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

Chapter 6

Chapter 63,634 wordsPublic domain

advised by Johnson to keep one, i. 433; Johnson pleased with it, iii. 260; helps to record a conversation, ib.; v. 307; reminded that it is kept, iii. 439; kept in quarto and octavo volumes, iv. 83; Journal of his visit to Ashbourne, iii. 208; Johnson's remark on it, iii. 209, n. 3; Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, extensive circulation, ii. 267; in spite of ridicule, iii. 190; editions and translation, ii. 267, n. 3; v. 3, n. 1; corrections made in part of first edition, v. 245, n. 2; passages omitted in the later editions, v. 148, n. 1, 381, n. 4, 387, n. 4, 388, n. 2, 415, n. 4; 'an honest chronicler as Griffith,' i. 24, n. 1; attacks on it, v. 3; Johnson's life, exact picture of a portion of, v. 279; praised by him, i. 24, n. 1; motto, iii. 190, n. 1; read in MS. by Johnson, ii. 383, n. 2; v. 58, n. 2, 226, 245, n. 2, 262, 277, 307, 360, n. 4; by Mrs. Thrale, ii. 383; v. 245, n. 2; and Malone, v. 1; task of much labour, v. 227; juxtaposition of stories and names, iii. 40, n. 3; Knight-errant, feels like a, v. 355; knowledge at the age of twenty-five, ii. 9; Laird, seen as a, iv. 164; Lancaster Assizes, at, iii. 261, n. 2; Latin corrected by Johnson, ii. 20; defended, ii. 23; talked Latin in Highland houses, v. 321; law, ignorance of, ii. 21, n. 4; v. 108, n. 2; study of it, i. 400, 427; professor of it in the imaginary college, v. 108; lawyer, unwilling to become a, i. 400, 427; lay-patron, a, ii. 246; learning, praises his own, v. 52, n. 3; _Letter to the People of Scotland on the Present State of the Nation_ (1783), iv. 258, 260-1; sent to Pitt, ib., n. 3; _Letter to the People of Scotland against diminishing the number of the Lords of Session_ (1785), Burke, Edmund, mentioned, iv. 173, n. 1; George III, i. 219, n. 3; Goldsmith and Reynolds, i. 417, n. 1; juries judges of the law, iii. 16, n. 1; Lee, 'Jack,' iii. 224, n. 1; 'Montgomerie, a true,' his wife, ii. 140, n. 1; Thurlow, Lord, iv. 179, n. 2; universal man, Boswell a very, iii. 375, n. 2; vanity, owns his, i. 12, n. 2; Whitefield, ii. 79, n. 4; Wilkes, iii. 64, n. 3; v. 339, n. 5; letters: see CORRESPONDENCE; letters, reasons for inserting his own, v. 16; Liberty and Necessity, troubled by, iv. 71; Lichfield, visits in 1776, ii. 461; shown real 'civility' there, iii. 77; visits it in 1779, iii. 411; life, reflections on, iii. 164-6; Life of Johnson, _additions_ to it, i. 10; Advertisement of it in the _Tour to the Hebrides_, v. 421; cancels, i. 520; ii. 2, n. 1; delayed by dissipation, i. 5, n. 2; Johnson approves of him as his biographer, i. 26; ii. 166, 217; iii. 196; v. 312; 'claws,' would not cut off his, i. 30, n. 4; death and character, how to describe his, iv. 399, n. 1; mode in which it is written, i. 30, n. 1; 'new kind of libel,' iv. 30, n. 2; printed by H. Baldwin: see BALDWIN; Odyssey, like the, i. 12; progress and sale, i. 9, n. 3 and 10; iv. 399, n. 1; translated, never, v. 3, n. 1; likes, a man whom everybody, iii. 362; Literary Club, a member of the, i. 478, n. 3, 481, n. 3; proposed by Johnson, ii. 235; v. 76; elected, ii. 240; Johnson's charge, ib.; how he got in, v. 76; for meetings: see CLUBS, Literary; lodgings, his London, Downing Street, i. 422; Farrar's Buildings, i. 437, 463. n. 3; Half-Moon Street, ii. 46, n. 2; 59; Old Bond Street, ii. 82; Conduit Street, ii. 166; Piccadilly, 219; Gerrard Street, iii. 51, n. 3; General Paoli's in South Audley Street, iii. 35, 324; Inner Temple Lane, chambers in, iii. 179, n. 1; London, expedition to it highly improving, ii. 311, n. 1; increased spirits there, iii. 246; Johnson consulted about a visit to it, ii. 275-7; agrees to his removing to it, iv. 351; love of it, i. 463; ii. 275; iii. 5, 176, 363; London, visits, in 1760, i. 385; 1762-3, i. 385-464; 1766, ii. 4-15; 1768, ii. 46-66; 1769, ii. 68-111; 1772, ii. 146-200; 1773, ii. 209-263; 1775, ii. 311-377; 1776, ii. 427-475, iii. 1-80; (in 1777 Boswell met Johnson in Ashbourne, iii. 135-208); 1778, iii. 222-359; 1779, spring, iii. 373-394; autumn, iii. 400-411; 1781, iv. 71-118; 1783, iv. 164-226; 1784 (sets out in March but turns back at York, iv. 265), 271-339; Lonsdale, pays court to Lord, ii. 10, n. 1; brutality, suffers from, ii. 179, n. 3; looks forward to his future worth, ii. 58, n. 3; loose life, his, ii. 46, n. 1, 47, n. 2, 58, n. 3, 170, 352, n. 1; manners, want of, ii. 475; manuscripts, his, destroyed by his executors, iii. 301, n. 1; 344, n. 1; v. 30, n. 2; marriage, approaching, ii. 68, 70, 76, 110; takes place, ii. 140; thinks of a second one, iii. 199, n. 1; masquerade, at a, ii. 205; _Matrimonial Thought_, ii. 110; melancholy: see above, Hypochondria; military life, love of, i. 400; iii. 413, n. 4; mind 'somewhat dark,' ii. 381; 'mingles vice and virtue,' ii. 246; mob, reported to have headed a, ii. 50, n. 4; Montagu, Mrs., quarrel with, iv. 64; mother-in-law, his, ii. 377, n. 1; Mountstuart, Lord, friendship with, iv. 128; music, made a fool of by, iii. 197-8; mystery, love of, iii. 225; and the mysterious, iv. 94, n. 2; Naples, at, v. 54; narrowness, troubled with a fit of, iv. 191; nature, no relish for the beauties of, i. 461; 'never left a house without leaving a wish for his return,' iii. 412; newspapers, inserted notices of himself in the, ii. 46, n. 2, 71, n. 2; noble friend, puzzled by a, iv. 209; objects on the road, not observant of, iv. 311; _Ode to Tragedy_, i. 383, n. 3; v. 51, n. 3; Oglethorpe, flattered by, ii. 59, n. 1 and 3; old-fashioned principles, v. 131; 'old-hock humour,' i. 383, n. 3; ii. 436, n. i; ostentatious, i. 465; Oxford, visits, in 1768, ii. 46; in 1776, ii. 438; in 1784, iv. 283-311; '_Paoli_ Boswell,' known as, v. l23; 'the friend of Paoli,' i. 426, n. 3; ii. 58, n. 3; 59, n. 3; attention to him, beautiful, iii. 51, n. 3; guest in London, ii. 375, n. 4; iii. 35, 51, n. 3; present of books to, ii. 61; parliament, wishes to be in, iv. 220, 267; perfection, periods fixed for arriving at his, ii. 46, n. 1; v. 337; piety, exalted in, ii. 360, n. 2; Pitt's neglect, complains of, iii. 213, n. 1; dislikes him, iii. 464; writes to him, iv. 261, n. 3; place, longing for a, i. 5, n. 2; ii. 381, n. 1; players, intimacy with, iii. 413, n. 4; plays his part admirably, iii. 413; 'all mind, iii. 415; pleasing distraction, in a, iii. 256; political speculation, owns himself unfit for, ii. 312, n. 4; portrait by Reynolds, i. 2, n. 2; _Praeses_, elected, iv. 248; preached at in Inverness chapel, v. 128; _Quare adhaesit pavimento_, iii. 261, n. 2; quotations sometimes inaccurate, i. 7, n. 1; quotes himself, v. 204, n. 1, 348, n. 4; changes words, ii. 45, n. 3; _Rasselas_, yearly reading of, i. 342; read, promises Johnson to, ii. 377, n. 1, 378, n. 1; sat up all night reading Gray, ii. 335, n. 2; reads Ovid's _Epistles_, v. 295; reserve, practises some, i. 4; ii. 84, n. 3; retaliates for attacks on Johnson made by Lord Monboddo, ii. 74, n. 2; by Foote, ii. 95, n. 2; Reynolds, introduced to, i. 417, n. 1: See REYNOLDS, Boswell; ridicule, defies, i. 33; iii. 190; right-headed, said by Baretti to be not, iii. 135, n. 2; Rousseau, wishes to see, iii. 463, n. 2; visits him, ii. 11-12, 215; sympathy with him, ii. II, n. 3; Royal Academy, Secretary for Foreign Correspondence, ii. 67, n. 1; letters of acceptance, iii: 370, n. 1, 462-4; seat reserved for him at a lecture, iii. 369, n. 2; Rudd, Mrs., acquaintance with, ii. 450, n. 1; iii. 79-80; rural beauties, little taste for, i. 461; v. 112; Scot, 'Scarce esteemed a Scot,' i. 223; Scotch accents, ii. 158, 159; Scotticisms, corrected, iii. 432, n. 2; v. 15, n. 4; criticised, 425; Scotch shoeblack, his, ii. 326; Scotland, forty years' absence from it suggested to him, iii. 26; finds it too narrow a sphere, 176; its manners disagreeable to him, ii. 381, n. 1; vulgar familiarity of its law life, iii. 179, n. 1; suffers from its rudeness, ii. 381, n. 1; Scotchman, the one cheerful, iii. 388; a Scotchman without the faults of one, iii. 347; _Scots Magazine_, contributes to the, i. 112; self-tormentor, i. 470; Seward, controversy with Miss, i. 92, n. 2; iv. 331, n. 2; Shakespeare Jubilee, ii. 68; short-hand, uses a kind of, iii. 270; his long head equal to it, iv. 166; slavery, approves of, iii. 200, 203-5, 212; Smith, Adam, opinion of, ii. 430, n. 1; praises his facility of manners, v. 19, n. 1; Socrates, does not affect to be a, ii. 25; sophist, plays the, iii. 386; spy, charge of being a, ii. 383, n. 2; St. Paul's, Easter worship in, ii. 171, 215, 275-7, 360; iii. 24, 316, 380; iv. 91; stepmother, on ill terms with his, ii. 382, n. 1; iii. 95; storm, among the Hebrides, in a, v. 281-2; studies, Johnson's advice as to his, i. 410, 457, 460, 464, 474; study, has a kind of impotency of, ii. 21, n. 4; succession, preference of male, ii. 387, n. ii, 411, n. 1, 420, n. 1; succession to the Barony of Auchinleck, ii. 413-23; superstition an enjoyment, ii. 318, n. 3; iv. 94, n. 2; dreams, i. 235, 236; iv. 379; Johnson's relief from dropsy, iv. 272: See above, MYSTERY, and below, GHOSTS, and SCOTLAND-HEBRIDES, second sight; swearing, blameless of, ii. 166, n. 1; talk, not from books, v. 378; _tanti-man, a, iv. 112; Temple, enter at the Inner: See above, English Bar; tenants, kindness to his, iv. 155, n. 1, 163; tenderness, calls for, iii. 216; _Thesis_ in Civil Law, ii. 20, 23; Thrale, Mrs., introduction to, ii. 77; her 'love' for him, ii. 145, 206, 383; attacked by her, iv. 318, n. 1; v. 245, n. 2; argument with her, iv. 72; see under, MRS. THRALE; Thurlow bows the intellectual knee to, iv. 179, n. 2; toleration, discusses, ii. 252; Tory, boasts of the name of, iii. 113, 375, n. 2; confirmed in his Toryism, iii. 392, n. 2; town, pleasure in seeing a new, iii. 163; _Travels,_ wishes to publish his, iii. 300, 301, n. 1; truthfulness: See AUTHENTICITY; 'universal man, a,' iii. 375, n. 2; 'unscottified,' ii. 242; Utrecht, goes to, i. 400, 473; vanity, avows his, i. 12; in his youth, i. 436, n. 3; variety of men and manners, sees a, ii. 352, n. 1, 378, n. 1; Voltaire, wishes to see, iii. 463, n. 2; visits him, i. 434, 435, n. 2; ii. 5; vows, love of making, ii. 20, 24: see below, WINE, vows of sobriety; Walpole, Horace, calls on, iv. 110, n. 3; who is silent in his presence, iv. 314, n. 5; Warren, Dr., attended on his death-bed by, iv. 399, n. 5; water-drinking, tries: See below, WINE; welcome where-ever he goes, iii. 414; wife, his search of a, ii. 47, n. 2, 56, n. 2, 169, n. 2; wife, his, 'a true Montgomerie,' ii. 140, n. 1; his praise of her, v. 24; bargain with her, ib. n. 3; death, i. 236, n. 1; See BOSWELL, Mrs.; will, his, iii. 400, n. 1; Williams, Miss, tea with, i. 421, 463; ii. 99; Wilkes, dines with, ii. 378, n. 1: See under Wilkes, John; Wine, bruised and robbed when drunk, i. 13, n. 3; 'intoxicated, but not drunk,' ii. 436, n. 1; intoxicated at Bishop Shipley's, iv. 88, n. 1; at Miss Monckton's, 109; in Sky on punch, v. 258; penitent, v. 259; thinks it good for health, v. 260; Johnson advises him to drink less, ii. 377, n. 1; iv. 266; 274; to drink water, iii. 169; life shortened by his indulgence, iii. 170, n. 1; lover of it, a, iii. 243, n. 4; v. 156; nerves affected by port, i. 434, iii. 381; vow of sobriety under the venerable yew, ii. 381, n. 1, 436, n. 1; to Paoli and Courtenay, ib.; water-drinking, tries, iii. 170, n. 1, 328; wits, one of a group of, ii. 324; works, list of his projected, v. 91, n. 2 (to this list should be added _An account of a projected Tour to the Isle of Man_, iii. 80); writings, early, i. 383, n. 3; York, at, in 1784, iv. 265, 267; Zelide, a Dutch lady, in love with, ii. 56, n. 2. BOSWELL, Mrs. (the author's wife), Boswell praises her as 'a true Montgomerie,' ii. 140, n. 1; a valuable wife, iii. 160, n. 1, 416; she describes him as a man led by a bear, ii. 269, n. 1; death, i. 7, n. 2, 236, n. 1; iv. 136, n. 2; health, iii. 130-1, 215, 362; iv. 155; Johnson, feelings towards, ii. 269, n. 1, 272, 275, 379, 380, 383, 387, 411, 412, 418, 420, 422, 424; iii. 86, 93, 95, 104, 105, 210, 372, 436, 442; iv. 149, 155, 226, 264; hospitality to, v. 23-4, 45, 395; invites her to his house, iii. 216, 316; letter to, iv. 157. For letters from--: See JOHNSON, Letters; sends marmalade to, iii. 105, 108, 120, 129; receives a set of _The Lives_ and _Poets,_ iii. 372, 436; Scotch accent, iii. 106; shrewd observation, her, iii. 160, n. 1; travelling, dislikes, iii. 219; mentioned, ii. 265, 416. BOSWELL, James, the author's second son, birth, iii. 366; account of him, ib. n. 1; educated at Westminster School, iii. 12; describes Malone's friendship with the Boswells, v. 1. n. 5; writes his father's dying letter, i. 14, n. 1; supplies notes to the _Life,_ i. 15. BOSWELL, Miss, ii. 378, n. 1. BOSWELL, Robert, burnt Boswell's manuscripts, iii. 301, n. 1. BOSWELL, Thomas (founder of the family), ii. 413; iv. 198; v. 379. BOSWELL, Veronica, Johnson pleased with her, v. 25; origin of her name, ib. n. 2; additional fortune promised her, 26; death, ib. n. 1; her Scotch, iii. 105; mentioned, ii. 379; iii. 86, 93, 372. BOSWELL, Sir W., i. 194, n. 2. _Boswelliana,_ variations in Boswell's anecdotes, i. 454, n. 1; ii. 450, n. 4; story about Voltaire, iii. 301, n, 1. BOSWORTH, i. 84; ii. 473; iv. 407, n. 4. BOTANICAL GARDEN, iv. 128. BOTANIST, Johnson not a, i. 377, n. 2. "BOTTOM OF GOOD SENSE," iv. 99. BOUCHIER, Governor, iv. 88. BOUFFIER. See BUFFIER. BOUFFLERS, Comtesse de, visits Johnson, ii. 118, 405; his letter to her, ib.; account of her, ib. n. 1. BOUFFLERS, Marquise de, ii. 405, n. 1. BOUHOURS, Dominic, ii. 90. _Boulter's Monument_, i. 318. BOULTON, Matthew, sells power, ii. 459; Johnson visits his works, v. 458. BOUNTY HERRING-BUSSES, v. 161. BOUNTY ON CORN. See CORN. BOUQUET, Joseph, bookseller, i. 243, BOURBON, House of, iv. 139, n. 4. BOURDALOUE, ii. 241, n. 3; v. 311. BOURDONNE, Mme. de, ii. 241, n. 3. _Bouts rimés_, ii. 336. BOWEN, Emanuel, _Complete System of Geography_, iii. 445. BOWLES, William, Johnson dines with him, iv. 1, n. 1; visits him, iv. 234-9; his wife a descendant of Cromwell, iv. 235, n. 5. BOWLES, ----, of Slains Castle, v. 106, n. 1. BOWOOD, iv. 192, n. 2. BOWYER, William, iv. 369, 437. _Box_, a tradesman's, v. 291, n. 4. BOYD, Hon. Charles, v. 97-107; 'out in the '45,' v. 99. BOYDS OF KILMARNOCK, v. 104. BOYDELL, Alderman, ii. 293, n. 2. BOYLE, family of, v. 237. See ORRERY, Earls of. BOYLE, Hon. Hamilton, (sixth Earl of Corke and Orrery), i. 257, n. 3; v. 238. BOYLE, Hon. Robert, _Martyrdom of Theodora_, i. 312; compares argument and testimony, iv. 281, n. 3. BOYSE, Samuel, account of him, iv. 407, n. 4, 441; compared with Derrick, iv. 192, n. 2. BRADLEY in Derbyshire, i. 82, 366. BRADSHAW, William, iv. 200, n. 2. BRAHMINS, admit no converts, iv. 12, n. 2; the mastiffs of mankind, iv. 88. BRAIDWOOD, Thomas, v. 399. BRAITHWAITE, Mr., iv. 278. BRAMHALL, Archbishop, ii. 104. BRAMSTON, James, i. 73, n. 3. BRANDY, the drink for heroes, iii. 381; iv. 79. BRANTOME, v. 55. 'BRAVE WE,' v. 360. _Bravery of the English Common Soldiers,_ i. 335. BRAZIL, iv. 104, n. 3; language, v. 242, n. 1. BREAD TREE, ii. 248. BREEDING, good, ii. 82; v. 82, 211, 276. BRENTFORD, iv. 186; v. 369. BRETT, Colonel, i. 174, n. 2. BRETT, Mrs., i. 166, n. 4. BRETT, Miss, i. 174, n. 2. BRETT, Rev. Dr. Thomas, the nonjuror, iv. 287. BREWERS, thwart the 'grand scheme of subordination,' i. 490. BREWING in Paris, ii. 396. See THRALE, Henry. BREWOOD, iv. 407, n. 4. BREWSE, Major, v. 123-5. BRIBERY, statutes against, ii. 339. BRIDGENORTH, v. 455. BRIDGEWATER, Duke of, v. 359, n. 2. BRIGHT, John, _Speeches_, quoted, ii. 480. BRIGHTHELMSTONE (Brighton), books burnt there as Popish, iii. 427, n. 1; Johnson describes it, iii. 92, n. 3; finds it very dull, iii. 93; does not much like it, iii. 442; stays there in 1782, iv. 159-60; other visits, iii. 452-3; Ship Tavern, iii. 423, n. 1; mentioned, iii. 45, n. 1, 397. BRILLE, iii. 458. BRISTOL, Boswell and Johnson's visit in 1776, iii. 50; bad inn, iii. 51; Burke its representative, iii. 378; Hannah More keeps a school there, iv. 341, n. 5; Newgate prison, Savage dies in it, i. 164; described by Wesley, iii. 431, n. 1; Dagge, the keeper, praised by Johnson, iii. 433, n. l; Whitefield forbidden to preach in it, ib.; St. Mary Redcliff, iii. 51. BRISTOL, first Earl of, i. 106, n. 1. BRISTOL-WELL (Clifton), iii. 45, n. 1. BRITAIN, ancient state, iii. 333. BRITAIN and Great Britain, Swift dislikes the names of, i. 129, n. 3. BRITISH MUSEUM, library, iv. 105, n. 2; papers deposited by Boswell, ii. 297, n. 2, 307, 399, n. 2; mentioned, iv. 14. _British Princes, The_, ii. 108, n. 2. BRITON, Johnson's use of the term, i. 129, n. 3; George III gloried in being born one, ib. BROADLEY, Captain, iii. 359. BROCKLESBY, Dr., account of him, iv. 176; Boswell and Johnson dine with him, iv. 273; Essex Head Club, member of the, iv. 254; generosity towards Johnson and Burke, iv. 338; Johnson's physician in 1783-4, iv. 229, n. 2, 230-1, 245, 262-4, 267, 360, 378; attends his death-bed, iv. 399; quotes Shakespeare, iv. 400; Juvenal, iv. 401; instructed by Johnson in Christianity, iv. 414,416; tells him that he cannot recover, iv. 415; bequest from him, iv. 402, n. 2. For Johnson's letters to him, See JOHNSON, LETTERS. BRODIE, Captain, i. 83, n. 4; ii. 466. BROMLEY, i. 241; ii. 258; iv. 351-2, 394. BROOKE, Henry, _Earl of Essex_, iv. 312, n. 5; _Gustavus Vasa_, i. 140; subscription raised for him, i. 141, n. 1. BROOKE, Mrs., _Siege of Sinope_, iii. 259, n. 1. BROOKS, Mrs., the actress, v. 158. BROOKS, unchanged for ages, iii. 250. _Broom's Constitutional Law_, iii. 87, n. 3. BROOME, William, iii. 427; iv. 49. _Broomstick, Life of a_, ii. 389. BROTHERS AND SISTERS, born friends, i. 324. BROWN, Dr. John, account of him, ii. 131, n. 2; _Athelstan_, ii. 131, n. 2; _Barbarossa_, ii. 131, n. 2; _Estimate_, ii. 131. BROWN, Launcelot, (_Capability_), account of him, iii. 400, n. 2; improves Blenheim park, ii. 451; anecdote of Clive, iii. 401. BROWN, Professor, of St. Andrew's, v. 64. BROWN, Rev. Robert, of Utrecht, ii. 9; iii. 288. BROWN, Tom, author of a spelling-book, i. 43. BROWN, ----, Keeper of the Advocates' Library, v. 40. BROWNE, Hawkins, iv. 272. BROWNE, Isaac Hawkins, delightful converser, ii. 339, n. 1; _De Animi Immortalitate_, v. 156; drank freely, v. 156; parodied Pope, ii. 339, n. 1; silent in Parliament, ii. 339. BROWNE, Patrick, _History of Jamaica_, i. 309. BROWNE, Sir Thomas, Anglo-Latian diction, i. 221; 'Brownism,' ib., 308; _Christian Morals_, i. 308; death, on, iii. 153, n. 1; 'do the devils lie?' iii. 293; fortitude in dying, iv. 394, n. 3; _Life by Johnson_, i. 308, 328; oblivion, on, iv. 27, n. 5; Pembroke College, member of, i. 75, n. 3. BROWNE, Mr., 'a luminary of literature,' i. 113, n. 1. _Brownism_, i. 221, 308. BRUCE, James, the traveller, ii. 333; v. 123, n. 3. BRUCE, Robert, Boswell's ancestor, v. 25, n. 2, 379, n. 3; not the lawful heir to the throne, v. 204. BRUCE, ways of spelling it, v. 123. BRUMOY, Peter, i. 345. BRUNDUSIUM, iii. 250. BRUNET, ----, ii. 394. BRUNSWICK, House of. See HANOVER, House of. BRUTES, future life, their, ii. 54; misery caused them recompensed by existence, iii. 53; not endowed with reason, ii. 248. BRUTUS, Marcus Junius, i. 389, n. 2. BRUYÈRE, La, ii. 358, n. 3; v. 378. BRYANT, Jacob, his antediluvian knowledge, v. 458, n. 5; Johnson's knowledge of Greek, v. 458, n. 5; mentioned, iv. 272; v. 303, n. 3. BRYDGES, Sir Egerton, ii. 296, n. 1; v. 384, n. 1. BRYDONE, Patrick, _Travels_, ii. 346; antimosaical remark, ii. 468; iii. 356. _Bubbled_, v. 29. n. 6. BUCCLEUGH, third Duke of, v. 142, n. 2. BUCHAN, sixth Earl of, ii. 173, 177. BUCHANAN, George, born _solo et seculo inerudito_, v. 182; _Calendae Maiae_, v. 398; _Centos_, ii. 96; Johnson's retort about him, iv. 185; learning, v. 57; poetical genius, i. 460; ii. 96; mentioned, v. 225. _Buck_, v. 184, n. 3. BUCKHURST, Lord, v. 52, n. 5. BUCKINGHAM, George Villiers, second Duke of, The Rehearsal, ii. 168, n. 2; _Zimri_, ii, 85, n. 4. BUCKINGHAM, Duchess of, iii. 239. BUCKLES, iii. 325; v. 19. BUDGELL, Eustace, calls Addison cousin, iii. 46, n. 3; Addison wrote his _Epilogue to The Distressed Mother_, i. 181, n. 4;