'Mazarine (Cardinal), his behaviour to Quillet, who had Merchants of great benefit to the publick, N. 69. Mixt communion of men and fpirits in paradise, as de- Mode, on what it ought to be built, N. 6. Modefty the chief ornament of the Fair Sex, N. 6.~ Mourning, the method of it confidered, N. 64. Who the Mufick banished by Plato out of his commonwealth, N. Eighbourhoods, of whom confifting. N. 49. New-River, a project of bringing it into the playhouse, N. 5. Nicolini (Signior) his voyage on pafteboard, N. 5. His Q. Ates (Dr.) a favourite with fome Party Ladies, N. 57- Old maids generally fuperftitious, N. 7. Old Testament in a periwig, N. 58. Opera, as it is the prefent entertainment of the English Overdo, a juftice at Epping, offended at the company of Oxford fcholar, his great discovery in a coffee-house, P P. Ainter and Tailor often contribute more than the Parties Parties crept much into the converfation of the Ladies, Particles English, the honour done to them in the late Paffions, the conqueft of them a difficult task, N. 71. Pharamond, memoirs of his private life, N. 76. His Philautia, a great votary, N. 79. Philofophy, the use of it, N. 7. faid to be brought by Phyfician and Surgeon, their different employment, N. 16. Pinkettman to perfonate King Porus on an elephant, N. Players in Drury-Lane, their intended regulations, N. 36. Poets (English), reproved, N. 39, 40. their artifices, 44. Praife, the love of it implanted in us, N. 38. Profeffions, the three great ones over-burdened with Projector, a fhort defcription of one, N. 31. Punchinello, frequented more than the church, N. 14. Punning much recommended by the practice of all ages, R Q. Uality no exemption from reproof, N. 34. Ants confidered as blemishes in our English trage Rape of Proferpine, a French opera, fome particulars in it, N. 29. Reafon, inftead of governing paffion, is often fubfervient to it, N. 6. Rebus, a kind of false wit in vogue among the ancients, Royal-Exchange, the great refort to it, N. 69. SA S. Sandorius, her vegenuity. 25? Almon (Mrs.) her ingenuity, N. 28. Scholar's egg, what fo called, N. 58. Sempronia, a profeffed admirer of the French nation, N. 45Sense, some men of fense more despicable than commen beggars, N. 6. Sentry (Captain) a member of the Spectator's club, his character, N. 2. Sextus Quintus, the Pope, an inftance of his unforgiving temper, N. 23. Shadows and realities not mixed in the fame piece, N. 5. Shovel, (Sir Cloudefly) the ill contrivance of his monument in Weftminfier-Abbey, N. 26. Sidney (Sir Philip) his opinion of the fong of ChevyChace, N. 70. Sighers, a club of them in Oxford, N. 30. Their regu lations, ibid. Sign-pofts the abfurdities of many of them, N. 28. Socrates, his temper and prudence, N. 23. Solitude, an exemption from paffions the only pleafing folitude, N. 4. Sophocles, Sophocles, his conduct in his tragedy of Electra, N. 44. Sparrows bought for the ufe of the opera, N. 5. Spartan virtue acknowledged by the Athenians, N. 6. Spectator (the) his prefatory difcourfe, N. 1. His great taciturnity, ibid. His vifion of Publick Credit, 3. His entertainment at the table of an acquaintance, 7. His recommendation of his fpeculations, 10. Advertised in the Daily Courant, 12. His encounter with a lion behind the fcenes, 13. The defign of his writings, 16. No party-man, ibid. A little unhappy in the mold of his face, 17. His artifice, 19. His defire to correct impudence, 20. And refolution to march on in the caufe of virtue, 34. His vifit to a travelled Lady, 45. His fpeculations in the first principles, 46. An odd accident that befel him at Lloyd's coffee-house, ibid. His advice to our English Pindarick writers, 58. His examen of Sir Fopling Flutter, 65. Spleen, a common excufe for dulness, N. 53. Statira, in what propofed as a pattern to the Fair Sex, N. 41. 1 Superftition, the folly of it defcribed, N. 7. Sufanna, or innocence betrayed, to be exhibited by Mr. Powell, with a new pair of elders, N. 14. T. Emplar, one of the Spectator's club, his character, TEN. 2. That, his remonstrance, N. 8o. Theatre (English) the practice of it in feveral instances cenfured, N. 42, 44, 51. Thunder of great ufe on the ftage, N. 44. 5. the hours of eleven and twelve at night, N. 49. Tombs in Westminster vifited by the Spectator, N. 26. his reflection upon them, ibid. Trade, the benefit of it to Great Britain, N. 69. Tragedy; a perfect Tragedy the nobleft production of human nature, N. 39. Wherein the modern tragedy excels that of Greece and Rome, ib. Blank verse the most proper for an English tragedy, ib. The English tragedy confidered, ib.` Tragi. Tragi-Comedy, the product of the English theatre, a monftrous invention, N. 40. Travel, highly neceffary to a coquette, N. 45. The behaviour of a travelled Lady in the playhouse, ib. Truth an enemy to falfe wit, N. 63. Tryphiodorus, the great lipogrammatit of antiquity, N. 59. U. 7Enice Preferved, a tragedy founded on a wrong plot, N. 39. Uglinefs, fome fpeculations upon it, N. 32. Vifit; a vifit to a travelled Lady which the received in her bed, defcribed, N. 45. Understanding, the abuse of it, is a great evil, N. 6. Vocifer, the qualifications that make him pafs for a fine Gentleman, N. 75. W W. HO and Which, their petition to the Spectator, N. 78. Wit, the mischief of it when accompanied with vice, N. 23. very pernicious when not tempered with virtue and humanity, ib. turned into deformity by affectation, 38. Only to be valued as it is applied, 6. The hiftory of falfe 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 defcribed, 63. Women, the more powerful part of our people, N. 4. their ordinary employments, 10. Smitten with fuperficials, 15. Their ufual converfation, ib. Their ftrongest paffion, 33. Not to be confidered merely as objects of fight, ib. Woman of quality, her drefs the products of an hundred climates, N. 69. Y. Yarico, the ftory of her adventure, N. 11. The END of the FIRST VOLUME. |