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., unopposed 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; Ireland, 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, 80; literary attacks, left unanswered, 104; ' little Dicky,' 115, 155; loan to friend, 156; Lover, The, contributed to, 95 n. 8; Magdalen 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; metaphor, 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 incapacity, 109, 111, 198; Old Whig, 115, 155; Ormond, relations with, 152; Otway's Venice Preserved, i. 245 n. 7; O.'s tenderness, 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 n. 1; 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 2. 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 2.3; 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 n. 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 m. 4; Shakespeare, omits, ii. 46 n. 1, 84 n. 6; Sheffield's Essay, 179; signatures to Spectators 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 2.5; 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. 373.1; 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 n. 1; Warburton's criticism, 127 n. 1; Westminster Abbey, midnight funeral in, ii. 156; Whig Examiner, 107, iii. 16; Whiggism, 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, friendship 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, 101 n. 4, 121 n. 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. LIVES OF POETS. III Adventurer, iii. 67, 333, 358 n. I. AISLABIE, 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; dissenting 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 lecturer, 415; halt in gait, 411 n. 2; Hampstead, 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. criticized, 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 Imagination, 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 12. I. ALABASTER, Dr. William, i. 88. ALBERTI, Leandro, Descrizione di tutta l'Italia, ii. 87 n. I. Hh 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. INDEX ABBERLEY, i. 328, 329 n. 7. ABINGDON, Countess of, Dryden's Eleo- ABINGDON SCHOOL, iii. 84 n. 2. ABNEY, Sir Thomas, Watts's residence in ABNEY, Mrs. Elizabeth, iii. 306. ACCADEMIA DELLA CRUSCA, i. 232 n. 6. 12. I. Adamo, by Andreini, i. 133 n. 9. ADDISON, Miss Charlotte, the poet's daugh- ADDISON, Gulston, the poet's brother, i. 159 12. 4. ADDISON, Joseph, Account of English Cato, altered in MS., ii. 121; attempt to six last lines, 121; smooth, lines too, 145; character and habits, ii. 118-26; Char- n. 4; estate in Indies, lost, ii. 152; fable of 126 n. 3; payments received, Drummer, |