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n. 3 ; perfection, seldom struggled after, 464; Street, 389; revende, mostly casual, 405 ; 'persecution of fools,'355 n. 1 ; Persius, trans- revision, negligent in, 465 n. 2; rhyme, a lation of, 332 11. 4, 385, 447 ; personal ap- constraint, 468 n. 2 ; 1. circumscribes luxu. pearance, 394 n. 3 ; Pindaric style, criticizes, riant fancy, iii. 417 n. 5; 1., lines on, i. 193 48 n. 3; placability, 395; plagiarism, i. n. 6; rhymes, his, 468; rhymed tragedy, 341, 347, 348 11. 2, 367, 371, 424, 460; first, 336; Rival Ladies, ib.; Rochester,
Plays, celerity of performance, 367; relations with, 354; see ROCHESTER; Roman contract to furnish three a year, 367 n. Catholic, constancy as a, 481, 484; R. C., 3; 'false magnificence,' 458; first play, 335, sincere, 394; see DRYDEN, conversion; Ros- 336 ; gains from them, 366, 405, 484; im- common's Essay on Translated Verse, 236 ; morality, their, defends, 347, 415; repents of see ROSCOMMON; Royal Society, 434; Rymer, it, 399, 401; last play, 365, 386 n. 5; 'noisy praised by, 337; R.'s Tragedies of the Last lines,' 462 ; 'only play be wrote for himself, Aze, 471; R. on Shakespeare, 485; salary 361; order of production, 335, 342 n. 1, 356 ill paid, 205 n. 3, 207 n. 5, 386 n. 3, 484; n. 4, 358 n. 7, 367 n. 4; plagiarism, 424, sallies of sentiment, wild and daring, 460 ; and see DRYDEN, plagiarism ; secure of saturnine humour, 397 ; Satyr to his Muse, being heard,' 335; three best plays, 362 n. 6; attacked in, 374, 393 n. 4, 397 n. 2, 398 twenty-eight plays, 336, 371; - play- n. 2 ; school translation, 447; secretary to Sir writing, discontinued, 363 ; P., resumed, 385, Gilbert Pickering, 334 n. 3; Secret Love, 446 ; please, wrote only to, 337; 'pleasure 340; Settle, attacked by, 350-4, 374, 375; S.'s not the only end of poesy,' 348; poems, Empress of Morocco, attacks, 342-6, 401; and almost all occasional, 424; p. written hastily, see SETTLE; Shadwell, satirizes, 383; iii. 320, 223; poet, how far judge of own Shakespeare, his character of, 412, iii. 139; works, i. 340; poetic license, 359; poetical S., plays altered from, i. 341, 356 ; S.'s plots, justice, 475, ii. 134 n. 3; poet laureate, i. 347; S., ' refined' language of, 419 n. 1; S., 340, 405, 481, 482, ii. 169; p. l., loss of remarks on, 178 n. I, 180 n. 3, 245 n. 3,485; office, i. 365 n. 3, 383; p. l., income, 484; S., 'taught to admire,' 341 n. 2; S.'s tragedies, Pope, compared with, iii. 220–3 ; P.'s 472, 474, 476, 478; Sheffield's Essay of favourite plays, i. 362 n. 6; P.'s lines on Poetry, ii. 175, 176; S.'s Essay on Satire, his versihcation, 465, iii. 232 ; P.'s praise, 175; S.'s lines on him, i. 372 ; Sigismunda 220; see POPE, Dryden; poverty, i. 332, and Guiscardo, 455; simple and elemental 404, 405, 423, 484; precipice of absurdity, passions, not much acquainted with, 457 ; delighted to approach, 460; predecessors,
460 ; predecessors, simplicity, no pleasure in, 458 ; single-poem discredits, 349; prefaces of criticism, poets, iii. 211 n. 2; Sir Martin Marall, i. 349, 366, 412 n. 5, 418, 456 n. 2, ii. 146; to 340 ; snuff, takes, 408 n. 5 ; society for re- Epistles of Ovid, i. 373; Fresnoy's Art of fining language, 332; sons, 332 n. 4, 393; Painting, 387; Juvenal, 355, 361, 385; Southey's estimate, 458 n. 2 ; Spanish critics, priests, malignity to, 348, 403; printed debt to, 411 n. 3;
Spanish Friar, play bills, 337; profanity, 404; prologues, account of publication, 356; his fondness price for bis, 367; Prologue to All for Love, for it, 357 n. I; 'given to the people,' 361
P. to Don Sebastian, 383 n. ? ; P. to n. 5; Protestant play, 357, n. 1; Queen The Prophetess, 384 n. 2 ; P. at University Mary and 'anhappy expressions, ib. ; two of Oxford, 333; P. and Epilogue to Love plots praised by Addison, 356 n. 9; Triumphant, 386 n. 5; P. and Epilogue to specimens of every mode of poetry, 469; the Pilgrim, 456 n. 3 ; prose, compared with Spenser, his 'master,' 426 n. 1; stage, 'genius Pope's, iii. 222 ; P., style, i. 418 ; quatrains, not dramatic, 335, 367, 435, 459 n. 4; So, 338, 425, 430, ii. 316 ; Queen Mary's death, kept possession for many years of, 335 ; S., silent on, 183; 'rants of Maximin,' i. 348, most profitable market for poetry,' 435 ; 462; ratiocination, favourite exercise, 459; State of Innocence, 358–60; Stillingfileet, read badly, 363 n. 4, 408 n. 5; reasoning in controversy with, 378,483; stillness invades verse, 380, 469; receipt to Tharloe, 334 n. the ear, 334, iii. 224 n. 4; saicide, as cata- 3; r. to Tonson, 363 n. 5, 406; reconcilia- strophe in poetry, 397; Swift's malevolence, tion after provocation, ii. 168 n. 3; 'redolent 8; see SWIFT; Tacitus, translation of, i. 372; of spring,' iii. 435; refined the language, i. Tasso's Aminta, 296 n. I ; technical terms, 419; regular life, 398 n.4; Rehearsal, satirized 178 n. 4, 433, 462 ; Tempest, 341; Theodore in, 368, 371 n. 2, 380 n. 3, 396 n. 3, 459 n. and Honoria, 455; third day for a play,' 5, 463 n. 8, 482 ; Religio Laici, 442; reli- 365 n. 8; Threnodia Augustalis, 438 ; Tillot. gion, disobeyed not disbelieved, 404; 1., son's prose, 418 n. 5; Tonson, relations with, human excellence praised in language of, 405, 407 ; tragedies, his, eighteenth century 359; I. and mythology, intermingled, 427, estimate of, 335 n. 4; translation, discourse 439, 445, 462 ; repartee to airy stripling, on, 373, 421, 436; translations, his, 372, 364; r. to his wife, 397 n. 1; Republicans, 385, 446-54; Trinity College, Cambridge, wrote against, 358; residence in Gerard 332, 333; triplets, 406, 468; Troilus and
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Cressida, 356 ; 'tuned the numbers of Eng- lish poetry,' 419; Tyrannic Love, 348, 369, 462 ; unevenness of compositions, 464; Varil. las's History of Heresies, translated, 379; versification, date of settling his, 436; early formed, 436; establishment of new versifica- tion due to him, 421; examination of his versi- fication, 465-9; Hind and Panther, most correct specimen,' 443 ;
vice, abetted only with pen, 398 ; . village words, 430 n. 2; vindictive, naturally, 400 n. 5; Virgil bis master,' 426 % 1; V. and Statius, 415;
Virgil, translation of, 386, 387, 447, 449; abusing priests and religion, 403 ; Addison's contributions to it, 449, ii. 83 ; Cato, line taken from it, 122; compared with other versions, i. 453, iii. 279; Con- greve's aid in correction, ii. 226 n. 2; dedi. cations , i. 387, 480 n. 1; Johnson's estimate, 449, 453; Milbourne's attack, 449-53; praised by Addison, iii. 129 n. 6 ; Conington, i. 454 n. 2; FitzGerald and Tennyson, 449 n. 3; Pope, 449; printed by subscription, iii. 109; profits, i. 387 n. 4; sickness and want, written in, 448 n. 5; success, 481; Swift's sneers, 449 n. 3, 454
n. 2; William IIÍ and Aeneas's portrait, 480; W.III, attacks on, 387 n. 6; Wordsworth's criticism, 449 n. 3; versions of Pollio, &c., in Miscellany, 447 ;
Voltaire's estimate of him, 457 n. 4; Waller, acknowledges his debt to, 293 n. 6, 296 n. 1; W., had more music than, 465; Walsh's criticism, praises, 328; W., writes Preface for, 330; want of time, his excuse, 348; 356; wants a heart,' 385 n. I; way- laid and beaten, 371, ii. 179; Westminster Abbey, funeral and monument in, i. 393, 486, iii. 261; Westminster School, i. 332, 416, 447 n. 5; The Wild Gallant, 336; Will's Coffee-house, presides at, 408, iii. 93 ; wit, eccentric violence of his, i. 460; Words- worth’s estimate of him, 465 n.4; W.'s favour- ite poems, 455 nn. ; Wycherley, iii. 91 n. 3; younger writers, presides over, i. 396, 409;
quotations, Absalom and Achitophel (l. 156), ii. 317n. I; (1. 230), i. 410 n. 3; (1.559), 206 n. 1; (1. 819), 370 n. 3; (1. 833), ii. 168 n. 6; (1.877), 175 n. 5; (1. 1028), i. 437 n. 2; (Pt. ii. 1. 405), 374 n. 7; Address to Lord Chancellor Hyde, 428, 429; Alexander's Feast, 457 n. 1; All for Love, 361 n. 7, ii. 257 n. 5; Annus Mirabilis, i. 352, 354, 410, 43; 432, 33, 434 435, 46o, 463; Astrada Redux, 426, 427, 437 n. 2, 464 n. 2, ii. 232 n. 3; Britannia Rediviva, i. 379 n. 3, 446 n. 2; Conquest of Granada, 351, 353, 354, 461, 462, üi. 351 n. 4; Don Sebastian, i. 363 n. 2, 424, 461; Eleonora, 440, 441; Epilogue to Conquest of Granada (Pt. ii), 349 n. 3; Epilogue to the Pilgrim, 401 n. 6; Epistle to Congreve, 395 nr. 2, ii. 224 n. 2; Epistle to John Driden, i. 331 n. 3, ii. 58 n. 2, 240 n. 3; Epistle to Kneller, iii. 337 n. 1;
Epistle to Motteux, i. 403 n. 3; Epistle to Roscommon, 193 n. 6, 235 n. 4, 236 n. 2; Heroic Stanzas on the Death of Oliver Crom- well, 463; Hind and Panther (i. 1-8), 444; (i. 57), 463; (i. 253), 404 n. 3; (i. 160-5), 444; (i. 256), ii. 232. n. 3; (i. 308-26), i. 444; (i. 554-72), 445; (ii. 535), 469 n. 3 ; (iii. 96), 463 n. 1; (iii. 221), 377 n. 4; (iii. 247), 207 n. 5; Iliad, 388 n. 7, iii. 222 n. 6; Indian Emperor, i. 350 n. 4; Juvenal, iii. 241 n. 7; Mac Flecknoe, i. 383 n. 5; Medai, 438, ii. 318 n. 4; Ode on the death of Mrs. Killigrew, i. 238 n. 2, 399 n. 2, 410 n. 3, 463 n. 5, ii. 233 n. 7, iii. 264 n. i, 269 n. i; Ode on St. Cecilia's Day, i. 440; Palamon and Arcite, 468; Panegyric on the Coronation of Charles II, 428, 464 n. 1; Prologue to Amboyna, 356 n. 3; Prologue to Aurengzebe, 360 n. 6; Prologrie to the Pil. grim, ii. 235 n.5; Prologue to the Prophetess, i. 463 n. 3; Prologue to Tyrannic Love, 460 n. 3; Prologue to the University of Oxford, 333; Religio Laici, 442; State of Innocence, 359 n. 1; Threnodia Augustalis, 404 n. 3, 417, 438, 439; Tyrannic Love, 458, 460, 461 ; Virgil, Aeneid, 387 n. 6, ii. 225 n. 4, iii. 35 n., 279 n. 1; Georgics, i. 387 n. 6, 403 n. 4, 450_2. Dryden's Miscellany, account of it, i. 330 n. 3, ii. 83 n. 10; Collier, denounced by, 83 n. 10; contributors, Addison, 83; Duke, 24. n. 4; Prior, 183 n. 3; Tickell, 305 n. 3; Yalden, 301 n. 5; Walsh, i. 330; Dryden's versions of Virgil, 447 nn; Virgilian translation, ii. 83, n. 5. See Tonson's Miscellany. DRYDEN, John, the poet's son, Husband his own Cuckold, i. 393; Juvenal, Sat. xiv, translated, 385; death, 393.
DRYDEN, Sir John, the poet's uncle, i. DRYDEN, Mary, the poet's mother, i. 331 DUBLIN, Blind Quay, iii. 36 n. 3; Bull Alley, Bride Street, in. 5; Hoey's Alley, ib.; Newgate, 31 n. 1; St. Patrick's Cathe- dral, 54 n. 1; St. Patrick's Hospital, 45 n. 1, 64 n. 2; St. Werburgh, 1 n. 5. Du Bois, Abbé, ii. 188 n. 3. Duck, Stephen, i. 190 n. 1, ii. 404 n. 1. DUCKETT, George, account of him, ii. 17 n. 5, 23; Clarendon's Hist., alleged forgeries, 18, 20; Dunciad, libelled in, iii. 151; Pope, caricatures, 136; Smith, friendship with, ii. 17, 20; Walmsley, friendship with, 20, 23 DU FRESNOY, I. 387 n. I. DUKE, Rev. Richard, birth, ii. 24 n. 2; burial attended by Atterbury and Prior, 25 n. 4; death, 25; Dryden's Miscellany, con- tributed to, 24 n. 4; ecclesiastical prefer. ment, 25; Fifteen Sermons, &c., 24 n. 8; friendship with Otway, 24; Marriage of George, Prince of Denmark, and the Lady
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Anne, 25; Review, The, 24; Swift's account ELECTOR PALATINE, Parliamentary allow- of him, 25 n. 4; translations, 24; Trinity ance, i. 261 n. 2. College, Cambridge, 24, 25; tutor to Duke of ELEGIES, ii. 231 n. 4, 316. Richmond, 24; Westminster School, 24. ELIZABETH, Queen, 'had a wise council,' Du Moulin, Peter, i. 117.
i. 275; 'lives in Spenser's song,' 238 n. 8. DUNBAR, Charles, Surveyor General of the ELIZABETHAN Poets, art of modulation, Leeward Islands, iii. 460. DUNCES, iii. 146 n. 5.
ELLIS, Professor Robinson, Threnodia Au. DUNCOMBE, John, editor of Correspondence gustalis, i. 438 n. 2. of John Hughes, ii. 164, iii. 343 n. 2.
ELLIS, Dr. Welbore, Bishop of Kildare, üi. DUNKIRK, ii. 31.
8o. Durfer, Thomas, i. 245 n. 4, ii. 46 n. 2, 221 ELLIS, Sir William, Granville's tutor, ii.
286. DYER, Sir James, Chief Justice of the Com- ELLWOOD, Thomas, Milton, introduced to, mon Pleas, iii. 269 n. 3.
i. 131 n. 2; M., reads to, 132; M., takes house, DYER, Rev. John, birth, &c., iii. 343; at Chalfont for, 140; Paradise Lost and buried in woollen,' 345; death, ib.; ec- Paradise Found,' ib.; Paradise Regained clesiastical preferment, 344; Fleece, 344, shown to him, 147; Waller's pleasure in 345, 346; Grongar Hill, i. 78 n. 1, ii. 342 his conversation, 276 n. 2. 11. 3, iii. 343 n. 8, 345, 347; "happiest of ELSTOB, Lucy, Mallet's second wife, see his productions,' 345; 'Heathcote's leisure,' MALLET, Mrs. Lucy. 344 n. 4; Hughes's Correspondence, letters ELWIN, Rev. Whitwell, Ayre's Life of Pope, in, 343; imagination, praised by Gray, 345 n. iii. 100 n. 4, 403 11. 3 ; Pope's early letters, 4; i., p. by Wordsworth, 341 n. 6, 345 n. 4, 347 208 n. 4; P.'s early poems, 88 n. 2; P.'s n. I; Italy, travels to, 344; legal profession, Essay on Man and bad rhymes, 162 n. 5; abandons, 343; marriage, 344; orders, en- P.'s forged letters, 92 n. 1, 93 n. 1, 130 n. 1, tered into, ib.; poetry with painting, min- 155 n. 1 ; P.'s letter to Racine, 214 11. 7; P.'s gled, 343; Richardson's pupil, ib.; Ruins Windsor Forest, date when written, 105 n. 5; of Rome, 344, 345; Savage's verses to him, Prior and Lord Harley, ii. 194 1. 3; War- 343 n. 6; wanderings in South Wales, 343 ; burton's insincerity, iii. 167 n. 3. Westminster School, ib.; wool, exportation ELYS, Mr. Edmund, of Exeter College, of, 346 11. 2; quotations, Fleece, 344 nn., Oxford, i. 42 n. 1. 346 nn.; Ruins of Rome, 345.
Englishman, The, ii. 105, iii. 366, 368. DYER, Robert, the poet's father, iii. 343. English Poets, account of plan, XXV n., DYER, Samuel, member of Literary Club, Goldsmith's omission, i. 301 n. 1; Johnson's iii. 308, 343 n. 1.
Poets,' ii. 65 n. 1; Johnson's anger at Dyson, Jeremiah, Akenside's friend and insertion of obscene piece, ib.; J.'s di- patron, iii. 413, 414.
rections, iii. 365 n. 1; J. not responsible for
selection, 331 n. 4; J. recommends insertion EACHARD, Rev. John, D.D., i. 322 n. 1. of four poets, i. 301 n. 1, iii. 302; J. regrets EARL'S-CROOMB, i. 202.
omissions, ii. 264 n. 8, 295 n. 6, iii. 279, EAST BURY, iii. 376.
425 n. 3; poets passed over, i. 301 n. 1; East GRINSTEAD, i. 303, ii. 185.
Rochester's Poems castrated at Johnson's EASTHAMPSTEAD, ii. 262, iii. 257, 267. request, 223 n. 2 ; Thomson's inclusion ap- ECHARD, Rev. Laurence, ii. 292.
parently due to Johnson, iii. 281 n. 1, Eclogue, iii. 317.
302 n. I. EDGE HILL, iii. 358 n. I.
ENSOR, iii. 344: Edinburgh Miscellany, iii. 401 n. 1.
EPIC POETRY, i. 170. EDINBURGH, High School, Mallet, janitor, EPICTETUS, ii. 423. iii. 400; University, Akenside a member, EPISCOPACY, i. 257, 258. 411; U., Mallet, a member, 400, 402 n. 6; EPITAPHS, definition, iii. 254; mixed lan- Medical Society, 411 n. 5; U., Thomson, guages or styles, 260, 270; mythology un- a member, 282.
suitable, 261; names, without, i. 36, iii. 257, EDNAM, iii. 281.
262; private virtue, the best subject, 262 n. EDSTON, ii. 317.
2; writer not upon oath, 254 n. 4; want of EDUCATION, Cowley's plan, i. 12 n. 1, 99; discrimination, 263 n. 4; see under POPE. Johnson's views, 99; Milton's plan, 99. ERASMUS, 'magis habuit quod fugeret quam Eikon Basilike, authorship, i. 197; Milton quod sequeretur,' i. 155; praised in Essay charged with interpolation, 110, III n. 4; on Criticism, iii. 98. Royston, the publisher, 485.
EQUALITY OF MANKIND, ii. 394 n. 3. ELDON, Lord Chancellor, Newcastle Gram- ERROL, thirteenth Earl of, iii. 422 n. 4. mar School, iii. 411 n. 3; sacramental test, ERYTHRAEUS, i. 295. 13 n. I.
Essay, i. 235 n. 4.
EXETER, Earls of, i. 331 n. 3, ii. 181, iii. 369, 370. EXCISE BILL, iii. 447 n. 6. EYE, iii. 80.
Essay on Satire, i. 371. See SHEFFIELD. Essex, Arthur Capel, Earl of, i. 221 n. ESSEX, Robert Devereux, third Earl of, i. 104, 267. ETHEREGE, Sir George, i. 340 n. II. ETON COLLEGE, Allestree, Provost, i. 273 1. 5; Antrobus, Mr., a master, iii. 421; Broome, 75; Dobson, Waller's school- master, i. 249 n. 6; George, Dr., Head Master, iii. 421; Godolphin, Dr. Provost, ii. 199 n. 2; Gray, iii. 421; Lyttelton, 446 ; Prior seeks Provostship, ii. 199 n. 2; Provost- ship, i. 273; Waller, 249; W., Provostship, fails to obtain, 273; Walpole, Horace, iii. 422; West, Gilbert, 328. EUGENE, Prince, i. 408 n. 5.
EURIPIDES, Alcestis, material agency of allegorical persons, i. 185 ; Dryden's remarks, 473, 474, 476; forces himself into grandeur, ii. 208; Milton's fondness, i. 154; Phaedra,
. 476. EUSDEN, Laurence, poet laureate, i. 482, ii. 381, iii. 184 n. 1; satirized in Dunciad, i. 237 n. 3, ii. 381 n. 2; s. in Session of the Poets, 381 n. 2.
EUSTACE, Lady, iii. 47 n. 2. EUSTACE, Miss Clotilda, ii. 304 n. 4. See TICKELL, Mrs.
EUSTATHIUS, iii. 76, 115. EUSTON, Earl of, Young's 'Altamont,' iii. 385. EVANS, Oxford wit, ii. 304 n. 1.
EVELYN, John, Barberini, Cardinal, i. 95 n. 1 ; Charles II's sons, ii. 34 n. 3; Cooper's coinage designs, i. 202 n. 4; Cowley, visits, 16 n. 1; Ci's funeral, 17 n. 8; dates not always trustworthy, 368 n. 11; daughters' learning, 157 n. 5; Denham, 74 n. 3 ; Digby, Sir Kenelm, 4 n. 6; Diodati, John, visits, 97 n. 6; Dryden, meets, 386 n. 5; D.'s Con. quest of Granada, 348 n. 9; D.'s Evening Love, 346 n. 2; D.'s Wild Gallant, 336 n. 2; gaming at Court, 231 n. 3; Geneva, 97 n. 5; Hamlet, 337 n. 4; Inquisition at Milan, 96 n. 5; Knights of the Bath, 74 n. 4; Milton, John and Christopher, 85 n. 5; Mon- mouth, Duchess of, ii. 268 n. 2; nobility and literature, i, 221 n. 1; Padua, ii. 335 n. 8; ‘Pindarics’ at the Encaenia, i. 48 n. 4; regicides, meets mangled quarters of, 268 n. 4; Rehearsal, 368 n. II; Sprat's Observa- tions on Sorbière's Voyage, helps in, ii. 40; S.'s preaching, 34 n. 1 ; theatres in Charles II's reign, i. 399 n. 3; Tuke, Sir Samuel, his cousin, 15 n. 2; Waller, meets, 268 nn.; Westminster pronunciation of Latin, 133 Examiner, account of it, ii. 29. n. 9, 187; Garth criticized, 61, 187; sets Steele's politics on fire, 105; Swift's papers, 29 n. 9, 187, üi. 16. Exasperation, iii. 294 n. 2.
FABLES, ii. 283. FAIRBAIRN, Rev. Dr. A. M., iii. 411 n. 4. FAIRFAX, Edward, Godfrey of Bulloigne, i. 251 n. 3, 293, 296-300. FALKLAND, Henry Cary, third Viscount, Prologue for Congreve's Old Batchelor, ii. 214,
FALKLAND, Lucius Cary, second Viscount, "lastre cast by his notice,' i. 6; every man proud to praise him, 36 ; Sortes Virgilianae, 9 n. I.
FALMOUTH, Hugh Boscawen, second Vis- count, ii. 314 n. 3.
FALSEHOODS, of convenience or vanity, ii. 213. FANE, Mr., Rowe's son-in-law, ii. 74. FANSHAWE, Sir Richard, i. 77, 239, 373. FARMER, Dr., Master of Emmanuel Col. lege, Cambridge, iii. 75 n. 4. FARNHAM CASTLE, i. 71, 72 n. I. FARQUHAR, George, Constant Couple, ii. 216 m. 1; Dryden's funeral, i. 391 n. 1, 392. FAULKNER, George, Dublin printer, iii. 36 n. 3, 48 n. 1. FAWKES, Francis, iii. 337 n. 2. Feague, to, ii. 137 n. 2. FEELING FOR OTHERS, iii. 208 n. 2. FELL, Dr. John, Dean of Christ Church, FELLOW-COMMONERS, ii. 43 n. I. FELLOWSHIP ELECTION, interference by Government, i. 88 n. 4. FELLTHAM, Owen, i. 421.
. FELTON, Henry, D.D., Dissertation on Reading the Classics, i. 64 n. 3, ii. 24 n. 8.
FÉNELON, Dialogues des Morts, iii. 453 n. 1; Telemachus, 275.
FENTON, Elijah, 'Advice to Painters' and Tatler, ii. 242; anecdotes of him, 261, 263; amiability, 262, iii. 267; birth, &c., ii. 257; Bolingbroke's unfulfilled promises, 258; Broome, friendship with, 261, 266; brotherly affection, 263; Cambridge degrees, 257 n. 4;
commoner of nature,' 257; Court attend- ance, 260; Craggs, Secretary, instructs, 259; death, 262, 265; described by Broome, 263 n. 1; d. by Pope, 265; 'died of great chair and two bottles of port a day,' 262 n. 5; Dryden's alexandrines and triplets, i. 468; Epistle to Lambarde, ii. 264; Epitaph by Pope, 262, iii. 267; Fair Nun, ii. 264 n. 3; fat and indolent, 262, 265; 'Fenton- ism or laziness,' 262 n. 5; fishing, ib.; Florelio, 259 n. 1, 263; Gay, advice to, 274; Homeric lyre,' iii. 276; "bonest Fenton,' ii. 263 n. 1; inoffensive and un-
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ambitious, 263 11. 1; indecent pieces, ib.; 275; P.'s 'Man of Ross,' 172 1. 3 ; P.'s Jesus College, Cambridge, 257 n. 4; Jor- spies, ii. 362 n. 1; Steele and Addison, 81 tin's notes to Pope's Iliad, iii. 116; • lie n. 2; subscription editions, iii. 112 11. 4; a-bed and be fed with a spoon,' ii. 262; Thomson's Sophonisba, 288 n. 3; Ton Mariamne, 260; Marlborough, praises, 259; Jones, Allen the original of 'Allworthy,' 169 Milton, editor and biographer of, i. 84, 121, n. 6; dedication to Lyttelton, 330 n. 3, 450 ii. 261; nonjuror, 257, 258; Ode, An, 263; 11. 3; Tom Thumb, Young ridiculed in, 376; Ode to Lord Gower, 264 ; Ode to the Sun, translating for booksellers, 314n. 1; War- 263 ; Odyssey, blank verse versions, 260, 264 burton's learning, 169 1. 6; Westminster n. 5; Paraphrase on Isaiah, 264; Justice, salary as, 321 n. 4. payments received, Mariamne, 260; Pope's FIELDING, Sir John, ii. 278 n. 6. Odyssey and Shakespeare, 260 n. 1, iii. 78; FIERA, Baptista, iii. 317 n. 4. personal appearance, ii. 262; poems, published Finch, Lord, ii. 43 12. 2. collection of, 259 ; poor but honest, 266 ; Finch, Mr. Heneage, iii. 323 n. 5.
Pope's alexandrines, iii. 249 1.4; P. and FINCH, Sir Heneage, i. 130 11. 3. Betterton's Chaucer, 108; P.,'feared more than FINCH, Mr., Warden of All Souls, i. 376 loved' by, ii. 262 n. 2; P., praised by, 263, 265; P., recommended to Craggs and Lady Trum- FIRE OF LONDON, booksellers' losses, i. ball by, 259, 262 ; Odyssey, share in, 259, iii. 141 n. 4; Milton's house burnt, 153 n. 6. 76-8, 140–2; Shakespeare, helps in, ii. 260 FIRTH, Professor C. H., Barebones Parlia- 1. 1 ; P., weekly chronicles his only news of, ment and the Records, i. 215 n. 1; Crom- 'pretty verses' inserted in first
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