, ii. 49 seq.:
- to be exposed by fables, ii. 68:
- referred to, ii. 74, 111, 115 seq., 137 seq., 159 seq., 175 seq.; iii. 9 seq.
- See also Rascals, Dogs, and Curs
- Shayles, Elinor, mother of Steele, iii. 350 and note
- Sheer (Shire) Lane, ii. 259, 260 and note, 279; iii. 75 note, 209, 357; iv. [375] note
- Shelton, Lady, of Norfolk, i. 15 note
- Shepherd's Week, by Gay, iv. [250] note, [344] note
- Sherburne Lane, iv. [381]
- Sheridan, his School for Scandal, ii. 315 note
- Shilling, the autobiography of a, iv. [265] note, [266] seq.
- Ship, John, overseer, ii. 43 note
- Ship tavern, iv. [148] note
- Shipton, Mother, ii. 281
- Shipyard, the, ii. 264 note
- "Shock," iv. [353] and note
- Shoes, high red heels, i. 217 and note, 388; ii. 127, 165, 166, 321, 417; iii. 197, 257:
- ladies' shoes not to be exposed in shop windows, iii. 159
- Shoestring, Will (Sir W. Whitlocke), a coxcomb, i. 310, 311
- Shoe Lane, i. 179 note
- Shorey, Major John, i. 334
- Short-sight, the fashion of, ii. 201
- Shoulder-knots, the fashion of, iii. 197
- Shovel, Sir Cloudesley, i. 102 note
- Shrewsbury, Duchess of, iii. 6 note
- Sibourg, Colonel, i. 184
- Sichæus, Dido's first husband, iii. 105, 215
- Sid Hamet's Rod, by Swift, i. 228 note
- Side-boxes, seats for men and wenches, ii. 6 note, 201; iii. 168; iv. [114]
- Sidney, Lord Godolphin (Horatio), i. 45 and note; iii. 90
- ---- Lady Dorothy (Saccharissa), ii. 87 note
- ---- Sir Philip, his Arcadia, ii. 313 note
- Siege of Rhodes, by Davenant, i. 172 note
- —— of Damascus, by John Hughes, iv. [90] note
- Signior, the Grand, iv. [186]
- Sign-posts, the bad spelling on, leads schoolboys and others astray, i. 152 seq.
- Silence, the virtues of, iii. 103, 104
- Silent Woman, by Jonson, ii. 29 and note; iii. 92
- Silvia courted by Damon, ii. 299:
- her letter acknowledged, iv. [189]
- Silvius, suitor to Cælia, iv. [35]-37
- Simmonds, John, his mezzotints of the Indian kings, iii. 299 note
- Simplicity recommended in dress, discourse, and behaviour, i. 8
- Simplicius, ii. 293
- Simulation distinguished from dissimulation, iv. [97] seq.:
- Bacon on, iv. [97] note
- Singer, Mrs. Elizabeth, her works and life, i. 92 note, 93 and note
- Sintelaer, the pearl-driller, his Scourge of Venus and Mercury, i. 215 and note
- Sippet, Harry, the famous, iii. 96
- Sisly, the maid of Signor Hawksly, in whose name the raffling shop is taken, ii. 68
- Skelton, poet-laureate to Henry VIII., i. 84 note
- Skinners' Hall, iv. [382]
- Slaughterford, a murderer, i. 337 and note
- Slender, Elizabeth, spinster, a petition from, iv. [372]
- Slim, Mrs., a lady of understanding, i. 260
- Slimber, Beau, a Londoner, i. 301
- Sloane, Sir Hans, his museum, i. 280 note:
- brings frogs to Ireland, iv. [208] and note, 209:
- referred to, ii. 156
- Sly, Richard, in a breach of promise, iv. [334], [335]
- Slyboots, Humphrey, a careful laugher, ii. 101, 102
- Smack, Mrs. Sarah, her complaint of scandal, iv. [332], [333]
- Smagge, Mr. Jan, farmer, iv. [380]
- Smalridge, Dr., Bishop of Bristol (Favonius), a Jacobite, i. 5 and note:
- tutor of Maynwaring, i. 7 note:
- his character and life, ii. 171 and note, 421
- Smart, Captain, his duel, i. 320 seq.
- Smart fellow, not a pretty fellow, i. 217, 230 seq., 367; ii. 79, 166, 321, 323; iii. 256:
- a defence of the awkward fellows against the smarts, ii. 80
- Smith, Edmund, author of Phædra and Hippolitus, his Charlettus Percivallo Suo, i. 158 note
- ---- Joseph, married to Mrs. Tofts, i. 171 note
- ---- Dr. Thomas, of King Street, Westminster, cures corns, teeth, &c., ii. 362 and note; iv. [15]
- ---- Thomas, M. P., iii. 343 note
- Smithfield Bars, iv. [43]
- "Smyrna, The," coffee-house in Pall Mall, i. 92 and note; ii. 210
- Snapdragon, to be avoided in married life, ii. 252, 253
- Snuff, history of, by Charles Lillie, i. 229 and note:
- folly of taking, i. 284 seq.:
- worse for ladies, i. 285:
- the best Barcelona, ii. 309:
- snuff-takers not "whetters," iii. 147:
- taking it no sign of wit, iii. 256:
- referred to, ii. 192, 298, 401
- Snuff-box, its shape determines character, i. 229:
- lost, i. 349 note:
- a new, at eighty guineas, iii. 155:
- referred to, ii. 214, 359, 401, 418
- Sobieski, John, King of Poland, i. 153 note
- Social Life in the Reign of Queen Anne, by Ashton, iii. 56 note
- Socrates, questions the spirit of a duellist, i. 220 seq.:
- in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 228:
- an anecdote of, iii. 47:
- referred to, ii. 223 note, 231, 324; iii. 115, 116 note, 250 note
- Softly, Ned, iii. 259 seq.
- Soho Square, i. 161
- Soilett, Mr., i. 218
- Somers, John, Lord (Camillo), i. vii, 44 and note; iii. 90
- Somerset, Lady Mary, ii. 35 note
- ---- Duke of, iii. 6 note
- Somerset House Yard, auction at, iii. 303
- Son, a, who would be wiser than his father, ii. 391
- Sophronius, i. 176; ii. 17, 50
- Sorrow, the benefits of, iii. 349 seq.:
- consolations for, iv. [189] seq.
- Sotus, the learned, his tongue loosed by snuff, i. 285
- Sound, the, i. 72
- South, Dr. Robert, his saying that a liar is "a coward to man and a brave to God," i. 6:
- on the Ways of Pleasantness, iv. [62] seq.:
- on religion, iv. [91] seq.:
- referred to, ii. 85 note
- South British, Mr., or Mr. English, iv. [310], [311]
- South Sea mania, i. 349 note
- Southgate, iv. [95]
- Southwark Fair, i. 140 note
- Sowerby, not fond of being laughed at, ii. 102
- Spain, i. 49, 51, 88, 105, 197, 235, 237, 299, 323 note, 332; ii. 9; iii. 86, 335; iv. [85], [87], [145], [158]
- Spanheim, Baron, Bavarian Ambassador, iii. 76 note
- ---- Mary Anne, his daughter, iii. 76 note
- Spanish snuff, i. 229; ii. 352
- —— Curate, The, by Beaumont and Fletcher, iv. [199]
- ---- wine required at the "Grecian," i. 13
- Sparta, ii. 412
- Speech, perfection of, in an accomplished woman, ii. 93:
- the abuse of, iii. 125 seq.:
- the proper dignity of, iv. [55] seq.
- Spence's Anecdotes, i. 8 note
- Spenser, ii. 284, 425 note; iv. [7], [14], [16] note, [173], [288]
- Spindle, Tom (Henry Cromwell, or possibly Thomas Tickell), a disappointed poet, i. 382 seq.; ii. 378 note
- Spleen, a sufferer from, ii. 220, 221
- Splendid Shilling, by John Philips, iv. [270] note
- Spondee, Harry, in praise of nonsense, ii. 77 seq.
- ---- a critic, i. 243; ii. 92
- Sprightly, Mrs., iii. 273
- ---- Mr., turned sulky, iii. 401
- Spring Gardens, new, at Vauxhall, i. 219 note
- ---- old, at Charing Cross, some account of, ii. 126 and note:
- referred to, i. 219 note, 261 and note; ii. 125
- Springly, Lady, of Epsom, i. 293 seq.
- ---- Tom, a pretender to vice, iv. [98], [99]
- Spruce, Jack, driven mad by a smile, ii. 6
- Spy, Mrs., cured of ogling, i. 277
- Spyer, Anth., iv. [152] note
- Squibs, ii. 272
- "Squir," to, iv. [268] and note
- Squire Easy (Henry Cromwell) the amorous bard, i. 380 note; iii. 263
- Squires, some account of, i. 160 seq.
- Staffian race, the history of, i. 102:
- the staffs of another family, i. 104, 105, 179:
- related to Greenhats, ii. 72:
- Shakespeare is of the clan, ii. 4:
- referred to, i. 240, 289 seq.; ii. 110, 162, 184, 215
- Staffordshire, a drinking county, iii. 289
- Stage, audience on, at Betterton's benefit, i. 16, 17
- Stanhope, James, first Earl of, i. 37 note, 72, 95, 213; ii. 19 and note; iv. [85] and note, 86, 87
- Stanilaus, King, i. 43, 71
- Stanley, Dr. Will. (Stentor), Canon of St. Paul's, his loud voice in church, ii. 39 and note, 55, 127, 154
- ---- Sir John, ii. 336 note
- Stanyon, Temple, perhaps author of part of No. 193, iii. 407 note and seq.
- Staremberg, Count, ii. 19, 187, 200; iv. [158]
- Stars, ladies' eyes no longer to be compared to, ii. 309
- State of Innocence and Fall of Man, by Dryden, compared to Paradise Lost, i. 55, 56:
- referred to, ii. 92 note
- State weather-glass, a, described, iv. [103] seq., 128
- States-General, the, i. 72, 143, 173, 197, 198, 213, 229, 399; ii. 108, 127, 133; iii. 123, 318
- Stationers' Hall, i. 64; iii. 71 note, 102 note
- Statira, in Lee's Alexander the Great, played by Mrs. Bracegirdle, i. 17 note:
- referred to, i. 139, 141; iv. [81]
- ---- the victim of treachery in love, iii. 79 seq.
- Steele, his age and position at starting of The Tatler, i. vii, viii:
- originator and chief author of The Tatler, i. xiv:
- his character, i. xx:
- service to stage, i. 15 note:
- with Doggett in control of Drury Lane, i. 17 note:
- watch bequeathed to, by D'Urfey, i. 18 note, 19 note:
- his Apology, i. 48 note; ii. 118 note:
- discovered by Addison as author of Tatler, i. 57 note:
- his dedication of The Drummer to Congreve, i. 155 note, 292 note; iii. 227 note:
- his Lying Lover, i. 219 note; ii. 145 note:
- his Ladies' Library, i. 266 note; iv. [264] note:
- at Christ Church, i. 281 note:
- letter to Miss Scurlock, i. 286, 287:
- his Correspondence, i. 286 note:
- criticisms by, ii. 141, 142 note:
- his regiment the Coldstream, ii. 264 note, 267:
- his Funeral, ii. 335 note:
- governor of Theatre Royal, iii. 1:
- his Lover, i. 192 note; ii. 255 note; iii. 161 note:
- Life of Betterton dedicated to him, iii. 279 note:
- Eucrates partly drawn from, iii. 322 seq.:
- origin of his unmanly tenderness, iii. 350, 351:
- his treatment of death, iii. 351 note:
- Epistles of Obscure Writers to Ortuinus dedicated to him, iv. [21] seq.:
- his Tender Husband, iv. [32] note, [249] note:
- his Theatre quoted, i. 209 note; ii. 6 note:
- Some English Grammars of his Time, iv. [196] note:
- acknowledges authorship of Tatler, iv. [375]
- Author of Nos. 1-4, 6-17, 19-23, 25-31, 33-35, 39-41, 43-49, 51, 52, 55-62, 64, 65, 67, 69, 71-74, 76, 79, 80, 82, 83, 87-89, 91, 92, 94, 98, 99, 104, 105, 106, 115, 124, 125, 127, 128, 132, 134, 135, 137-141, 143-145, 149, 150, 159, 164, 166-182, 184-191, 195-198, 200-204, 206-208, 210-213, 215, 217, 225, 228, 231-234, 241, 242, 244-248, 251, 252, 258, 261, 263, 264, 266, 268-271
- ? Author of Nos. 36, 37, 38, 50, 53, 54, 68, 77, 78, 118, 136, 151, 194, 219, 235, 237
- Steele and Addison, authors of Nos. 18, 42, 63, 75, 81, 86, 93, 101, 103, 110, 111, 114, 147, 160, ? 214, 253, 254, 256, 257, 259, 260, 262, 265
- and Swift, authors of Nos. 32, 66, 230, 238
- Part of Nos. 59, 193, 223, 236
- ---- Richard, father of Steele, iii. 350 and note
- Stella (Mrs. Johnson), i. 92 note, 107, 285 note; iii. 407
- Stentor (i.e. Dr. Will Stanley), his loud voice in church, ii. 39 and note, 55, 127, 154
- Stephen, toyshop-man, iv. [382]
- Stepney Churchyard, iv. [44] seq.
- Sterne, his Tristram Shandy, ii. 316 note
- Stevenson, Mrs. Anne, iii. 282 note
- Stick, Lieutenant Jeffry, i. 232, 233
- Stiffrump, Ezekiel, a Quaker, ii. 206, 207
- Stockbridge, i. 298 note; iii. 158
- Stocking, the ceremony of throwing, ii. 217
- Stockjobbers of the Exchange, heirs to I. B.'s real estate, his bearskin, &c., i. 65
- Stocks Market, statues in, i. 153 and note
- Story-tellers, the Order of, iv. [44]
- Story's Gate in the Park, ii. 420
- Stout, Richard, vendor of ass's milk, iv. [151] and note
- Strand, the, i. 13 note, 170 note, 219 and note, 229 note; ii. 54, 264 note, 298; iii. 26 note, 158, 276 note, 299 note; iv. [150] note 372, 379
- Stratonica, Queen, beloved of Antiochus, iii. 369, 370
- Strephon, a master in the art of persuasion, ii. 78 seq.
- ---- a man of sense, iv. [260]
- ---- his love-letters, iv. [250], [251]
- Strops for razors, iv. [149] and note
- Strutt, his Complete Gamester, iv. [250] note
- Stuart, John, Earl of Bute, ii. 1 note
- Sturdy, honest Mr., i. 262 note, 268
- Styx, iii. 24, 213, 214, 223
- Sublime, the true, i. 351 seq.
- Such-an-one, Jack, his character, iv. [65], [66]
- ---- Lady, iv. [67]
- Suckling, Sir John, on love, i. 329:
- his tragedy of Brennoralt, i. 329:
- his Poems, iv. [240]:
- referred to, ii. 61, 70, 256
- Suffenus, his happiness centred on a gilded chariot, iii. 171
- Suffolk, Henry, fifth Earl of, i. 179 note
- ---- Street, resort of gamblers, ii. 89 and note, 91, 157 seq.
- Summer-house, a covered, iii. 337 seq., 380 seq.; iv. [53]
- Sunderland, Lord (? Horatio), i. 45 and note
- ---- Robert, Earl of, ii. 87 note
- "Supple men," iv. [101] seq.
- Surville, M. de, i. 199
- "Swallowers" distinguished from the "Eaters," iv. [61]
- Swan, Captain, ii. 95 note
- Swash, Sir Paul, Knight, indicted for discourtesy, iv. [348], [349]
- Swearers, iii. 126 seq.
- Swearing, a cunning cure for, i. 118, 119
- Sweden, King of, i. 72, 213, 399; ii. 67, 134, 135; iii. 85 note, 336
- Sweething's Lane, iii. 352 note
- Swift, his age and position at starting of The Tatler, i. vii, viii:
- his contributions, i. xiv:
- his coldness towards Steele and others, i. xxiv:
- acknowledgements to, i. 3:
- his verses on a Shower, ibid.:
- his Description of the Morning, ibid., i. 81, 82, 111 seq.; iv. [216] note:
- made name of Bickerstaff famous, i. 8, 22 note:
- his Essay on Modern Education, i. 12 note:
- described as Wagstaff, i. 81 seq.:
- his Journal to Stella, i. 83 note, 92 note, 107, 285 note; ii. 122 note, 396 note; iii. 55 note, 299 note, 407 note; iv. [175] note, [211] note, [215] note, [254] note, [265] note, [294] note, [310] note, [320] note, [374] note:
- hatred of Boyer, i. 157 note:
- his Tale of a Tub, i. 209 and note; iv. [320] note:
- the "Janus of the Age," i. 268:
- his Polite Conversation, ii. 6 note:
- his City Shower, iii. 58 note; iv. [215] note:
- his Genteel Conversation, iii. 100 note:
- on Mary Astell, iii. 274 note:
- his treatment of Death, iii. 351 note:
- his continuation of the Tatler, iii. 406 note:
- his The Importance of the Guardian considered, iii. 407 note:
- his Project for the Advancement of Religion, iv. [294] note:
- his Directions to the Waiting-Maid, iv. [294] note:
- his Journal of a Modern Lady, iv. [338] note
- Referred to, i. 13 note, 22 note, 48 note, 49 note, 99 note, 112 note, 156 note, 228 note, 245 note, 263 note; ii. 4 note, 85 note, 146 note, 320 note; iii. 12, 390 note, 407 note; iv. [43] note, [93] note, [149] note, [194] note, [204] note, [206] note, [315] note, [343] note
- Letters by (signed Obadiah or Tobiah Greenhat, Elizabeth Potatrix, Cato junior, and Aminadab), i. 259 and note, (?) 289; ii. 70 seq., 102 seq., 151 (?), 162, 163 (?); iii. 391, 392 (?); iv. [13] seq.
- Part author of Nos. 32, 66, 67, 68 (?), 230, 238
- Hawkesworth claims for him Nos. 66, 67, 74, 81; ii. 223 note:
- an article not by him, ii. 186 note
- Swiss, the (Heidegger), ii. 118
- Switch, Tom, a letter from, i. 240
- Switzerland, i. 50, 61, 62, 76:
- described by Addison, ii. 300
- Sylvia and Dorinda, dialogue by Mrs. Singer, i. 92 and note
- Sylvia, her hard case, iii. 367 seq., 382 seq.
- Sylvius (General Cornelius Wood), iii. 162 and note
- Symes, Thomas, first husband of Steele's mother, iii. 350 note
- Synge, Captain R., i. 334
- T. R., a Welshman, iv. [301] seq.
- Tabio, a rival of Bromeo, ii. 99 seq.
- "Table of the Titles and Distinctions of Women," i. 89 note
- Tacitus, his Annals quoted, i. 145; iii. 361
- "Talc," iv. [250] and note
- Tale of a Tub, i. 209 note; iv. [320] note
- Talgol (in Hudibras), iii. 179 note
- Talicotius, Gaspar, iv. [314], [320], [322] note and seq., 327
- Talking, the art of, iv. [242] seq.:
- the abuse of, iv. [342] seq.
- Tallboy, a sharper, ii. 115, 116
- Taming of the Shrew retold, iv. [181] seq.
- Tapestry described, i. 32, 33
- Taplash, John, a singing clerk, i. 337
- Tarantula, its poison cured by dancing or music, i. 383 and note
- Tasso, his Pastor Fido, iii. 236
- Taswell (i.e. Caswell), Dr. William, minister, ii. 43 note
- Tate, Nahum, his No Duke, iii. 409
- Tatler, its forerunners, i. x, xi:
- its origin, i. xi; its methods, i. xi-xiv, xviii seq.:
- characters in, i. xvi:
- Gay on, i. xvi seq.:
- its teachings, i. xxii seq.:
- causes of its discontinuance, i. xxiv:
- its popularity, i. xxv-xxvii:
- imitators and continuations, i. xxvii:
- some account of the design of, i. 3 seq.:
- contributions by Addison, i. 4 seq.:
- subscribed to by every one eminent for wit, power, beauty, valour, or wisdom, i. 9:
- title chosen in honour of the fair sex, i. 12:
- price to be 1d., i. 12, 13, 46 note:
- foreign news made interesting, i. 12:
- service to stage, i. 15 note, 31:
- French translation of, i. 34 note:
- Annotations on, i. 52 note, &c.:
- wit of, exhausted, i. 64:
- will, burial and funeral, i. 65-67:
- devoted to the fair sex, i. 142, 143; ii. 218:
- increase of advertisements, i. 182 and note:
- hush-money for, i. 219:
- advice to, ii. 183 seq.:
- defended, ii. 197 seq.:
- the Female Tatler, ii. 247 note, &c.:
- pirated Tatler, ii. 347 and note:
- the censor of Great Britain, iii. 160, &c.:
- the continuation of, by Swift and Harrison, iii. 406 note:
- its rivals and critics, iv. [171] seq., 219 seq.:
- Edinburgh reprint of, iv. [382]
- Tatler, Martha, a letter from, i. 293 seq.
- Tattle, Jasper, a talkative fellow, iv. [247] seq.
- Taylor, Jeremy, his Art of Living and Dying, iv. [350]
- Tears, cause for shedding, ii. 138 seq.
- Tearshift, an unjust judge i. 124
- Tee Zee Neen Ho Ga Prow, an Iroquois chief of the Maquas, Emperor of the Mohocks, iii. 299 note, 301
- Telemachus among the shades in Fénélon's Télémaque, iii. 222 seq.
- Tempest, Miss (? Hebe), maid of honour, i. 355 note and seq.
- Tempest, The, iii. 409
- Temple, the i. 161; ii. 363
- ---- Sir Richard, i. 102 note, 291
- ---- Sir William, his Memoirs of what passed in Christendom from 1672 to 1679, ii. 351 and note
- ---- Bar, i. 348; ii. 156 note, 215, 260; iii. 98 note, 127, 264; iv. [372]
- ---- Gates, iii. 61 note
- Tender Husband, The, by Steele, iv. [31] note, [249] note
- Tenoe, Mr., a music-master of Hampstead, ii. 61 note
- Teraminta, i. 66:
- the reigning toast of I.B.'s youth, ii. 311
- Teraminta, her unhappy fate, i. 363, 364, 365
- Terence quoted, ii. 322:
- Hecyra quoted, iii. 5; iv. [256]:
- Eunuchus, iii. 73; iv. [77]:
- Andria, iii. 234:
- Phorm, iii. 194
- Terentia, wife of Cicero, iii. 239 seq.
- Terms, different, at Oxford and Westminster, i. 315 seq.
- Terræ filius, i.e. undergraduate who makes extempore speeches at degree-giving, i. 366 note
- —— or, The Secret History of the University of Oxford, by Amherst, i. 366 note
- Terrour, Tom, a gamester, i. 128
- "Tetrachymagogon," a physician's sign, iv. [225] seq.
- Tewin-water; or, The Story of Lady Cathcart, by Edward Ford, iv. [261] note
- Texel, the, i. 20, 198, 276
- Thackeray quoted, i. xxi; iii. 351 note; iv. [74] note
- Thais, iv. [81]
- Thalestris, i. 270
- ---- a plain woman set off by jewels and colours, iii. 195, 196
- Thames, the, i. 158, 219 note; iv. [268] note
- ---- Street, i. 232, 390; ii. 29 note
- Thatched House, ii. 118
- Thaun, General, i. 70
- ---- Count Henry, i. 71, 182, 399; ii. 48, 73, 200
- Theatre, lamentable history of the, i. 109, 110:
- its effect on manners of the age, i. 111:
- at Amsterdam, i. 171, 172:
- moral influence of, ii. 334; iii. 353 seq.:
- fair sex in front boxes, gentlemen of wit and leisure in side-boxes, substantial cits in pit, ii. 6 note:
- visited for effects of light, ii. 388:
- evil effects of having two, ii. 335:
- at Oxford, Hogarth's picture of, i. 366 note
- Theatre, The, quoted, i. 209 note; ii. 6 note; iv. [58] note, [91] note
- Themistocles, a repartee of, iii. 197
- Theory and Regulations of Love, by John Norris, i. 262 and note
- "Thermometer," description of, by Addison, i. 4
- Theron, his happiness centred on a running horse, iii. 171
- Thersites, a myrmidon, ii. 52 seq.
- Theseus, i. 256; ii. 129, 232
- Thesse, Marshal de, i. 35, 94, 95
- Thickett, Orson, a savage huntsman, ii. 330
- Thiers, his treatise on perukes, iv. [372] note
- Thimble, Rachael, a waiting-maid, iii. 124
- Thomas, Sir, a waiter at White's, i. 138, 141, 214, 298, 379
- ---- Mrs. Elizabeth (? Sappho), known as Corinna, i. 55 note:
- her Pylades and Corinna, i. 380 note; ii. 19 note; iii. 263; iv. [194]:
- her conquest of Henry Cromwell, i. 380 note
- Thoresby, Ralph, his Diary quoted, i. 13 note, 345 note
- Thorold, Sir Charles, i. 106
- ---- Sir George, i. 106
- Thouy, Marquis de, ii. 34
- Threadneedle Street, iv. [149] note
- Threadpaper, Sarah, waiting-maid, iii. 124
- Thrifty, John, a letter from, ii. 257
- Thumb, Tom, history of, ii. 351
- Thungen, General, i. 71
- Tickell, Thomas, his The Prospect of Peace, i. 382 note:
- as Tom Mercett, iv. [123] note:
- referred to, ii. 3 note, 178 note, 223 note, 257 note, 317 note, 346 note, 405 note; iii. 178 note; iv. [283] note, [287] note
- Tillotson, John, Archbishop of Canterbury, ii. 350 and note
- Tilney Churchyard, Norfolk, ii. 316 note
- Tiltyard, i. 318
- Timbs, his Clubs and Club Life in London, i. 12 note, 280 note; ii. 260 note
- Timoleon on the origin of titles, iii. 298 seq.:
- referred to, iii. 300, 301
- Timon, Lord, i. 84 seq.; iii. 369 note
- Timothy and Philatheus, by Oldisworth, ii. 9 note, 12 note
- Timothy [Tittle], Sir (Henry Cromwell), the critic, i. 380 note; iii. 270 seq.
- Tinbreast, Mr., of Cornwall, i. 301
- Tindal, Dr., on Rights of the Christian Church, ii. 12 and note
- Tintoret, Tom, a notable vintner, iii. 95, 134
- Tipstaff, i. 102, 103, 104
- Tiptoe, Mr., his dancing-school, iii. 348
- Tiresias, iii. 200 seq.
- Tit for Tat, iv. [172] and note
- Titles, historical origin of, iii. 298 seq.
- Tittle, Sir Timothy (i.e. Henry Cromwell), i. 380 note; iii. 270 seq.
- To a Lady on her Parrot, i. 226, 227
- Toast, a, history and definition of, i. 201 seq., 259:
- visit from a top toast, ii. 286 seq.:
- referred to, ii. 166, 315; iii. 42, 76 note
- Tobacco, iii. 63 note
- Tockenburg, i. 62, 76, 204; ii. 47
- Tofts, Mrs. Catherine (Camilla), singer, i. 171 and note, 346; iii. 6 note:
- rival of Margerita, iii. 191 note
- Toilet, Mrs., tirewoman, ii. 214
- Torcy, M., i. 88, 96, 97, 120, 121, 130, 143, 144, 155, 164, 173, 174 note, 184, 197, 204; iii. 123
- ---- and Mme. Maintenon, i. 165, 166
- Toland, John, his Christianity not Mysterious, ii. 417
- Toledo, the sword-blades of, i. 282 and note
- Tom Brown's Ghost; or, Gazette à la Mode, iv. [172] and note
- Tom's Coffee-house, ii. 277 and note; iv. [327] and note
- Tombs in Westminster Abbey, i. 247 and note
- Tompion, watchmaker, iii. 60 note
- "Tongue pad," countryfolks' name for the witty Emilia, ii. 56
- Tonson, Jacob, publisher of Miscellany Poems, i. 92 note:
- founder of Kit-Cat Club, i. 92 note:
- his edition of Hudibras, iv. [314]:
- referred to, i. 112, 380 note; iii. 249 note
- Tooke, Ben., Swift's bookseller, ii. 223, 260 and note
- Tooly, Deputy, ii. 179 note
- "Top," the, a dice trick, ii. 143
- "Topping" fellows, i. 321, 322
- Toricellius, inventor of common weather-glass, iv. [129]
- "Torner" (i.e. Turner), Richard, founder of Dick's Coffee-house, ii. 260 note
- Torrington, Lord, iii. 85 note
- Toss, Mrs., a great coquette, i. 225 seq.
- Tothill-Fields, i. 232 and note
- ----, Chapel, ii. 171 note
- Touchhole, Major (i.e. Mr. Gregory), a train-band major, ii. 79 and note, 80
- Touchstone, The, by James Ralph, ii. 335 note
- Touchwood, Lady Penelope, her delicacy, iv. [317]
- Touchy, Colonel, complains of assault, iv. [346] seq.
- Toulon, i. 182, 372, 400
- Tournay, i. 19 note, 43, 174, 269, 290, 291, 299, 304, 313, 331, 332, 337, 339, 354, 362, 377, 378, 399; ii. 34, 48, 67 note, 73, 92, 96, 97, 108; iii. 317
- Tower of London, i. 19; ii. 372 note:
- lions at, i. 247 and note
- ---- Hill, i. 387
- ---- Street, iv. [359] note
- Town, The, by Leigh Hunt, i. 136 note
- Town, the, inclined to Periodical Essays, by Swift, i. 3:
- Tatler to reform, i. 7:
- low amusements of, i. 107:
- popularity in, i. 199:
- terms of, explained to country gentlemen, i. 175, 198 seq., 201 seq., 223 seq.:
- celebrated characters in, i. 241 seq.
- Townly, Lady, claims a call from Mrs. Flambeau, iv. [334]
- Townshend, Lord, i. 89, 129, 143, 155, 166
- Tradescant, John, senior, founder of the Ashmolean, i. 282 note
- ---- John, junior, founder of the Ashmolean, i. 282 note
- Traffic, Richard, a letter from, iv. [99]-101
- "Tragedian," iv. [277] and note
- Tragedy, decline of, i. 385:
- how to write, ii. 32 seq.:
- the source of, ii. 139 seq., 233 seq.
- Tranquillus, honest Felix, lover of Jenny Distaff, ii. 212, 250 seq., 366; iii. 365; iv. [369], [370]
- Transition, the art of, ii. 134
- Trapp, Professor Joseph (Parson Dapper), his character, ii. 121 note and seq.:
- his A Character of the Present Set of the Whigs, ii. 121 note
- Travels in England, by Misson, iii. 275 note
- Treatise by an Elephant against receiving Foreigners into the Forest, ii. 80
- Treatall, Timothy, indicted for madness, iv. [331] seq.
- Trelooby, Humphrey, iv. [233]
- Trencher-caps, the, ii. 172, 173
- Trick-track (Sir Henry Colt), an unjust judge, i. 123, 124 and note
- Trimalchio, the banquet of, ii. 14 and note
- Trimmer, a man undone by cards, i. 107
- Trinculo in The Tempest, iii. 409
- Trinity College, Cambridge, iv. [3] note
- Trip to the Jubilee; or, The Constant Couple, i. 125 note:
- performed, i. 163 and note
- Trippet, Sir Taffety (i.e. Henry Cromwell), the fortune-hunter, his history and conduct at Epsom, i. 380 note and seq.
- ---- Mrs. Sissy, iv. [127]
- Trippit, Simon, a puny coxcomb, his petition, ii. 360, 361
- ---- William, gentleman-usher to the play-house, iv. [333]
- Tristram, little Sir (Sir Francis Child), a banker whose folly will do him good service, ii. 58 seq., 75
- Tristram Shandy, ii. 316 note
- Triumph, a flaw in the Roman, ii. 98, 99, 106
- Triumph of Love, an Italian opera, i. 110 note
- Trivia, by Gay, i. 234 note, 327 note; ii. 204 note; iii. 102 note
- Trojans, the, i. 58, 59, 60, 256; ii. 52; iii. 104
- Tron Church, Edinburgh, iv. [383]
- Trosse, Francis, overseer, ii. 43 note
- Trot, Tom, the penny-post, iv. [373]
- Trotter, Dr., an astrologer, iii. 313
- Trouin, Mons. du Guy, i. 137
- Troy, i. 59, 64; ii. 231; iii. 202, 215
- Truby, Will, always ready to laugh, ii. 101, 102, 138
- Trueman, Charles, hero of domestic life, iv. [100], [101]
- Truepenny, old, giveth excellent advice, ii. 56
- Truman, Mr., i. 241, 331: letter from, i. 270: on tragedy, ii. 32 seq.
- Trump, Tom, in defence of gamesters, ii. 57 seq.
- Trumpet, the, in Shire Lane, account of, iii. 98 note and seq.:
- the society at, iv. [47]:
- referred to, ii. 260 note, 279; iii. 75
- Truncheon, Col. Alexander, a hero of invincible stupidity, ii. 82:
- foreman of jury in the Court of Honour, iv. [283]
- Trusty, Will (John Hughes), on dogs, ii. 175 seq.
- ---- Sam (? Jabez Hughes), iv. [351]
- Truth, the mirror of, ii. 341 seq., 353 seq.
- "Tube" for the eye, ii. 364
- Tudor, Mary, daughter of Charles II. and Mary Davis, iv. [140] note
- Tulliola, daughter of Cicero, iii. 239, 240, 243
- Tully (Cicero), ii. 390, 412; iii. 103, 142, 280, 347; iv. [220]:
- on the Fable of Gyges, iii. 131; iv. [238]
- Tumbril, ridden by Orlando, ii. 13 and note
- "Tun" of Wapping. See Hogshead, iv. [85]
- Tunbridge, i. 380; ii. 111, 378
- Turin, i. 35, 70, 182; ii. 133
- Turnbull, Andrew, iv. [382]
- Turkey, a merchant of, whose Greek servant founded the "Grecian," i. 13 note:
- the Emperor of, his gratitude to his horse, iii. 43:
- referred to, iii. 111, 220, 222, 246
- Turners, the, city ladies (Lady Autumn and Lady Springly), i. 293 and note
- Tuscany, Duke of, iv. [227]
- Tusculan Disputations, Dr. Bently on, i. 66 note
- Tutchin, John, tried for libel, i. 158 note
- "Tutty," iv. [353] and note
- "Twelvepence a peck, oysters," a London cry, i. 41 note
- Twicestaff, another name for Distaff, i. 104
- Twig, Mrs. Biddy, ii. 247
- ---- Offspring, a letter from, ii. 88, 89
- Two Crowns and Cushion, Thomas Arne's sign, iii. 301
- Twoshoes, Giles, a monied wag, ii. 58, 59
- Twysden, Heneage, author of genealogy of the house of Bickerstaff, i. 4:
- his death and monument, ibid.:
- referred to, i. 101 note, 102 seq.
- ---- Sir William, i. 101 note
- ---- Josiah, i. 102 note
- ---- John, i. 102 note
- Typhonus, a giant, i. 256
- Ubi, Will, company for anybody, ii. 56
- Ukrania, i. 71, 236
- Ulysses, i. 59, 60; ii. 53, 232; iii. 104, 222; iv. [288]:
- his voyage to the regions of the dead, iii. 200 seq.
- Umbra, a coxcomb, i. 311, 312
- ---- the genius of credit, i. 391 seq.
- Umbratilis, a pretender, iv. [245]
- "Umbrello," an, iii. 12 and note
- Under a Lady's Picture, by Waller, verses in which every woman thinks herself described, iii. 137, 138
- Underhill, Cave, a famous comedian, i. 188 and note:
- as the grave-digger, i. 188 note, 189
- Union Coffee-house, iv. [154] note
- Unnion, a corporal, his story, i. 52 seq.
- Upholders, the Company of, claim to bury all the dead, ii. 337:
- a letter from, ii. 338, 339:
- referred to, ii. 352, 365, 381, 399 seq., 402, 416, 419; iii. 45, 257; iv. [327].
- See "Walking Dead"
- "Upholsterer, the political," iii. 218, 244, 332 seq., 336, 343; iv. [18], [185] seq.
- Urbanus, an excellent companion, iv. [244]
- Ursula, Mrs., iv. [353]
- Urwin, Will, proprietor of Will's Coffee-house, from whom it was named, i. 12 note
- Vafer, Will, a sharper, ii. 51
- Vainglorious Glutton, The, by Mr. Fuller, iv. [59] note
- Valenciennes, i. 174, 339; ii. 200; iii. 317
- Valentia, an esteemed woman, ii. 46
- Valentine, a sentinel, i. 52 seq.
- ----, in Love for Love, ii. 163 note
- ----, I. B.'s, iii. 149:
- referred to, iii. 130 and note
- Valentini Urbani, Signior, singer, i. 345 and note
- Valerius Maximus, ii. 62 note, 262 note
- ---- honest, iii. 241
- Van Konsbruch, i. 61
- Vanbrugh, Sir John, architect of the Haymarket, i. 110 note, ii. 334 note:
- his Confederacy, i. 111 note:
- his Relapse, i. 29 note, 67 note:
- locked in Bastille, i. 218 and note
- Vandals, i. 257; ii. 337; iv. [22]
- Vanderbank, Peter, his tapestries, i. 32 note, 33 note
- ---- William, son of Peter, i. 33 note
- ---- Instructions to, i. 32 and note
- Vandyck, iv. [109] note
- Vanity, condemned, i. 8:
- the Temple of, iii. 50, 54
- Vanity Fair quoted, iv. [74] note
- Varick, the widow, her advertisement, iv. [148] note
- Varillus, his true modesty, ii. 26
- Varnish, Tom, a talker, iv. [243]:
- his history; iii. 120 seq.
- Vauxhall (or Fox-Hall), originally the new Spring Gardens, i. 219 and note; ii. 126 note
- Vegetable, a reverend, ii. 258
- Vellum, in The Drummer, i. 158 note
- Venice, Doge of, i. 95:
- all soldiers from, are mercenaries, i. 231:
- letter from, i. 27:
- referred to, i. 171 note, ii. 301
- Venice Preserved, by Otway, Belvidera in, played by Mrs. Barry, i. 16 note:
- referred to, iii. 105, 409
- Venus, i. 59, 138, 227; ii. 79 note, 281, 294; iii. 341; iv. [7], [261], [262]:
- her help sought by Juno, iii. 176, 177:
- her girdle or cestus, iii. 176:
- a tale of, iv. [321]
- Vendôme, Duke of, i. 20, 229; iv. [158]
- Verbruggen, Mrs., Cibber on, i. 30 and note:
- Aston on, i. 31 note
- ---- Mr., i. 16 note, 30 note, 31 note
- Verdier, Mr., iv. [380]
- Verelst, John, his pictures of the Indian kings, iii. 299 note
- Verisimilis, guardian-spirit of Honour, i. 389 seq.
- Vernon, Mr. Secretary, i. 124 note
- Verono (i.e. the Earl of Wharton), i. 45 and note
- Verses on His own Death, by Swift, ii. 396 note
- Verus (Sir John Holt), magistrate, his character, i. 123 and note
- "Very Pretty Fellow," a character of a, i. 198 seq.:
- a true woman's man, i. 199: referred to, i. 322, 324, 366; iii. 256
- Very pretty gentleman, a, i. 14
- Vickers, Mr., iv. [381]
- Vienna, i. 27, 49, 61, 70, 95, 182, 213, 236; ii. 133
- Vignolles, Major, i. 184
- Villaria (i.e. Barbara, Duchess of Cleveland), ii. 7 note and seq., 14, 87 and note
- Villars, Marshal, i. 19 note, 197, 205, 229, 244 note, 269, 290, 291, 299, 313, 339; ii. 49, 105; iii. 316 note, 317, 333
- ---- Mrs., a bad woman, ii. 4 note
- Villiers, Will., Viscount Grandison, father of Duchessof Cleveland, ii. 7 note
- ---- George, Duke of Buckingham, Dryden on, ii. 16 note
- Vincent, Dr. Nathaniel, his long wig, iv. [372] note
- Vindication of Isaac Bickerstaff, i. 21 note, 22 note
- Viner, Sir Robert, i. 153 note
- Virgil, compared to Homer, i. 57 and note:
- in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 229:
- Æneid continued by Mapheus Vegius, ii. 281 note:
- on a future life, iii. 211 seq., 235
- his Æneid, i. 215, 257; ii. 142, 146, 399, 405; iii. 16, 22, 105, 107, 108, 109, 125, 129, 130, 199, 211, 222, 236, 348, 380, 390; iv. [104], [159], [238], [262], [283], [293], [362]
- his Georgics, i. 137, 336; ii. 276; iii. 27, 337; iv. [101], [106], [141]
- his Eclogues, iii. 93, 165; iv. [114], [197], [235], [298]
- Referred to, i. 77, 136; ii. 100; iii. 44, 234, 236, 309; iv. [220], [222], [234], [261]
- Virgin Muse, by Greenwood, iv. [296] note
- Virginity, time of reckoning, iv. [84], [96]
- Virgulta, receives Delamira's fan, ii. 20 seq.
- Virtue and pleasure, a fable of, ii. 324 seq.:
- effectively recommended by poetry, ii. 331 seq.:
- men of, allowed to look in the "Mirror of Truth," ii. 344:
- the Temple of, iii. 49
- Virtuoso, complaints of, iii. 152 seq.:
- the whims of, iv. [110], [111]:
- the will of a, iv. [112], [113]
- Visits, unseasonable, ii. 279 seq.:
- the art of paying, ii. 394 seq.
- Vitry, ii. 317, 320
- Vivarez, the, i. 332, 337
- Voisin, M., i. 229
- Volpone; or, The Fox, by Ben Jonson, i. 172 note
- Volscius, Prince, in The Rehearsal, i. 172 note
- Voluble, Will, a fine talker, iii. 315 seq.
- Von Hutten, Ulrich, author of Epistles to Ortuinus, &c., iv. [22] note
- Vossus, his De Poematum Cantu et Viribus Rhythmi, i. 282 note
- Voyage to the Island of Cajamai, by Dr. W. King, iv. [208] note
- Vulgar, the truly, ii. 144 seq.
- Wadsworth, Mary, spinster, ii. 4 note
- Wag, a tiresome, ii. 216, 217:
- the class, iii. 365
- Wager, Admiral Charles, iii. 84 note, 85 note
- Wagg, Mr., Lord Steyne's toady, iv. [74] note
- Wagstaff, Walter, translator of Bournelle's Annotations on the "Tatler," i. 52 note; ii. 211 note
- ---- Humphrey (i.e. Swift), of the Staffs, a new and original writer, i. 81 seq., 89 note; iv. [216] seq., 343
- ---- Lepidus, his suitable discourse, ii. 215, 216
- ---- Mrs. Rebecca, i. 89 note, 130
- Wagstaffs, i. 102, 103
- Waldeck, Prince, i. 156
- Wales, ii. 193; iv. [53]
- Walker, Obadiah, Master of University College, Oxford, ii. 171 note
- ---- Dr. Thomas, Headmaster of Charterhouse, ii. 331 note
- Walking dead, the, allowed in certain places at certain times, ii. 420:
- resurrection of, iii. 24:
- referred to, ii. 318 seq., 352, 353, 381, 399 seq.; iii. 21, 313
- Wall, Dr., a celebrated quack, i. 215 and note; iv. [323]
- Waller, his Instructions to a Painter, and his Advice to a Painter, i. 34 note:
- his Under a Lady's Picture, iii. 137, 138:
- referred to, iii. 260 seq.
- Walloon Guards, i. 106, 120, 269
- Walpole, Horatio, quoted, i. 33 note, 34 note; iv. [109] note:
- Secretary at the Hague, i. 164:
- referred to, ii. 182 note
- ---- Sir Robert, i. 164 note
- Walsh, Will, critic and man of fashion, ii. 249 and note
- Wands not of the family of the Staffs, i. 105
- Wapping, i. 170; ii. 372 note; iii. 147, 265; iv. [154] note:
- the beauties of, iv. [291]
- Warren, Mrs. (Mrs. Lucy), i. 286 note
- Wartenberg, Count, iv. [56], [57]
- Warton's Court, iv. [152]
- Warwick Street, ii. 339
- ---- Lane, iv. [169] note:
- the College of Physicians in, iv. [39] and note
- Watson, James, printer, iv. [383]
- Way of the World, by Congreve, iv. [367]
- Wealth, iii. 54
- Wealthy, Lady, ii. 87
- Webb, Lieutenant-General, ii. 109, 113
- Wedding, a Grecian, iii. 364
- Wedlock may be a most impudent prostitution, ii. 289
- Weekly Packet, The, iv. [376] note
- Wenman, Viscount, an idiot, i. 325
- ---- Lady, his mother, i. 325
- Wentworth, Peter, letters from, i. 146 note, 293 note, 297 note, 325 note, 371 note, 377 note, 386 note
- Papers quoted, i. 147 note, 293 note, 297 note, 323 note, 325 note, 343 note, 355 note, 371 note, 377 note, 386 note; ii. 5 note, 313 note; iii. 6 note, 55 note; iv. [84] note, [204] note
- ---- Lady, letter from, ii. 5 note; iii. 6 note, 151
- ---- Lady Anne, ii. 313 note
- Wentworth, Lady Hariot, ii. 313 note
- Wesell, General, iv. [85]
- West, of Chelsea, ii. 267
- West Indies, i. 234 note; iii. 221, 277
- Westminster, i. 31 note, 232 note, 371, 392; ii. 8, 12 note, 150, 163 note, 171 note, 180, 209; iii. 126, 162, 164; iv. [3] note
- Westminster Abbey, monument to Mr. Twysden in, i. 4:
- tombs in, i. 247 and note:
- Betterton's funeral in, iii. 279 note and seq.:
- referred to, iii. 149
- ---- Hall, shop-keepers' stalls in, iii. 139 note:
- two shepherdesses in, iii. 139, 169:
- as a dining-room, iii. 151:
- referred to, iv. [176], [267], [338]
- ---- a Prebendary of, iv. [204] note
- Westmorland, the lovers of, ii. 236
- Westphalia, Treaty of, i. 174
- Wexford, Earl of, ii. 315 note
- Wharton, Thomas, Earl of (Verono), i. 45 and note, 57 note; iii. 90
- Whatdee'call, Mr., his buttons, i. 184; ii. 127
- Wheat Sheaf, the, iv. [327] and note
- Wheel of Fortune, The; or, Nothing for a Penny, iii. 58 note
- Wheelbarrow, Sir Giles, knight, ii. 257 seq.
- Whetstone, George, his English Mirror, i. 340
- "Whetters," iii. 133, 134, 147 seq.
- Whipstaff, i. 130
- "Whisperer," iv. [172] and note
- Whiston, his Prælections Physicæ Mathematicæ sive Philosophia clarissimi Newtoni Mathematica illustrata, i. 350 note
- White Cross Street, i. 334
- "White pots," iv. [250] and note
- Whitaker, Admiral, i. 50
- ---- Sir Edward, i. 182
- Whitefriars, refuge for debtors, ii. 126 note
- Whitehall, iii. 127 and note, 295
- ---- Gardens, iii. 296 note
- White's Chocolate-house, accounts of gallantry and pleasure from, i. 12 and note:
- costs a man 6d. a day, i. 13:
- referred to, i. 107, 119, 134, 138, 214, 216, 297 note, 300; ii. 123, 277, 297, 419
- Whitestaff, i. 102, 103
- Whitlocke, Sir William (Will Shoestring), i. 310 note, 311
- Whittington, Alderman Dick, in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 208:
- referred to, iv. [207]
- Whittlestick, Lady, the virtuous, ii. 246 seq.
- Whole Art of Life, The; or, The Introduction to Great Men, illustrated in a pack of cards, i. 37
- Whole Duty of Man, The, ii. 184
- Why-not, Will, a questioner, i. 336 seq.
- Widows, beautiful, in the Mirror of Truth, ii. 356 seq.
- Wife, the case of a distressed, i. 167 seq.:
- her virtue, like the merits of a poet, never rightly valued till after death, ii. 38
- Wig, combing it, an act of gallantry, i. 310 and note, 311 note
- Wildacre, Sir Geoffrey, iv. [281]
- Wildair, Tom, of the Inner Temple, his reformation, ii. 74 seq.
- ---- Humphrey, the wise father of Tom W., ii. 75 seq.
- ---- Sir Harry, in Farquhar's Constant Couple, i. 163 note; iii. 356; iv. [42]
- Wildfire, Sir Harry, i. 248
- Wilks, Robert, actor, as Wildair, i. 163 note, 164:
- as Macbeth, ii. 140:
- his salary, ii. 164 note:
- should not imitate Betterton, iv. [42] and note:
- head of the stage, iii. 355 seq.:
- as Othello, iii. 380, 384:
- referred to, i. 125 and note; iii. 282 note, 365
- William III., i. 31 note, 188 note; ii. 272 note, 285, 351 note; iv. [3] note, [93] note, [251] note
- ---- nephew of I. B., i. 247 seq.
- ---- his youth compared to that of his sister Mrs. Elizabeth, iii. 319
- Willit, Sir Harry, his quarrel with his wife, ii. 213 seq.
- Will's Coffee-house, accounts of new poetry dated from, i. 12 and note:
- resort of Dryden, i. 13 note:
- costs a man 2d. a day, i. 13:
- referred to, i. 373; ii. 110, 277; iii. 209, 270, 275, 336; iv. [131]
- Winchester House, i. 349 note
- Windmill, Andrew, Esq., ii. 257 seq.
- Wine-brewers, complaints against, iii. 92 seq.
- Winifred, a country girl, i. 375
- ---- daughter of a Kentish yeoman, iii. 382
- Winstanley, Henry, his water theatre, ii. 181, 182 note
- ---- Hamlet, father of Henry W., i. 181 note
- Wirtemberg, i. 44, 73
- Wisdom, Walter, a new "fortune," ii. 330
- Wit, a new way of, i. 107 seq.:
- men of, used to be men of virtue, i. 136:
- a character of, i. 241 seq.:
- and breeding are wholly local, ii. 56:
- made useful, ii. 110:
- defined by Dryden, ii. 92 note and seq.:
- a determined wit, iv. [246]:
- bequeathed by I. B., i. 66
- Wit and Mirth, by D'Urfey, iii. 192 note
- Witches, satire on the belief in, i. 180, 181
- Withers, General Henry, at Tournay, i. 378 note:
- Pope's Epitaph on, i. 378 note
- Wits, the, The Tatler appeals to, i. 5 seq.:
- absorbed in frivolous affairs, i. 151, 152:
- a hospital for the decayed, i. 173 and note:
- wits to be discouraged, i. 347 seq.:
- the manners of possessed, iv. [123] seq.
- Wives, beautiful, in the Mirror of Truth, ii. 356 seq.
- Woffington, Mrs., i. 110 note
- Wolfembuttel, i. 44, 73
- ---- Duke of, iv. [271]
- Wolstenholm, Sir John, ii. 19 note
- Woman, destroying fiend or guardian angel, iv. [40]:
- a beautiful romantic animal, iii. 16
- Wood, Anthony, his Athenæ Oxonienses quoted, i. 87 note:
- his Fasti, iv. [169] note:
- referred to, iv. [372] note
- ---- Gen. Cornelius (Sylvius), his life and distinction, iii. 1628 note, 163 note:
- referred to, i. 20 and note; iv. [376] note:
- ? as "Martius," a brave invalid, iii. 324, 325
- ---- Rev. Seth, father of Gen. W., iii. 162 note
- Wood, Walter, overseer, ii. 43 note
- Woodby, Lady, the learned, i. 342
- Woodford, a school at, iv. [196] note
- Wooing, the extravagances of, iii. 136 seq.
- Woolfe, Sir Joseph, knight, i. 333 seq.
- Woollen Act, iii. 22
- Woolsack, the sign of the, iv. [304] note
- Wootton, Sir Henry, iv. [180]
- Works and Days, by Hesiod, ii. 326 note; iv. [58]
- Works of the Learned, iv. [194] note, [195] note
- World, The, quoted, iv. [109] note
- Wouldbe, Lady Betty, accused of painting, iv. [318], [319]
- Wrathful, Justice, i. 42
- Wren, Sir Christopher (Nestor), ii. 24 and note, 25 and note
- Writers, strange scarcity of, i. 32:
- their skill in transition, ii. 133, 134
- Writing-masters, iv. [329] seq.
- Wroughton, Susannah, i. 325 note
- ---- Seymour, i. 325 note
- ---- Francis, i. 325 note
- Wycherley, his Country Wife, i. 29 seq:
- his Plain Dealer, i. 243 note; ii. 246 note:
- his Love in a Wood, i. 311 note:
- on easy writers, i. 81:
- his definition of a coxcomb, i. 309:
- referred to, i. 380; ii. 334 note
- Wynendale, victory at, ii. 113 note
- Xenophon, conductor of Socrates, ii. 228
- Xerxes, his robes, i. 346:
- he weeps, ii. 323
- Yalden, his verses to Mackworth, ii. 84 note
- Yes, when a young virgin should say "yes," ii. 244
- Yokefellow, Bridget, question on the education of her children, iv. [282]
- ---- Ralph, question on the education of his children, iv. [282]
- Young, Mrs., i. 29 note
- ---- Boorwit in Steele's Lying Lover, i. 219 note
- Young Man's Coffee-house, i. 261 and note; iii. 276
- ---- Dr. Margery (alias John), a kind of Amazon in physic, iv. [159] seq.
- "Young Maid's Portion, The," a song in D'Urfey's Wit and Mirth, iii. 192 note
- Youth, I. B.'s kindness for, i. 247:
- devoted to lust, iii. 32
- York Buildings, ii. 61 note; iii. 192 note, 276 note, 299 note
- ---- Duke of, iii. 100 note
- Zealand, i. 20, 129
- Zinzendorf, Count, i. 61, 95