Country gentlemen, advice about spending their time 583. The strudard of it 474 Delicacy, difference between true and false delicacy 286 - 296 622 Delight and surprise, properties essential to wit Socrates's model of devotions - 207 415 483 91 21 439 508 163 - 214 The noblest buildings owing to devotion Diana's cruel sacrifices condemned by an ancientpoet 453 Dionysius, a club tyrant Disappointments in love, the most difficult to be con- quered of any other Discontent, to what often owing The first thing to be taken care of in education Gardening applied to education Eginhart, secretary to Charles the Great, his adven- A young fellow very guilty of it Discourse in conversation not to be engrossed by one 428 - 147 Embellishers, what persons so called Absolutely necesrary in a good husband - 607 Eloquence of beggars - 613 - 521 - 419 599 - 224 Distracted persons, the sight of them the most mor- Emilia, an excellent woman, her character - 302 - 421 'Distressed Mother,' a new tragedy, recommended by praise - 432 290 - 565 193 446 A character of the English by a great preacher 557 - 557 502 - 455 41 - 226 The English Tongue much adulterated Enmity, the good fruits of it 135, 148 - 165 - 399 - 201 - 19 19 19 - 133 11 A discourse on dreams 593, 597 Several extravagant ones - 597 Ephraim, the Quaker, the Spectator's fellow travel- - 132 His reproof to a recruiting officer in the same coach 132 - 132 Funnel, (Will) the toper, his character No. 569 Green-sickness, Sabina Rentfree's letter about it Futurity, the strong inclination a man has to know it 604 Grinning: a grinning prize The misery of knowing it GALLANTRY: wherein true gallantry consists No. 431 604 Grotta, verses on one - 604 Guardian of the fair-sex, the Spectator so 173 - 337 Gaper, the sign of the gaper frequent in Amsterdam Part of Kensington Garden to be most admired - 7 Gymnosophists, (Indian) the method used by them 47 477 HABITS, different, arising from different professions 197 414 44 - 144 - 144 414 Handsome people generally fantastical - 82 Hardness of heart in parents towardis their children 138 - 417 Harlot, a description of one out of the Proverbs - 15 600 45 - 181 - 410 • 98 98 - 407 Harry Terset, and his lady; their way of living The appearance of a ghost of great efficacy in an What ghosts say should be a little discoloured Not a village in England formerly without one Gifts of fortune more valued than they ought to be Gipsies: an adventure between Sir Roger, the Spec- Giving and forgiving, two different things - 44 419 419 Heads never the wiser for being bald 497 419 Health, the pleasures of the fancy more conducive - 411 - 587 - 150 - 580 - 590 - 600 600 - 447 405 - 189 436 Heaven and hell, the notions of, conformable to the 130 The notions several nations have of it 197 light of nature 494 Hebrew Idioms run into English Heavens, verses on the glory of them 110 Heirs and elder brothers spoiled in their education 123 - 139 Heraclitus, a remarkable saying of his - 139 Hermit, his saying to a lewd young fellow 381 Goat's-milk, the effect it had upon a man bred with Good-breeding, the great revolution that has hap- 179 487 - 575 - 171 - 483 40 601 513 447 250 -565 - 571 Hilpa, the Chinese antediluvian princess, her story 584 -585 Historian, in conversation, who - 136 - 119 Good-humour, the necessity of it 100 Good sense and good-nature always go together Government, what form of it the most reasonable Grandmother, Sir Roger de Coverley's great, great, Gratitude, the most pleasing exercise of the mind - 177 196 · 218 437 The most agreeable talent of an historian - 420 - 420 - 428 47 586 - 509 - 436 - 372 * 46 Homer: his excellence in the multitude and variety 273 Reproved Husbands, an ill custom among them Rules for marrying them by the Widow's club 561 Hush, (Peter) his character Hymen a revengeful deity Hymn, David's pastoral one on Providence On gratitude On the glories of heaven and earth 617 178 607 Impudence: an impudence committed by the eyes 231 373 Most proper means to avoid the imputation of it - 390 - 443 Independent minister the behaviour of one at his ex- 441 Indifference in marriage, not to be tasted by sensible 465 Indigo, the merchant, a man of great intelligence Hypocrisy, honor and justice done by it to religion 243 Indiscretion, more hurtful than ill nature The various kinds of hypocrisy To be preferred to open impiety An enemy to virtue 71 Infidelity, another term for ignorance 100 - 316 429, 437, 440 440 444 A farther account of it from the country - 416 Initial letters, the use party writers make of them 567 447 47 411 Injuries, how to be measured Idiots, in great request in most of the German courts Idleness, a great distemper Idol: coffee-house idols Idolatry, the offspring of mistaken devotion How to be allayed An exquisite torment Jest, how it should be uttered - 624 Inkle and Yarico, their story 567 - 568 316 Innocence, not quality, an exemption from reproof 34 - 211 Instinct, the power of it in brutes 73 The several degrees of it in different animals 988 - 120 - 519 - 557 171 Interest, often a promoter of persecution - 185 - 178 The way to promote our interest in the world - 394 616 Intrepidity of a just good man taken from Horace 615 487 - 495 428, 442 - 317 - 404 185 Irish gentlemen, widow hunters 411 Italian writers, florid and wordy 564 411 411 Julian, the emperor, an excellent passage out of his 634 |