n. 4; estate in Indies, lost, ii. 152; fable of poem, i. 54 n. 1; familiar day, his, ii. 122; fees and friends, 90; flatterers, endured, 120 n. 3; follies rather than crimes, detects, 125; Freeholder, 109; gaiety dissociated from vice, 125; garret, lodged in, 87 n. 6; Garth's Dispensary, 61 n. 5; G.'s religion, 62 n. 7, 63 n. 1; Gay, in last illness summoned, 117; George I, memorial to, 108 n. 9; 'good company,' timid and awkward in, 119 n. 1; Good Friday, dines at Bolingbroke's on, 125 n. 2; Granville, 'takes off,' 294 n. 2; great writers propagating immorality, i. 399 n. 1; Guardian, ii. 104; 'Guilt's chief foe,' iii. 371; Hacket's, Bishop, motto, 325; Halifax and Dorset's' numbers,' ii. 287 n. 3; Halifax, his patron, 84; H., praises, 46; H., quotes, 42 n. 8; Hanover mission, 88; Haymarket, lodges in, 87 n. 6; hemistichs, 145 m. 4; Hoadly, 329 n. 3; Holland House, 156; holy orders, diverted from, 84; Homer, Virgil, and Ovid, i. 448 n. 1; House of Commons, failure in, ii. 111; H. C., un- opposed election to, 118; Hudibras, i. 217 nn.; human life, read volume of, ii. 121; human nature, knowledge of, 124; humour, 119, 148; Iliad and Aeneid, iii. 222 n. 5; invention, a painful action, 218 n. 3; Ire- land, time in, ii. 89-91, 152; Italian opera, 15 n. 3, 165, 166; Italy, visits, 86; 'Joe,' called by Philips, iii. 314 n. 5; Keeper of Irish Records in Birmingham's Tower, ii. 89, 152; knowledge, presented in alluring form, 146; lampoons, condemns, iii. 318 n. 5; late hours, i. 409 n. 2, ii. 123; latinity, 12 n. 3, 82, 83, 84, 121; learning, 120; Letter from Italy, 86, 128; Lichfield school, So; literary attacks, left unanswered, 104; 'little Dicky,' 115, 155; loan to friend, 156; Lover, The, contributed to, 95 n. 8; Mag- dalen College, demy of, 82, 151; M. C., fellowship, 87 n. 6, 151; M. C., rooms in, 151; marriage to Countess of Warwick, 110, 154; merit, high opinion of his own, 120; m., universally acknowledged, 118; meta- phor, broken, 128; Milton's daughter, i. 159; M., 'language sunk under,' 190; M.'s Paradise Lost and Spectators, see under MILTON; M.'s place among poets, 170 n. 1; M.'s profaned pen, 116 n. 2; M.'s 'unfettered numbers,' 200; mixed wit, 41; morality, ii. 125, 149; Musae Anglicanae, 84; music, no relish for, 89 n. 1; mythology in poetry, dislikes, 311 n. 3, iii. 225, 261 n. 5, 319 n. 2, 436 n. 6; oblique strokes,' ii. 124; Ode for St. Cecilia's Day, 127; official in- capacity, 109, 111, 198; Old Whig, 115, 155; Ormond, relations with, 152; Otway's Venice Preserved, i. 245 n. 7; O.'s tender- ness, 248 n. 1; Oxford degrees, ii. 151; parallel of Princes and Gods, 144; 'parson in tye wig,' 123; party-lying, 94 n. 5; party zeal, 92, 118; passions on side of truth, sets,
126 n. 3; payments received, Drummer, 106; pp., Spectator, 108 n. 1; Peace of Ryswick, Latin verses on, 82, 85; Peace of Utrecht, iii. 106 n. 2; pension for travelling, ii. 85; p. on retirement, III; Perrault, iii. 230 . I; Philips's, A., magistracy, 321 n. 4; P.'s Pastorals, 318 n. 5, 319; P., solicits Swift on behalf of, 313 n. 3; P., see PHILIPS, Ambrose; Philips's, J., Splendid Shilling, i. 313 n. 3; philosophy brought to dwell in clubs and assemblies, ii. 93 n. 4; Pindaric writers, i. 48 n. 3; Pleasures of the Imagination, ii. 148, iii. 412 n. 2; Poem to his Majesty, 365; poetical justice, ii. 134 n. 3; poetry, calmness and equability, 127; P., want of vigour, 145; 'poets waiting at his levee,' 126; political academy, iii. 200 n. 5; political opponents, kindness for, ii. 118; p. o., reverenced by, 125; Pope, account of quarrel with, iii. 128; P., advice to, 110; P., alleged jealousy of, 103; P.'s charges, innocent of, 133 n. 1; P. and Dennis's Remarks on Cato, ii. 102, iii. 106; Essay on Criticism, praises, 95, 99, 229n.1; Guardian on Philips's Pastorals, 107, 319; Iliad, 110, 126, 129 n.6; P.'s lines on him, 133 n. 4, 178; Pastorals, stroke aimed at, 319 n. 2; P., paid court to, by, 129; P., praised by, ii. 126 n. 3; Rape of the Lock, machinery, iii. 103; 'Sisyphus and the Stone,' 231 n. 2; Windsor Forest, pained by, 106; popularity of his poetry, ii. 211 n.3; poverty and ridicule, iii. 204 n. 2; Present State of the War, ii. 107; Pretender's poverty, ridicules, 109; 'priest in his heart,' 112; Prior's Examiner, answers, 187; P.'s Poems, did not subscribe to, 118 n. 7; professions and practice, 125; profits, eager for, 106; Prologue to Smith's Phaedra, 15 n. 2, 20; Prologue to Steele's Tender Husband, 89; prose, model of middle style, 149; Psalms, versions of, 112, 127 n. 3, 144 n. 6; public opinion, chief architect of, 95 n. 2; Queen's College, Oxford, 82, 151; religion, his, 148; Remarks on Ovid, 148; Remarks on Several Parts of Italy, 86; reputation, causes of his, 126; return to England, 87; rhymes, often dissonant, 145; Rochester's Nihil, i. 224 n. 3; Rosamond, account of production and publication, ii. 88; criticized by Johnson, 131; dedicated to Duchess of Marlborough, 89; Tickell's lines on it, 305; its versification, 145; Rowe's levity, 75; R.'s Pharsalia, 73 2. 1; Royal Society, 39; Sacheverell, chamber-fellow with, 83; St. James's Place, lodges in, 122 n. 9; salaries, official, 88 n. 4, 90, 152; San Marino, 87; secretary to Lord Lieutenant in Ireland, 89, 111 n. 2, 118, 152; secretary to Regency, 108, iii. 367; Secretary of State, ii. 111, 155; Shadwell, i. 383 n. 4; Shakespeare, omits, ii. 46 n. 1, 84 n. 6; Sheffield's Essay, 179; signatures to Specta- tors and Guardians, 105, 154; Sir Roger de Coverley, 96; Smalridge, iii. 11 n. 2; Smith's
Phaedra, ii. 8, 15 n. 3, 16, 20; S., proposed Hist. of the Revolution to, 14; see SMITH; Socrates, projected tragedy on, 112; Somers, dedications to, 85, 86, 127, iii. 365; Spacious Firmament, ii. 127 n. 3, 243 n.4; ·Spec- tator, share in it, 92-8, 105, 108, 153, 154, 157; many written very fast, 121; revives it, 107; sold copy to Tonson, 108 n. 1; Spenser, 84; Sprat's Cowley, i. I n. 3; S.'s Observations on Sorbière's Voyage, ii. 40; Steele, memorable friendship with, 80-2; see STEELE; Stepney, sends Dialogues on Medals to, i. 309 n. 6; subscriptions to collected Tatlers, ii. 152; Swift's Baucis and Philemon, corrected, iii. 65 n. 4; S.'s 'good nature,' 59 n. 5; S., kept in his place by, ii. 152, iii. 21; S.'s lines on him, ii. 86 n. 5, 126 n. 5; S., maintained acquaintance with, 118; see SWIFT; sympathy with fellow men, 124 n. 3; Tatler, share in, 91, 152; tautology, 130 n. 5; tavern,' arrived to his pint,' 157; t., late hours, 123; theatre's lewdness, 221 n. 5; theatre tickets, 100 n. 3; 'thinks justly but faintly,' 127; Tickell's patron, 305, 310; T.'s Prospect of Peace, 306; see TICKELL; Tillotson's prose, 113; timidity of sober hours, 123; timorous taciturnity, 118; To Sir Godfrey Kneller, 144; translation, on, i. 373. I; translations, his, ii. 145; travels abroad, 85-7; Trial of Count Tariff, 107; truth shown in a thousand dresses, 149; tutor to a travelling squire, 86; Two Children in the Wood, 147 n. 3; Under-Secretary of State, 88, 152; 'valued himself more on poetry than on prose,' 145 n. 2; versification, 145; Virgil's Fourth Georgic, translated, 83; V., Dryden, praised by, 83; Vision of Mirza, 144 n. 6; Waller, criticizes, i. 287 n. 5 ; W., lines on, ii. 128; Walpole's criticism, 127 1. I; Warburton's criticism, 127 n. 1; Westminster Abbey, midnight funeral in, ii. 156; Whig Examiner, 107, iii. 16; Whig- gism, once shown in Spectator, ii. 92; Whigs in Ireland, 90 n. 3; will, 155; William III, poem to, 85, 127; wine, weakness for, 123, 157; wit, on side of virtue and religion, 125; wits, humanity of greatest, i. 394 n. 5; women's learning, 157 n. 5; Yalden, friend- ship with, ii. 298; Young's Death of Queen Anne, &c., inscribed to him, iii. 367; Y.'s verses on his death, 370; quotations,
Account of English Poets, i. 41 n. 5, 116 n. 2, 200, 236 n. 2, 293 n. 1, ii. 84 nn., 226 n. 2, 287 n. 3; Campaign, 129, 130 n. 5, iii. 225 n. 7; Cato, ii. 100 n. 2, IOI n. 4, 121 2. 7, 137-42; 'How are thy servants bless'd,' 144 n. 6; Letter from Italy, 86 n. 4, 128; Verses to Kneller, 158.
ADDISON, Dean Lancelot, the poet's father, ii. 79, 151.
ADDISON, Mrs., the poet's mother, iii. 326. ADDISON, Miss, the poet's sister, ii. 79 n. 4. ADRIAN VI, iii. 335 n. 5.
Adventurer, iii. 67, 333, 358 n. I. Adventures of Five Hours, i. 15 n. 2. AESCHYLUS, i. 185, 472 n. 2. AGAR, Mr., i. 158.
BAISLABIE, John, Chancellor of Exchequer, iii. 25.
AKENSIDE, Mark, Aldermanly discretion' deficient in, iii. 416 n. 1; alexandrines 'set upright, like one of his,' 416 n. 1; birth, &c., 411; blank verse, 417; Cambridge degree, 415; conversation, 416; Crounian lecturer, 415; death, 416; diction, 418; dis- senting ministry, intended for, 411; Dyer's Fleece, 346; Dyson, friendship with, 414; Edinburgh University, 411; Epistle to Curio, 414, 419; established, no friend to anything, 413; Fenton's Ode to Gower, ii. 264 n. 7; F.R.C.P., iii. 415; F.R.S., 415; Gent. Mag., verses in, 412 n. 1; Gray, criticized by, 420 n. 2; Greek, his, 416 n. 2; Gulstonian lec- turer, 415; halt in gait, 411 n. 2; Hamp- stead, 414; latinity, 416; Leyden, studied physic at, 412, 414; liberty, outrageous zeal for, 411; light the tapers,' &c., 420 n. 2; medical practices at Northampton and Bloomsbury, 414, 414 n. 6; medical writings, 412 n. 5, 415, 416 n. 2; Newcastle Grammar School, 411; Odes, collected, 414; O. criti- cized, 419; Ode to Thomas Edwards, 413 n. 4; payment received for Pleasures of Imagination, 412 n. 3; Peregrine Pickle, physician in, 411 n. 5, 416 n. 1, 419 n. 3; physician to Queen Charlotte, 411 n. 5; P., St. Thomas's Hospital, 415; p., success as 415; p., 'supercilious and unfeeling,' 415 n.6; - Pleasures of Imagination, account of publication, 412; Gray's criticism, 416 n. 4; Johnson's criticism, 416-9; J. could not read it, 417 n. 3; immortality of soul, 419; Pope's advice to Dodsley, 412; revision and additions, 413, 418; Rolt's impudent claim, 412 n. 2; Wordsworth's motto from it, 420 n. 2; read his verses badly, 420 n. 2; ridicule test of truth, 413; Shaftesbury's Characteristics, 413 n. 1; Table of Modern Fame, i. 198; Walpole, laughed at by, iii. 420 n. 2; Warburton, warfare with, 413;
quotations, Hymn to Cheerfulness, 420 n. 2; Odes, ii. 12, iii. 414 n. 5; Ode on the Winter Solstice, 420 n. 2; Pleasures of Ima- gination, 418 nn., 419 n. 2, 420 n. 2.
AKENSIDE, Mark, the poet's father, iii. 411. AKENSIDE, Mrs. Mary, the poet's mother, iii. 411.
AKERMAN, Keeper of Newgate, ii. 424
ALABASTER, Dr. William, i. 88. ALBERTI, Leandro, Descrizione di tutta l'Italia, ii. 87 n. I.
ALDRICH, Dr. Henry, Dean of Christ Church, Clarendon's History, one of editors of, ii. 18, 22, 23; Philips, John, under him, i. 312, 318 n. 4; Smith's expulsion, ii. 13.
ALEXANDRINES, history of introduction, i. 466; Addison's use of them, ii. 145; Cowley, common in, i. 63; Dryden's use of them, 63, 466, 469; Pope's use of them, iii. 231, 232 n. I, 249; Prior's use of them, ii. 209; Swift censures them, i. 467, iii. 249 n. 3; Waller, not used by, i. 294; Young, excluded by, iii. 399 n. 3.
ALGAROTTI, Addison's 'classic ground,' ii. 86 n. 4; 'appartenait à l'Europe,' i. 177 n. 4; 'arbiter elegantiarum,' ii. 93 n. 3; ' gigantesca sublimità Miltoniana,' i. 177 n. 4; Gray's Bard, iii. 438.
ALLEGORICAL PERSONAGES, i. 185, iii.
ALLEN, Ralph, Amelia dedicated to him, iii. 169 n. 6; Atterbury's Bible, 141 n. 3; Blount, Martha, visits him, 195; 'low-born,' 180; Mayor of Bath, 195 n. 4; Pope, friend- ship with, 157; P. and Savage, ii. 428 n. 4; P.'s servant's legacy, iii. 196 n. 2; P.'s will, contemptuous mention in, 195, 196, 214; Squire Allworthy, of Tom Jones, 169 n. 6; Warburton married his niece, 169.
ALLEN, Mrs., Blount, Martha, quarrel with, iii. 195.
ALLESTREE, Dr. Richard, Provost of Eton, i. 273 n. 5.
ALLITERATION, i. 295, iii. 439.
ALPHONSO II of Ferrara, iii. 318 n. 4. ALPHRY, Mr., of Gray's Inn, i. 101 n. 4. Alpine, iii. 418.
AMERICAN PLANTATIONS, shipping to, ii. 327 n. 2.
AMERSHAM or AGMONDESHAM, i. 249, 256,
ANGLESEY, Arthur Annesley, first Earl of, Eikon Basilike, i. 197; Milton's Character of Long Parliament, &c., given to him, 146; Restoration, part in, 129 n. 3, 146 n. 4. ANGLESEY, James, third Earl of, ii. 28. ANGUILLARA, Ovid, translated, iii. 237. ANNE, Princess, conducted by Dorset to Nottingham, i. 306; courted by Sheffield, ii. 172. See ANNE, Queen.
ANNE, Queen, dismisses Halifax, ii. 44; Prior's obscure birth, 189 n. 2; slow to act, iii. 17; Swift, attacked by, 69; S., and bishopric, 10, 68; Tale of a Tub, shown to her, 10; Young's godmother, 362; Y.'s Last Day dedicated to her, 366.
ANNE, Princess, daughter of George II, ii. 293.
ANNESLEY, see ANGLESEY.
Annual Register, Gray's death, iii. 429 n. 3; indecent writing, ii. 126 n. 3. ANTAEUS, ii. 229.
Anti-Lucretius, see POLIGNAC. Antiperistasis, i. 23 n. 2.
ANTROBUS, Mr., Gray's uncle, an Eton master, iii. 421.
Aphorism, ii. 251.
APOLLONIUS, i. 337 n. 3.
Apophthegm, ii. 251.
APOTHECARIES, contest with Physicians, ii. 58.
AQUINAS, St. Thomas, iii. 19 n. 2, 375. Arbiter elegantiarum, ii. 93 n. 3.
ARBUTHNOT, John, M.D., Bessy Cox's, bowl of punch at, ii. 199 n. 4, iii. 274; character, 177, 273-4; Chesterfield, praised by, 273; Christianity, patron of, 273; Cowper, praised by, 273; death, 177; despised the world, 61 n. 4; Gay, advice to, ii. 273; G.'s death, 281; G.'s Three Hours after Marriage, aids in, 271, iii. 274; G., visits, ii. 272 n. 6; gluttony, iii. 274; ill-natured jest, liked, 274; inattention, king of, 201 n. 2; letters, ease of his, 160; Lewis, praises, ii. 273 n. 3; Memoirs of Scriblerus, iii. 181, 182; music, skill in, 228 n. 5, 273; piety, imperfect, 273; Pope's Dunciad notes, wrote part of, 151; P.'s irregular life, 199 n. 2; P.'s Miscellany, 38 n.2; P. and Swift's unacknowledged obliga- tions to him, 273; Prior's 'Chloe,' ii. 199 n. 4; profession, skill and generosity in his, iii. 273; raillery, ii. 63 n. 1; repartee to Jervas, iii. 273; Swift's exaggeration of danger, 36 n. 1; friendship with, 59 n. 5; Gulliver's Travels, 38 n. 5, 73; praised by, 274; at Tory downfall, 26 n. 4; walk, could do everything but, 274.
ARGYLE, John, second Duke of, Beggar's Opera, ii. 276; Will's Coffee House, fre- quented, i. 408 n. 6.
ARIOSTO, 'darling and pride of Italy,' i. 454; epitaph on himself, iii. 272; levity, i. 187; 'pravity,' 179.
ARISTOTLE, catastrophe from change of will, i. 365 n. 5; Ethics, courage, iii. 99 n. 5; Poetics, fable of epic, i. 54 n. 1, 174 n. 2, 175; poetry, TéXVN μμNTIKŃ, 19 n. 2; Smith, studied by, ii. 5; tragedy, rules for, i. 472-9; unity of place not mentioned in, ii. 140; wonderful, the, iii. 172 n. 4.
ARLINGTON, Henry Bennet, first Earl of, Cowley's letters to him, i. 8.
ARNE, Thomas, Addison's Rosamond, music for revival of, ii. 89 n. 1; Rule Britannia, iii. 293 n. I.
ARNOLD, Matthew, Chapman's Homer, iii. 115 n. 2; Gray's style, 445; Milton and Homer, i. 183 n. 1; Paradise Lost, 194 n. I ; Pope's Iliad and Cowper's, iii. 276; P.,
Sarpedon's speech to Glaucus, 240 n. 1; P., weakest in level passages, 239 n. 1; Rome, time needed to see, i. 95 n. 8; Young's Night Thoughts, iii. 396 n. 2.
ARRAS, Bishop of, ii. 220 n. I. Arsinoe, ii. 165.
Art of Living in London, ii. 398 n. 1. ASCHAM, Roger, Denham, imitated by, i. 78 n. 5; latinity, 87; 'quick wits,' 280. ASGILL, John, iii. 12.
ASHE, Rev. Dillon, iii. 53 n. 6.
ASHE, Dr. St. George, Bishop of Clogher, conferred archdeaconry on Parnell, ii. 50; Swift and Stella, said to have privately married, iii. 30, 69.
ASKEW, Anne, ii. 171.
ASTON, Miss Molly,' iii. 262 n. 4. ASTROLOGY, judicial, i. 216, 409. ATHENIAN SOCIETY, iii. 7. ATKINSON, Mr., ii. 304 n. 2.
ATTERBURY, Francis, Bishop of Rochester, Addison's Works, dedication of, ii. 118 n. 3; A.'s funeral, officiates at, 156; Boyle's tutor, iii. II 2.4; Clarendon's History, alleged forgeries in, ii. 18, 23; Cowley, quotes, i. 16 n. 5; Cragg's funeral, officiates at, iii. 260 n. 1; daughter dies in his arms, 271 n. 2; death in exile, 271 n. 2; Dryden's Cleomenes, i. 363 n. 5; D.'s epitaph, 469 n. 10; Duke, buries, ii. 25 n. 4; Garth's epitaph to St. Évremond, 62 n. 7; Milton's name in Abbey, i. 150; Paradise Lost, allegory of Sin and Death superior to Homer, 185 n. 8; P. L., Tonson's edition of, collects Oxford subscriptions, 198; Samson Agonistes, urges Pope to polish,' 188 n. 8; More's answer to Luther, 112 n. 4; Philips's epitaph, 150, 314; Pope, advice to, iii. 134, 145; Dunciad, criticized, 145 n. 3; P.'s epitaph on him, 271 n. 2; P., gives Bible to, 141 n. 3; P.'s juvenile epic, advises burning, 89; P.'s lines on Addison, 134; - preacher of Bridewell Hospital, ii. 300; Prior's epitaph, 195 .5; Shakespeare, ignorant of, iii. 139 n. 5; Tale of a Tub, ii. 18 n. 3, iii. 10 n. 5; Tatler, ii. 23; trial before House of Lords, 300 n. 6, iii. 140; Waller's alliteration, i. 295 n. 3; mentioned, iii. 375.
ATTERBURY, Mary (Mrs. Morice), daughter of the Bishop, iii. 271 n. 2. AUBIGNEY, see DAUBIGNY.
AUBREY, John, Butler, friendship with, i. 201 n. 10; B.'s pall-bearer, 207 n. 1; credi- bility, 230; Roscommon's second sight, 230; Rota Club, 126 n. 1; satirical wits, 206 n. 5 ; Waller, 279 n. I.
AUGURELLUS, Aurelius, Gratiarum Con- vivium, ii. 52 n. 9.
AUGUSTUS, advice to his successor, iii. 103 n. 5; Rome, i. 469; Virgil's Aeneid, 326. AUTHORS, affectation of production of works by chance, ii. 214; critics treated with con- tempt, iii. 91; gentlemen first, ii. 226; judge- ment of their own works, i. 147, ii. 206;
subscriptions to proposed works, live on, 403 n. 2, 404 n. 3.
AYLMER, Brabazon, assignee of Paradise Lost, i. 142, 486.
AYRE, W., Life of Pope, iii. 100 n. 4, 131 n. I, 403 n. 3.
AYSCUE, Sir George, ii. 288 n. 2.
BACON, Francis, 'commodious allusions,' i. 33; Life by Mallet, iii. 404; 'live to study, not study to live,' 337 n. 1; no command to forgive our friends, 194 n. 1; personal de- formity, a spur, 196 n. 5; 'weariness to do the same thing,' ii. 62 n. 2.
BAILLIE, Lady Grisell, iii. 283 n. 2, 287 n. 1. BAGOT, Hervey, i. 305 n. 5.
BAKER, William, grandson of younger Ton- son, i. 486.
BALAGUER, Mr., ii. 306 n. 1. BALLAD OPERA, ii. 282.
BALLER, Rev. Joseph, ii. 267 n. 2. BAMFIELD, Col., i. 73 n. 3. BAMPTON, i. 312.
BANGOR CONTROVERSY, ii. 329. BANISTER, Rev., iii. 84 n. 2.
BANKS, Anne, Waller's first wife, i. 252. BANKS, Professor Sir John, Swift's loss of mind, iii. 48 n. 2.
BARBAULD, Mrs., i. 132 n. 4.
BARBER, Alderman John, account of him, i. 207 n. 6; Arbuthnot's epicurism, iii. 274; Butler's monument, i. 207; offers bribe for commendation in Pope's writings, iii. 205 n. 2; printed Sheffield's Works, ii. 177 n. 1; printer of The Gazette, 30 n. 6; Swift and Lady Somerset, iii. 69; Swift's printer, 26 1. 3.
BARBER, Mrs. Mary, iii. 39, 74. BARBERINI, Cardinal, i. 94, 95 n. I. BARCLAY, Alexander, author of Ship of Fools, iii. 317 n. 3.
BARCLAY AND PERKINS, ii. 212 n. 1, iii. 206 n. I.
BARETTI, Joseph, Anguillara's Ovid, iii. 237 n. 1; Berni's 'rifacimento,' i. 455 n. 2; Milton's Italian poetry, 161 n. 3; pastoral plays in Italy, ii. 285 n. 1; Salvini's Homer, iii. 237 n. 2.
BARKER, James, Young's footman, iii. 389. BARNES, Joshua, account of him, iii. 81 n. 2; Anacreon, ii. 89; Cowley's 'Mistresses,' i. 6; Greek, 'unoculus inter caecos' in, 138 2. 2; Jeffreys, ode in praise of, ii. 89 n. 4; Lines on Death of Queen Anne, iii. 81. BARN-ELMS, i. 16.
BARNES, Rev. William, iii. 298 n. 6. BARNSTAPLE, ii. 267.
BARROW, Rev. Dr. Isaac, i. 418 n. 5.
BARROW, Dr. Samuel, Latin verses on Paradise Lost, i. 183 n. 2.
BARRY, Mrs. Ann Spranger, iii. 409 n. 4.
BARRY, Mrs. Elizabeth, played in Congreve's Old Bachelor, ii. 215 n. 6; Otway's Orphan, i. 245 n. 2; Smith's Phaedra, ii. 19 n. 1. BARRYMORE, Elizabeth, Countess of, daughter of Earl Rivers, ii. 326 n. 3, 439. BARTON, Catherine, Sir Isaac Newton's niece, ii. 42 n. 2.
BATEMAN, Edmund, tutor of Christ Church, ii. 409 n. 2.
BATH, Earl of, see GRENVILLE, Sir John.
BATH, Allen, Ralph, Mayor of, iii. 195 n. 4; Broome's tomb, 80; Congreve's journey, ii. 227; Dorset's death, i. 306; hospital, iii. 196; Lady Macclesfield, ii. 378; Shenstone's visits, iii. 350.
BATHURST, first Earl, Burke's speech, men- tioned in, iii. 205 n. 8; described by John- son, 205 n. 8; Dunciad, one of nominal publishers, 148 n. 6; Epistle to Bathurst, complains of, 173 n. 4; Essay on Man and Bolingbroke, 163 n. 4; Pope's Iliad, 113 2. 4; P.'s over-eating, 200 n. 2; Prior's Alma, ii. 205 n. 4; P. and Lewis, 198 n. 2; spoiled by wealth,' iii. 205 n. 8. BATHURST, Dr. Ralph, President of Trinity College, Oxford, ii. 6.
BAUDIUS, on Erasmus, i. 155.
BAXTER, Richard, 198, iii. 311 n. 3. BEACONSFIELD, i. 268, 277- BEAMINSTER, ii. 32 n. 2.
BEATTIE, Dr. James, Addison's prose, ii. 150 n. 1; Blackmore's paraphrases, 240 n. 2; Gray's debt to Dryden, iii. 435 n. 5; G., visited by, 428; Johnson's regard for him, 428 n. I. BEAUFORT, Henry Somerset, second Duke of, ii. 299.
BEAUMONT AND FLETCHER, King and No King, i. 476 n. 3, 478, iii. 212 n. 3; Rollo, Duke of Normandy, i. 246 n. 1, 475 n. 3, 479; plots in Spanish stories, 347.
BECKETT, Mr., the bookseller, iii. 284 n. 3. BECKINGHAM, Charles, Savage's Life, ii. 354 n. I.
BEDDOES, Thomas Lovell, iii. 360. BEDDOES, Dr. Thomas, iii. 360. BEHN, Afra, i. 242 n. 1, 399. BELCHFORD, iii. 344..
BELL, Mr., Thomson's brother-in-law, iii. 296. BEMBO, Cardinal, Epitaph on Raphael, iii. 265 n. 2.
BENEFIT OF CLERGY, ii. 350 n. 2. Benlow and Dallison's Reports, ii. 65. BENNET, see ARLINGTON.
BENSON, William, Dobson's Paradisus Amissus, iii. 170 n. 3; Milton's monument, i. 150; Thomson, advice to, iii. 283 n. 2. BENTHAM, Jeremiah, father of Jeremy Bentham, i. 126 n. 6, iii. 85 n. 6.
BENTHAM, Jeremy, Luctus on George II's death, iii. 312 n. 2; Milton's house, i. 126 n. 6; Paradise Lost, frightened by, 181 n. 5; Watts's Logic, iii. 308 n. 4.
BENTLEY, Dr., astrology, i. 409 n. 3; Cobb, the Pindarist, reply to, iii. 227; deterred from printing by war taxes, ii. 154; English tongue might be made immutable, iii. 16 n. 4; episcopacy, argument for, i. 258 n. 1; Horace, Comments on, 413 n. 1; Newton's epitaph, iii. 270 n. 2; Paradise Lost, edition of, i. 181, 188, 198, ii. 261 n. 3, 293 n. 3; Phalaris controversy, i. 332 n. 4, ii. 27, iii. 11 n. 4; Pope's dislike to him, 213 n. 2; P.'s Prol. Sat. and Dunciad, attacked in, 138 n. 6, 242, 276; P.'s Iliad, will not 'call it Homer,' 213 n. 2; P.'s Sober Advice from Horace, 176 n. 1, 276; Rowe's Lucan, ii. 77 n. 5; 'to a Bentley 'tis we owe a Boyle,' 60 n. 2; verses on death of Prince George of Den- mark, 46 n. 2; verses, his English, i. 38, ii. 272 n. 1; Warburton's learning, iii. 165 n. 3. BENTLEY, Richard, junior, designs for Gray's Poems, iii. 425, 443; Pope's Sober Advice, 176 n. 1, 276.
BENTLEY, Thomas, the nephew, iii. 276. BENTLEY, the bookseller, i. 247 n. 4. BÉRANGER, Chantez, pauvre petit,' iii. 196 n. 5.
BERKELEY, Bishop, Addison's Cato, ii. IOI nn., 157; Garth's death-bed, 62 n. 7; Kil- kenny school, 213 m. 3; Lord Orrery, iii. 67; Rape of the Lock, 104; Steele's extravagance, ii. 150; Swift's alleged marriage, iii. 69; S.'s good nature and agreeableness, 56 n. 1; 'wit of no party,' ii. 225 n. 4.
BERKELEY, Charles, second Earl of, iii. 8. BERKELEY, Elizabeth, Countess of, iii. 13. BERKELEY, George Monck, Swift's alleged marriage, iii. 69; S.'s belief in Revelation, 54 n. 4; S. and Orrery, 67; S.'s private devo. tions, 55 n. 1; Stella's niece, 43 n. 4. BERNARDI, Major John, iii. 258 n. 3. BERNI, Francesco, i. 455.
BEROALDS, the, i. 455.
BERRY, Miss Mary, iii. 134 22. 2.
Best to sit next the chimney when the chamber smokes,' i. 234.
BETHEL, Mr., iii. 199 n. 2.
BETTERTON, Thomas, Dryden's Troilus and Cressida, i. 356 n. 6; Milton's escape, 129 New Theatre in Lincoln's Inn Fields, ii. 218; Pope's portrait of him, iii. 107; P. revises his modern version of Chaucer, 108.
BETTESWORTH, Sergeant, iii. 44, 314 m. 2. BEZA, Ad Musas, Iocus, ii. 52 n. 8; Hessus's Iliad, iii. 114 n. 3.
BIBLE, The, 'best translation in the world,' iii. 236 n. 3.
Billingsgate, i. 323, 360 n. 7, iii. 202 #. 2. BINFIELD, iii. 85, 86, 89, 90, 134. BINNING, Lord, iii. 287.
Biographia Britannica, Vindicatio Britan- nica, i. 146 n. 4.
BIOGRAPHY, penury of English, i. I. BIRCH, Rev. Dr. Peter, Waller's son-in-law, i. 375, 276, 277.
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