135 No. Englishman, the peculiar blessing of being born 135 | Euphrates river contained in one pasin tongue Exchange, (Royal) described No 415 454 Englishmen not naturally talkative Exercise, the great benefit and necessity of bo- 116 191 Enmity, the good fruits of it 399 Expenses, oftener proportioned to our expecta- Enthusiasm, the misery of it 201 tions than possessions 191 Envy, the ill state of an envious man 19 Eyes, a dissertation on them 250 His relief 19 Abhorrence of envy a certain note of a great mind Epaminondas, his honourable death Ephesian matron, the story of her 11 Of Jupiter and the countryman 25 Ephraim, the Quaker, the Spectator's fellow 132 The antiquity of fables Fable of Pleasure and Pain 183 183 His reproof to a recruiting officer in the same And advice to him at their parting His rule for a person's behaviour under de- traction 219 355 Fairy writing 419 524 52 The pleasures of imagination that arise from it 419 419 The English are the best poets of this sort 410 493 | Faith, the benefit of it 459 of life Equestrian order of ladies 143 Falstaff, (Sir John) a famous butt 47 Its origin Equestrian ladies, who Equipages, the splendour of them in France A great temptation to the female sex 104 Divided into three different species 218 Error, his habitation described lies in the education of their younger sons 108 Family madness in pedigrees 612 Fan, the exercise of it 102 421 Essays, wherein differing from methodical dis- The daughter of Liberty 514 476 The character of Fancy Estates generally purchased by the slower parts Her calamities 558 Speech in Cato on eternity,translated into Latin 628 Evergreens of the fair sex Evremond, (St.) his endeavours to palliate the Ebulus, his character Fashions, the vanity of them wherein beneficial 478 51 478 395 213 | Fashionable society, (a board of directors of Men of fashion, who 151 A society proposed to be erected for the in- 175 A description of fashion 460 The singularity of his remarks. 49 478 Eucrate, the favourite of Pharamond 76 Father, the affection of one for a daughter Faults, (secret,) how to find them out 399 128 Euxodus and Leontine, their friendship and Fear, how necessary it is to subdue it 615 123 Passion of fear treated 471 Eugene, (Prince) the Spectator's account of him 340 Eugenius appropriates a tenth part of his in- 340 Feasts, the gluttony of modern ones 195 411 177 posterity 583 VOL. II. 56. Hamlet's reflections on looking upon Yorick's His notion of a man of wit 151 404 His boasts 151 Handsome people generally fantastical The Spectator's list of some handsome ladies Hardness of heart in parents towards their chil- Harlot, a description of one out of the Proverbs 144 His application to rich widows 311 144 15 His dissertation on the usefulness of looking- 325 600 600 His observation on the corruption of the age 352 359 410 Resolved not to marry without advice of 475 |