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"His character, ib. His conversation with the Spectator,
ib. A man of ceremony, 119. Thinks the Spectator a
fanatic, 126. And fears he has killed a man, 131.

Wine, not proper to be drank by every one that can swallow,
140.

Winter-gardens, recommended and described, 477.
Wise (Mr.) the gardener, an heroic poet, 477.

Wise men and fools, the difference between them, 225.
Wit. The many artifices and modes of false wit, 220. The
mischief of it when accompanied with vice, 23. Very
pernicious when not tempered with virtue and humanity, ib.
Turned into deformity by affectation, 38. Only to be va
lued as it is applied, 6. The history of false wit, ib. Every
man would be a wit if he could, 59. The way to try a
piece of wit, 62. Mr. Locke's reflection on the difference
between wit and judgment, ib. The god of wit described,
63. May purchase riches, but is not to be purchased by
riches, 522.

Wit (false) why it sometimes pleases, 416.
judgment, 422.

Nothing without

Witchcraft generally believed by our forefathers, 419.
Wits, minor, the several species of them, 504. Wits ought
not to pretend to be rich, 509.

Wives, perverse, how to be managed, 479.

Woman a definition of woman by one of the fathers, 265.
The general depravity of the inferior part of the sex, 274.
They wholly govern domestic life, 320. The utmost of
her character, wherein contained, 342. The notion some
women have of virtue and vice, 390.

Woman of quality, her dress the products of an hundred
climates, 69.

Woman's man described, 156. His necessary qualifications, ib.
Women the more powerful part of our people, 4. Their
ordinary employments, 10. Smitten with superficials, 15.
Their usual conversation, ib. Their strongest passion, 33.
Not to be considered merely as objects of sight, ib. Have
always designs upon men, 433. Greater tyrants to their
lovers than husbands, 486. Reproved for their neglect of
dress after they are married, 506. Their wonderful influ-
ence upon the other sex, 510. (The English) excel all
other nations in beauty, 81. Signs of their improvement
under the Spectator's hand, 92. The real commendation
of a woman, what, 95, and 104. Their pains in all ages to
adorn the outsides of their heads, 98. More gay in their
nature than men, 128. Not pleased with modesty in men,
154. Their ambition, 156. Deluding women, their prac-
tices exposed, 182. Women great orators, 247. Work
necessary for women, 606.

Words, the abuse of them demonstrated in several instances,
373. The pleasures proceeding to the imagination from the
ideas raised by them, 416.

World, the present, a nursery for the next, 111. (The) con-
sidered both as useful and entertaining, 187.

World of Nature, and life, considered by the Spectator, 519.
Writer, how to perfect his imagination, 417. Who among the
ancient poets had this faculty, ib.

Writing unintelligibly, the art of it much improved, 379. The
difficulty of it to avoid censure, 568.

XENOPHON, his schools of equity, 337. His account of
Cyrus's trying the virtue of a young lord, 564.

YARICO, the story of her adventure, 11.

Yawning, a Christmas gambol, 179.

Youth, instructions to them to avoid harlots, 410.

ZEAL, intemperate, criminal, 399.

Zemroude, queen, her story out of the Persian Tales, 578.
Zoilus, the pretended critic, had a very long beard, 331.

THE END.

INDEX

TO THE

NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS.

ABRACA

BRACADABRA, iv. 136.

Academie, Galante, ii 150.

Addison, Hon. Joseph, i. 196, 206. vi. 179. ix. 206. x. 146.

Ammonius, Andreas, iv. 221.

Aquinas, Thomas, iv. 219.

Aretine, Peter, i. 199.

BARNES, Joshua, iv. 247.

Behn, Mrs. i. 333.

Bentley, Dr. Richard, iii. 171.

Bicknell, Mrs. vii. 75.

Blackmore, Sir Richard, vi. 172. ix. 148.

Bland, Dr. Provost of Eton, x. 257.

Blundell, Mr. i. 196.

Brady, Dr. Nicholas, iii. 184.

Britton Thomas, musical small coal man, x. 137.

Brown, Tom. x. 10.

Buckingham, Sheffield, duke of viii. 56.

-Villers, duke of, vi. 329.

Bullock, Gabriel, vi. 86.

Burnet, Dr. Thomas, iii. 65, 78.

Byrk's, Robert, epitaph, iii. 238.

CAMPBELL, Duncan, viii, 115.
Cantrell, Mrs. vi. 86.

Catullus, iv. 172.

Charles II. statue of, viii. 56.

Chelsea tapestry, x. 189.

Chevy-chase, ii. 53.

Child's coffee-house, i. 91.

Clavius, Christopher, v. 274.

Cleland, Colonel, i. 99.

Cleveland, John, v. 167.

Cole, Mr. of Northampton, vi. 86.

Colly-Molly-Huff, iv. 275,

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Commode, a kind of head-dress, ii. 186.
Compton, Lady Mary, v. 227

Conformity, occasional, bill against, iii. 295.
Crawley. See Crowley.

Crowley, Sir Ambrose, v. 227.

Cumberland, Mrs. x. 161.

DAINTRY, Captain, x. 20.

Dawson, Bully, i. 95.

Deering, Sir Cholmondley, ii. 123.

Deity, notes on, vi. 100.

Devonshire, William first Duke of, ii. 192.

Dogget, Thomas, iv. 201.

Dorigny, the artist, iv. 157.

Dryden, John, i 113, 241. viii. 288.

Doumove, flitch of bacon, x. 179.

ESTCOURT, Richard, i. 132. viii. 87.

Eugene, Prince, vi. 174.

Eyles's, family of, iii. 302.

FLEETWOOD, Dr. bishop of Ely, ii. 222. vii. £2.
Fontenelle's " Plurality of Worlds," ix. 29.

Flourilles, Chevalier de, iii. 107.

Fuller, Francis, ii. 262

GAZETTE, definition of, ii. 217.

Goodwin, Dr. Thomas, viii. 204.

Gore, Mr. of Tring, v. 227.

Grant, Dr. occulist, viii. 105.

Greaves's "Pyramidographia," i. 91.

Grove, Rev. Henry, viii. 389.-

HAMELEN, a town in Germany, i. 116.

Hardwicke, Earl of, vi. 298.

Henley, Anthony, viii. 203.

Hewit, Mr. ii. 29.

Hill, Aaron, i. 115.

Hirst, James, ii. 61.

Hughes, John, iv. 10.

JONATHAN's coffee-house, i. 91...

KEMPENFELT, C. 198. ix. 152.
Kit-Cat Club, i. 132.

LETI, Gregorio, x. 273.

Lewis XIV. iv. 220.

London and Wise, Gardeners, i. 116.

London and its Environs; Child's coffee-house, i. 91. Statue
of Charles II. viii. 56, Chelsea, x. 189. Jonathan's
coffee-house, s. 91. Ludgate prison, ii. 112. Mulberry
garden, iii. 178. New-Exchange, ii. 179. Pancras, vii. 321.
Rose tavern, i 91. St. James's coffee-house, i. 91. Soho
square, i. 95. Stocks market, viii. 56. Tilt yard, ii. 232.
Vauxhall, viii. 18.

Lowndes, Mr. secretary of the treasury, viii. 30.
Ludgate prison, ii. 112.

MARLBOROUGH, duke of, vi. 176.

Mather, Charles, toyman, vi. 106.

Mercurialis, Hieronymus, ii. 262.
Miller, Captain, vii. 255.
Milton, iv. 342.

Morecraft, Thomas, ii. 227.

Moreton, Mr. iv. 261.

Mulberry garden, ii. 178.

NASH, Beau, iv. 261.

Naturalization bill, iv. 37.

Neal, Edmund, alias Smith, vi. 179.
Nesbet, Rev. Mr. vi. 45.

New exchange, ii. 179.

PANCRAS, vii. 333.

Parker, or Sparkes, John, vii. 255.

Pasquin and Pasquinades, vii. 219.

Perukes. See Wigs.

Peter John's," Artificial Versifying," iv. 130.
Phalaris' Epistles, vi. 216.

Phillips, Ambrose, vi. 160.

Pix, Mrs. Mary, i. 333.

Pope, Alexander, ii. 150. iv. 283, 284. vi. 358.

Porta-Baptista della, ii. 131.

Prosper, W. i. 184.

Prosopolepsia explained, ii. 133.

Puppet shows, i. 157.

Querno, Camillo, the arch-poet, x. 220.

RADCLIFF, Dr. ii 103. viii. 87.

Ramillies wig, vì. 146.

Rawlinson, Thomas, ix. 141.

Rich, Christopher, v. 31.

Rivers, Colonel, iv 58.

Rochefoucault's "Maxims," ix. 115.
Roderick, Dr. Charles, iii. 163.
Rose tavern, i. 91.

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