19 143 No. tongue · · · · · 135 Exercise, the great benefit and necessity of bo- y talkative xercise 399 ) Expenses of Expenses, oftener proportioned to our expecta- 201 tions than possessions - - - The prevailing influence of the eye instanced mind . . . . . . . 253 FABLE of the lion and the man . . . 11 Of Jupiter and the countryman 132 Fable of Pleasure and Pain . . 183 coach - - - - - - 132 The great usefulness and antiquity of fables 512 His allusion to human life . . 219 Fadlallah, his story out of the Persian tales 578 • • • among the Persians · · · · 511 397 Fairy writing . . . . . . 419 524 The pleasures of imagination that arise from it 419 52 More difficult than any other, and why 419 The English are the best posts of this sort 410 493 Faith, the benefi . . .. The means of confirming it . . . 465 On the countess dowager of Pembroke 323 Falsehood in man a recommendation to the fair sex - : .. of it perpetral . . . . . . Falstaff, (Si John) a famous butt . . 47 Fame generally coveted . . . . 73 Difficulty of obtaining and preserving fame A follower of merit . . . . . The palace of Fame described . . 439 . 379 Familiarities indecent in society Families: the ill measures taken by great fami- 460 lies in the education of their younger sons 421 Fancy, all its images enter by the sight . 514 The character of Fancy · · · 558 558 Fashion, the force of it · · 175 Speech in Catoon eternity, translated into Latin 628 Fashions, the vanity of them wherein beneficial 478 . . . 478 The evil influence of fashion on the married state . . . . . . . 490 . Fashionable society, (a board of directors of the) proposed, with the requisite qualifica- tions of the members . . : 478 Father, the affection of one for a daughter • 449 Favours, of ladies, not to be boasted of . 611 Faults, (secret,) how to find them out . . Faustina, the empress, her notions of a pretty gentleman . . . . . . 128 Passion of fear treated - - - 25 340 Feeling not so perfect a sense as sight . 177 posterity . . . . . . 589 435 15 239 460 411 222 151 123 un 41 56 93 • 392 of delight in objects . 36 - 460 No. Rakes described . . . . . 336 Gaper, the sign of the gaper frequent in Am- please the imagination - - - . 419 Part of Kensington Garden to be most admired 477 449 Gardening, errors in it . . . . 414 ing to the fancy as those in France and 413 Italy - Observations concerning improvement both for benefit and beauty 414 75 Applied to education . . . . 455 460 | Genealogy, a letter about . . . . 612 91 | Genius, what properly a great one . . . 160 Spoiled by a marriage . - . . 437 | Georgics, (Virgil's) the beauty of their subjects 417 238 an English theatre . . . . 44 What ghosts say should be a little discoloured 412 . 576 Why we incline to believe them : · 419 - - 485 . 419 to be · · · · · · · 294 Gigglers in church reproved . . . Spectator, and some gipsies - - 130 Gladiators of Rome, what Cicero says of them 436 Gladness of heart to be moderated and restrain- ed, but not banished by virtue - · 494 speaker . . . . . . . 484 | Gloriana, the design upon her . . . 403 of both ancients and moderns in architec In what the perfection of it consists . . . -415 How to be preserved - - . - 172, 218 with it . . . . . - 408 God, the being of one the greatest of certainties 381 174 An instance of his exuberant goodness and mercy . . . . . . . A being of infinite perfections . 513 565 . 571 435 | Good-breeding, the great revolution that has happened in that article . . . 119 45 Good-humour, the necessity of it . . . 100 288 Good-nature, more agreeable in conversation than wit . . . . . . 169 The necessity of it . . . . 169 Born with us . . . . . . 68 A moral virtue . . . . . An endless source of pleasure . . . 385 Good-nature and cheerfulness the two great or. - - 490|Gospel gossips described · · · · 40 Goths, in poetry, who 107 able . . . . . . . 987 • 604 them . . . . . . . 604 uig to the fa 2 126 232 385 490 Good 458 604 No No ..'. 436 . 273 Grandmother, Sir Roger de Coverley's great, I Her letter to Shalum . 585 hasty-pudding and a white-pot . . 109 The most agreeable talent of an historian 420 mind . . . . . . . 453 | Descriptions of battles in it seldom understood 428 - 453 History, secret, an odd way of writing one . 619 death . . . . . . 101 | Hobson, (Tobias) the Cambridge carrier, the first man in England who let out hackney- horses . . . . 509 cess of it . . children . . . . . . 313 Homer: his excellence in the multitude and house - - - - - • 197 Throws his watch into the Thames . 105 . 131 . 151 . 156 His great insight into gallantry . 265 The Spectator's list of some handsome ladies 144 His dissertation on be usefulness of looking. . . 325 An argument that God has assigned us for it 600 He gives the club a brief account of his amours and disappointments · · 359 45 Hje adventure with Sukey . . . 410 friends His letters to the Sp ctator . . Extravagantly high in the fourteenth century 98 The genealogy of true honour that age . . . . . . 98 Wherein commendable cive to it than those of the understanding Hoods, coloured, a new invention 587 | Hope, passion of, treated . . . 471 150 Folly of it when misemployed on tem - . 535 590 | Instanced in the fable of Alnaschar, the Per- sian glassman - - - - Hopes and fears, necessary passions Odyssey · . :m: :ren His recommendatory letter to Claudius Nero, 465 429 garco oye .e saucien 520 40 . try t humour". . 617 616 . . 617 . 116 • • • • 584 | Reproved . . . . . . . 583 530 35 219 411 600 408 of ih age 243 447 624 18 73 student No. 1781 Where it falls short of the understanding Qualities necessary to make good ones - 607 As liable to pain as pleasure; how much of On gratitude. - - . - - 453 Imma, the daughter of Charles the Great, ber . 181 The benefits arising from a contemplation of it 210 Impudence gets the better of modesty . 2 eyes . . . . . . Definition of English, Scotch, and Irish im- I pudence ce • . . . . . . 373 of it . - - . . . . 390 . . 413 47 his examination of a scholar, who was in which he was governor · · · their stay here - - sensible spirits . . 170 Indigo, the merchant, a man of great intelligence e 136 . 171 Indiscretion, more hurtful than ill nature - 616 or imaginary, ought not to be admitted into company. - • • • • 143 316 their religion : • • . | Infirmary, one for good humour. 429, 437, 440 A farther account of it from the country 410 Ingratitude, a vice inseparable from a lustful mind . . . . . . . 491 187 them . . . . . . . 567 567 Instances in Ovid, Virgil, and Milton - 419 | Innocence, not quality, an exemption proof . • . .: 411 The several degrees of it in different animals 519 Interest, often a promoter of persecuron - 185 The way to promote our interest in the world 394 . 411 Intrepidity of a just good man taken from Ho race . . . . . . . 615 understanding . . . . . 411 well as philosophers to assist him 428, 412 to entertain the imagination - · · 414 | try Infirmary 416 Journal: a week of a deceased citizen's, pre- sented by Sir Andrew Freeport to the . . . . . . . . 420, 421 Irish-gentlemen, widow hunters - - • 561 grees, as in the survey of the earth, and the Irresolution, from whence arising . . 151 • • . 421 Irus's fear of poverty, and effects of it . 114 calamities 559 to Spec 334 No. No. The description of her country seat .. - 425 Leopold, last emperor of that name, an expert joiner - - - - . . 353 • 558 | Lesbia's letter to the Spectator, giving an ac. count how she was deluded by her lover - 14 . . - - 207 From the under-sexton of Covent-garden parish 14 one who is in a post of power and direction 479 From one who had been to see the opera of From Charles Lillie : . . . From Tho. Prone, who acted the wild boar - 67 From William Screne and Ralph Simple 187 From an actor • • • • • From Tho. Kimbow . 379 From Mary Tuesday, on the same subject From some persons to the Spectator's clergy- 115 man . . . 207 sign-posts . . . . . . 607 From the master of the show at Charing-cross 37 From a member of the Amorous Club at Oxford From a gentleman to such ladies as are pro- From the play-house thunderer 23 From the Spectator to an affected very witty 23. From a married man, with a complaint that his wife painted . . From Abraham Froth, a member of the } From a husband plagued with a gospel-gossip 405 From the Spectator, to the president and fel- 248 lows of the Ugly Club • • strollers . From a lady, complaining of a passage in the Funeral . . 249 From R. B. to the Spectator, with a proposal Indecent in any religious assembly - - 630 From a reformed starer, complaining of a peeper atinus count of a new sect of philosophers called Loungers · · · · · · From a father, complaining of the liberties : 66 353 To the Spectator, from the Ugly Cl Cambridge . . . . 469 man . . . - - . 4141 400 21 420 |