The Tatler, Volume 4

ii. 418

Chapter 82,332 wordsPublic domain

Crowdero in _Hudibras_, i. 377

Crowley, Sir Ambrose (Sir Arthur de Bradley), ii. 179 and _note_

Crown and Cushion, the, iii. 299 _note_

---- Coffee house, i. 293 _note_

Crowther, Colonel Thomas, i. 146 _note_ and _seq._: verses by, i. 377 _note_

Cudgels not of the family of Staffs, i. 104

Culverin (or Gun) of Wapping, i. 200, 201 and _note_

Cunning condemned, i. 8

Cupid, i. 46, 225, 395; iii. 36, 78; iv. 223, 250: a perverse, iv. 321, 322

---- a dog, iii. 39 _seq._

Curatii, i. 319

Curll, i. 15 _note_

Curtius, Quintus, quoted, i. 74; iv. 80 _seq._

Custom, force of, i. 239, 240

---- House, i. 390

Cutter, a sharper, ii. 177

Cutts, Lord, his verses quoted, i. 47 and _note_: referred to, i. vii

_Cyder_, by John Philips, iii. 23 _note_; iv. 270 _note_

Cymon, a young fellow grown sprightly, ii. 22

Cynthia, a coquette, ii. 382 _seq._

Cynthio (_i.e._ Viscount Hinchinbroke), the story of, i. 14, 15 and _note_: absorbed by passion for a lady who passed his window in a coach, i. 14, 15: the only true lover of the age, i. 47 and _note_: on love, i. 184 _seq._: a letter from his mistress, i. 186 _seq._: gives up Clarissa, his letter to Elizabeth Popham (_i.e._ Steele's to Prue), i. 286, 287: his passion for Clarissa, ii. 62 _seq._: his reflections on the story of Scipio, ii. 64: his death and epitaph, ii. 255, 256

Referred to, i. 47, 48

Cyrus the Great, i. 345, 358

Czar, the, ii. 47 and _note_, 67; iii. 336

Dacier, the critic, iii. 272; iv. 139

Dactile, Little Mr. Jasper, at work on a poem of advice to a young virgin who knits, i. 34, 35: a wit, i. 243: on ridicule, ii. 100 _seq._

_Daily Courant_, i. 36 _note_, 157 _note_, 159 and _note_, 293 _note_; ii. 42 _note_, 182 _note_, 211 _note_; iii. 220, 277 _note_, 335; iv. 150 _note_, 152 _note_, 154 _note_

Daintry, innkeeper, i. 156 _note_

Dainty, Lady, refuses to eat, ii. 201

---- Dame Winifred, her reputation, iv. 318

---- Richard, husband of Dame Winifred, iv. 318

---- of Soho, i. 302

Dale, Will, churchwarden, ii. 43 _note_

Damasippus, a victim of vanity, iii. 372

Damia, a very pretty lady, i. 278, 279

Damon, his courtship, ii. 299: lover of Clarinda, iv. 260

---- i. 300

Dampier, Will, his fat boatswain, ii. 95, 96

Danae, iv. 216 _note_

Dancing-master, a, ii. 273 _seq._

Daniel, Cromwell's mad porter, ii. 14 and _note_

---- Samuel, the historian, iii. 180; iv. 180, 181

Danish blood in England, ii. 193

Dantzic, the plague at, ii. 324 and _note_: referred to, i. 77, 236

Dapper, Tim, a very inconsiderable fellow, ii. 254

---- a, ii. 321; iii. 256

----, Parson (_i.e._ Joseph Trapp), his character, ii. 121 _seq._

Dares, i. 257

Darius, iii. 400; iv. 78, 79

Dashwell, Nehemiah, i. 162

Dassapas, Tom, his potion, i. 393

Dathan, a peddling Jew, iv. 301 _seq._

Dauphin, the, i. 144, 305; ii. 54

Dauphiné, i. 51, 94, 182, 354; ii. 48

Davenant, Sir William, his _Siege of Rhodes_, i. 172 _note_: his alterations of Shakespeare, ii. 141 _note_: his theatrical company, ii. 163 _note_: his _Rivals_, iv. 140 _note_: referred to, i. 37 _note_

---- Lady, i. 15 _note_

Davenport, Major-General Sherington, iii. 9 _note_; iv. 376 and _note_

David, iii. 391; iv. 308

Davis, Edward, ii. 179 _note_

----, Mrs. Mary, dancer, mistress of Charles II., iv. 140 _note_

Dawks, Ichabod, a news-writer, i. 158 and _note_: his _Letter_ printed to imitate handwriting, iii. 334 and _note_, 335: his character, iii. 335

_De Duello_, by Selden, i. 255 _note_

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

_De Usu Partium_, by Galen, iii. 28

Dean Street, iv. 148 _note_

Death, considerations on, iii. 350 _seq._: as treated by Swift, Addison, and Steele, iii. 351 _note_

Decius, the abandoned, i. 364, 365

Dedication, an ideal, i. 348, 349: some thoughts on, iii. 327 _seq._

Defence of the Awkward Fellows against the Smarts, &c., ii. 80

Defoe, Daniel, his _Life of Campbell_, the fortune-teller, i. 126 _note_; iii. 100 _note_: wrongly supposed author of _Memoirs of the Life and Adventures of Signor Rozelli_, i. 83 _note_: on the storm of 1703, i. 353 _note_: his _Journey through England_, i. 387 _note_: regret at Steele answering his critics, iv. 173 _note_: his _Apparition of Mrs. Veal_, iv. 316 _note_: his (?) _Groans of Great Britain_, iv. 335 _note_

Referred to, i. 31 _note_; 158 _note_, ii. 135 _note_

Delamira (Lady Jane Hamilton?) resigns her fan, ii. 20 _seq._

Deleau, Mrs., a widow, ii. 4 _note_

Delia, ii. 6; iii. 190

----, a beauty within the power of art, ii. 56

Demosthenes, ii. 94, 119, 120, 153; iii. 360; iv. 221

Denham, his _Directions to a Painter_, i. 34 and _note_

Denis's Coffee-house, iv. 252 _note_

Denmark, King of, i. 50, 51, 60, 61, 72, 76, 129, 183, 204, 213, 236, 276, 304; iii. 85 _note_

Dennis, John (Rinaldo Furioso, "Critic of the Woful Countenance"), his Essay on Operas, i. 40 _note_: his invention of stage thunder, i. 346 and _note_: his _Appius and Virginia_, i. 346 _note_: referred to, iii. 249 _note_

Dentifrice, Mrs., i. 118

D'Epingle, Madame, a doubtful character, i. 68 _seq._, 273 _note_, 278

Derision. _See_ Ridicule

Derwentwater, Earl of, iv. 140 _note_

_Description of the Morning_, by Wagstaff (_i.e._ Swift), i. 3, 82, 111; iv. 216 _note_

Desdemona, iii. 281: her character, iii. 383

D'Estain, Count, i. 73

Deucalion, preserved at the destruction of mankind, iii. 173

Devereux Court, a duel at, i. 13 _note_

Devil, the Old, at Temple Bar, ii. 215

Devillier (or Duvillier), a hairdresser, iii. 275

D'Harcourt, M., i. 88; ii. 73

_Dialogues on Medals_, by Addison, i. 152 _note_

Dialogue, a, on the present wits, i. 107 _seq._

Diana, i. 42; iii. 341; iv. 262

Dick's Coffee-house (also called Richard's), ii. 260 and _note_, 279

Dicky, a cruel boy, ii. 411, 412, 415

Dictinna, her character, i. 116 _seq._

Didapper, Mr., persists in red-heeled shoes, ii. 127

Dido, i. 57; iii. 105: the shade of, iii. 215

Diego, Don. _See_ Don Diego Dismallo

Diego, the sexton in Beaumont and Fletcher's _Spanish Curate_, iv. 199

Diet of the City considered by _Tatler_, iii. 179 _seq._: beef and mutton recommended, _ibid._: foolish custom in, iii. 181 _seq._

Dieuport assisted to introduce Italian operas to England, iii. 276 _note_

_Difference between Scandal and Admonition_, by I. B., i. 151

Dimple, Jack, a pretty fellow, i. 176, 177

---- Mrs. Winifred, betrothed to Mr. Ezekiel Boniface, ii. 374

---- Lady, iii. 273

Dioclesian, i. 346

Diogenes the Laertian, ii. 231

Diomedes, i. 59, 60

Dipple, Mrs., i. 118

_Directions to a Painter_, by Denham, i. 34 and _note_

_Directions to the Waiting-Maid_, by Swift, iv. 294 _note_

_Discourse of Free-Thinking_, iii. 115 _note_

_Discourse on Satire_, by Dryden, ii. 425 _note_

Discretion, iii. 36

Disguises of Cunning, Vanity, and Affectation stripped off, by I. B., i. 8

Dismallo, Don Diego (name afterwards given to the Earl of Nottingham), i. 184, 259, 323 and _note_

_Dispensary, The_, by Sir Samuel Garth, i. 127 _note_; ii. 208 _note_, 376

"Dissertation on Bath Waters," i. 133 _note_

Dissimulation distinguished from simulation, iv. 97 _seq._

Distaff, Mrs. Jenny, half-sister to I. B., letters from, i. 89 _seq._, 270 _seq._, 291 _seq._, 300 _seq._; iv. 256: meaning of the name, i. 104: her instructive autobiography, i. 272 _seq._: devoted to the interests of her own sex, i. 305: consulted about the Chamber of Fame, ii. 136: a husband for, ii. 188 _seq._: her lover Tranquillus, ii. 250 _seq._: as a wife, ii. 366 _seq._: should not be called madam, iii. 143: a visit from, iii. 155 _seq._: her gay equipage, iii. 156, 157

Distaff, Mrs. Jenny, referred to, i. xvi, 93 _note_, 97 _note_, 290, 313, 314 _note_, 329; ii. 247; iii. 284, 365

"Distress of the News-Writers," by Addison, i. 4

Divination, the gift of, possessed by I. B., i. 14

Divito (_i.e._ Christopher Rich), his management of the theatre, ii. 336 _note_: referred to, i. 110 and _note_

Dockwra, William, established Penny Post in London, ii. 130

Dodwell, Henry, A. M., the Nonjuror, his _Epistolary Discourse, proving that the Soul is a Principle naturally Mortal_, iii. 23 and _note_, 375

Doelittle, Mrs. Mary, her scoured petticoat, iv. 316

Dog, a fine lady's, his illness and cure, iii. 39 _seq._

Doggett, Thomas, in _Love for Love_, i. 17 _note_: managed Drury Lane with Steele, i. 17 _note_: in the _Old Bachelor_, iii. 405, 406, 407: referred to, iii. 38, 282 _note_

Dogood, Mr., his foolish story, iv. 368

Dogs (or curs), _i.e._ sharpers, ii. 125 _seq._, 142, 143, 157 _seq._, 175 _seq._: of the feminine gender, ii. 137

Doll, i. 89 _note_

Domestic news from St. James's Coffee-house, i. 13

Domitian, i. 257; iv. 236

Dompre, Lieut.-General, i. 229

Don Diego. _See_ Dismallos

---- de Miranda, in _Don Quixote_, ii. 148 _note_

---- John, iii. 400

_Don Quixote, Comical History of_, i. 36 _note_: translated by Jervas, i. 39 _note_: the barber in, i. 282: translated by Motteux, ii. 377 _note_: reflections on, iii. 331 _seq._: said to destroy spirit of gallantry, iv. 126: referred to, i. 239, 258; ii. 148

_Don Quixote_, by D'Urfey, i. 36 _note_; iv. 102 _note_

Donauwerth, battle of, i. 20 _note_

Donne, his _Sermons_, iv. 342 _note_

Dorchester, the coach to, iii. 158

_Dorinda and Sylvia_, dialogue between, by Mrs. Singer, i. 92 and _note_

Dorinda (in _Spectator_), i. 216 _note_: referred to, iv. 25 and _note_

Dorset, Earl of, i. 112 and _note_: a dedication to, iv. 102 _note_

Dorset Gardens, comedians at, i. 36 _note_, 37 _note_: Theatre Royal in, iii. 58 _note_: referred to, ii. 163 _note_

Douay, i. 19 _note_, 174, 205, 269, 339; iii. 245, 316 and _note_, 321, 333 _note_, 379

Double, Peter, indicted for discourtesy, iv. 348, 349

_Double Gallant, The; or, The Sick Lady's Cure_, by Cibber, ii. 201 and _note_; iv. 262

Doubt, Mr. Nicholas, of the Inner Temple, ii. 257 _seq._, 290

Doubtful, Diana, her distresses, ii. 328 _seq._: I. B.'s cure, ii. 329 _seq._

Dover, Henry Lord, i. 41 _note_

Dover Cliff, in Shakespeare's _King Lear_, iii. 20

Downes, the prompter, an Epistle from, i. 4; iii. 343 _note_, 408 _seq._: his _Roscius Anglicanus; or, Historical Review of the Stage_, iii. 408 _note_: (? J. Osborne, Duke of Leeds), iii. 407 _note_

Dozers, the, their character, iv. 61 _seq._

Drachm, the learned Dr., i. 383

Dragon, of Wantley, the, i. 239 _note_

---- a kind of cane, iii. 154 and _note_

Drake, Sir Francis, iv. 266

Drawcansir, in _The Rehearsal_, i. 157 _note_

Dresden, i. 50, 51, 183, 204, 213, 276

Dress, simplicity in, recommended, i. 8: extravagance in, condemned, i. 253, 254: in house, rules for, iv. 93 _seq._

Driden, John, of Chesterton, Dryden's Epistle to, ii. 166 and _note_

Drinking, the vice of the country, iii. 289 _seq._: the habit of, iv. 229 _seq._, 278 _seq._

Dromio, a sharper, ii. 51

_Drummer, The_, dedicated to Congreve, i. 155 _note_, 292 _note_; iii. 227 _note_: referred to, i. 158 _note_

Drumstick, Dorothy, iii. 143, 144

Drury Lane, under Steele and Doggett, i. 17 _note_: closed, i. 250 and _note_: sale of its goods and movables, i. 344 _seq._, 358: its monopoly broken, ii. 334 _note_

Referred to, i. 24 _note_, 36 _note_, 42 _note_, 110 _note_, 188 _note_, 373; ii. 336, 420; iii. 276 _note_

Drybones, Tom, a very pretty fellow, i. 201

Dryden, John, at Will's, i. 13 _note_: his _state of Innocence and Fall of Man_ compared to _Paradise Lost_, i. 55, 56: referred to, ii. 92 _note_: as Bayes in _The Rehearsal_, i. 63 _note_: his _Miscellany Poems_, i. 92 and _note_: his _All for Love_, i. 93 and _note_: his _Almanzor and Almahide_, i. 114, 115 and _note_: translation of Helen's Epistle to Paris (Ovid), i. 117 _note_: on a critic, i. 242: his _Of Heroic Plays_, i. 367 _note_: his _The Kind Keeper_, i. 396 _note_: on Duke of Buckingham, ii. 16 and _note_: his definition of art, ii. 92 _note_ and _seq._: note on Bishop Burnet, ii. 154 _note_: his Epistle to John Driden of Chesterton, ii. 166 and _note_: his _Discourse on Satire_, ii. 424 _note_, 425 _note_: his _Translation of Virgil_ recommended, iii. 217: his _Hind and Panther_ parodied by Prior and Montague, iv. 3 _note_: his _Translation of Juvenal_, iv. 136 _note_

Referred to, i. 7 _note_, 18, 303 _note_; ii. 249 _note_, 334 _note_; iv. 226

Dublin, theatre at, i. 33 _note_: referred to, iv. 208, 209

Duck Island, Governor of, ii. 413 _note_

Duel over meaning of a Greek word, i. 13 _note_

Duelling, to be extirpated with gaming, i. 5: prompted by a false sense of honour, i. 6: the folly of, i. 207 _seq._: the spirit of, i. 220 _seq._: a subtle question on, i. 230 _seq._: thoughts on, i. 231 _seq._: effect on men of the city, i. 233 _seq._: survival of knight-errantry, i. 239: kept up by force of custom, i. 239, 240: history of, i. 254 _seq._: not known in countries of the South or East, i. 255: a place for, i. 258 and _note_: a bloodless duel, i. 307, 308: a dialogue on, i. 318 _seq._: duellists not men of honour, iii. 256: opposed, iv. 59 _note_

Duke (now Sardinia) Street, iii. 410 _note_

Duke of Marlborough's Head in Fleet Street, iii. 82 _note_, 83 _note_

Duke's company, the, ii. 163 _note_; iii. 408 _note_

Dull, the art of being, iv. 193 _seq._

Dulwich Hospital founded by the actor Alleyn, i. 172 _note_

_Dunciad, The_, i. 346 _note_; ii. 261 _note_

Dunkirk, i. 20, 173, 206, 362; iii. 336

Dunton quoted, iii. 332 _note_

D'Urfey, Tom, his character, i. 18, 19 and _note_: his _Modern Prophets_, i. 18 _note_, 42 _note_, 100 _note_, 348 and _note_: his _Wit and Mirth_, a song in, called "The Young Maid's Portion," iii. 192 _note_: his _The Old Mode and the New; or, Country Miss with her Furbelow_, iii. 196 _note_: that "ancient lyric," iv. 102 and _note_: his "Second Part of Don Quixote," i. 36 _note_; iv. 102 _note_

Quoted, iii. 66

Durham Street, i. 219 _note_

---- Yard, i. 219; iv. 379

Dursley, James, Viscount, i. 137 and _note_

Dutch, character of the, iii. 82: mails, iii. 218: nightingales (_i.e._ frogs), iv. 207

Duumvir (_i.e._ Duke of Ormond?), ii. 35 _note_ and _seq._

Duvillier, _i.e._ a full-bottomed wig, i. 238 and _note_, 239

D'Uzeda, Duke, i. 71

Dyctinna, a country beauty, iv. 262, 263

Dyer's _Letter_, i. 158 and _note_; ii. 261; iv. 103

Eachard, Dr. John, his _Contempt of the Clergy and Religion Inquired into_, ii. 143 _note_: referred to, iv. 294 _note_

_Earl of Essex_, a play by John Banks, i. 125 and _note_

Earl's Court, iii. 302

Early hours, in praise of, iv. 336 _note_ and _seq._

East India Company founded, iv. 3 _note_

---- Indies, iii; 154 iv. 204 _note_

Easy, Dick (? Henry Cromwell), his ambition to be a poet, i. 380 _note_; iii. 263

---- Lady, her visiting on the wrong days, ii. 397

---- Sir Charles, in _Careless Husband_, iii. 357 _note_

Eaters, the, distinguished from swallowers, iv. 61

Eaton Square, i. 280 _note_

Ebenezer, an ill-used lover, iv. 365 _seq._

Eboracensis (_i.e._ Robert Hunter), a wise governor, ii. 145 _seq._

Ecclesiastical thermometer, iv. 128 _seq._

Edgeworth, Miss, her _Castle Rackrent_, iv. 261 _note_

Edgworth, Colonel Ambrose, a dandy, iv. 254 and _note_

Edinburgh, fops in, iii. 165: referred to, iv. 260, 382, 383

---- reprint of _Tatler_, iv. 382

Editions, beautiful, dying out, ii. 351

Edward, Prince, ii. 285

---- IV., his sons, ii. 285

Egerton, his _Memoirs of Gamesters_, ii. 14 _note_, 178 _note_

Eitherside, Bridget, a letter from, ii. 147

Elector, the, ii. 73

---- Palatine, i. 183

Electuary, an, iv. 150 and _note_, 353 and _note_

Eleonora would conceal her grey hairs, ii. 131

Elizabeth, Queen, a speech by, quoted, ii. 180; her maids of honour allowed three rumps of beef at breakfast, iii. 180

Referred to, iii. 149; iv. 103, 180, 266, 267, 305

----, Mrs., her youth, iii. 319

Elliot, Mr., of St. James's Coffee-house, scheme to keep the lottery,