F. FABLE, sketch vi one by Jonnson, 1. 407. Falconer, Revereng Mr. ii. 354. Falkland's islands, i. 399. Fame, i. 317; ii. 238, 291; iii. 27. Farmer, Reverend Dr. letters from Johnson to, i. 387; f. 393. Favours, unreasonable, i. 225. Females, of their succession to land, ii. 57, 63, 95. Fergusson, Sir Adam, i. 423. Fergusson, the astronomer, i. 376. Feudal system, i. 428, 446, 489; ii. 57, 69, 278. Fielding's works, i. 342, 426; ü. 127. Fingal.-See Ossian. Fitzherbert, Mr. ii. 203. Flatman's poems, ii. 118. Flint, Bet, anecdotes of, ii. 472 Flood, Right Hon. Henry, his epitaph on Johnson, iii. 178. Floyer, Sir John, anecdotes of, iii. 61. Foote, Samuel, anecdotes and character of, i. 373, 4, 5, 414; ii. 73, 145. 227, iii. 28, 67. Forbes, Sir William, ii. 241. Ford, Parson, ii. 336. Fox, Right Hon. C. J. ii. 280, 521; iii. 78. France, Johnson's visit to, ii. 35, 6. his Journal there, ii. 39, & seq. Francis's Horace, ii. 341. Franklin, Rev. Dr. his "Demonax,” ii. 421. French language, Johnson's knowledge of, i. 365; iii. 50. Frederick III. his life by Johnson, i. 187. Friends and Friendship, i. 97, 183, 430; ii. 262, 296, 364. departed, i. 129; ii. 194, 311, 388, 402. Future state of man, ii. 237, 295; iii. 20. GAMING, i. 427; ii. 114. G. "Ganganelli's Letters," ii. 294. Gardiner, Mrs. iii. 42. Garrick, David, anecdotes of, i. 53, 56, 103, 111, 184, 294, 364, 466; ii. 91, 274, 275, 278, 468; iii. 28 his Shakspeare-Jubilee, i. 356. Johnson's opinion of him, i. 244, 372, 437, 8, 463, 532; ii. 75, 122, 131 146, 226, 278, 364, 409, 414; iii. 41. his death, ii. 353. Garrick, Peter, i. 524; ii. 90, 93, 382. Gastrel, Mrs. ii. 95, 6, 382. General Warrants, i. 359. Gentility, i. 303; ii. 6. Gentleman, Mr. Francis, i. 235. Gentleman's Magazine, i. 63, &c. King George I. ii. 7. II. i. 88, 90, 108; ii. 7. II. his accession and character, i. 220; ü. 395 Ghosts, i. 249, 419, 428; ii. 257, 301, 369, 466. Gibbon, Edward, Esq. ii. 11, 23, 452. his imitation of Johnson's style, iii. 152. Gillespie, Dr. consulted on Johnson's illness, iii. 55. Glow-worm, Johnson's fable of, i. 467. Gluttony, i. 288. Goldsmith, Dr. Oliver, character of, i. 253, & seq. anecdotes of, i. 253, 261, 338, 366, 431, 448, 9, 458. 9. 460, 483, 485, 6, 7; ii. 123, 317, 356, 479, 526. his death, i. 502. Johnson's epitaphs on him, ii. 153, 4, 5. his bon mots on Johnson, i. 354, 466, 470; iii. 66. Johnson's opinion of him and his works, i. 251, 313, 341, 2, 434, 440, 448, 451, 466, 469, 502; ii. 18, 123, 215, 267, 271, 283, 418. Gordon, Lord George, ii. 394, 462. Gower, Earl, his letter to Swift, i. 78. Graham, Lord, ii. 361, 476. Grainger, Dr. his "Sugar Cane,” ii. 84. ́ his "Ode on Solitude," ii. 235. Grammar-school, Johnson's plan of, i. 54. Granger, Reverend Mr. his "Biographical Dictionary," ii. 160. Gray's poetry, i. 247, 534; ii. 2, 119, 123, 412, 511. Green, Mr. of Lichfield, his museum, ii. 92, 382. Letter from Johnson to him, iii. 155. Greenwich hospital, i. 282. Greville, Richard Fulke, Esq. his "Maxims," &c. iii. 85. HABEAS CORPUS, i. 359. Hackman, Rev. Mr. ii. 362. Hailes, Lord, his and Johnson's opinion of each other, i. 267, 277. his "Annals of Scotland," i. 501, 2, 504, 5, 511; ii. 1, 32, 34, 5, 6, 55, 63, 135, 132, 346, 355, 376. his opinion on entails, ii. 62. Hale, Lord Chief Justice, anecdote of, iii. 89. Hales, venerable John, his works, iii. 93. Hall, General, his politeness to Johnson at Warley camp, ii. 347. Hamilton, Right Hon. William Gerard, his kind offers to Johnson, iii. 42. Hamilton's poems, ii. 204. Hanway, Mr. Jonas, i. 190, 394. Happiness, i. 314; ii. 132, 295.—See Life. Harleian miscellany, i. 107. Harris, James, Esq. ii. 266, 274. Harte's "History of Gustavus," i. 392; ïi. 455. Harvey, Hon. Thomas, i. 331. Harvey, Henry, i. 60. Hastie.-See Schoolmaster. Hastings, Warren, Esq. character of, ii. 445. Letter from him to the authour, ii. 446. Letters of Johnson to, ii. 447, 449. Hawkesbury, Lord, Johnson's letter to, relative to Dr. Dodd, ii. 200. his "Voyages," i. 479. Hawkins, Sir John, remarks on his life of Johnson, i. 2, 116. circumstances as to Johnson related by him contradicted or explained, quits the Literary Club, i. 295. Hawkins, Mr. i. 15. Hay, Lord Charles, ii. 105, 418. Heberden, Dr. his kind attendance on Johnson, iii. 32, 56, 160. Hebrides, Johnson's wish to visit, i. 277, 284, 345, 404, 410, 446, 467, 490. Johnson's published "Account of his Journey," i. 501, 507, 8, 9, 510, Hector, Mr. i. 18; ii. 86, 7, 8, 496; iii. 64, 140. Letters from Johnson to, ii. 505, 6; iii. 142. Heely, Mr. and Mrs. i. 329; iii. 138. Henderson, Mr. John, iii. 81. "Hermippus Redivivus," Campbell's, i. 257. Highwaymen, ii. 263. Hill, Dr. his works, i. 337. History and Historians, reflections on, i. 262, 364, 439, 459, 469; ii. 23, 110, Hogarth, i. 88. Hollis, Mr. Thomas, ii. 468. Home, Mr. John, his parody on Derrick, i. 280. his proposed history of the rising in 1745, ii. 212. Homer, Johnson's translations from, i. 23. critiques on the merits of that poet, ii. 233, 324, 5. Hoole, John, Esq. his "Tasso," i. 234. his "Cleonice," i. 508. Letters of Johnson to him, iii. 128, 9. Hoole, John, Esq. his attention to Johnson during his last illness, iii. 166. Horace, Johnson's translations from, i. 21, 2. --- criticism on a passage in that Latin poet, ii. 147. Horne, Reverend Dr. ii. 80; iii. 180. Horne Tooke, Mr. ii. 340. Hospitality, ii. 415; iii. 25. Houghton gallery, iii. 106. House of Commons, ii. 253, 259, 379, 452, 473; iii. 81. Peers, ii. 334. Huggins, Mr. ii. 408. Hume, David, his style, i. 270. his scepticism, i. 273, 314; i 78. 205. his "Life," ii. 181. Humphry, Ozias, Esq. antiquity of his family, and letters of Johnson to, iii. 62, 3. Hunter, Mr. i. 15, 16, 17. Hurd, Dr. (Bishop of Worcester,) ii. 148; iii. 77. Hussey, Reverend Mr. John, ii. 352. Dr. Thomas, iii. 169. I. and J. JAMES, Dr. his "Medical Dictionary," i. 98; ii. 114. "Idler," Johnson's, i. 200, 1, 2, 210. Jennyns, Soame, Esq. his "Origin of Evil," i. 192. his "Evidence of the Christian Religion," ii. 296. India, of the government in, iii. 21. Infidelity, i. 365; . 19, 133, 181, 380; iii. 75. Influenza, ii. 55. Inns, ii. 83. Inquisition, i. 286, 7. Johnson, Michael, (father of Dr. Johnson,) anecdotes of, i. 9, & seq.-His death, i. 39. JOHNSON, DR. SAMUEL, his birth, i. 9. touched by Queen Anne for the evil, i. 15. goes to school at Lichfield, i. 16.-Stourbridge, 19. enters at Pembroke College, Oxon, i. 28. leaves College, i. 39. becomes usher to Market-Bosworth school, i. 42. removes to Birmingham, i. 44. marries Mrs. Porter, i. 52. opens an academy at Edial, i. 53. goes to London, (with Garrick,) i. 56. a writer in "The Gentleman's Magazine," i. 66, &c. endeavours to obtain the degree of A. M. i. 78. his distrest circumstances, and filial piety, i. 99, 100. loses his wife, i. 142--his grief on that occasion, 143; ii. 42; iii. 122, 141. visits Oxford in 1754, i. 164; and again, i. 341, 355; ii. 77; iii. 72, obtains his degree of A. M. from that University, i. 169, 170, 1.—His loses his mother, i. 204. obtains a pension of 300l. a year, i. 229, & seq. JOHNSON, created LL. D. by Trinity College, Dublin, i. 308 i. 355- — ———— by Oxford University, i. 536, 7, 8. his interview with the King, i. 333- appointed Professor of Ancient Literature in the Royal Academy, endeavour to get him into Parliament, i. 401, & seq. visits the Hebrides, i. 492.—See Hebrides. -Wales, i. 503. France, ii. 35, 6.-His account of it, ii. 49, 50, 1. his various places of residence, ii. 377. his long illness and gradual decline, ii. 497, &c.-His various dis- his proposed tour to Italy for his health, iii. 101, 107, 8, 121. his Will and Codicil, iii. 162.—Remarks on them, iii. 163. his death, iii. 174.-His funeral, iii. 175. His Character and Manners. bis peculiarities of person and manner, i. 13, 87, 297, & seq. 533, 536; general traits of his character and mode of living, i. 30, 59, 60, 284, his early, habitual, and systematick piety, i. 11, 33, 289, 297, 339, 359, his superstition, i. 298; ii. 82. his aweful dread of death, i. 372, 382, 394, 516; H. 206, 209, 299; his general tenderness of nature, humanity and affability, i. 41, 252, his warm and sometimes violent manner, i. 377, 393; ii. 116, 296, iii. 44. his occasional jocularity, i. 489; ii. 21, 31, 85, 203, 209, 420, 456. his respect for birth and family, i. 275, 6, 412, 428, 488, 535; ii. 188, his love of good eating, i. 287, 8; ii. 144, 228, 293, 464. his political character and opinions, i. 188, 263, 266, 286, 350, 385, and pamphlets, i. 85, 385, 398, 409, 506, 525, 527; ii. 2.— catalogue of works proposed to be executed by him, iii. 146. Piozzi.) |