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quarrel, iii. 131; P.'s Guardian on Philips's
Pastorals, 107, 319; P.'s Messiah, 100; P.'s
St. Cecilia's Day, 226; P.'s Temple of Fame,
104, 225; Prior's poems, subscribes to, ii.
194 n. 1; salaries and expenses, 150; Savage,
helps, 331; S.'s Miscellany, subscribes to, 342
n. 6; S., forbids house to, 333; Sir Roger
de Coverley,' 96; South Sea Directors, speech
for, 81 n. 4;
Spectator,' called loudly
for letters,' 108; not concerned in continua-

tion of, 108 n. 3; his Whiggism breaks out in,
92; Swift on his Spectators, 153; see Spec-
tator;
Swift's Advancement of Religion,

iii. 13 n.5; S.'s agreeable qualities, 15, 59.5;
S.'s Bickerstaff's papers, 13 n. 2; S., breach
with, 24; S.'s description of him, ii. 150; S.,
kept in his place by, iii. 21 n. 1, 24 n. 7;
Tatler, ii. 91; Tender Husband, 89; Tickell's
Iliad and Addison, 309 n. 1; T.'s Preface and
Elegy on Addison, 310 n. 6; Whiggism,
definition of, 114 n. 5; quotation, 222 n. 4.
STEEVENS, George, Rochester's Poems, i.
223 n. 2, 226 n. 8; Shenstone's Poems upon
Various Occasions, iii. 349 n. 8; Young's
tragedies, 396.

STELLA, see JOHNSON, Esther.

STEPHEN, Sir Leslie, iii. 361 n. I.

STEPNEY, George, birth, &c., i. 309; Com-
missioner of Trade, ib.; foreign employments,
ib.; funeral and epitaph in Westminster
Abbey, 310; Halifax, friendship with, 309,
ii. 41; Juvenilia make 'grey authors blush,'
i. 310, ii. 3; scarce third rate poet,' i. 310
n. 3; translation of Juvenal, 311; Trinity
College, Cambridge, 309, ii. 41; West-
minster School, ib.

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SUCKLING, Sir John, i. 22; Cowley, satirizes,
15; Letters, iii. 159.

SUETONIUS, i. 469 n. 9, iii. 166 n. 1.
SUFFOLK, Countess of, see HOWARD, Mrs.
SUICIDE in tragedies, &c., iii. 226, 396, 440.
SUMMERS, Sir George, i. 254 n. I.
SUMNER, Bishop Charles, i. 155 n. 5.
SUNDERLAND, Charles Spencer, third Earl
of, Addison his Under-Secretary, ii. 88;
Peerage Bill, 113; Wood's patent, iii. 33

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SWIFT, Mrs. Abigail, the Dean's mother,
iii. 3, 6.

SWIFT, Deane, the Dean's cousin, iii. 3 ». 3;
Essay upon the Life, &c., of Dr. Swift, 1 n. 3,
67; Swift's character, 65 . 2; S., Queen
Caroline and Countess of Suffolk, 74.

SWIFT, Godwin, the Dean's uncle, iii.
I n. 5, 3.

SWIFT, Jane, the Dean's sister, iii. 1 #. 4,
7 n. 3.

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SWIFT, Jonathan, the Dean's father, iii. I.
SWIFT, Jonathan, abbreviations by poets,
i. 419 n. 2; account of his own life, iii. 1;
Addison, dines and sups with, ii. 119 n. 4, 157;
A.'s agreeable society, 119 n. 4; see ADDI-
SON; Agher rectory, iii. 9 n. 1; agreeable
qualities,' 59 n. 5; aldermanly discretion,'
416 n. 1; alexandrines and triplets, i. 467,
iii. 249 n. 3; anonymous writings, 10 n. 3;
ante-chamber scene, 130; Arbuthnot, praised
by, 59 n. 5; Archbishop of Dublin, disputes

--

with, 27; Argument against Abolishing |
Christianity, 12, 51 n. 3; arrogance, 60, 61;
Ashe, Bishop, 30 n. 2; asparagus and
William III, 4 n. 2; astrology, 12; authors
living by their pen, scorned, 50 n. 1; avarice,
29, 47, 57; awe of him, 59 n. 5; Barber,
Mrs., 74;
Battle of the Books, date of
writing, 7 n. 5; resembles Combat des Livres,
II;
Baucis and Philemon, 65 n. 4;
- Beggar's Opera, suggests subject, ii. 276;
praises its morality, 278; Bentley, iii.
11; Berkeley, Countess of, dedication to,
13 n. 4; Berkeley, Earl of, private secretary
to, 8; Bettesworth, Sergeant, 44; birth, &c.,
I; birthday, 49; birthplace, I; bishopric,
excluded from, 15, 68; Blackmore, ii. 240 n.
4, 246 n. 3; Bolingbroke, his 'patron and
friend,' iii. 206 n. 3; B., invited to France
by, 37; B., warned never to appear cold,
7 n. 4; books, in later years could make
little use of, 47; borrowed little, 66; Britain
and England, 266 n. 3; broomstick, could
write finely on a,' 33; Burgess's preaching,
ii. 300 n. 8; Burnet, iii. 20; burning book
by common hangman,' i. 108 n. 4; butler
and Drapier Letter, iii. 35; Cademus and
Vanessa, 31, 33, 70; captaincy of horse, 4;
Carteret, Lord, 35 nn.; Catalans, ii. 178;
Cato rehearsal, 100 n. 2; ceases work re-
quiring thought or labour, iii. 46; Change in
the Ministry, 27; character described by
Delany, 63; by Deane Swift, 65 n. 2; charity,
38 n. 2, 57, 64, 65 n. 2; chaste, sober and
temperate,' 65 n. 2; cheerful spirit, 56 n. 1,
65 n. 2; church, ceased attending, 54 n. I;

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churchman rationally zealous,' 53; City
Shower, 15 n. 8; civility, never practised,
61 n. 1; cleanliness, 55; clean sheets, 6;
'clear but shallow,' 63 n. 3; clothes, fine,
6 n. 5; club of sixteen Brothers,' ii. 197
n. 3, 299 n. 7, iii. 15; coach, richest gentle-
man in Ireland without, 29; colonies, ii.
394 n. 2; companions, chosen for com-
pliance, iii. 59 n. 5; Conduct of the Allies,
18; Congreve, intercedes for, ii. 225 n. 4, iii.
21; C., loved, ii. 224 n. 2; C.'s plays, 226
n. 2; C.'s Tatler, 224 n. 3; 'conversation
is but carving,' iii. 60 n. 4; c., excluded, 47;
c., interrupt, would not, 60 n. 4: c. made
difficult by deafness, 46; c., mixture of in-
solence in, 60 n. 2; c., paused for others to
speak, 60; c, peculiarities in, 59 n. 3; c.,
spent from noon till bed in, 47 n. 4; copies
of verses, gave away, 45; Court, attended,
8; courtier, recommences, 39; cousins in
Ireland, 3 ». 3; 'Cowley's briefs,' i. 40 n. 3 ;
Cyprian and Irenaeus, iii. 5; danger, ex-
aggerates his, 36 n. 1; deafness, 40 n. 3, 46;
see also SWIFT, giddiness and deafness;
Dean, Drapier, Bickerstaff or Gulliver,' 151
n. 5; the Dean,' 36; deanery of Derry,
disappointed in, 8; deanery of St.
Patrick, appointed to, 22, 68; enters into

possession, 24; attentive to his duty, 53;
charges on entering, 23 n. 1; dominions,
27 n. 2; left it more valuable, 57;
death, 49; d., thoughts of, 29, 46 n. 1; degree
speciali gratia, 2 n. 3; delude, not easy to,
15; Denham, borrows from, 66 n. 2;
'die
at top,' 368; Dingley, Mrs., 9 n. 4; dis-
gusting ideas, 62, 242; Directions for Ser-
vants, 47; disinterestedness, 22; Dissenters,
53; Dissensions in Athens and Rome, 10,
51 n. 2; Drapier's Letters, 33-36, 71; the
Drapier,' 36; Dr. Presto,' ii. 161 n. 7;
'drove acquaintance from his table,' iii. 43;

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Dryden, conversed with, i. 366; 'Cousin
Swift, you will never be a poet,' iii. 7; D.'s
dedications, i. 387 n. 8; D.'s haste, 465 n. 3;
Hind and Panther and Tommy Pots, 442 n.8;
D., malevolence to, iii. 8; D.'s prefaces, i. 366,
412 n. 5; D.'s triplets and alexandrines, 467
n. 5; D.'s Virgil, 449 n. 3, 454 n. 2;
Duke, ii. 25; Dunciad, reads Dublin edition
of, iii. 146 n. 4; D., put Pope on writing it,
150 n. 4; economy, 6, see also frugality;
England, ambition to live in, 6 n. 9; 'best
part of his life' in, I n. 7; hopes for prefer-
ment in, 39 n. I; English living offered him,
62; recalled to, 24; residences in, 68; visits,
14, 37, 38, 73; Essay on Man, forced

to read twice in places, 244 n. 10; never
doubted authorship, 162 n. 1; Examiner,
contributed to, ii. 29 n. 9, 187, iii. 16; Ex-
chequer draft for £1,000, 23; exercise, belief
in, 5; 'expires a driv'ler and a show,' 48
n. 3; eyes, 55 n. 5; eyesight, 47 n. 5;
fables, loved, ii. 283 n. 5; fame, in youth
desired, iii. 3 n. 1; familiarity with the great,
affected, 61; Famous Prediction of Merlin,
14 n. 2; female excellence, his opinion of,
42; first works, 9; flattery, delight in, 46,
60; Fleetwood, ii. 153; France, invited by
Bolingbroke to, iii. 37; Free Thoughts on
the present State of Affairs, 26; Freind and
Atterbury, 343 n. 4; friends, avoids causing
expense to, 57 n. 3; f. lost by death, 214
n. 3; friendship, fidelity in, 63; f, hearty
and sincere in, 59 n. 5; f. and love, 41 n. 4;
f. with Pope, Arbuthnot, and Gay, 61, 62
n. I; frugality, 47, 57; fruit, surfeit of, 4;
Garth's Christianity, ii. 63 n. 1; Gay's
Achilles, 281 n. 6; G., advice to, 273; G.'s
'country skill,' 268 n. 3; G.'s death, leaves
letter unopened, 281; G.'s Fables, 283 n. 5;
G.'s and Pope's supper money, iii. 58; genius
and rank, 61 n. 1; George II's accession,
39; giddiness and deafness, alleged
cause, 4; real origin, 4 n. 7; troubled by,
30, 40, 46;
Good Friday dinner with
Bolingbroke, ii. 125 n. 2; good nature, iii.
59 n. 5; Granville, quarrel with, ii. 291
n. 6; guests, dinner allowance to, iii. 47, 58;
Gulliver's Travels, account of publica-
tion, &c., 38, 72; criticisms by Arbuthnot,
Gay, Pope, and Voltaire, 38 n. 5; 'chief

end to vex the world,' 72; 'filthy images,'
63; hints from Scriblerus Memoirs, 182;
only book by which he got money, 27 n. 5,
73; Pope refers to it as expected, 160 n. 5;
translated into French, 73; Halifax, ii.
46, iii. 14 n. 5; Harley, dedication to, 16;
H., familiarity with, 15: H.'s £50, refuses,
22; H., represented as ill-used by Whigs to,
14; H., vainly stimulates, 17; H. and Boling-
broke's reconciliation, attempts, 24, 26;
Hawkesworth's Life, 1, 67; 'Hibernian
Politics, O Swift! thy fate,' 78 n. 4; Hints
towards an Essay on Conversation, 62 n. 4;
History of the Four last Years of Queen
Anne, 27; Horte, Bishop, 303 n. 3; hours
spent in chamber, 47 n. 5; h. of walking and
reading, 60 n. 5; Howard, Mrs., ii. 275 n. 2,
iii. 39, 73; Hughes, ii. 164; humour, inferior
to Arbuthnot and Addison in, iii. 63 n. 3;
hypocrisy, dread of, 54; 'hypocrite reversed,'
55 2. 2; idle, impossible to be, 46; income,
57; inflammation in eye, 49; inscription on
inn window-pane, 38 n. 1; Inquiry into the
Behaviour of the Queen's last Ministry, 27;
'instructs but does not persuade,' 52;
Ireland, considered as exile, 28; driven by
Queen's death into, 62; First Fruits, &c.,
solicits remission, 14; guardian and dictator
of, 50; Irish Parliament scorned, 72; never
reconciled to, 43; popularity in, 36, 37,
44; reception in, 26; visits to, 5;
'Irishman, could never endure to be called
an,' I n. 6; Isaac Bickerstaff,' 12, 13;
Jacobites, advice to, ii. 258 n. 1; jocularity,
iii. 60; Journal to Stella, 23; Kilkenny
School, ii. 213 n. 3, iii. 2; Kilroot in Connor,
prebend,7; King, Dr., ii. 30 n. 5; ladies' edu-
cation, i. 143 n. 3, ii. 146 n. 3; language, his,
iii. 51; Laracor and Rathbeggin livings, 9,
57; last illness, 48 n. 5, 49; latinity, 2 n. 4;
laughter and gaiety, 56; 'leaning on elbow to
consider what to write,' 160 . 2; legal
guardians appointed, 48; Legion Club, 46;
Lent and fasting, 53 n. 6; Letcombe, 5 n. 3,
26 n. 2; Letter to a Lady on her Marriage,
42; Letter to October Club, 16; letters, 61;
Cowper praises them, 431 n. 7; letters to
Pope, remembered he was writing to Pope,'
160; 1. to P., virtue confined to their narrow
circle, 61, 212; Lewis, Erasmus, ii. 273 n. 3;
'liberal by principle, frugal by inclination,'
iii. 57; 'liberty, his cry,' 65 n. 1; life of
ease, wish always returns for, 23; Lives of
him, 67; livings, value of his, 9 n. 1; loans
to Dublin poor, 45; London church defi-
ciencies, 64 n. 4; 'love of a shilling,' 6;
Lowndes, i. 207 n. 3; Lucian and Cervantes,
classed with, iii. 63 n. 3; Manley, Mrs., ii.
187 n. 5; Marlborough, iii. 18 n. 5; mar-
riage, alleged private, 30, 41, 43, 69; Marsh,
Archbishop, ii. 28 n. 6, iii. 14 n. 3; Master
of Requests,' 20 n. 5, 130; meat, frugal of,
47; medals, promised, 39, 73; Memoirs of

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Scriblerus, 181; mental powers, loss of, 48;
metaphors, 51; 'middle rank of mankind,'ii.
395 . 5; Milton's imitators, i. 318 n. 2; M.
on divorce, 105 n.6; M.'s Paradise Lost, 198;
M. and Thomson, iii. 298 n. 6; ministers,
equality and independence with, 21; Miscel-
lanies in Prose and Verse, 38, 144; Mon-
tagu's, Lady M. W., insolent mention of him,
178 n. 5; Moor Park, 4, 5, 6; mother, con-
sults his, 3; m., yearly visit to, 6; multa
gemens,' 23; Munster, Duchess of, 33 n. 4:
music, knew nothing of, 53 n. 5; name, only
put to two papers, 33 n. 2; national memo-
rial, 36 n. 3; nationality, 1, 2; Oldisworth,
ii. I n. 2; only a woman's hair,' iii. 43. 4;
only pieces he proposed making money by,
27 n. 5; On the Death of Dr. Swift, 47 n.6;
open and cheerful,' 65 n. 2; opera vogue, ii.
165; oppression and arbitrary power, resists,
iii. 63; ordained deacon and priest, 7 n. 2;
originality, 66; Oxford and Trin. Coll.,
Dublin, 5 n. 4; O. degree, 5; pamphlets
and verses for amusement, 47 n. 5; Parnell,
ii. 50, 51, 55, iii. 61 n. 1; parochial duties, 9;
'passions, pays no court to the,' 52; pastoral
poetry, i. 164 n. 2; patriotism, iii. 64; pay-
ments for his writings, 8 n. 2, 38 #. 2, 50 n. 1,
73; penny lodgings, 6; 'perfect health and
spirits,' 37 n. 3; personal appearance, 55; in
old age, 56 n. 1; Philips, A., 322 n. 5; see
PHILIPS; 'piety, has recourse to,' 28; Pindaric
Odes, writes, 7; 'plate, poorest gentleman in
Ireland that eat upon,' 29; poetry, best hours
for, 7 n. 6; poetry, criticism of his, 65; p.,
estimate of his own, 66 n. 1; Polite Conver
sation, 47; politics, 52; Pomfret, i. 302 n. 3;

Pope's alexandrines and triplets, iii. 249;
P.'s bad grammar, 249 n. 2 ; P.'s bad rhymes,
249 n. 3; P. and the bad poets, 147 n. 4; P.'s
conversation, 208, 209 n. 1; Dunciad, see
SWIFT, Dunciad; P., earliest mention of, 105
n.4: Epistle to Bathurst, 172 n 2; Epitaph
on Gay, 268 n. 2, 269 nn.; Essay on Man, see
SWIFT, Essay on Man; P.'s 'filial piety,' 154
n. 4; P., hopes to see once more, 43; Iliad,
promotes subscriptions, 130; P., left with
little ceremony, 40; P., Miscellanies with,
38; P.'s paper-sparing, 203 n. 1; P.'s parsimony
in wine, 203 n. 2; P.'s poor head for wine, 199
n. 2; P.'s portrait of him, 107 n. 5; P.'s 're-
fusing the visits of a Queen,' 171; P.'s resent-
ment against world, 212; P., visits, 62;
popularity with populace, 44; portrait, his, 55
1.5; post abroad, solicits, 26 n.4; Post office,
letters opened in, 211 n. 4; praise, extravagant,
hated, 60 n. 1; prayer, his evening, 62 n. 4;
prayers, goes daily to, 28 n. 4; p., read in se-
cret, 55; preached in his turn, 54; preaching,
viewson, 52 n. 3; Predictions for the Year 1708,
12 n. 2; predominated over companions, 59;
Preface to the Bishop of Sarum's Introduction,
&c., 20 n. 2; preferment in England, promised,
7, 8; Presbyterians, poems on the, 43; Prince

of Wales, approaches, 448 n. 1; printing, could
not live without, 45 n. 3; Prior, evening
with, ii. 200; P.'s death, 195 n. 3; P.,
subscription poems, 194 n. 1; see PRIOR;
private devotions, iii. 55 n. 1; Project for
Advancement of Religion, 13; property, 57
n. 5; Proposal for correcting...the English
Tongue, i. 232, ii. 185, iii. 16; Proposal for
Universal Use of Irish Manufactures, 30
n. 9; Public Spirit of the Whigs, 24; public
table, 29; quatrains, 7 n. 8; Queen Anne,
attacks, 69; Q. A., death of, ii. 191 n. 3, iii. 23,
26, 62; Queen Caroline, relations with, 39,
73; querulous, 61, 62; raillery and sarcasm,
59; rank, indifferent to, 21 n. 3; reading of
the service, 54; r. poetry, 54 n. 2; relations,
hated, 3 n. 3; religion, 13, 53, 54, 63, 65 n.
2; Remarks on the Barrier Treaty, 19 n. 7;
resentment against the world, 211; 'Resolu-
tions when I come to be old,' 60 n. 3;
Restoration drama, ii. 221 n. 5; Revolution,
the, always defended, iii. 15 n. 5; rich, wish
to be, 57 n. 1; Rolls Office in Ireland, place
in, 6; Rowe and Shakespeare, ii. 69 n. 5;
see RowE; royalist ancestry, iii. 3 n. 3;
Rundle, ii. 386 n. 3; runs up and down hill,
iii. 5; sacramental test, defends, 12, 13 n. 1;
St. Patrick's Cathedral, 53, 63; St. Patrick's
Hospital, 45 n. 1, 64 n. 2; Salamander,
The, 62 n. 4; Sandys's Ghost, ii. 61 n. 7;
Scotch, offends the, iii. 25; Scriblerus Club,
181; sensibility to reproach, 61 n. 3; Senti-
ments of a Church-of-England Man, 12;
sermons, 54; servants, treatment of, 56;
Shakespeare, ignorance of, 139 n. 5; Sharpe,
Archbishop, 15, 69; silent for a year, 49; sin-
gularity, 58; 'sitting like a toad in a corner,'
73; Somerset, Duchess of, attacks, 68;
spectacles, would never wear, 47; Spectator,
praises, ii. 153; S., ridicules, 98; spoke
a minute at a time, iii. 60; Steele, friendship
with, 15; S.'s Spectators, ii. 153; see STEELE;
Stella's life and character,' iii. 40 n. 4; S.'s
niece, affected by likeness, 43 n. 4; S., and
Tisdall's offer of marriage, 41 n. 2; S.,
prayers for, 37 n. 2, 43 n. 3; S., relations
with, 9, 30, 40, 69; S. and Vanessa, 31
n. 6; see JOHNSON, Esther; Stepney, i.
310 n. 3; story-telling, iii. 60; studies eight
hours a day, 2; style, definition of, 65 n. 5;
s., simplicity of, 51 n. 3, 52; subsistence,
left without, 3; 'swear or talk bawdy, gave
no man liberty to,' 62 n. 4; systems of philo-
sophy, ridiculed, i. 100 n. 2;

Tale of

a Tub, date of writing, iii. 7 n. 5; published,
10; censured by Blackmore, ii. 247; criti-
cized by Congreve and Voltaire, iii. 51 n. 1;
doubts as to authorship, ii. 18 n. 3, iii. 10;
first sketch, 3; 'Good God! what a genius
I had,' &c., 10 n. 6; 'ill intention, might be
without,' 10; 'little parson cousin,' hints at
share in it, 7 n. 6; lost him bishopric, 10,
22; originality, claims, 66 n. 2; read by

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Miss Byron in Sir Charles Grandison, II n.
3; Smalridge indignant at being supposed
author, II; sources of it, alleged, 11 n. 6;
superior to other writings, 10 n. 6; unlike
other pieces, 51; Tatler, contributed

to, ii. 300 n. 8, iii. 15; temper, 'peevish
and morose,' 45 n. 2; t., sourness of, 56
n. 1; Temple, enters household of, 3; T.,
relations with, 6, 7; T.'s legacy with MSS.,
8; T., reproached with ingratitude to, 7 n. 4;
Thomson's Seasons, 298 n. 6; Tickell, ii.
306; 'time, exact computor of,' iii. 60; Tories,
pen serviceable to, 15; Tory, not an obdu-
rate, ib.; Tory Ministry, 'favourite and con-
fidant of,' 20; Trapp, i. 453 n. 2; travels
on foot, iii. 6; Trinity College, Dublin, 2,
5; truth, strict adherence to, 63; 'two sick
friends never did well together,' 40 n. 3;
uncle's support, 3; upon the word of a
King,' 8 n. 5; Vanessa, relations with, 31,
33, 70; V.'s death, 32; see VANHOMRIGH,
Esther; verses written at night, 46 n. 1;
Vindication of Bickerstaff, 14; vive la baga-
telle, 45, 201 n. 2; voice, sharp and high-
toned, 54; wagon, journeyed in, 6; walking,
love of, 6 n. I, 29 n. 4, 49; Walpole,
attacked by, 25; see WALPOLE, Sir R.;
weekly communion, 53; 'Whig, always a,'
15 n. 5; W. by education, 52; W. on State
matters, Tory on Church, 53; Whiggism,
triumphant, withdraws before, 26 n. 4;
Whigs, formidable to, 25; W., kept in places
many, 21; W., neglected by, 14; W., turned
stream of popularity against, 50; Wicked
Treasonable Libel, 33 n. 4; will, his, 64;
William III, dedication to, 8; W. III, rela-
tions with, 4; Will's Coffee-house, i. 408
n. 6; Windsor, visits, iii. 31 n. 6; Windsor
Prophecy, 68; wine, 47; wits of all parties
conversed with, 15; Works, 1765 ed., uni-
versity subscriptions, 110 n. 1; W., popu-
larity of his, 50 n. 1; Worrall, dines with,
29; writ de lunatico inquirendo, 48 n. 2,
57 n. 5; Young's anecdote of him, 368; Y.'s
pension, 366; Y.'s Satires, 371, 394 n. 8;

quotations, Advice to the Grub Street
Verse-Writers, 203 n. 1; Apollo's Edict, ii.
231 n. 4, iii. 322 n. 5; Author upon Himself,
25 nn., 69; Aye or No, 37 n. 1; Bettes-
worth's Exultation, 327; Brother Protestants,
44 n. I, 314 n. 2; Cadenus and Vanessa,
i. 40 n. 3, iii. 31 nn., 32 n. 2, 70; City
Shower, i. 467 n. 5; Dr. Swift to Mr. Pope,
iii. 40 n. 3; Epigram from the French, 53
n. 6; Horace Epis., ii. 273 n. 3; Libel on
Dr. Delany, 46 n. 3, 86 n. 5, 126 n. 5, 215
n. 8, 275 n. I, iii. 154 n. 4, 171 n. 5; On
the Death of Dr. Swift, 21 n. 3, 22 n. I,
26 n. 1, 28 n. 3, 50 n. 3, 65 n. 1, 66 n. 2, 73;
Quiet Life, ii. 327 n. 2; Rhapsody on Poetry,
i. 408 n. 6, 412 n. 5, iii. 366; Sandys's
Ghost, ii. 61 n. 7, iii. 321 n. 4; Storm, The,
303 n. 3; Stella's Birthday, 47 n. 5; To

n

Mr. Congreve, ii. 226 n. 2; Two Celebrated
Modern Poets, iii. 394 n. 8.

SWIFT, Theophilus, iii. 42 n. 1.

SWIFT, Rev. Thomas, the Dean's grand-
father, iii. I n. 6.

SWIFT, Rev. Thomas, the Dean's 'little
parson cousin,' iii. 7 n. 6.

SWIFT, William, the Dean's uncle, iii. 5
n. 6.

SWINBURNE, Henry, the traveller, iii. 274.
SYDENHAM, Thomas, M.D., ii. 236.

Table of Modern Fame, i. 198.
TACITUS, quoted, i. 127 n. 5, ii. 93 n. 3, iii.
103 n. 5; translations, i. 372 nn.
Tag, to, i. 358 n. 7.

TALBOT, Lord Chancellor, ii. 386 n. 3, iii.
285, 288, 290.

TALBOT, Charles, iii. 288, 289.
Talented, iii. 434 22. 2.
TALLARD, Marshal, i. 318.
TALLATON, ii. 32.

TANGIERS, ii. 170.

TASSO, Aminta and Guarini's Pastor Fido,
i. 296; Gerusalemme Liberata and Cowley's
Davideis, 55; Manso, his patron, 96; Pas-
torals, iii. 318, 319; quoted, i. 96 n. I.

TATE, Nahum, Absalom and Achitophel,
Pt. ii., i. 437; King Lear, ii. 249 n. 5; poet-
laureate, 72; Psalms, 249.

last

TATLER, Addison's contributions, ii. 91,
152; A.'s simile of the angel, 129; collected
subscription edition, 152, iii. 109; Congreve's
contribution, ii. 224; continued by Harrison,
224 n. 3; countenance added to religion and
virtue,' 125 m. 4; date of beginning, 91, iii. 15
n. 6; diverted attention from politics, ii. 94;
'grew cruel dull and dry,' 91 n. 5;
Tatler,' ib.; minute watch for conversation,
iii. 60 n. 4; motto to Court of Judica-
ture on the Petticoat, 417 n. 2; Philips's
contribution, 312; press stopped,' ii. 157;
" sources of conversation,' 95 n. 2; Steele
and Addison, 91; Swift's contributions, 300
n. 8, iii. 15; Young's contribution, 366.
TAVERNER, Pope's master, iii. 84, 85.
TAYLOR, Jeremy, i. 238 n. 8.
TAYLOR, Rev. Dr. John, ii. 409 n. 2.
TAYLOR, William, i. 418 n. 5.
TAYLOR, Rev. Mr., ii. 347 n. I.
TAYLOR, Mr., of Salisbury, ii. 79.
TEDIOUSNESS, most fatal fault in poem, ii.

206.

TEMPLE, Henry, Young's 'Philander,' iii.
377, 378.

TEMPLE, Sir John, Master of the Rolls in
Ireland, iii. 3, 6 n. 7.

TEMPLE, Sir Richard, see COBHAM.
TEMPLE, Sir William, Burnet, attacked by,
iii. 20 n. 4; divines, lawyers, and physicians,
ii. 57 n. 5; Horace, translations from, 6 n. 3;
Master of the Rolls in Ireland, iii. 6 n. 7;
Milton, passes over, i. 198; Moor Park, iii. 4;

'music and poetry grown fiddling and
rhyming,' i. 193 n. 7; nobody should make
love after forty or be in business after fifty,'
iii. 4 n. 1; 'race,' 301; Stella, 9, 74;
Swift's kinsman and patron, 3-8; see SWIFT;
unpolluted writings, i. 235 n. 3; William III,
visited by, iii. 4.

TEMPLE, Rev. William Johnson, iii. 429.
TEMPORARY POEMS, iii. 219 n. 6.

TENISON, Thomas, Archbishop of Canter-
bury, Charles II's papers, i. 483; clergy's
want of books, 143 n. 2; surrender of Dun
kirk, ii. 31; Young's All Souls Fellowship,
iii. 363.

TENNYSON, Lord, blank verse in Dryden's
time, i. 338 n. 1; b. v., rhyme easier than
good, 200; critics and authors, iii. 91 n. 5;
Dryden's Virgil, i. 449 n. 3; Gray's ear, iii.
445; G.'s Elegy, ib.; Lycidas, i. 164 n. 2;
Milton and Virgil, 179 n. 1, 191 m 4;
M.'s and V.'s reclothing of bygone poets'
creations, 187 n. 5; Paradise Lost, hell com-
pared with Dante's, 186 n. 2; its similes, 179
n. I; Pope and Dryden, iii. 222 n. 6; P.'s
Eloisa and Abelard, 235 n. 4; P.'s heroic
metre, 248 n. 4; P.'s Homer, 251 n. 5; Ro-
chester's Vanity of Human Reason,' i. 223
n. 5; Settle, 376 n. 2; spring, best working
time, 136 n. 1; Swift's Legion Club, iii. 46
n. 4; Thomson's blank verse, 298 n. 6.
TERENCE, quoted, i. 17 nn., 337 n. 5;
plays, versions of Menander, iii. 237.

TEST ACT, i. 148 n. 2, ii. 48, iii. 13 %. I.
THACKERAY, William Makepeace, Addi-
son's Spacious firmament,' ii. 127 n. 3; A.'s
weakness for wine, 158; Philips, Ambrose,
iii. 324 n. 5; Prior's lyrics, ii. 210 2.6; Swift,
not an Irishman, iii. 1 n. 7; S.'s Polite Con-
versation, 47 n. 6; S. and Sterne, 'traitors
and renegades,' 54 n. 4; S.'s wit, 63 n. 3.
Theatre, The, ii. 164.

THEATRE, author's nights, i. 365; Con-
greve's time, audience in, 382 n. 5; Dryden's
time, audiences and profits in, 365, 366;
length of runs, 244; sale of tickets, 366
n. I; see also DRAMA.

iii.

THEOBALD, Lewis, Dunciad's original hero,
iii. 145, 186, 241, 242; Key to the What d'ye
call it, ii. 271; L'Allegro and Il Penseroso,
i. 165; Plato's Dialogues of the Immortality
of the Soul, ii. 143 n. 1; Pope's Iliad, praises,
iii. 146 n. 1; P., attacked by, i. 321 n. 2,
138 n. 6; P.'s Shakespeare, attacks, 138, 241;
Shakespeare, edits, 138, 146, 166; War-
burton's notes to it, 167; S.'s Merry Wives of
Windsor, ii, 261 n. 2; Shakespeare Restored,
iii. 138.

THEOCRITUS, iii. 316.

Theologiae Philosophia ancillatur, iii. 309.
The one, iii. 187 n. 3.
THERIACA, i. 285.

THINN, Mr., Usher of House of Lords, i.
265.

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