Life of Johnson, Volume 6 Addenda, index, dicta philosophi, etc.

Chapter 28

Chapter 289,259 wordsPublic domain

election of ministers, ii. 244; neglected ones, iii. 437. PARISH-CLERKS, iv. 125. PARKER, Chief Baron, i. 45, n. 4. PARKER, John, of Browsholme, v. 431. PARKER, Sackville, the Oxford book-seller, iv. 308. PARLIAMENT, awed the press, i. 115; corruption alleged, iii. 206; crown influence, ii. 118; debates: See DEBATES; disadvantages of a seat, iv. 220; dissolution: See under HOUSE OF COMMONS; duration immaterial, ii. 73; bill for shortening it,_ ib., n_. 2; iii. 460; duration of parliaments from 1714 to 1773, v. 102, n. 2; governing by parliamentary corruption, ii. 117; Highlander's notion of one, v. 193; Houses of Commons and of Lords: See under HOUSE OF COMMONS and HOUSE OF LORDS; Johnson projects an historical account, i. 155; suggested as a member, ii. 136-9; larger council, a, ii. 355; Long Parliament, ii. 118; members free from arrest by a bailiff, iv. 391, n. 2; Pitt's motion for reform, iv. 165, n. 1; speakers and places, iv. 223; speeches, effect produced by, iii. 233-5; upstarts getting into it, ii. 339; use of it, ii. 355. _Parliamentary History_, Johnson's _Debates_, i. 503, 508; prosecution of Whitehead and Dodsley, i. 125, n. 3. _Parliamentary Journals_, i. 117. PARLOUR, company for the, ii. 120, n. 1. PARNELL, Rev. Dr. Thomas, Contentment, iii. 122, n. 2; drank too freely, iii. 155; iv. 54, n. 1, 398; Goldsmith writes his _Life_, ii. 166; _Hermit_, a disputed passage in his, iii. 220, 392-3; Johnson writes his epitaph, iv. 54; v. 404; and his _Life_, iv. 54; Milton, compared with, v. 434; _Night Piece_, ii. 328, n. 2. PARODIES, Johnson's parodies of ballads, ii. 136, n. 4, 212, n. 4; parodies of Johnson: See under JOHNSON, style. PARR, Rev. Dr. Samuel, describes himself as the second Grecian in England, iv. 385, n. 2; Johnson, argues with, iv. 15; character, describes, iv. 47, n. 2; epitaph, writes, iv. 423-4,444-6; _Life_, thinks of writing, iv. 443; Latin scholarship, praises, iv. 385, n. 3; reputation, defends, iv. 423; writes him a letter of recommendation, iv. 15, n. 5; neglected at Cambridge, i. 77, n. 4; Priestley, defends, iv. 238, n. 1, 434; Romilly, letter to, iv. 15, n. 5; Sheridan's system of oratory, i. 394, n. 2; Steevens, character of, iii. 281, n. 3; _Tracts by Warburton_, &c., iv. 47, n. 2; White's _Bampton Lectures_, iv. 443. PARRHASIUS, iv. 104, n. 2. PARSIMONY, quagmire of it, iii. 348; timorous, iv. 154; wretchedness, iii. 317. PARSON, the life of a. See CLERGYMEN. PARSONS, the impostor in the Cock Lane Ghost, i. 406, n. 3. PARTNEY, ii. 17. PARTY, Burke's definition, ii. 223, n. 1; sticking to party, ii. 223; v. 36. PASCAL, Johnson gives Boswell _Les Pensees_, iii. 380; read by Hannah More, iv. 88, n. 1. _Passenger_, iv. 85, n. 1. PASSION-WEEK. See JOHNSON, Passion-week. PASSIONS, purged by tragedy, iii. 39. _Pastern_, defined, i. 293, 378. _Pastor Fido_, iii. 346. PATAGONIA, v. 387. _Pater Noster_, the, v. 121. PATERNITY, its rights lessened, iii. 262. PATERSON, Samuel, ii. 175; iii. 90; iv. 269, n. 1. PATERSON, a student of painting, iii. 90; iv. 227, n. 3, 269. _Paterson against Alexander_, ii. 373. PATRICK, Bishop, iii. 58. _Patriot, The_, by Johnson, account of it, ii. 286, 288; written on a Saturday, i. 373, n. 2; election-committees described, iv. 74, n. 3. _Patriot, The_, a tragedy by J. Simpson, iii. 28. _Patriot King_, i. 329, n. 3. PATRIOTISM, last refuge of a scoundrel, ii. 348. PATRIOTS, defined, iv. 87, n, 2; Dilly's 'patriotic friends,' iii. 66, 68; 'don't let them be patriots,' iv. 87; patriotic groans, iii. 78. PATRONAGE, Church, ii. 242-6; rights of patrons, ii. 149. PATRONS, of authors, iv. 172; defined, i. 264, n. 4; harmful to learning, v. 59; mentioned in the _Rambler_, i. 259, n. 4; _Letter to Chesterfield_, i. 262; _Vanity of Human Wishes_, i. 264. PATTEN, Dr., iv. 162. PATTISON, Mark, General Oglethorpe, i. 127, n. 4; Oxford in 1770, ii. 445, n. 1; Bishop Warburton, v. 81, n. 1. PAUL, Father. See SARPI. PAUL, Sir G.O., v. 322, n. 1. PAUSANIAS, v. 220. PAVIA, ii. 125, n. 5. PAYNE, Mr. E.J., defends Burke's character, iii. 46, n. 1; describes his love of Virgil, iii. 193, n. 3. PAYNE, John, account of him, i. 317, n. 1; Ivy Lane Club, member of the, iv. 435; Johnson's friend in 1752, i. 243; publishes the first numbers of _The Idler_, i. 330, n. 3; mentioned, iv. 369, n. 3. PAYNE, William, i. 317. PEARCE, Zachary, Bishop of Rochester, Johnson, sends etymologies to, i. 292; iii. 112; writes the dedication to his posthumous works, iii. 113; wishes to resign his bishopric, iii. 113, n. 2; mentioned, i. 135. PEARSON, John, Bishop of Chester, edits Hales's _Golden Remains_, iv. 315, n. 2; Johnson recommends his works, i. 398. PEARSON, Rev. Mr., ii. 471; iv. 142, 256. PEATLING, i. 241, n. 2. PEERS, creations by Pitt, iv. 249, n. 4; influence in the House of Commons, v. 56; interference in elections, iv. 248, 250; judges, as, iii. 346; Temple's proposed reform, ii. 421. See HOUSE OF LORDS. PEKIN, v. 305. PELEW ISLANDS, v. 276, n. 2. PELHAM, Fanny, iii. 139, n. 4. PELHAM, Right Hon. Henry, Garrick's _Ode on his Death_, i. 269; pensions Guthrie, i. 117, n. 2; Whiggism under him and his brother, ii. 117. PELISSON, i. 90, n. 1. PELLET, Dr., iii. 349. PEMBROKE, eighth Earl of, 'lover of stone dolls,' ii. 439, n. 1. PEMBROKE, tenth Earl of, Boswell visits him, ii. 371; iii. 122, n. 2; Johnson's _bow-wow_ way, describes, ii. 326, n. 5; v. 18, n. 1; author of _Military Equitation_, v. 131. PENANCE in churches, v. 208. PENELOPE, v. 85. PENGUIN, v. 225. PENITENCE, gloomy, iii. 27. PENN, Governor Richard, iii. 435, n. 4. PENNANT, Thomas, Bâch y Graig, v. 436, n. 3; bears, ii. 347; Bolt Court and Johnson, mentions in his _London_, iii. 274-5; Fort George described, v. 124; rents racked in the Hebrides, v. 221, n. 3; _Tour in Scotland_, praised by Johnson, iii. 128, 271, 274, 278, v. 221; censured by Percy, iii. 272; and Boswell, iii. 274; v. 222; Voltaire, visits, i. 435, n. 1; a Whig, iii. 274-5; v. 157. PENNINGTON, Colonel, v. 125, 127. PENNY-POST. See POST. PENRITH, ii. 4, n. 1; v. 113, n. 1. _Pensioner_, defined, i. 294, n. 7, 374-5. PENSIONS, defined, i. 294, 374-5; French authors, given to, i. 372, n. 1; George III's system, ii. 112; Johnson, conferred on, i. 372-7; not for life, i. 376, n. 2; ii. 317; nor for future services, i. 373, n. 2, 374; ii. 317; not increased after his _Pamphlets_, ii. 147, 317; proposed addition, iv. 326-8, 336-9, 348-50; 367-8; attacked, i. 142, 373, 429; ii. 112; iii. 64, n. 2; iv. 116; in parliament, iv. 318; Beauclerk's quotation in reference to it, i. 250; effect of it on Johnson's work, i. 372, n. 1; on his travelling, iii. 450; effect had it been granted earlier, iv. 27; entry in the Exchequer Order Book, i. 376, n. 2; 'out of the usual course,' iv. 116; Johnson unchanged by it, i. 429; Strahan his agent in receiving it, ii. 137. PENURIOUS GENTLEMAN, a, iii. 40. PEOPLE, the judges afraid of the, v. 57. PEPYS, Sir Lucas, iv. 63, 169, 228. PEPYS, Samuel, Lord Orrery's plays, v. 237, n. 4; Spring Garden, iv. 26, n. 1; tea, i. 313, n. 2. PEPYS, William Weller, _account of him_, iv. 82, n. 1; Johnson, attacked by, iv. 65, n. 1; over-praised by Mrs. Thrale, iv. 82; attacked again, iv. 159, n. 3; mentioned, ii. 228, n. 1; iii. 425. _Perce-forest_, iii. 274, n. 1. PERCEVAL, Lord (second Earl of Egmont), i. 508; iv. 198, n. 3. PERCEVAL, Lady Catharine, v. 449, n. 1. PERCY, Earl, iii. 142, 276-7. PERCY, Dr. Thomas, Dean of Carlisle, afterwards Bishop of Dromore, Alnwick, at, ii. 142; anecdotes, full of, v. 255; Boswell, letter to, i. 74; Dean of Carlisle, made, iii. 365; 'very _populous_' there, iii. 416, 417; death, on parting with his books in, iii. 312; dinner at his house, iii. 271; Dyer, Samuel, describes, iv. 11, n. 1; Easton Maudit, rector of, i. 486; iii. 437; Goldsmith and the Duchess of Northumberland, ii. 337, n. 1; epitaph, settles the dates in, iii. 81; lodgings, i. 350, n. 3; quarrels with, iii. 276, n. 2; visionary project, iv. 22, n. 3; Grainger's character, draws, ii. 454, n. 1; reviews his _Sugar-cane_, i. 481; admires it, ii. 454, n. 2; '_Grey Rat, the History of the_' ii. 455; Hawkins, draws the character of, i. 28, n. 1; heir male of the ancient Percies, iii. 271; _Hermit of Warkworth_, ii. 136; Johnson attacks him about Dr. Mounsey, ii. 64; about Percy's calling him short-sighted, iii. 271-3; Percy's uneasiness, iii. 275; Boswell's friendly scheme, iii. 276-8; at variance for the third time iii. 276 n. 2; conversation, iii. 317; first visit to Goldsmith, i. 366, n. 1; Garrick's awe and ridicule of, i. 99, n. 1; method in writing his _Dictionary_, i. 188, n. 2; parodies his poems, ii. 136, n. 4; 212, n. 4; praises him in a letter to Boswell, iii. 276, 278; projected _Life of Goldsmith_, iii. 100, n. 1; questions his daughter about _Pilgrim's Progress_, ii. 238, n. 5; serves him in his _Ancient Ballads_, iii. 276, n. 2; visits him, i. 49, 486; _Vision of Theodore_, i. 192; Levett, account of, iii. 220, n. 1; Literary Club, member of the, i. 478, n. 2, 479; loses by a fire, iii. 420; neglected parishes, iii. 437; Newport School, at, i. 50, n. 2; _Northern Antiquities_, iii. 274; Pennant, attacks, iii. 272; professor in the imaginary college, v. 109; _Reliques_, quoted, iv. 307, n. 3; _Spectator_, projects an edition of the, ii. 212, n. 1; wolf, is writing the history of the, ii. 455; mentioned, i. 142, 319, n. 3; ii. 63, 3l8, 375. n. 2; iii. 256; iv. 98, 344, 402, n. 2. _Peregrinity_, v. 130. PERFECTION, to be aimed at, iv. 338. PERIODICAL BLEEDING, iii. 152. PERKINS, Mr.. Account of him, ii. 286, n. 1; Johnson's letters to him. See JOHNSON, letters; likeness in his counting-house, ii. 286, n. 1; manager of Thrale's brewery, iv. 80, 85, n. 2; mountebanks, on, iv. 83; mentioned, iv. 245, n. 2, 402, n. 2. PERKS, Thomas, i. 95, n. 3. PERREAU, the brothers, ii. 450, n. 1. PERSECUTION, the test of religious truth, ii. 250; iv. 12. PERSECUTIONS, The Ten, ii. 255. PERSEVERANCE, i. 399. PERSIAN EMPIRE, iii. 36. _Persian Heroine, The_, iv. 437. PERSIAN LANGUAGE, iv. 68. _Persian Letters_, i. 74, n. 2. PERSIUS, quotations, _Sat_. i. 7, iv. 27, n. 6; _Sat_. i. 27, v. 25, n. 2. PERSONAGE, a great, i. 219; v. 125, n. 1. PERTH, Duke of, Chancellor of Scotland, iii. 227. PERUVIAN BARK, i. 368; iv. 293. PETER THE GREAT, worked in a dockyard, v. 249. PETER PAMPHLET, i. 287, n. 3. _Peter Pindar_, v. 415, n. 4. PETERBOROUGH, Charles Mordaunt, Earl of, iv. 333. PETERS, Mr., Dr. Taylor's butler, ii. 474. PETHER or PEFFER, an engraver, iii. 21, n. 1. PETITIONS, Dodd's case, iii. 120; how got up, ii. 90, n. 5; Johnson on petitioning, ii. 90; iii. 120, 146; Middlesex election, ii. 103; mode of distressing government, ii. 90. PETRARCH, _Aeglogues_, i. 277, n. 2; read by Johnson, i. 57, 115, n. 2; iv. 374, n. 5. PETTY, Sir William, allowance for one man, i. 440; employment of the poor, iv. 3; _Quantulumcunque_, i. 440, n. 2. PETWORTH, iv. 160. PEYNE, Mr., of Pembroke College, i. 60, n. 5. PEYTON, Mr., Johnson's amanuensis, i. 187; ii. 155; death, ii. 379, n. 1. PHAEAX, iii. 267, n. 4. PHALLICK MYSTERY, iii. 239. PHARAOH, ii. 150. PHARMACY, simpler than formerly, iii. 285. PHILIDOR, the musician, iii. 373. _Philip II, History of_, by Watson, v. 58. PHILIPPS, Sir Erasmus, _Diary_, i. 60, n. 4, 273, n. 2. PHILIPPS, Sir John, v. 276. PHILIPPS, Lady, v. 276. PHILIPS, Ambrose, Blackmore's _Creation_, describes the composition of, ii. 108, n. 1; _Distressed Mother_, i. 181, n. 4; _Life_ by Johnson, iv. 56; _Namby Pamby_, called by Pope, i. 179, n. 4; 'seems a wit,' i. 318, n. 4; mentioned, iii. 427. PHILIPS, C. C., a musician, his epitaph, i. 148; ii. 25; v. 348. PHILIPS, John, _Cyder_, a poem, v. 78. PHILIPS, Miss (Mrs. Crouch), iv. 227. PHILIPS, Mr., one of Johnson's old friends, iv. 227. PHILOSOPHERS, ancient philosophers disputed with good humour, iii. 100; Edwards tries to be one, iii. 305; also White, ib., n. 2; French philosophers, ib. PHILOSOPHICAL NECESSITY, iii. 291, n. 2. PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY, iv. 36, n. 4. _Philosophical Survey of the South of Ireland_, ii. 339; iv. 320, n. 4. _Philosophical Transactions_, i. 309; ii. 40, n. 2. PHILOSOPHICAL WISE MAN, ii. 475. PHIPPS, Captain, v. 236, 392, n. 6. PHOCYLIDIS, v. 445. PHOENICIAN LANGUAGE, iv. 195. PHYSIC, a science and trade, iii. 22, n. 4; irregular practisers in it, iii. 389: See under JOHNSON, physic. PHYSICIAN, a foppish one, iv. 319; history of an unfortunate one, ii. 455; one recommended by Dr. Taylor, ii. 474; one not sober for twenty years, iii. 389; one who lost his practice by changing his religion, ii. 466. PHYSICIANS, ancients failed, moderns succeeded, iii. 22, n. 4; bag-wigs, wore, iii. 288; _Fortune of Physicians_, i. 242, n. 1; Hogarth's pictures of one, iii. 288, n. 4; intruders, do not love, ii. 331, n. 1; Johnson celebrates their beneficence, iv. 263; has pleasure in their company, iv. 293; esteems them, v. 183; his conversation compared to the practice of one, ii. 15; title: See under DR. MEMIS. PIAZZAS, v. 115. PICKLES, ii. 219. _Pickwick_, story of the man who ate crumpets, iii. 384, n. 4. PIERESC, his death and papers, ii. 371. PIETY, comparative piety of women and wicked fellows, iv. 289; crazy piety, ii. 473. _Piety in Pattens_, ii. 48, n. 1. PIG, a learned, iv. 373. _Pilgrim's Progress_, Fearing and the screen, i. 163, n. 1; Fearing and death, iv. 417, n. 2; Johnson praises it highly, ii. 238; wishes it longer, i. 71, n. 1. PILING ARMS, iii. 355. PILKINGTON, James, _Present State of Derbyshire_, iii. 161, n. 2. PILLORY, how far it dishonours, iii. 315; 'a place or the pillory,' iv. 113, n. 1; Parsons of the Cock Lane Ghost set in it, i. 406, n. 3. _Pindar_, Johnson asks Boswell to get him a copy, ii. 202; receives it, ii. 205; West's translation, iv. 28. PINK, Dr., i. 194, n. 2. PINKERTON, John, iv. 330. PINO, ii. 451, n. 3. PIOZZI, Signor, account of him, iv. 339, n. 2; attacked by Baretti, iii. 49, n. 1; Thrale, Mrs., attached to him, iv. 158, n. 4; marries him, ii. 328, n. 4; iv. 339. PIOZZI, Mrs. See THRALE, Mrs. _Piozzi Letters_. See under MRS. THRALE, Johnson's letters to her. _Pit_, to, iii. 185. PITCAIRNE, Archibald, v. 58. PITT, William. See Chatham, Earl of. PITT, William, the son, Boswell, neglects, iii. 213, n. 1, 464; iv. 261, n. 3; letter to him, iv. 261, n. 3; his answer, ib.; called to order, iv. 297, n. 2; Fox a political apostate, calls, iv. 297, n. 2; compared with, iv. 292; honesty of mankind, on the, iii. 236, n. 3; Johnson's pension, proposed addition to, iv. 350, n. 1; Macaulay, attacked by, ib.; ministry, his, iv. 165, n. 3, 170, n. 1, 264, n. 2; motion for reform of parliament, iv. 165, n. 1; tax on horses, v. 51. PITTS, Rev. John, iv. 181, n. 3. PITY, not natural to man, i. 437. PLACE-HUNTERS, iii. 234. PLACES OF PUBLIC ENTERTAINMENT, v. 295, n. 2. PLAGUE OF LONDON, Dr. Hodges, ii. 341, n. 3. PLAIDS, v. 85. _Plain Dealer_, i. 156, 173, n. 3, 174. _Plan of the Dictionary_. See _Dictionary_. PLANTA, Joseph, ii. 399, n. 2. PLANTATIONS (settlements), ii. 12. PLANTERS. See AMERICA, planters. PLANTING TREES, Johnson recommends, iii. 207. See SCOTLAND, trees. PLASSEY, Battle of, v. 124, n. 2. PLAUTUS, quoted, i. 467, n. 2. PLAXTON, Rev. G., i. 36, n. 2. PLAYERS, action of all tragic players is bad, v. 38; below ballad-singers, iii. 184; Camden's, Lord, familiarity with Garrick, iii. 311; change in their manners, i. 168; Churchill's lines on them, i. 168, n. 1; Collier's censure, i. 167, n. 2; dancing-dogs, like, ii. 404; declamation too measured, ii. 92, n. 4; drinking tea with a player, v. 46; emphasis wrong, i. 168; 'fellow who claps a hump on his back,' iii. 184; 'fellow who exhibits himself for a shilling,' ii. 234; Johnson's prejudice against them shown in the _Life of Savage_, i. 167; _Life of Dryden_, ib., n. 2; more favourable judgment, i. 201; iv. 244, n. 2; lawyers, compared with, ii. 235; past compared with present, v. 126; Puritans, abhorred by, i. 168, n. 1; Reynolds defends them, ii. 234; transformation into characters, iv. 243-4; Whitehead's compliment to Garrick, i. 402. See GARRICK, profession. PLEASED WITH ONESELF, iii. 328. PLEASING, negative qualities please more than positive, iii. 149. PLEASURE, aim of all our ingenuity, iii. 282; happiness, compared with, iii. 246; harmless pleasure, iii. 388; monastic theory of it, iii. 292; in itself a good, iii. 327; no man a hypocrite in it, iv. 316; partakers in it, iii. 328; 'public pleasures counterfeit,' iv. 316, n. 2. _Pleasures of the Imagination_. See AKENSIDE, MARK. _Pledging oneself_, iii. 196. PLINY, v. 220. PLOTT, Robert, _History of Staffordshire_, iii. 187. PLOWDEN, iv. 310. _Plum_, defined, iii. 292, n. 2. PLUNKET, W. C. (afterwards Lord), ii. 366, n. 2. PLUTARCH, _Alcibiades_ quoted, iii. 267, n. 4; apophthegms and _memorabilia_, v. 414; biography, i. 31; Euphranor and Parrhasius, iv. 104, n. 2; Monboddo follows him in the approval of slavery, v. 77, n. 2; _Solon_ quoted, iii. 255. PLYMOUTH, French ships of war in sight, iii. 326, n. 5; Johnson visits it, i. 377; hates a 'docker,' i. 379; mentioned, iv. 77. PLYMPTON, iv. 432. POCOCK, Dr. Edward, the Orientalist, iii. 269, n. 3; iv. 28. POCOCK, Mr., catalogue of sale of autographs, ii. 297, n. 2. POCOCKE, Richard, _Travels_, ii. 346. POEMS, preserved by tradition, ii. 347; temporary ones, iii. 318. POET-LAUREATES, i. 185, n. 1. _Poetical Calendar_, i. 382. _Poetical Review of the Literary and Moral Character of Dr. Johnson_. See COURTENAY, John. POETRY, devotional, iii. 358, n. 3; iv. 39; mediocrity in it, ii. 351; modern imitators of the early poets, ii. 136, 212; iii. 158-160; translated, cannot be, iii. 36, 257; what is poetry? iii. 38. POETS, collection of all the English poets proposed, iii. 158; English divided into four classes, i. 448, n. 2; fundamental principles, knowledge of, iii. 347; preserve languages, iii. 36; rarity, their, v. 86. _Poets, Lives of the_. See _Lives of the Poets_. _Poets, The_, Apollo Press edition, iii. 118. POKER CLUB, ii, 376, n. 1, 431, n. 1. POLAND, hospitality to strangers, iv. 18; Johnson wishes to visit it, iii. 456. _Polemo-middinia_, iii. 284. _Polite Philosopher, The_, iii. 22. POLITENESS, 'fictitious benevolence,' v. 82; its universal axiom, v. 82, n. 2. _Politian_, i. 90; iv. 371, n. 2. _Political Conferences_, iii. 309. POLITICAL IMPROVEMENT, schemes of, ii. 102. _Political Survey of Great Britain_, ii. 447. _Political Tracts by the Author of the Rambler_, ii. 315; copy in Pembroke College, ib., n. 2; attacked, ii. 315-317; preface to it suggested, ii. 441. POLITICS, modern, devoid of all principle, ii. 369; in the seventeenth century, ii. 369. 'POLL,' Miss Carmichael, iii. 368. _Polluted_, iv. 402, n. 2. POLYBIUS, ii. 35. POLYGAMY, v. 209, 217. POLYPHEME, i. 278. POLYPHEMUS, v. 82, n. 4. POMFRET, John, Johnson adds him to the _Lives_, iii. 370; his _Choice_, ib., n. 7. _Pomponius Mela de situ Orbis_, i. 465. _Pomposo_, i. 406. PONDICHERRY, v. 124, n. 2. PONSONBY, Hon. Mr., v. 263. POOR, cannot agree, ii. 103; condition of them the national distinction, ii. 130; deaths from hunger in London, iii. 401; education, ii. 188, n. 6: See under STATE; employment under the poor-law, iv. 3; France, in, ii. 390; 'honour, have no,' iii. 189; injured by indiscriminate hospitality, iv. 18; provision for them, ii. 130; rich, at the mercy of the, v. 304; superfluous meat for them, v. 204. POPE, Alexander, Addison's 'familiar day,' iv. 91, n. 1; Adrian's lines, translation of, iii. 420, n. 2; _Beggar's Opera_, his expectation about the, ii. 369, n. 1; Benson's monument to Milton, v. 95, n. 2; Blair, anecdotes of him by, iii. 402-3; bleeding, advised to try, iii. 152, n. 3; Blount, Martha, i. 232, n. 1. Bolingbroke's present to Booth, v. 126, n. 2; Bolingbroke's enmity, i. 329; Bolingbroke, Lady, described by, iii. 324; 'borrows for want of genius,' v. 92, n. 4; Budgell, Eustace, ii. 229, n. 1; _Characters of Men and Women_, ii. 84; Cibber's _Careless Husband_, ii. 340, n. 4; iii. 72, n. 4; condensing sense, art of, v. 345; confidence in himself, i. 186, n. 1; Congreve, dedicates the _Iliad_ to, iv. 50, n. 4; conversation, iii. 392, n. 1; iv. 49; Cooke, correspondence with, v. 37, n. 1; Cowley out of fashion, iv. 102, n. 2; Crousaz's _Examen_, i. 137; death, reflection on the day of his, iii. 165; his death imputed to a saucepan, i. 269, n. 1; death-bed confession, v. 175, n. 5; Dodsley, assisted, ii. 446, n. 4; Dryden, distinguished from, ii. 5, 85; in his boyhood saw him, i. 377; n. 1; _Dunciad_, annotators, its, iv. 306, n. 3; concluding lines, ii. 84; Dennis's thunder, iii. 40, n. 2; resentment of those attacked, ii. 61, n. 4; written for fame, ii. 334; _Dying Christian to his Soul_, iii. 29; _Elegy to the memory of an unfortunate Lady_, i. 173 n. 2; epigram on Lord Stanhope attributed to him, iv. 102, n. 4; _Epitaph on Mrs. Corbet_, iv. 235, n. 2; _Epitaphs_, Johnson's Dissertation on his, i. 335; _Essay on Criticism_, ii. 36, n. 1; iv. 217, n. 4; _Essay on Man_, Bolingbroke's share in it, iii. 402-3; Warburton's comments, ii. 37, n. 1; fame, his, said to have declined, ii. 84; iii. 332; female-cousin, his, iii. 71, n. 5; Fermor, Mrs., describes him, ii. 392; Flatman, borrowed from, iii. 29; friends, his, iii. 347; iv. 50; gentlemen, on the ignorance of, iv. 217, n. 4; Goldsmith's reflection on his 'strain of pride,' iii. 165, n. 3; Greek, knowledge of, iii. 403; grotto, his, iv. 9; verses on it, iv. 51; happy, says that he is, iii. 251; Homer, his, attacked by Bentley, iii. 256, n. 4; and Cowper, iii. 257, n. 1; praised by Johnson, iii. 257; and Gray, ib., n. 1; his pretended reason for translating it into blank verse, ii. 124, n. 1; written on the covers of letters, i. 143, n. 1; _Iliad_, written slowly, i. 319, n. 3; _Odyssey_, translated by the help of associates, iv. 49; imitations, fondness for, i. 118, n. 5; intimidated by prosecution of P. Whitehead, i. 125, n. 3; Johnson criticises his _Ode on St. Cecilia's Day_, iv. 16, n. 4; defends him as a poet, iv. 46; _Dictionary_, apparently interested in, i. 182; estimate of the _Dunciad_, ii. 84, n. 4; recommends, to Lord Gower, i. 132, n. 1, 133, 143; to J. Richardson, ib.; translates his _Messiah_, i. 61, 272; 'will soon be déterré,' i. 129; ii. 85; writes his _Life_, iv. 46-7; labour his pleasure, ii. 99, n. 1; laugh, did not, ii. 378, n. 2; Lewis's verses to him, iv. 307; Lintot, quarrels with, i. 435, n. 4; Lords, gave all his friendship to, iii. 347; 'low-born Allen,' v. 80, n. 5; Mallet paid to attack his memory, i. 329; 'Man never is but always to be blest' ii. 350; Marchmont's, Earl of, anecdotes of him, iii. 342-5, 392, 418; Pope's executor, iv. 51; _Memoirs of Scriblerus_, v. 44, n. 4; mill, his mind a, v. 265; _Miscellanies_, transplants an indecent piece into his, iv. 36, n. 4; lines applicable to Gibbon, ii. 133, n. 1; 'modest Foster,' iv. 9; monument proposed in St. Paul's, ii. 239; 'narrow man, a,' ii. 271, n. 2; 'nodded in company,' iii. 392, n. 1; pamphlets against him, kept the, iv. 127; 'paper-sparing,' i. 142; papers left at his death, iv. 51, n. 1; parents, behaviour to his, i. 339, n. 3; parodied by I.H. Browne, ii. 339, n. 1; parsimony, i. 143, n. 1; _Pastorals_, ii. 84; _Patriot King_, clandestinely printed copies of the, i. 329, n. 3; pensioners, satirises, i. 375; Philips, Ambrose, attacks, i. 179, n. 4; pleasure in writing, iv. 219, n. 1; Prendergast and Sir John Friend, ii. 183; priests where a monkey is the god, ii. 135, n. 1; Prince of Wales, repartee to the, iv. 50; Radcliffe's doctors, iv. 293, n. 1; _Rape of the Lock_, ii. 392, n. 8; reading, his, i. 57, n. 1; ii. 36, n. 1; of the modern Latin poets, i. 90, n. 2; Rich, anecdote of, iv. 246, n. 5; Ruffhead's _Life of Pope_, ii. 166; Settle, the City Poet, iii. 76, n. 1; _Seventeen hundred and thirty-eight_, i. 125, n. 3, 126, 127, n. 3; Shakespeare, edition of, v. 244, n. 2; Spence at Oxford, visits, iv. 9; Steele, letter to, iii. 165, n. 3; Swift, his prudent management for, iii. 20, n. 1; Swift's letter on parting with him, iii. 312; Theobald, revenge on, ii. 334, n. 1; introduces him in the _Dunciad_, iii. 395, n. 1; Tory and Whig, called a, iii. 91; Tyburn psalm, iv. 189, n. 1; Tyrawley, Lord, ii. 211, n. 4; '_un politique_' &c., iii. 324; valetudinarian, iii. 152, n. 1; vanity, iii. 347, n. 2; _Verses on his Grotto_, iv. 51; Latin translation, i. 157; versification, ii. 84, n. 6; iv. 46; Voltaire, i. 499, n. 1; Walpole's 'happier hour,' iii. 57, n. 2; Warburton at first attacks him, v. 80; defends him, i. 329; makes him a Christian, ii. 37, n. 1; made by him a bishop, ib.; Ward the quack-doctor, iii. 389, n. 5; Warton's _Essay_, i. 448; ii. 167; wit, definition of, v. 32, n. 3.

POPE, quotations, _Dunciad_, i. 41, iv. 189, n. 1; i. 87, iii. 76, n. 1; i. 141, i. 55, n. 2; i. 253, ii. 321, n. 1; (first edition) iii. 149, v. 419, n. 2; iii. 325, i. 227, n. 4; iv. 90, i. 266, n. 1; iv. 111, v. 95, n. 2; iv. 167, iii. 182, n. 1; iv. 249, v. 219, n. 2; iv. 342, iii. 199, n. 2; _Eloisa to Abelard_, i. 38, i. 272; i. 134, v. 325, n. 2; _Epitaph on Craggs_, iv. 445; _Essay on Criticism_, i. 66, iii. 72; i. 297, v. 32, n. 3; i. 370, v. 290, n. 3; _Essay on Man_, i. 99, iii. 98, n. 2; i. 221, iv. 373, n. 2; ii. 20, iii. 80, 253, n. 3; ii. l0, i. 202; iii. 3, iv. 270, n. 2; iv. 57, ii. 9, n. 1 iv. 219, v. 83, n. 2; iv. 267, iii. 82, n. 2; iv. 380, iii. 342; iv. 383, iii. 19; n. l; iv. 390, iv. 420; _Moral Essays_, i. 69, i. 3; i. 174, iv. 316, n. 2; ii. 275, i. 249; iii. 25, iii. 346, n. 3; iii. 242, i. 481; iii. 392, i. 375, n. 2; _Prologue to Addison's Cato_, i. 30; _Satires, Prologue_, l. 99, i. 318; l. 135, i. 251, n. 2; l. 247, i. 227, n. 4; l. 259, ii. 368, n. 1; l. 283, iii. 328; l. 350, v. 415, n. 4; 1. 378, ii. 229, n. 1; _Satires, Epilogue, i. 29, iii. 57, n. 2; iv. 364, n. 1; i. 131, iv. 9, n. 5; i. 135, iii. 48, n. 2; ii. 70, i. 508; ii. 283, n. 1; iv. 29, n. 1; ii. 208, iii. 380, n. 1; _Imitations of Horace, Epistles_, i. vi. 3, ii. 158, n. 2; i. vi. 120, ii. 211, n. 4; i. vi. 126, iii. 386, n. 4; ii. i. 14, v. 372, n. 2; ii. i. 71, i. 118; ii. i. 75, iv. 102, n. 2; ii. i. 180, iii. 389, n. 5; ii. i. 221, ii. 132, n. 2; ii. ii. 23, iii. 237, n. 2; ii. ii. 78, v. 265, n. 1; ii. ii. 157, i. 220; ii. ii. 276, i. 127, n. 4; _Satires_, ii. i. 67, iii. 91, n. 6; ii. i. 78, iv. 318, n. 2; ii. ii. 3, i. 105, n. 1; _Universal Prayer_, iii. 346. POPE, Mrs., i. 499, n. 1. POPE, Dr. Walter, iv. 19. POPERY. See ROMAN CATHOLICS. POPULAR ELECTIONS, of the clergy, ii. 149. POPULATION, America, increase in, ii. 314; changes in density, ii. 101-2; comparative population of counties in 1756, i. 307, n. 4; emigration, how far affected by, iii. 232-3; high convenience where it is large, v. 27. PORSON, Richard, Bentley not a Scotchman, ii. 363, n. 4; described by Dr. Parr, iv. 385, n. 2; Hawkins, Sir J., ridicules, i. 224, n. 1; ii. 57, n. 5; iv. 370, n. 5; natural abilities, ii. 437, n. 2. PORT, family of, iii. 187. PORT, liquor for men, iii. 381; iv. 79. PORT ELIOT, iv. 334. PORTER, Endymion, v. 137, n. 4. PORTER, Henry (Mrs. Johnson's first husband), Birmingham mercer, i. 86; family registry of births, &c., i. 94, n. 3; insolvency, i. 95, n. 3; mentioned, iv. 77. PORTER, Captain (Henry Porter's son), i. 94, n. 3; ii. 462. PORTER, ---- (Henry Porter's son), ii. 388; iv. 89; death, iv. 256. PORTER, Sir James, iii. 402. PORTER, Mrs. (afterwards Mrs. Johnson). See under JOHNSON, Mrs. PORTER, Mrs., the actress, i. 369, 382; iv. 243; ib., n. 6. PORTER, Miss Lucy (Henry Porter's daughter and Johnson's stepdaughter), birth, i. 94, n. 3; Boswell calls on her, ii. 462; iii. 412, 414; Dodd's _Convicts Address_, reads, iii. 141, n. 2; fortune, her, and house, ii. 462; Johnson's account of her, i. 370; earlier letters to her, ii. 387, n. 3 (for his letters, See under JOHNSON, letters); feelings towards her, i. 515; ii. 462, n. 1; her feelings towards, ii. 462, 469; memory, i. 40; personal appearance, i. 94; present to her of a box, ii. 387; prologue to Kelly's comedy, disowns, iii. 114, n. 1; will, not in, iv. 402, n. 2; mother's wedding-ring, does not value her, i. 237; residence in Lichfield, i. 110, 346, n. 1, 347, 515; verses said to be addressed to her, i. 92, n. 2; mentioned, i. 103, 340, n. 1, 512; ii. 468; iii. 132, 417; iv. 374, 394. PORTER, A STREET-, Johnson drives a load off his back, iv. 71. PORTER, Johnson sends a present of, ii. 272, 275. PORTEUS, Beilby, Bishop of Chester (afterwards of London), Boswell, attentive to, iii. 413, 415; Jenyns's, Soame, conversion, i. 316, n. 2; _Life of Secker_, iv. 29; reverend fops, iv. 76; Sunday knotting, iii. 242, n. 3; mentioned, iii. 124, 279, 280. PORTLAND, third Duke of, iii. 224, n. 1; iv. 174, n. 3. See COALITION MINISTRY. PORTLAND, Dowager Duchess of, iii. 425. PORTMORE, Lord, Johnson's letter to him, iv. 268, n. 1. PORTRAITS, their chief excellence, v. 219; portrait-painting, improper for women, ii. 362; of Johnson: See under JOHNSON, portraits. PORTUGAL, iii. 23, 445. PORTUGAL PIECES, iv. 104. PORTUGUESE, discovery of the Indies, i. 455; n. 3; ii. 479; iii. 204, n. 1; iv. 12, n. 2. POSSIBILITIES, v. 46. POST, Brighton, to, iii. 92, n. 3; double letters, i. 283, n. 1; franking letters, iii. 364; iv. 361, n. 3; penny-post, i. 121, 151; postage from Lisbon, iii. 23; to Oxford, i. 283, n. 1. POST-CHAISE, driving from, or to something, iii. 5, 457; Gibbon delights in them, ii. 453, n. 1; also Johnson, ii. 453; if accompanied by a pretty woman, iii. 162; in 1758, v. 56, n. 2. POST-HORSES, charge per mile, v. 427. POSTERITY, prescribing rules to, ii. 417. POT, Mr., iv. 5, n. 1. POTT, Rev. Archdeacon, ii. 459. POTT, Mr., a surgeon, iv. 239. POTTER, Robert, translation of Aeschylus, iii. 256. POVERTY, 'All this excludes but one evil--poverty,' iii. 160; arguments for it, i. 441; a great evil, iv. 149, 152, 155, 157, 163, 351. POWELL, a clerk, iv. 223, n. 3. POWER, all power desirable, ii. 357; despotic, iii. 283; of the Crown, ii. 170. POWERSCOURT, Lord, v. 253. PRACTICE. See PRINCIPLES. PRAGUE, iii. 458. PRAISE, on compulsion, ii. 51; extravagant, iii. 225; iv. 82; value of it, iv. 32, 255, n. 2. PRATT, Chief Justice. See CAMDEN, Lord. PRAYER, arguments against it, v. 38; dead, for the, ii. 163; efficacy, its, v. 68; family prayer, v. 121; form of prayer, v. 365; Hume on Leechman's doctrine, v. 68, n. 4; Johnson designs a _Book of Prayers_, iv. 293, 376; offered a large sum for one, iv. 410; lies in prayers, iv. 295; reasoning on its nature unprofitable, ii. 178. PRAYERS, by Johnson, against inquisitive and perplexing thoughts, iv. 370, n. 3; before his last communion, iv. 416-7; before study, iii. 90; before the study of law, i. 489; Chambers, Catherine, for, ii. 43; death of his wife, on the, i. 235; _Dictionary_, on beginning vol. ii. of his, i. 255; Easter Day, 1777, iii. 99; engaging in Politicks with H----, i. 489; forgiveness for neglect of duties in married life, i. 240; January 1, 1753, i. 251; new scheme of life, i. 350; 'On my return to life,' i. 234, n. 2; _Rambler_, before the, i. 202; repentance and pardon, for, iv. 397; resolutions, on, i. 483; study of philosophy, on the, i. 302; Trinity, the, invoked, ii. 255. _Prayers and Meditations_, Johnson's, i. 235, n. 1; ii. 476; publication, iv. 376, n. 4. PREACHERS, women, i. 463. PREACHING, above the capacity of the congregation, iv. 185; plain language needed, i. 459; ii. 123. _Preceptor, The_, i. 192. PRECISENESS, iv. 89. PRECOCITY, ii. 408. PREDESTINATION, ii. 104. PREFACES, Johnson's talent for, i. 292. PREMIER, i. 295, n. 1. PREMIUM-SCHEME, i. 318. PRENDERGAST (Prendergrass), an officer, ii. 182, 183, n. 1. _Presbyterian_, in the sense of _Unitarian_, ii. 408, n. 1. PRESBYTERIANS AND PRESBYTERIANISM, compared with Church of Rome, ii. 103; differ from it chiefly in forms, ii. 150; doctrine, ii. 104; form of prayer, no, ii. 104; frightened by Popery, v. 57. PRESCIENCE, of the Deity, iii. 290. PRESCRIPTION OF MURDER. See MURDER. _Present State of England_, iv. 311. PRESENT TIME, never happy, ii. 350. PRESENT TIMES, Johnson never inveighed against them, iii. 3. PRESS, awed by parliament as regards report of debates, i. 115; iii. 459-60; iv. 140, n. 1; complete freedom obtained, i. 116; Johnson attacks its liberty, ii. 60; vindicates it, ib., n. 3; discusses it with Dr. Parr, iv. 15, n. 5; Mansfield tries to stifle it, i. 116, n. 1; law of libel, iii. 16, n. 1; licentiousness, its, i. 116; debate on it, iv. 318, n. 3; prosecutions in 1764, ii. 60, n. 3; superfoetation, its, iii. 332. PRESS-GANGS, iii. 460. PRESTBURY, v. 432, n. 2. PRESTICK, ii. 271, n. 4. PRESTON, iii. 135, n. 1. PRESTON, Sir Charles, iv. 154. PRETENDER, the Young, account of his escape, v. 187-205, 264; dresses in women's clothes, v. 188; at Kingsburgh, v. 185, 189; shoes, ib.; in Rasay, v. 174, n. 1, 190-4; fears assassination, v. 194; speaks of Culloden, ib.; returns to Sky, v. 195; pretends to be a servant, v. 195, 196-7; his odd face, v. 196; goes to Mackinnon's country, v. 197; to Knoidart, v. 199; reward offered for him, v. 186, 199, n. 1; agitating a rebellion in 1752, i. 146, n. 2; base character, his, v. 200, n. 1; Charles III, ii. 253; Derby, march to, iii. 162; designation proper for him, v. 185, n. 4; Johnson sleeps in his bed, v. 185; London, in, i. 279, n. 5; v. 196, n. 2, 201; Voltaire's reflections on him, v. 199. PRICE, Archdeacon, v. 454. PRICE, Dr. Richard account of him, iv. 434; Hume, dines with, ii. 441, n. 5; Johnson would not meet him, iv. 238, n. 1, 434; London-born children, iv. 210. PRICE, ----, a vain Welsh scholar, v. 438. _Prideauxs Connection_, iv. 311. PRIESTLEY, Dr. Joseph, Boswell attacks him, iv. 238, n. 1, 433; Parr defends him, iv. 238, n. 1, 434; discoveries in chemistry, iv. 237, n. 6, 238; Elwall's trial, account of, ii. 164, n. 5; Franklin praises his moderation, iv. 434; Gibbon and Horsley attack him, iv. 437; Heberden, Dr., a benefactor to him, iv. 228, n. 2; house burnt by rioters, iv. 238, n. 1; 'index-scholar,' iv. 407, n. 4; Johnson's estimate of his writings, iv. 407, n. 4; interview with, iv. 434; on the pronunciation of Latin, ii. 404, n. 1; Mackintosh's character of him, iv. 443; Philosophical necessity, iii. 291, n. 2; iv. 433-4; Shelburne, Lord, lives with, iv. 191, n. 4; theological works, ii. 124. PRIESTS, enemies to liberty, v. 255, n. 5. PRIME MINISTER, name and office, ii. 355; n. 2; not in Johnson's _Dictionary_, i. 295, n. 1; no real one since Walpole's time, ii. 355. PRIMROSE, Lady, v. 201. PRINCE, the bookseller, i. 291. PRINCE FREDERICK (brother of George III), v. 185, n. 1, PRINCE OF WALES, happiest of men, i. 368, n. 3; iv. 182. PRINCE OF WALES (Frederick, father of George III), generosity, shows, v. 188, n. I; Mallet's dependence on him, i. 329, n. 3; Pope's repartee to him, iv. 50; Vane, Anne, his mistress, v. 49, n. 4. PRINCE OF WALES (George III), v. 185, n. 1. PRINCE OF WALES (George IV), Boswell carries up an address to him, iv. 248, n. 2; insolence, his, iv. 270, n. 2; Johnson pleased with his knowledge of the Scriptures as a child, ii. 33, n. 3; language as a young man, his, ib.; Thurlow and Sir John Ladd, iv. 412, n. 1. PRINCESS OF WALES, Dowager, (mother of George III), presents to Lord Bute, iv. 127, n. 3. _Prince Titi_, ii. 391. _Prince Voltiger_, ii. 108. PRINCIPLE, goodness founded upon it, i. 443; things founded on no principle, v. 159. PRINCIPLES, general, must be had from books, ii. 361. PRINCIPLES and practice, i. 418, n. 3; ii. 341; iii. 282; iv. 396; v. 210, 359. PRINGLE, Sir John, Johnson could not agree with him, iii. 65; v. 376, 384; madness, on the cause of, iii. 176, n. 1; President of the Royal Society, iii. 65, n. 1; Smith's _Wealth of Nations_, ii. 430; mentioned, ii. 59, n. 3, 164; iii. 7, 15, n. 2, 247; v. 97. PRINTER'S DEVIL, iv. 99. PRINTERS, keeping their coach, ii. 226; wages of journeymen, ii. 323. PRINTING, early printed books, v. 459; effect on learning, iii. 37; people without it barbarous, ii. 170. PRIOR, Sir James, Johnson's projected _Life of Goldsmith_, iii. 100, n. 1. PRIOR, Matthew, amorous pedantry, iii. 192, n. 2; _Animula vagtila_, translation of, iii. 420, n. 2; borrowing, instances of his, iii. 396; _Chameleon_, ii. 158, n. I; _Despairing Shepherd_, ii. 78, n. 2; Goldsmith republishes two of his poems, iii. 192, n. 2; _Gualterus Danistonus ad Amicos_, translation of, iii. 119, n. 6; Hailes, Lord, censured by, iii. 192; lady's book, a, iii. 192; love verses, ii. 78; 'My noble, lovely little Peggy,' iii. 425, n. 2; _Paulo Purganti_, iii. 192; Pitcairne, translation from, v. 58. PRIOR PARK, v. 80, n. 5. PRISONS, Johnson's praise of a good keeper, iii. 433. See under LONDON, Newgate, &c. PRITCHARD, Mrs., the actress, good but affected, v. 126; _Irene_, acted, i. 197; in common life a vulgar idiot, iv. 243; mechanical player, ii. 348; mentioned, ii. 92. PRIVATE CONVERSATION, iv. 216. PRIZE-FIGHTING, v. 229. PRIZE VERSES, in the _Gent. Mag_., i. 91, n. 2, 136. PRIZES, money arising from, ii. 353, n. 4. _Probationary Odes for the Laureateship_, A Great Personage, i. 219, n. 3; Boswell ridiculed, i. 116, n. 1; and the two Wartons, ii. 41, n. 1. PROBATIONER, cause of a, ii. 171. _Probus Britannicus_, i. 141. _Procerity_, i. 308. _Prodigious_, iii. 231, n. 4, 303; v. 396, n. 3. PROFESSION, choice of one, v. 47; misfortune not to be bred to one, iii. 309, n. 1; time and mind given to one not very great, ii. 344. _Profession, The_, iii. 285, n. 2. PROFESSIONAL MAN, solemnity of manner, iv. 310. _Profitable Instructions, &c._, i. 431, n. 2. PROFUSION, iii. 195. _Progress of Discontent_, i. 283, n. 2. _Project, The_, iii. 318. _Project for the Employment of Authors_, i. 306, n. 3. _Prologue at the Opening of Drury Lane Theatre_, i. 181; ii. 69; iv. 25, 310. PRONUNCIATION, difficulty of fixing it, ii. 161; Irish, Scotch, and provincial, ii. 158-160. _Properantia_, i. 223. PROPERTY, depends on chastity, ii. 457; permanent property, ii. 340. PROPITIATION, doctrine of the, iv. 124; v. 88. _Proposals for printing Bibliotheca Harleiana_, i. 153. PROSE, English. See STYLE. PROSPERITY, vulgar, iii. 410. PROSPERO, i. 216. PROSTITUTION, severe laws needed, iii. 18. PROTESTANT ASSOCIATION, iii. 427, n. 1. PROTESTANTISM, converts to it, ii. 106. PROVIDENCE, entails not an encroachment on his dominions, ii. 420, 421; his hand seen in the breaking of a rope, v. 104; a particular providence, iv. 272, n. 4. PROVISIONS, carrying, to a man's house, v. 73. _Provoked Husband, The, or The Journey to London_, ii. 48, 50; iv. 284. PRUDENCE, '_Nullum numen,'_ &c., iv. 180. PRUSSIA, Queen of, (the mother of Frederick the Great), iv. 107, n. 1. PSALM 36, v. 444. PSALMANAZAR, George, account of him, Appendix A, iii. 443-9; arrives in London, iii. 444, 447; at Oxford, iii. 445, 449; birth, education, and wanderings, iii. 446-7; writes his _Memoirs_, iii. 445; Club in Old Street, his, iv. 187; _Complete System of Geography_, article in the, iii. 445; _Description of Formosa_, iii. 444; hypocrisy, never free from, iii. 444; 448-9; Innes, Dr., aided in his fraud by, i. 359; invention of his name, iii. 447; Johnson sought after him, iii. 314; respected him as much as a Bishop, iv. 274; _Spectator_, ridiculed in the, iii. 449. PUBLICATIONS, spurious, ii. 433. _Publick Advertiser_, i. 300; ii. 46, n. 2, 71, n. 2, 93, n. 3. PUBLIC AFFAIRS vex no man, iv. 220. See ENGLAND. PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS, ii. 169. _Public dinners_, iv. 367, n. 3. PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS, iii. 53. PUBLIC JUDGMENT. See WORLD. _Public Ledger_, iii. 113, n. 3. PUBLIC LIFE, eminent figure made in it with little superiority of mind, iv. 178. PUBLIC OVENS, ii. 215. PUBLIC SCHOOLS. See SCHOOLS. PUBLIC SPEAKING, ii. 139, 339. _Public Virtue_, iv. 20. PUBLIC WORSHIP, i. 418, n. 1; iv. 414, n. 1. PUBLISHERS. See BOOKSELLERS. _Pudding, Meditation on a_, v. 352. PUFFENDORF, corporal punishment, ii. 157; _Introduction to History_, iv. 311; not in practice as a lawyer, ii. 430. PULPIT, liberty of the, iii. 59, 91. PULSATION, effect on life, iii. 34. PULTENEY, William. See BATH, Earl of. PUNCH, bowl of, i. 334. PUNCTUATION, Lyttelton's _History of Henry II_, iii. 32, n. 5. PUNIC WAR, iii. 206, n. 1. PUNISHMENT, eternal, iii. 200; iv. 299. PUNS, 'dignifying a pun,' v. 32, n. 3. Johnson's contempt for them, ii. 241; iv. 316; Boswell's approval of them, ib.; one in _Menagiana_, ii. 241. See under BURKE and JOHNSON. PUNSTER, defined, ii. 241, n. 2. PURCELL, Thomas, ii. 343. PURGATORIANS, ii. 162. PURGATORY, ii. 104, 163. See MIDDLE STATE. PUTNEY, ii. 444. PYE, Henry James, poet laureate, i. 185, n. 1. PYM, John, member of Broadgates Hall, i. 75, n. 3; mentioned, ii. 118. PYRAMIDS of Egypt, iii. 352. PYTHAGOREAN DISCIPLINE, iii. 261.

Q.

QUACK DOCTORS, iii. 389. QUAKERS, Boswell loves their simplicity, ii. 457; Johnson liked individual Quakers, but not the sect, ii. 458; on their objection to fine clothes, iii. 188, n. 4; many a man a Quaker without knowing it, ii. 457; Pennsylvanian Quakers, vote of, iv. 212, n. 1; proselyte, a young, iii. 298; slavery, abolitionists of, ii. 478; soldiers, clothing to the, iv. 212; texts, literal interpretation of, iv. 211; tythes and persecution inseparable, v. 423; women preaching, i. 463. See under KNOWLES, Mrs. _Qualifying a wrong_, iii. 63, n. 1. _Qualitied_, iv. 174. QUALITY, women of, iii. 353. _Queen Elizabeth's Champion_, v. 241, n. 2. QUEEN'S ARMS CLUB, iv. 87. QUEEN'S HOUSE LIBRARY, ii. 33. QUEENSBERRY, family of, iii. 163. QUEENSBERRY, Duke of, Gay and the _Beggar's Opera_, ii. 368. QUEENY (Miss Thrale), iii. 422, n. 4; v. 451. _Quem Deus vult perdere, &c_., ii. 445, n. 1; iv. 181. QUESTIONING, ii. 472; iii. 57, 268. QUIN, James, Bath, praises, iii. 45, n. 1; _Beggar's Opera_, anecdote of the, ii. 368; Falstaff, his, iv. 243, n. 6; kings and January 30, v. 382, n. 2; Thomson, intimacy with, iii. 117, n. 2; vanity, his, iii. 264. QUINTILIAN, iv. 35. QUIXOTE, Don. See under CERVANTES. _Quos Deus null perdere, prius dementat_, ii. 445, n. 1; iv. 181. QUOTATION, the _parole_ of literary men, iv. 102. QUOTATIONS, untraced, iv. 181. _Quotidian_, v. 345-6.

R.

RABELAIS, Garagantua, iii. 256; surpassed by Johnson, ii. 231. _Race, The_, by Mercurius Spur, Esq., ii. 31. RACINE, 'goes round the world,' v. 311. RACKSTROW, Colonel, of the Trained Bands, iv. 319. RADCLIFFE, Charles, his execution, i. 180. RADCLIFFE, Dr., Master of Pembroke College, i. 271. RADCLIFFE, Dr. John, travelling fellowships, iv. 293. RADICALS, iii. 460. RALEIGH, Sir Walter, autograph letter, i. 227; Birch edits his smaller pieces, i. 226; execution, his, i. 180, n. 2; Johnson mentions his _Works_ in the preface to his_ Dictionary_, iii. 194, n. 2. RALPH, James, _The Champion_, i. 169, n. 2. _Rambler_, account of it, i. 201-226; contributors, i. 203, 208, n. 3; editions and sale, i. 208, 212, 255; Scotch edition, i. 210; revision of collected edition, i. 203, n. 6; publication, i. 202; sale of a sixteenth-share, ii. 208, n. 3; hastily written, i. 203; iii. 42; could be made better, iv. 309; hints for essays, i. 204-7; origin of the name, i. 202; style, i. 217; club in an Essex town incensed by it, i. 215; friend, learning one's faults from a, iv. 281, n. 1; Garrick and Prospero, i. 216; 'hard words,' i. 208, n. 3; index, iv. 325; in Italian, _Il Genio errante and Il Vagabondo_, iii. 411; Johnson's epitaph, quotation from it in, iv. 445; gives a copy to Edwards, iv. 90; opinion of it, i. 210, n. 1; thinks it 'too wordy,' iv. 5; portrait prefixed, iv. 421, n. 2; wife praises it, i. 210; ladies strangely formal, i. 223; Langton admires it, i. 247; last number, i. 226, 233; lessons taught by it, i. 213; mottoes translated, i. 210, n. 3, 211, 225; Murphy's translation from the French, i. 356; _Necessity of Cultivating Politeness_, v. 82, n. 2; quotation in Colonel Myddelton's inscription, iv. 443; Russian translation, iv. 277; Shenstone, praised by, ii. 452; suicide, supposed to recommend, iv. 150, n. 2; virtuoso, description of a, iv. 314, n. 2; v. 61, n. 5; Young's, Dr., copy, i. 214. _Rambler, Beauties of the_, i. 214. _Raniblefs Magazine_, i. 202. RAMSAY, Allan, the elder, the poet, dedication to the Countess of Eglintoune, v. 374, n. 3; _Gentle Shepherd_, ii. 220; _Highland Laddie_, v. 184, n. 1. RAMSAY, Allan, the son, the portrait-painter, death, iv. 260, n. 1, 366, n. 1; dinners at his house, iii. 331-6,382-3, 407-9; house in Harley Street, iii. 391, n. 2; Italy, visits, iii. 250; iv. 260; Johnson loves him, iii. 336; politeness, praises, iii. 331; Pope's poetry less admired than formerly, iii. 332; Select Society, founds the, v. 393, n. 4; 'There lived a young man' &c., quotes, iii. 252; mentioned, iii. 254; iv. I, n. 1. RANBY, John, _Doubts on the Abolition of the Slave Trade_, iii. 205. RANGER, the character of, ii. 50. RANK, its claims, iii. 55; Johnson's respect for it, i. 443, 447-8; morals of high people, iii. 353. RANKE, Professor, Sixtus Quintus, v. 239, n. RAPHAEL, Johnson admires his pictures, ii. 392; mentioned, i. 248, n. 3. RAPTURIST, ii. 41, n. 1. RASAY, the Macleods of, account of them, v. 165, 167; estates, v. 412, n. 2; family happiness, v. 178; league with the Macdonalds, v. 174; Johnson compliments them in his _Journey_, ii. 304; they praise him, ib. RASAY, John Macleod, Laird of, 'Macgillichallum,' v. 161, n. 2; his _carriage_, v. 162, 179, n. 2; income, v. 165, n. 2; patriarchal life, v. 167; befriends the Pretender, v. 190-5; Johnson's mistake about the chieftainship, ii. 303, 380, 382, 411; correspondence about it, v. 410-413; entertained by, ii. 305; iv. 155; v. 413, n. 1; visits him, v. 165-179, 183. RASAY, old Laird of, out in the '45, v. 174, 188, 190, 199. _Rascal_, Johnson's use of the term, iii. 1. _Rasselas_, account of its publication, i. 340-4; date of its composition and publication, i. 342, n. 2, 516; editions, first, i. 340, n, 3; fifth, ii. 208, n. 3; an American one, ii. 207; origin of the name, i. 340, n. 3; price paid for it, i. 341; translations, i. 341; ii. 208; in French by Baretti, ib., n. 2; written in the evenings of one week to pay the expenses of Johnson's mother's funeral, i. 341; Boswell's yearly reading, i. 342; iii. 133; made unhappy by it, iii. 317; _Candide_, compared with, i. 342; iii. 356; choice of life, ii. 22, n. l; civilisation, advantages of, ii. 73, n. 3; Europeans, the power of the, iv. 119; Gough Square, written in, iii. 405, n. 6; Imlac and the Great Mogul, ii. 40, n. 4; influence of places on the mind, v. 334, n. 1; Johnson reads it in 1781, iv. 119; _Lobo's Abyssinia_, partly suggested by, i. 89; Macaulay's, Dr. J., _Bibliography_, ii. 208, n. 3; marriages, late, ii. 128, n. 4; misery of life, the, iii. 317; praise to an old man, i. 339, n. 3; resolutions, ii. 113, n. 3; retirement from the world, v. 62, nn. 1 and 4; scholar, the business of a, ii. 119, n. 1; solitude of a great city, iii. 379, n. 2; sorrow, the cure for, iii. 6; spirits of the dead, i. 343; travelling in Europe, i. 340, n. 1; _Vanity of Human Wishes_, resemblance to the, i. 342. RAT, grey or Hanover, ii. 455; 'Now, Muse, let's sing of Rats,' ii. 453. RAWLINSON, Dr., iv. 161. RAY, John, British insects, ii. 248; Collection of north-country words, ii. 91; _Nomenclature_, ii. 361. RAY, Miss, iii. 383. RAYMOND, S., ii. 338, n. 2. RAYNAL, Abbé, iv. 434-5. READING, advice of an old gentleman, i. 446; art, its, iv. 207; boys should read any book they will, iii. 385; iv. 21; general amusement, iv. 217, n. 4; hard reading, i. 446; inclination to be followed, i. 428; iii. 43, 193; knowledge got by it compared with that got by conversation, ii. 361; people do not willingly read, iv. 218; reading books to the end, i. 71; ii. 226; iv. 308; reading no more than one could utter, iv. 31; snatches useful, iv. 21; Voltaire testifies to its increase in England, ii. 402, n. 1; youth the season for plying books, i. 446. See JOHNSON, reading. REBELLION, natural to men, v. 394. REBELLION OF 1745-6, Boswell's projected history of it, iii. 162; would have to be printed abroad, ib.; cruelty shown to the rebels, i. 146; effect on the _Gent_. _Mag_., i. 176, n. 2; Highlanders' wants, ii. 126; Johnson's occupation at the time, i. 176; noble attempt, iii. 162. REBELS, never friends to arts, ii. 223; successful, ii. 223. _Recollecting_, iv. 126. _Recreations and Studies of a Country Clergyman_, iv 190, n. 2. RECRUITING, iii. 399, n. 3. _Recruiting Officer_, iv. 7. RECUPERO, Signor, ii. 468, n. 1. _Red Coat_, v. 140. RED SEA, iii. 134, n. i, 455. REDRESS FOR RIDICULE, v. 295. REED, Isaac, aids Johnson in the _Lives_, iv. 37; mentioned, i. 169, n. 2; ii. 240, n. 4; iii. 201, n. 3; v. 57, n. 2. REED, John, iii. 281, n. 3. REES, Dr., ii. 203, n. 3. REFINEMENT, in education, iii. 169. _Reflections on a grave digging in Westminster Abbey_, ii. 26; v. 117, n. 4. _Reflections on the State of Portugal_, i. 306. REFORMATION, Church revenues lessened, iii. 138; freedom from bondage, iii. 60; the light of revelation obscured upon political motives, ii. 28. REFORMERS, why burnt, ii. 251. _Regale_, iii. 308, n. 2; v. 347, n. 1. REGATTA, iii. 206, n. 1. REGICIDES, ii. 370. REGISTRATION OF DEEDS, iv. 74. _Rehearsal, The_, ii. 168; iv. 320. REID, Andrew, iii. 32, n. 5. REID, Professor Thomas, meets Johnson in Glasgow, v. 369, 370; _original principles_, his, i. 471; Scotticisms corrected by Hume, ii. 72, n. 2; mentioned, ii. 53, n. 1. REIGN OF TERROR, i. 465, n. 1. REINDEER, ii. 168. RELATIONS, a man's ready friends, v. 105; in London, ii. 177. See FRIENDS, natural. RELIGION, amount of religion in the country, ii. 96; ancients not in earnest as to it, iii. 10; balancing of accounts, iv. 225; changing it, ii. 466; iii. 298; choosing one for oneself, iii. 299; College jokers its defenders, iv. 288; differences of opinion not much thought of, iv. 291; general ignorance, iii. 50; hard, made to appear, v. 316; ignorance of the first notion, iv. 216; joy in it, iii. 339; particular places for it, iv. 226; people with none, iv. 215; perversions, ii. 129; religious conversation banished, ii. 124; State, to be regulated by the, ii. 14; iv. 12; unfitness of poetry for it, iii. 358, n. 3; iv. 39. RELIGIOUS ORDERS. See MONASTERY. _Remarks on Dr. Johnson's Journey to the Hebrides_, ii. 308, n. 1. _Remarks on Johnson's Life of Milton_, i. 231, n. 2. _Remarks on the characters of the Court of Queen Anne_, iv. 333, n. 5. _Remarks on the Militia Bill_, i. 307. REMBRANDT, iii. 161. REMEDIES, prescribing, ii. 260. _Remembering_, distinguished from _recollecting_, iv. 126. _Remonstrance, The_, ii. 113. _Renegade_ defined, i. 296. RENTS, carried to a distance, iii. 177; how they should be fixed, v. 293: paid in kind, iv. 18; v. 254, n. 2. See LANDLORDS. REPENTANCE in dying, iv. 212. _Republic of Letters_, v. 80, n. 4. REPUBLICS, respect for authority wanting, ii. 153. _Republics_. See _Respublicae Elzevirianae_. REPUTATION injured by spurious publications, ii. 433. RESENTMENT, iii. 39; iv. 367. RESOLUTIONS, rarely efficacious, ii. 113, 360. RESPECT, not to be paid to an adversary, ii. 442; v. 29. _Respectable_, iii. 241, n. 2. _Respublica Hungarica_, ii. 7. _Respublicae Elzevirianae_, ii. 7, n. 2; iii. 52. REST, man never at rest, iii. 252. RESTORATION, ii. 369, 370; v. 406. RESTRAINT, need of, iii. 53. RESURRECTION OF THE BODY, iv. 93, 95. _Retirement_, ii. 133, n. 1. RETIREMENT, from the world, v. 62; its vices, ib., n. 5. RETIRING FROM BUSINESS, ii. 337; iii. 176, n. 1. RETREAT, cheap, few places left, ii. 124. _Retreat of the Ten Thousand_, iv. 32. REVELATION, attacks on it excite anger, iii. 11. _Revelation, Book of_, ii. 163. REVERENCE, for government impaired, iii. 3; general relaxation of it, iii. 262. REVIEWS AND REVIEWERS, acknowledgments to them improper, iv. 57; defiance, to be set at, v. 274; _Monthly_ and _Critical_ impartial, iii. 32; attack each other, ib., n. 2; payment for articles, iv. 214; well-written, iii. 44. See _Critical_ and _Monthly Reviews_. _Revisal of Shakespeare's Text_, i. 263, n. 3. _Revolution_, defined, i. 295, n. 1. REVOLUTION OF 1688, could not be avoided, ii. 341; iii. 3; iv. 170, 171, n. 1; _Lilliburlero_, ii. 347; reverence for government impaired by it, iii. 3; iv. 165; v. 202; writing against it got Shebbeare the pillory and a pension, ii. 112, n. 3. REVOLUTION SOCIETY, the, iv. 40. REVOLUTIONS, 'Happy revolutions,' ii. 224. REWLEY ABBEY, i. 273. REYNOLDS, Miss, Barnard's verses on Johnson, iv. 431-3; coolness with her brother, i. 486, n. 1; irresolution, her, i. 486, n. 1; Johnson's affection for her, i. 486, n. 1; bequest to her, iv. 402, n. 2; and the Cotterells, i. 246, n. 2; dress and study, i. 328, n. 1; and Garagantua, iii. 256; and Hannah More, iii. 293; iv. 341, n. 6; letters to her, i. 486, n. 1; portrait, ii. 362, n. 1; iv. 229, n. 4, 421, n. 2; miniatures, paints, i. 326; oil-painting, ib., n. 7; iv. 229, n. 4; Montagu, Mrs., paints, iii. 244; politician, no, ii. 317, n. 2; purity of mind, i. 486, n. 1; ii. 362, n. 1; mentioned, iii. 82, 215, 319-20, 390, 434. REYNOLDS, Sir Joshua, Abington's, Mrs., benefit, ii. 324; abused in a newspaper, iv. 29; Academy, influence in the, iv. 219, n. 4; amusement is the great end of all employments, ii. 234; a key to character, iv. 316; associates with men of all principles, iii. 375; Baretti's ignorance, gives an instance of, v. 121, n. 4; is a witness at his trial, ii. 97, n. 1; Barry quarrels with him, iv. 436, 438; Beattie, portrait of, v. 90, n. 1; v. 273, n. 4; books, judgments on, iii. 320; Boswell, bequest to, i. 11, n. 1; first acquaintance with, i. 417, n. 1; gives Johnson's portrait to, i. 392; letter from, iv. 259, n. 2; _Life of Johnson_, has a leaf cancelled in, ii. 2, n. 1; portrait, paints, i. 2, n. 2; visits, when ill, iii. 391; Burke's echo, ii. 222, n. 4; and Johnson on Bacon's Essays, iii. 194, n. 1; too much under, iii. 261; wit, v. 32, n. 3; Cambridge, Mr., dines with, ii. 361; Camden's, Lord, portrait, ii. 353, n. 2; _Cecilia_, iv. 223, n. 5; character drawn by Burke, i. 245, n. 3; v. 102, n. 3; colouring in conversation, iv. 183; conversation, his, i. 246; critics mostly pretenders, ii. 191, n. 1; Cumberland, dislikes, iv. 384, n. 2; 'Dear Knight of Plympton,' iv. 432; death, i. 10; delicacy as regards Pope's note on Johnson, i. 143; delicate observer of manners, ii. 109; Devonshire, visits, i. 377; dinners at his house, gathering of literary men, iii. 65, 250, 317, 337, 381;