The Tatler, Volume 4

iv. 104, 159, 238, 262, 283, 293, 362

Chapter 261,599 wordsPublic domain

his _Georgics_, i. 137, 336; ii. 276; iii. 27, 337; iv. 101, 106, 141 his _Eclogues_, iii. 93, 165; iv. 114, 197, 235, 298

Referred to, i. 77, 136; ii. 100; iii. 44, 234, 236, 309; iv. 220, 222, 234, 261

_Virgin Muse_, by Greenwood, iv. 296 _note_

Virginity, time of reckoning, iv. 84, 96

Virgulta, receives Delamira's fan, ii. 20 _seq._

Virtue and pleasure, a fable of, ii. 324 _seq._: effectively recommended by poetry, ii. 331 _seq._: men of, allowed to look in the "Mirror of Truth," ii. 344: the Temple of, iii. 49

Virtuoso, complaints of, iii. 152 _seq._: the whims of, iv. 110, 111: the will of a, iv. 112, 113

Visits, unseasonable, ii. 279 _seq._: the art of paying, ii. 394 _seq._

Vitry, ii. 317, 320

Vivarez, the, i. 332, 337

Voisin, M., i. 229

_Volpone; or, The Fox_, by Ben Jonson, i. 172 _note_

Volscius, Prince, in _The Rehearsal_, i. 172 _note_

Voluble, Will, a fine talker, iii. 315 _seq._

Von Hutten, Ulrich, author of _Epistles to Ortuinus_, &c., iv. 22 _note_

Vossus, his _De Poematum Cantu et Viribus Rhythmi_, i. 282 _note_

_Voyage to the Island of Cajamai_, by Dr. W. King, iv. 208 _note_

Vulgar, the truly, ii. 144 _seq._

Wadsworth, Mary, spinster, ii. 4 _note_

Wag, a tiresome, ii. 216, 217: the class, iii. 365

Wager, Admiral Charles, iii. 84 _note_, 85 _note_

Wagg, Mr., Lord Steyne's toady, iv. 74 _note_

Wagstaff, Walter, translator of Bournelle's _Annotations on the "Tatler,"_ i. 52 _note_; ii. 211 _note_

---- Humphrey (_i.e._ Swift), of the Staffs, a new and original writer, i. 81 _seq._, 89 _note_; iv. 216 _seq._, 343

---- Lepidus, his suitable discourse, ii. 215, 216

---- Mrs. Rebecca, i. 89 _note_, 130

Wagstaffs, i. 102, 103

Waldeck, Prince, i. 156

Wales, ii. 193; iv. 53

Walker, Obadiah, Master of University College, Oxford, ii. 171 _note_

---- Dr. Thomas, Headmaster of Charterhouse, ii. 331 _note_

Walking dead, the, allowed in certain places at certain times, ii. 420: resurrection of, iii. 24: referred to, ii. 318 _seq._, 352, 353, 381, 399 _seq._; iii. 21, 313

Wall, Dr., a celebrated quack, i. 215 and _note_; iv. 323

Waller, his _Instructions to a Painter_, and his _Advice to a Painter_, i. 34 _note_: his _Under a Lady's Picture_, iii. 137, 138: referred to, iii. 260 _seq._

Walloon Guards, i. 106, 120, 269

Walpole, Horatio, quoted, i. 33 _note_, 34 _note_; iv. 109 _note_: Secretary at the Hague, i. 164: referred to, ii. 182 _note_

---- Sir Robert, i. 164 _note_

Walsh, Will, critic and man of fashion, ii. 249 and _note_

Wands not of the family of the Staffs, i. 105

Wapping, i. 170; ii. 372 _note_; iii. 147, 265; iv. 154 _note_: the beauties of, iv. 291

Warren, Mrs. (Mrs. Lucy), i. 286 _note_

Wartenberg, Count, iv. 56, 57

Warton's Court, iv. 152

Warwick Street, ii. 339

---- Lane, iv. 169 _note_: the College of Physicians in, iv. 39 and _note_

Watson, James, printer, iv. 383

_Way of the World_, by Congreve, iv. 367

Wealth, iii. 54

Wealthy, Lady, ii. 87

Webb, Lieutenant-General, ii. 109, 113

Wedding, a Grecian, iii. 364

Wedlock may be a most impudent prostitution, ii. 289

_Weekly Packet, The_, iv. 376 _note_

Wenman, Viscount, an idiot, i. 325

---- Lady, his mother, i. 325

Wentworth, Peter, letters from, i. 146 _note_, 293 _note_, 297 _note_, 325 _note_, 371 _note_, 377 _note_, 386 _note_

_Papers_ quoted, i. 147 _note_, 293 _note_, 297 _note_, 323 _note_, 325 _note_, 343 _note_, 355 _note_, 371 _note_, 377 _note_, 386 _note_; ii. 5 _note_, 313 _note_; iii. 6 _note_, 55 _note_; iv. 84 _note_, 204 _note_

---- Lady, letter from, ii. 5 _note_; iii. 6 _note_, 151

---- Lady Anne, ii. 313 _note_

Wentworth, Lady Hariot, ii. 313 _note_

Wesell, General, iv. 85

West, of Chelsea, ii. 267

West Indies, i. 234 _note_; iii. 221, 277

Westminster, i. 31 _note_, 232 _note_, 371, 392; ii. 8, 12 _note_, 150, 163 _note_, 171 _note_, 180, 209; iii. 126, 162, 164; iv. 3 _note_

Westminster Abbey, monument to Mr. Twysden in, i. 4: tombs in, i. 247 and _note_: Betterton's funeral in, iii. 279 _note_ and _seq._: referred to, iii. 149

---- Hall, shop-keepers' stalls in, iii. 139 _note_: two shepherdesses in, iii. 139, 169: as a dining-room, iii. 151: referred to, iv. 176, 267, 338

---- a Prebendary of, iv. 204 _note_

Westmorland, the lovers of, ii. 236

Westphalia, Treaty of, i. 174

Wexford, Earl of, ii. 315 _note_

Wharton, Thomas, Earl of (Verono), i. 45 and _note_, 57 _note_; iii. 90

Whatdee'call, Mr., his buttons, i. 184; ii. 127

Wheat Sheaf, the, iv. 327 and _note_

_Wheel of Fortune, The; or, Nothing for a Penny_, iii. 58 _note_

Wheelbarrow, Sir Giles, knight, ii. 257 _seq._

Whetstone, George, his _English Mirror_, i. 340

"Whetters," iii. 133, 134, 147 _seq._

Whipstaff, i. 130

"Whisperer," iv. 172 and _note_

Whiston, his _Prælections Physicæ Mathematicæ sive Philosophia clarissimi Newtoni Mathematica illustrata_, i. 350 _note_

White Cross Street, i. 334

"White pots," iv. 250 and _note_

Whitaker, Admiral, i. 50

---- Sir Edward, i. 182

Whitefriars, refuge for debtors, ii. 126 _note_

Whitehall, iii. 127 and _note_, 295

---- Gardens, iii. 296 _note_

White's Chocolate-house, accounts of gallantry and pleasure from, i. 12 and _note_: costs a man 6d. a day, i. 13: referred to, i. 107, 119, 134, 138, 214, 216, 297 _note_, 300; ii. 123, 277, 297, 419

Whitestaff, i. 102, 103

Whitlocke, Sir William (Will Shoestring), i. 310 _note_, 311

Whittington, Alderman Dick, in the Chamber of Fame, ii. 208: referred to, iv. 207

Whittlestick, Lady, the virtuous, ii. 246 _seq._

_Whole Art of Life, The; or, The Introduction to Great Men_, illustrated in a pack of cards, i. 37

_Whole Duty of Man, The_, ii. 184

Why-not, Will, a questioner, i. 336 _seq._

Widows, beautiful, in the Mirror of Truth, ii. 356 _seq._

Wife, the case of a distressed, i. 167 _seq._: her virtue, like the merits of a poet, never rightly valued till after death, ii. 38

Wig, combing it, an act of gallantry, i. 310 and _note_, 311 note

Wildacre, Sir Geoffrey, iv. 281

Wildair, Tom, of the Inner Temple, his reformation, ii. 74 _seq._

---- Humphrey, the wise father of Tom W., ii. 75 _seq._

---- Sir Harry, in Farquhar's _Constant Couple_, i. 163 _note_; iii. 356; iv. 42

Wildfire, Sir Harry, i. 248

Wilks, Robert, actor, as Wildair, i. 163 _note_, 164: as Macbeth, ii. 140: his salary, ii. 164 _note_: should not imitate Betterton, iv. 42 and _note_: head of the stage, iii. 355 _seq._: as Othello, iii. 380, 384: referred to, i. 125 and _note_; iii. 282 _note_, 365

William III., i. 31 _note_, 188 _note_; ii. 272 _note_, 285, 351 _note_; iv. 3 _note_, 93 _note_, 251 _note_

---- nephew of I. B., i. 247 _seq._

---- his youth compared to that of his sister Mrs. Elizabeth, iii. 319

Willit, Sir Harry, his quarrel with his wife, ii. 213 _seq._

Will's Coffee-house, accounts of new poetry dated from, i. 12 and _note_: resort of Dryden, i. 13 _note_: costs a man 2d. a day, i. 13: referred to, i. 373; ii. 110, 277; iii. 209, 270, 275, 336; iv. 131

Winchester House, i. 349 _note_

Windmill, Andrew, Esq., ii. 257 _seq._

Wine-brewers, complaints against, iii. 92 _seq._

Winifred, a country girl, i. 375

---- daughter of a Kentish yeoman, iii. 382

Winstanley, Henry, his water theatre, ii. 181, 182 _note_

---- Hamlet, father of Henry W., i. 181 _note_

Wirtemberg, i. 44, 73

Wisdom, Walter, a new "fortune," ii. 330

Wit, a new way of, i. 107 _seq._: men of, used to be men of virtue, i. 136: a character of, i. 241 _seq._: and breeding are wholly local, ii. 56: made useful, ii. 110: defined by Dryden, ii. 92 _note_ and _seq._: a determined wit, iv. 246: bequeathed by I. B., i. 66

_Wit and Mirth_, by D'Urfey, iii. 192 _note_

Witches, satire on the belief in, i. 180, 181

Withers, General Henry, at Tournay, i. 378 _note_: Pope's Epitaph on, i. 378 _note_

Wits, the, _The Tatler_ appeals to, i. 5 _seq._: absorbed in frivolous affairs, i. 151, 152: a hospital for the decayed, i. 173 and _note_: wits to be discouraged, i. 347 _seq._: the manners of possessed, iv. 123 _seq._

Wives, beautiful, in the Mirror of Truth, ii. 356 _seq._

Woffington, Mrs., i. 110 _note_

Wolfembuttel, i. 44, 73

---- Duke of, iv. 271

Wolstenholm, Sir John, ii. 19 _note_

Woman, destroying fiend or guardian angel, iv. 40: a beautiful romantic animal, iii. 16

Wood, Anthony, his _Athenæ Oxonienses_ quoted, i. 87 _note_: his _Fasti_, iv. 169 _note_: referred to, iv. 372 _note_

---- Gen. Cornelius (Sylvius), his life and distinction, iii. 1628 _note_, 163 _note_: referred to, i. 20 and _note_; iv. 376 _note_: ? as "Martius," a brave invalid, iii. 324, 325

---- Rev. Seth, father of Gen. W., iii. 162 _note_

Wood, Walter, overseer, ii. 43 _note_

Woodby, Lady, the learned, i. 342

Woodford, a school at, iv. 196 _note_

Wooing, the extravagances of, iii. 136 _seq._

Woolfe, Sir Joseph, knight, i. 333 _seq._

Woollen Act, iii. 22

Woolsack, the sign of the, iv. 304 _note_

Wootton, Sir Henry, iv. 180

_Works and Days_, by Hesiod, ii. 326 _note_; iv. 58

_Works of the Learned_, iv. 194 _note_, 195 _note_

_World, The_, quoted, iv. 109 _note_

Wouldbe, Lady Betty, accused of painting, iv. 318, 319

Wrathful, Justice, i. 42

Wren, Sir Christopher (Nestor), ii. 24 and _note_, 25 and _note_

Writers, strange scarcity of, i. 32: their skill in transition, ii. 133, 134

Writing-masters, iv. 329 _seq._

Wroughton, Susannah, i. 325 _note_

---- Seymour, i. 325 _note_

---- Francis, i. 325 _note_

Wycherley, his _Country Wife_, i. 29 _seq_: his _Plain Dealer_, i. 243 _note_; ii. 246 _note_: his _Love in a Wood_, i. 311 _note_: on easy writers, i. 81: his definition of a coxcomb, i. 309: referred to, i. 380; ii. 334 _note_

Wynendale, victory at, ii. 113 _note_

Xenophon, conductor of Socrates, ii. 228

Xerxes, his robes, i. 346: he weeps, ii. 323

Yalden, his verses to Mackworth, ii. 84 _note_

Yes, when a young virgin should say "yes," ii. 244

Yokefellow, Bridget, question on the education of her children, iv. 282

---- Ralph, question on the education of his children, iv. 282

Young, Mrs., i. 29 _note_

---- Boorwit in Steele's _Lying Lover_, i. 219 _note_

Young Man's Coffee-house, i. 261 and _note_; iii. 276

---- Dr. Margery (_alias_ John), a kind of Amazon in physic, iv. 159 _seq._

"Young Maid's Portion, The," a song in D'Urfey's _Wit and Mirth_, iii. 192 _note_

Youth, I. B.'s kindness for, i. 247: devoted to lust, iii. 32

York Buildings, ii. 61 _note_; iii. 192 _note_, 276 _note_, 299 _note_

---- Duke of, iii. 100 _note_

Zealand, i. 20, 129

Zinzendorf, Count, i. 61, 95

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THE END OF THE FOURTH VOLUME

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Transcriber's Notes:

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