The Tatler, Volume 4

iv. 43;

Chapter 91,056 wordsPublic domain

referred to, iv. 48, 52, 72

Elmira, a faithful spouse, ii. 27 _seq._

Eloquence and graceful action, ii. 118 _seq._

Elow Oh Kaom, Iroquois Chief of River Sachem and the Ganajohhom Sachem, iii. 299 _note_, 301

Elpenor among the shades, iii. 200

Elscrikius, Dr. Johannes, Professor in Anatomy, iv. 112

Elstob, Elizabeth, author of Anglo-Saxon Grammar, ii. 104 and _note_

Elvas, i. 106, 150

Elysian Fields, i. 77, 78

Elysium, ii. 308; iii. 216, 226

Elzevir, ii. 218, 347 _note_; iii. 234, 249

Emilia, a letter from, ii. 55: a town wit not appreciated in the country, ii. 56 _seq._

Emma, Queen, ii. 104

Emmanuel College, iii. 160 _note_

Emperor, the German, i. 54 _note_, 70, 72, 95, 145, 174; iv. 148

"Empire of Beauty," an essay contemplated by I. B., i. 90 _seq._

Empty, Tom, iii. 154

_Encheiridion_ of Epictetus, ii. 145

Enfield Chase, iv. 261

England, papers published for the use of the people of, i. 11: duels in, conducted with good breeding, i 235: mixed blood in, ii. 193: referred to, iii. 335, 337

---- Sir George, on the victory at Malplaquet, ii. 113, 114

English, the, love blood in their sport, iii. 113 and _note_: character of, iv. 97 _seq._

_English Grammar_, an, by M. Maittaire, iv. 196 _note_

_English Mirror, The_, by George Whetstone, i. 340

_English Post, The_, iii. 220

_English Rudiments of Grammar for the Anglo-Saxon Tongue_, ii. 104 and _note_

Entellus, i. 257

Entertainment, articles of, under White's Chocolate-house, i. 12: means of, will never fail _The Tatler_, i. 14

Envious man, a madman, iii. 65

Envy, its cause and cure, iv. 163 _seq._

Epaminondas, ii. 223 _note_ Epicene gender, the, i. 225

---- (Mrs. Manley), her _Memoirs from the Mediterranean_, ii. 104: her _Secret Memoirs and Manners of Several Persons of Quality of both Sexes, from the New Atalantis_, and her _Memoirs of Europe towards the close of the Eighth Century_, ii. 104 _note_

Epictetus, his _Encheiridion_, ii. 145: referred to, iii. 346; iv. 363

Epicurus, iv. 21

Epistles of Phalaris, the controversy on, i. 66 _note_

_Epistolarum Obscurorum Virorum_, dedicated to Steele, iv. 21 _seq._

_Epistolary Discourse concerning the Soul's Immortality_, by Henry Dodwell, iii. 23 _note_, 375

Epitaph of Don Alonso, ii. 256

Epithets of Virgil more judicious than those of Homer, i. 57

Epsom, the waters of, i. 293: news from, i. 379 _seq._: referred to, i. 381; ii. 111

_Epsom Wells_, by Th. Shadwell, i. 70, 293 _note_

Equanimity, the virtue of, iii. 321 _seq._

Equipages, the folly of gay, iii. 156, 157, 161 _seq._

Erasmus, his _Adagia_, i. 360 _note_

Eriphyle, iii. 202

"Error," the den of, in the _Faërie Queene_, iv. 173

Esquire, the title, its uses and abuses, i. 160 _seq._; iii. 256

Essay on the Invention of Samplers, by Mrs. Arabella Manly, school-mistress, i. 41 and _note_

----, concerning the Human Understanding, by Locke, i. 328 and _note_

----, on Modern Education, by Swift, i. 12 _note_

_Essays, Divine, Moral, and Political_, iii. 407 _note_

_Essays upon several Moral Subjects_, by J. Collier, iv. 275 _note_

Essex, Earl of, i. 346

---- manners in, i. 162

---- the Hundreds of, ii. 32

---- Street, i. 161; ii. 132

Estcourt, Richard, comedian (Tom Mirrour), as Sergeant Kite in Farquhar's _Recruiting Officer_, i. 169 and _note_: anecdote of, ii. 15 _seq._: his salary, ii. 164 _note_: referred to, iii. 92 _note_; iv. 20

Este, Marquis d', ii. 34

Esteem of others the principal desire of mankind, iv. 64 _seq._

Eucrates, a man of ill-regulated benevolence, iii. 322 _seq._

Eugène, Prince, and Marlborough, compared to Cæsar and Alexander, i. 62, 63: referred to, i. 44, 51, 72, 97, 143, 155, 157, 197, 213, 214, 234, 237, 269, 290; ii. 4, 9, 108, 109; iii. 316

Eugenio, his criticism of bad plays, i. 74, 75: on pictures, iii. 355

Euphusius, too good-natured, ii. 195 _seq._

Euripides, a tragedy of, iii. 47 _seq._

Eusebius, understands familiarity, iv. 156, 157

Eustace, Francis, the terrible effects of his passion, iii. 306 _note_ and _seq._

Eutrapelus, a humourist mentioned by Horace, iii. 198

Evance, Sir Stephen, banker, i. 349 and _note_

Evander, iii. 21

Evans, i. 29

Eve, a puppet, i. 140: tempted by toad, iv. 211: as a wife, ii. 424; iii. 188, 189; iv. 116, 117, 126, 127: referred to, i. 56, 330, 381; iv. 249

Everbloom, Lady, compliment to, iv. 319

_Every Man out of his Humour_, by Ben Jonson, i. 341

_Examiner, The_, i. 7 _note_, 84 _note_, 121 _note_, 126 _note_, 184 _note_, 201 _note_, 245 _note_, 300 _note_; ii. 417 _note_; iii. 2 _note_, 71 _note_, 218 _note_, 343 _note_, 366 _note_, 395 _note_, 396 _note_, 407 _note_; iv. 13 _note_, 85 _note_, 118 _note_, 173 _note_, 187, 219 _note_, 222 _note_

Exchange, the Royal, an angel in, iii. 169: referred to, i. 65, 170 _note_, 293 _note_, 390; ii. 15 _note_, 42 _note_, 139, 156 _note_, 420; iii. 25, 120, 133, 147; iv. 132, 241, 252 _note_, 259, 300

---- the New, some account of, i. 219 and _note_: three goddesses in, iii. 139, 169: referred to, i. 170 _note_

Exchange Alley, i. 387 _note_, 390; ii. 156 _note_; iii. 178

Exchequer bills, first issue of, iv. 3 _note_

Exercise at arms, an, i. 333 _seq._

Exeter, ii. 389 _note_; iii. 401

---- College, ii. 187

Exilles, i. 174; ii. 48

Extortion, iii. 53

Fabio, beloved of Diana Doubtful, ii. 328 _seq._

"Fable of the Worlds," i. 350, 351

Fabulous histories, moral satisfaction in, iii. 17

_Faërie Queene_, iv. 7, 14, 16

Fair, Mayfair, i. 41 _note_, 42 _note_: Bartholomew, i. 42 _note_: at Southwark, i. 140 _note_

Fair sex, the, to be entertained in the _Tatler_, i. 12, 142, 143: title chosen in their honour, i. 12: usually love those who look the other way, i. 47: how to prevail with them, i. 128: outdone by a lazy fellow, i. 91, 92: skill in addressing them, i. 117 _seq._: a squire is one born for their service, i. 163: to be won by graceful ogling, i. 185 _seq._: lesson to the voluntary invalids of, i. 191-193: love a "very pretty fellow," i. 199 _seq._: _Tatler_ always courteous to, i. 218: a lady wooed through her parrot, i. 226, 227: to be "come at" only be "survivorship," i. 240: letters of gallantry to, i. 250 _seq._: to be won by flattery, i. 264, 364: their frailties due to men's admiration of coquetry, i. 271 _seq._: folly of their taking snuff, i. 285: their chief interest, in love, i. 292: do not talk scandal more than men, i. 300: their interests in charge of Mrs. Distaff, i. 305: not won by gravity, i. 251: of small importance in Shakespeare's days, i. 341 _seq._: always approve those whom their friends abuse, i. 382: their place in the front box, ii. 6 _note_: prevailed on by nonsense, ii. 77 _seq._: how far and to what age should they make beauty their first care, ii. 85 _seq._: letters finding fault with them, ii. 131 _seq._: accomplices of the "sharpers," ii. 137: being made of men and not of earth have a more delicate humanity,