Slike strani
PDF
ePub

Seaman's life, J.'s dislike to, ii.
273; iii. 178.
Secker, Archbishop, his political
principles, iv. 27.

Second sight, ii. 6, 92, 198, v. 122,
127, 179.

Self defence, iii. 161.
Sermons, an important branch of
English literature, iv. 79.
Seward, Anna, ii. 292; iii. 192; iv.

223.

Rev. Mr., ii. 291; iii.

101, 276.
Shakspeare, iii. 32, 172; iv. 24; J.'s
edition of, i. 180; Capel's edition
of, iv. 12; orthography of his
name, v. 88.
Sharp, Archbishop, v. 43. Miss S.,
his great-grandchild, v. 45.

Dr. John, his account of
J.'s visit to Cambridge, i. 283.
Sinclair, Sir John, iv. 91.
Shaving, iii. 110.
Shaw, Dr., v. 42, 45.

Cuthbert, Esq., his poem of
the "Race," ii. 19.

Rev. Mr., his works on the
Celtic languages, iii. 68; iv. 172.
Shebbeare, Dr., his "Letters on
the English Nation," iv. 84.
Shelburne, Lord, iv. 134.
Shenstone, W., ii. 281; witty say-
ing of, iv. 155.

Sheridan, Thomas, i. 261; ii. 52,
199, iii. 254; iv. 149, 153, 222;
J.'s difference with, i. 221, 223;
Mrs. S., her novels, i. 223.

Richard Brinsley, iii. 75,
76; his marriage, ii. 228.
Shiels, Mr., one of J.'s amanuenses,
i. 99; iii. 18, 22.
Shieply, Dr., Bishop of St. Asaph,
iii. 169.

Shorthand reporting, remarks on,
ii. 137.

Sibbald, Sir Robert, his "Scotch
Antiquities," iii. 153.
Siddons, Mrs., visits J., iv. 166.
Silver salver, J.'s, iv. 69.
Skye, island of, ii. 164; J.'s Ode
to, v. 118; rental of, v. 160.
Slate, parish church of, v. 115.
Slavery, discussion on, iii. 136.
Smart, Christopher, i. 173; ii. 214;
his madness, i. 228.

Smith, Dr. Adam, v. 14; his re-

[blocks in formation]

66

Spectator," iii. 20; iv. 69; new
edition of, with notes, proposed,
ii. 129.
Speldings, v. 35, 77.

Spence's, Rev. J., "Anecdotes,"
iv. 50.

Spirits, evil, extracts from a ser-
mon of Bishop Hurd's on, iv. 198.
Staffordshire, J.'s last visit to, iv.
237.

Stanhope, Mr. (son of Lord Ches-

terfield), i. 148; iv. 224.
Stanzas, by J., addressed to a rich
young man, iv. 280.
Staunton, Dr. (Sir George), letter
from J. to, i. 210.

Steele, Mr., Secretary of Treasury,
i. 72.

Steevens, George, Esq., republishes
Johnson's Shakspeare, ii. 125;
letters from J. to, ii. 168; iii. 63;
his particulars of J., iv. 219.
Stella, her trick in argument, v.

192.

Stewart, Francis, one of J.'s ama-
nuenses, i. 99; his sister, J.'s
kindness to, iii. 279; iv. 179.
Sir Annesley, iv. 61.
Stillingfleet, Mr. Benjamin, his re-
markable dress and blue stock-
ings, iv. 80.

Stockings exported from Aber-
deen, v. 59.

Stopford, Colonel, ii. 232.
Strahan, Rev. Mr., Vicar of Is-
lington, i. 129; iv. 281; pub-
lishes J.'s "Prayers and Medi-
tations," i. 130.

Mr., the printer, i. 162;

ii. 82; v. 63; breakfast at his
house, ii. 200.
Strahan, William (junior), death
of, iv. 75.

-, Mrs., letters from J. to,

iv. 75, 103.
Stratford-on-Avon, ii. 281; jubi-
lee, ii. 42.

Streatham, Mr. Thrale's residence
at, iii. 152; iv. 100.
Street-charity, more common in
men than women, iv. 29.
Stuart, House of, ii. 134; iii. 103,
104; J.'s partiality to, ii. 212.
Sir Andrew, letters to
Lord Mansfield, ii. 140.

Colonel James, iii. 268, 275.
Hon. and Rev. W., vicar
of Luton, iv. 138.
Subordination, remarks on, ii. 7 ;
iii. 177.

Subscription, ecclesiastical, v. 42.
Suicide, ii. 140; v. 34.
Sunday, observance of, ii. 232; v.46.
J.'s scheme of life for, i.171.
Swallows, remarks on their habits,
ii. 34.
Swearing, the habit almost uni-
versal, ii. 101.

Sweden, History of, by Daline, ii.

95.

Sheridan's account of Re-
volution in, read by J., iii. 192.
Swift, Dean, i. 66; ii. 39, 199;
"Tale of a Tub," i. 260; v. 26;
J.'s prejudice against, v. 26; J.'s
life of, iv. 49; Orrery's life of,
v. 189; Stella's remark on, ii.
240; his style, ii. 117.
Swinfen, Dr., i. 21, 31, 32.
Swinton, Mr., Chaplain of Oxford
Jail, i. 152.
Sydenham, Dr., Description of St.
Vitus's dance, i. 73.

TASSO, J. writes dedication to
Hoole's translation of, i. 219.

his "Jerusalem," iii. 222.

Taste, change of, ii. 8.
"Taxation no Tyranny," J.'s
pamphlet, ii. 195, 196, 197, 209.
, Tower's answer to, ii.197.
Tea, defence of, i. 179; J.'s love
of, i. 283; v. 9.
Telemachus, a Masque," by G.
Graham, i. 237; v. 67.

66

[ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

Thrale, family, i. 285; Mr., i. 285;
iii. 11; J.'s character of, i. 287;
death of infant son, ii. 292; his
illness, iii. 281; iv. 57; contests
Southwark election, iii. 165;
dinners at his house, iii. 17; iv.
62; death of, iv. 65; J. one of
his executors, iv. 65; sale of
brewery, iv. 65; v. 95.

Mrs., i. 23, 39, 40, 287, 288;
ii. 47, 268; iii. 4, 29, 212; iv.
189; v. 2; J.'s ode to, v. 120;
her flattery of J., ii. 216; letter
to J. from, iii. 282; letters from
J. to, iii. 283; iv. 157, 158, 159;
coolness to J., iv. 115; retains
appearance of friendship, iv.
229; marries Piozzi, an Italian
music-master, iv. 228; "Anec-
dotes" of J., iv. 216; inaccuracy
of Anecdotes,' iv. 229-33;
"British Synonomy," iv. 279.
Thuanus, J.'s thought of trans-
lating, iv. 278.

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

Thurlow, Lord, letter to J. from,
iii. 297; letter from J. to, iv. 234;
application to, in J.'s behalf, iv.
221, 226, 234.
Tickell, life of, iv. 45.
Timidity, best means of over-
coming, iv. 213.

Toleration, remarks on, iv. 15, 278.
Tongue, government of the, iii. 255.
Tour, J.'s provincial, ii. 273.
Town and country life compared,
iii. 171.

Townshend, Mr. (Lord Sydney),
iv. 216.

Trade, remarks on, ii. 57; v. 184;
impositions in, v. 216.
Translations, iii. 174; J.'s, i. 12.
Transpire, definition of, iii. 233.
Transubstantiation, v. 47.
Trapaud, Mr., v. 100.

Travellers, iii. 159, 201, 202.
Travelling, advantages of, iii. 181,
238.

Treason, constructive, iv. 66.
Trees, scarcity of, in Scotland, v.
46, 50.

Trent, J.'s translation of "His-
tory of Council of," i. 50, 68.
Trianon, ii. 245.

Trimlestown, Lord, iii. 154, 155.
Trinity, doctrine of the, ii. 156;
v. 60.

College, Oxford, ii. 278.

Dublin, i. 284.
Truth, iii. 270; iv. 217; physical
and moral, iv. 12.
Truthfulness, iii. 154, 155.
Tuileries, ii. 243.

Tunbridge Wells, J. visits, i. 102.
Turk's Head Coffee-house, i. 267.
"Turkish Spy," not genuine, iv.

139.

[blocks in formation]

Unius lacertæ, meaning of, iii. 172.
Universal History, list of authors
of, iv. 259-261.

Visitor, J.'s contribu-

tions to, i. 94, 173.
Universities, English, iii. 8.
University College, Oxford, ii. 275,

277; university verses, ii. 229.
"Urban Sylvanus (Edward
Cave), verses addressed to, by
J., i. 55; letter to, i. 87.
Uttoxeter market, J.'s refusal to
attend, iv. 252.

J.'s penance in, iv. 253.

"VAGABONDO, Il," Italian trans-
lation of the Rambler, i. 109.
Valancy, Colonel, celebrated anti-
quary, iv. 187.

"Vanity of Human Wishes," i.
103, 104; v. 30.

Vanity, reproofs for, iv. 135, 217.
Veal, Scotch, v. 15.
Versailles, ii. 244.

Verses, J.'s mode of writing, ii. 8.
Vesey, Hon. Mr., iv. 26.
Vice and Virtue, popular estimate
of, iii. 237.

[blocks in formation]
[ocr errors]

WALES, J.'s visit to, ii. 173.
Prince of, iv. 129.
Walker, Mr., the elocution master,
iv. 143.

Wall, Dr., physician at Oxford,
iv. 200.

Waller, Edmund, the poet, J.'s
"Life of," iv. 34; his great-
grandson, v. 57.
Walmesley, Gilbert, Esq., of Lich-
field, J.'s character of, in life of
Edmund Smith, i. 31; his life
and opinions, i. 46; letter from,
to Rev. Mr. Colson, i. 48.
Walpole, Sir Robert, i. 63, 72.

Horace (Earl of Orford),
his character of J., iv. 214.
"Walton's Lives," a favourite
book of J.'s, ii. 225.
Wapping, J. explores, iv. 139.
Warburton, Dr., iv. 39; v. 54, 63,

89; his editions of Shakspeare,
i. 93; controversy with Lowth,
ii. 25.

Warley Camp, J. visits, iii. 243.
Warren, J., Esq., of Pembroke-
shire, i. 37.

Mr., bookseller, of Bir-
mingham, i. 35.
Warton, Rev. Dr. Joseph, "Essay
on the Genius and Writings of
Pope," i. 259; letters from J. to,
i. 138; ii. 69.

Rev. Thomas, i. 149; ii.
278; his sketch of J.'s visit to
Oxford, i. 150; letters from J.
to, i. 149, 154-160, 163, 165-182,
189, 190; ii. 42, 69.

Watts, Dr., J.'s eulogy of, i. 177.
Watson, Dr., Bishop of Llandaff,
iv. 88.

with Warburton, ii. 25; v. 89;
his learning, v. 55.
Lowther, noble family of, v. 79.
Loyola, Ignatius, founder of the
Jesuits, i. 28.

Loyalty of Highlanders, v. 160.
Lucan. Lord and Lady, their at-
tention to J., iv. 220.
Luke, Gospel of St., remarks on
chap. vii. ver. 50, iv. 12.
Lutterel, Col., rival of Wilkes,ii.67.
Luxury, remarks on, ii. 133; iii.
33, 190, 196.

Lydiat, Thomas, his history, i. 104.
Lyttelton, Geo., Lord, his anxiety
as an author, iii. 20; his "Dia-
logues," ii. 76; caricature of, v.
225; his "History of Henry the
Second," ii. 25.

Thomas, second Lord,
his remarkable vision, iv. 203.

MACALLAN, Eupham, a reputed
witch, v. 20.
Macaulay, Mrs. Catherine, a great
republican, i. 258; her remarks
on J.'s political principles, ii.
134; J. severe upon, 209; J.
does not wish to be pitted
against her, iii. 124.

Rev. Kenneth, Minister
of Calder, Nairnshire, his "His-
tory of St. Kilda," ii. 32, 93;
visited by J. at Calder, v. 83;
his claim to authorship of "His-
tory of St. Kilda" disputed, 84;
and affirmed, 287; J. promises
his son a Servitorship at Oxford,

[blocks in formation]

mother, v. 116; bond to Kings-
burgh, 204.
Macdonald, Sir Alexander, after-
wards Lord Macdonald, ii. 96,
106; visited by J. at Armidale,
v. 112; his parsimony and want
of spirit, v. 113, 115, 124, 221.

Lady Margaret, her great
popularity in Skye, iii. 257; v.
116, 207; assists Prince Charles
Edward in his escape, v. 146.

v. 142.

Flora, v. 142-146, 157.
Allan (husband of Flora),

Alexander, old Kings.
burgh, v. 143, 146-7, 204, 206-7.
Mackenzie, Sir George, his works,
v. 167.

Henry, his "Man of
Feeling," i. 207; his " Life of
Blacklock," v. 28; his "Man of
the World," v. 219.

Roderick, a chivalrous

young Jacobite, v. 207.
Mackinnon, Laird of, assists in es-
cape of Charles Edward, v. 155.

family of, at Corricha-
tachin, hospitably entertain J.,
v. 119; account of, 123; entertain
J. a second time, 204; Boswell's
excess of drinking at, 205.
Maclaine, John, Laird of Lochbuy,
entertains J., v. 270; his curious
mistake about J., 271; his son
killed in a duel, 272.
Maclaurin, Colin, the mathemati
cian, his epitaph, v. 31.

[ocr errors]

John, Lord Dreghorn,

ii. 225; v. 31, 217.
Maclean, Donald, young Laird of
Coll, v. 198, 201; plans an ex.
pedition for J. and acts as leader,
203; their danger at sea, 223;
entertains J. at island of Coll,
231; they sail for Mull, 245; his
character and merits, 259; his
death, 262.

Sir Allan, and his
daughters, visited at Inchken-
neth by J., v. 256; accompanies
him to Iona, 262; reverence for
his feudal power as chief, 267.

-, Capt. Lachlan, Coll, en-
tertains J., v. 225.

Rev. Hector, Coll, dis-
putes with J., v. 227.

« PrejšnjaNaprej »