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Cato, an instance of his probity,

Cave of Trophonius, several people put into it to be
mended,

Censure and applause should not mislead us,
Chancery court, why erected,

Chastity, how prized by the heathens,
Cherubims, what the rabbins say they are,
Chit-chat club's letter to the Spectator,

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Christianity, the only system that can produce content,
How much above philosophy,

Cleanliness, the praise of it,

Clergymen, the vanity of some in wearing scarves,

Coach (stage), its company,
Content, how described by a Rosicrucian,

The virtue of it,

Country-gentlemen, advice to them about spending their

time,

Memoirs of the life of one,

Cowley, (Mr.) his description of heaven,.

His story of Aglaüs,
His ambition

Crazy, a man thought so by reading Milton aloud,
Critics, modern ones, some errors of theirs about plays,
Cyrus, how he tried a young lord's virtue,

D.

DISCRETION absolutely necessary in a good husband,
Distempers, difficult to change them for the better,
Divine nature our narrow conceptions of it,
Its omnipresence and omniscience,

Dreams, a discourse on them,

Several extravagant ones,
Of Trophonius's cave,
Drunkard, a character of one,

Is a monster,
Drunkenness, the ill effects of it,

What Seneca and Publius Cyrus said of it,
Dryden (Mr.) his translation of Iapis's cure of Æneas,
out of Virgil,

Of Eneas's ships being turned into goddesses,
His cock's speech to dame Partlet,
Dumb's conjurer's letter to the Spectator,

E

EDGAR (king), an amour of his,
Egotism, the vanity of it condemned,

A young fellow very guilty of it,
N 3

NO.

557

599

610

564

579

600

560

574

634

631

609

631

574

574

583

622

590

610

613

577

592

564

607

599

565

565

593, 597

597

599.

569

569

569

569

572
589

621

560

605

562

562

Egyptians

Egyptians tormented with the plague of darkness,
Eloquence of beggars,

English, a character of them by a great preacher
By the Bantam ambassador,

A distemper they are very much afflicted with,
Epistolary poetry, the two kinds of styles,
Erratum, a sad one committed in printing the bible,
Eternity, an essay upon it,

Part is to come,

Speech in Cato on it, translated into Latin,

F

FACES, every man should be pleased with his own,
Fadlallah, his story out of the Persian tales,
Family madness in pedigrees,
Fancy, her character,

Her calamities,

Favours, of ladies, not to be boasted of,
Fear, how necessary it is to subdue it

Fellow of a college, a wise saying of one about posterity,
Flattery, how grateful,

Fontenelle, his saying of the ambitious and covetous,
Freethinkers, put into Trophonius's cave,

Fritilla's dream,

Funnel (Will), the toper, his character,
Futurity, the strong inclination man has to know it,

A weakness,

The misery of knowing it,

H

HAMADRYADS, the fable of them to the honour of trees,
Happiness of souls in heaven treated of,

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An argument that God has assigned us for it,
Hearts, a vision of them,
Heaven, its glory,

NO.

615

613

557

Described by Mr. Cowley,

'The notions sevreal nations have of it,
What Dr. Tillotson says of it,

557

582

618

579

590

628

628

G

612

GENEALOGY, a letter about it,
Gladio's dream,

697

565

God, a contemplation of his omnipresence and omniscience, 565
He cannot be absent from us,
Considerations on his ubiquity,
Grotto, verses on one,
Gyges and Aglaüs, their story,

571

632

610

559

578

612

558

558

611

615

583

621

576

599.

597

569

604

604

604

589

600

600

587

580

590

600

600
Hermit,

Hermit, his saying to a lewd young fellow,
Heroism, an essay upon it,

Hilpa, the Chinese anteduluvian princess, her story,
Her letter to Shalum,

History, secret, an odd way of writing one,
Hobbe's notions debase human nature,

Humour, the two extremes,

Burlesque,
Pedantic,

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Hunting reproved,

Husbands, rules for marrying them by the Widows club,
Qualities necessary to make good ones,

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I

IAPIS'S cure of Æneas, a translation of Virgil, by Mr.
Dryden,

Idle world,

Jest, how it should be uttered,

Initial letters, the use party-writers make of them,
An instance of it,

His just distribution of them,

Justice, the Spartans famous for it,

L

Criticisms upon it,

Integrity, great care to be taken of it,

Intrepidity of a just good man taken from Horace,
John a Nokes and John a Stiles, their petition,
Irish gentlemen, widow-hunters,

Isades the Spartan, his valour,

684

Julian the emperor, an excellent passage out of his
Cæsars, relating to the imitation of the gods,
Jupiter, his first proclamation about griefs and calamities, 558
His second,

559

559

564

LADIES, not to mind party,

Laughter indecent in any religious assembly,

Lesbia's letter to the Spectator, giving an account how
she was deluded by her lover,
Letter from the Bantam ambassador to his master about

the English,

From the Dumb conjurer to the Spectator,

From the Chit-chat club,

From Oxford about his recovering his speech,

From Frank Townly,

About the Widows Club,

From Blank about his family,
About an angry husband,

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NO.

575

601

584

585

619

588

617

616

617

583

561

607

572

624

616

567

567

568

557

615

577

561

564

607

630

611

557
560

560

560

560

561

563

563
Letter

Letter from Will Warley, about military education,
From an half-pay officer about a widow,
Prom Peter Push on the same subject,
Against Quacks,

-

From the President of the Widows club,
From a man taken to be mad for reading of poetry

From Constantio Spec,
From Amanda Lovelength,

aloud,

577

A second letter about the ubiquity of the Godhead, 580
Several answered at once,

581

From Shalum the Chinese to the princess Hilpa,
before the flood,

From Hilpa to Shalum,

From John Shadow at Oxford, about reflecting
at night on the past day's actions,
About a vision of hearts,

About Planting,

From John Shadow about dreams,
Of inconsistent metaphors,

From Jeremy Lovemore, with an account of his

life,

About making love,

From Fanny Fickle,

From an aunt about her niece's idleness,

From Cleora against the ladies work,
From Lesbia, a deluded lady,
About genealogy,

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From Will Hopeless, about ambition,
From the Temple about beggars eloquence,
From Monimia to recover a lost lover,
From a country wit in the burlesque way,
From a pedant in his pedantic way on the same

subject,

About the styles of letters,
Answers to several,

About flattery,

From the love-casuist about the widow's tenure,
and the black ram,

NO.

566

566

596

602.

605

606

About the vanity of some clergymen wearing scarves, 609

From Tom Nimble, about antipathies,

609

609

611

612

613

613

613

616

From the same about love-queries,

From one who recommended himself for a news-

monger,

About the force of novelty,

About a crossed lover,
About eternity to come,

566

572

573

581

581

584

585

586

587

589

593

595

617

618

619

621

623

625

625

626

627

628
Letter

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Letter about church music,

About the Rattling Club's getting into church,
Life, eternal, what we ought to be most solicitous about,
Man's not worth his care,

Valuable only as it prepares for another,
Love-casuist, some instructions of his,
Lover, an account of the life of one,
A crossed one retires,

M

MAHOMETANS, their cleanliness,
Marcia's prayer in Cato,

Memoirs of a private country gentleman's life,
Man, the two views he is to be considered in,
An active being,

631

593

622

588

624

His ultimate end,

624

Merry part of the world amiable,

598

Messiah, the Jews' mistaken notion of his worldly grandeur, 610
Metaphors, when vicious,

595

595

566

564

562

562

630

570

An instance of it,

Military education, a letter about it,

Mischief rather to be suffered than an inconvenience,
Montagne, fond of speaking of himself,
Scaliger's saying of him,
Music, (church) recommended,
Musician, (burlesque) an account of one,

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space,
Night, a clear one described,

N

NEEDLEWORK recommended to ladies,
A letter from Cleora against it,

News, the pleasure of it,
Newton, (Sir Isaac) his noble way of considering infinite

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-

Whimsically described by William Ramsay,
No, a word of great use to women in love matters,
Novelty, the force of it,

575

591, 607

596

627

0

OBSCURITY, often more illustrious than grandeur,
Orator, what requisite to form one,

Ovid, his verses on making love at the theatre, translated
by Mr. Dryden,

How to succeed in his manner,

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No.

630

630

575

575

P

PASSIONS, the work of a philosopher to subdue them,
Instances of their power,

606

609

625

564

565

582

625

626

622

633

609

618

564
564

Patience,

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