The most agreeable talent of an historian, Descriptions of battles in it scarcely ever understood, History, secret, an odd way of writing one, His notions debase human nature, Hobson (Tobias), the Cambridge carrier, the first man in His justice in his employment, and the success of it, Homer: his excellence in the multitude and variety of his He degenerates sometimes into burlesque, His descriptions charm more than Aristotle's reason. 411 His observation upon the corruption of the age, 352 He gives the club's brief account of his amours and dis- 359 His adventure with Sukey, 410 Resolved not to marry without the advice of his 475 His translation from the French of an epigram written 490 His letters to the Spectator, 499, 511 Honour to be described only by negatives, His boasts, His artifice, Marries a contry girl, The genealogy of true honour, And of false honour, Wherein commendable, And when to be exploded, Honours in this world under no regulation, Hoods, coloured, a new invention, Hope, passion of, treated, The folly of it when misemployed on temporal objects, Husband, an Ileustom among them, Rules for marrying them by the Widow's club, Hush (Peter), his character, Hymen, a revengeful deity, Hynin, David's pastoral one on Providence, On the glories of the heaven and earth, Hypocrisy, the honour and justice done by it to religion, To be preferred to open impiety, IAMBIC vers, the most proper for Greek tragedies, Jane (Mrs.), a great pickthank lapis's cure of Eneas, a translation of Virgil, by Mr. 530 The advantages of the pleasures of imagination, Two kinds of them, Awaken the faculties of the mind, without fatiguing or More conducive to health than those of the understand ing,, Raised by other senses as well as the sight, The cause of them not to be assigned, Works of art not so perfect as those of nature to enter tain the imagination, The secondary pleasures of the fancy, Whence its secondary pleasures proceed. Of a wider and more universal nature than those it has How poetry contributes to its pleasures, 400,45 How historians, philosophers, and other writers, When it works from great things to little, As liable to pain as pleasure; how much of either it The power of the Almighty over it, 35 Imma, the daughter of Charles the Great, her story, 471 535 535 224 493 The most proper means to avoid the imputation of it, Independent minister, the behaviour of one at his examina 334 408 here, Indifference in marriage not to be tasted by sensible p rits, 520 Indigo, the merchant, a man of prodigious intelligence, 617 Indisposition; a man under any, whether real or imaginary, 616 116 An enemy to virtue, 583 Infidelity, another term for ignorance, 561 A farther account of it from the country, 441 453 Criticisms upon it, 465 Injuries, how to be measured, 243 Inkle and Yar'co, their story, 9 10 399 Innocence, and not quality, an exemption from reproof, 458 Inquisitive ten pers exposed, 39 Instiner, the power of it in brutes. The several degrees of it in several different animal, 272 Interest, often a promoter of persecution, The ready way to promote our interest in the world, 447 phers, to assist him, 47 A general one, 411 John a Nokes and John a Stiles, their petition, 316 ary. 87 Jonson (Ben), an epitaph written by him on a lady, 73 170 46 Letter about education, From one who had married a scold, 455 455 About the use and abuse of similes, 455 Salutations at churches, 460 With a translation of the 114th Psalm, 461 About the advance on the paper for the stamps, 461 About King Charles the Second's gaieties, 462 About dancing, 466 About sight, 472 About panegyrical satires on ourselves, 473 From Timothy Stanza, 473 From Bob Short, 473 No. 455 Letter from Mr. Pope, on the verses spoken by the Emper From Dustererastus, whose parents will not let h From Penance Cruel, complaining of the behaviour of From Sharlot Wealthy, setting forth the hard case such women as are beauties and fortunes, ing rich by losing his customers, From Lucinda Parley, a coffee-house idol, From C. B. recommending knotting as a properame a shoeing horn, From Relicta Lovely, a widow, From Eustace, in love with a lady of eighteen, whe From with a short critique on Spenser, From Charles Easy, setting forth the sovereign From Sir Andrew Freeport, who is retiring from bu ~, on poetical justice, From with an account of the unmarried hen- ness, pecked, and a vindication of the married, 486 From with an epigram on the Spectator by Mr. Tate. 488 From with some reflections on the ocean, con. From Matilda Mohair, at Tunbridge, complaining of the From Rachel Shoestring, Sarah Trice, an humble ser From Moses Greenbag, the lawyer, giving an account From Philonicus, a litigious gentleman, complaining o From Hezekiah Thrift, containing a discourse on From Titus Trophonius, an interpreter of dreams, on past day's actions, 508 About a vision of hearts, About planting, 509 From Will Honeycomb, occasioned by two stories he Of inconsistent metaphors, 511 About making love, From the Spectator's clergyman, being a Thought on From Fanny Fickle, 513 From an aunt, about her niece's idleness, From From -, with a vision of Parnassus, 514 From Tom Nimble, about antipathies, From Cleora, against the ladies' work, From Ed. Biscuit, Sir Roger de Coverley's butler, with About genealogy, 517 From Tom Tweer on Physiognomy, &c. From -, condoling with him on Sir Roger's death, From Will Hopeless, about ambition, From the Temple, about beggar's eloquence, 518 518 From F. G. a widower, with some thoughts on a man's 520 From From T. W. a man of prudence, to his mistress, —, a great enemy to public report, 521 522 From Monimia, to recover a lost love, From a pedant, in his pedantic way, on the same s ject, About the styles of letters, Answers to several, About flattery, From the love-casuist, about the widow's tenure, and the From the same, about love queries, From one who recommended himself for a ne M T M T M B Su Hi W ΤΗ An Hi |