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adds disgust to an unpleasing subject,' 346;
support of striking images needed, i. 237,
319; Thomson's Seasons, would have been
embarrassed by rhyme, iii. 299; unsuited to
English language, i. 192; 'verse only to the
eye,' 193; Voltaire remarks, 192 n. 8;
Young's Night Thoughts, rhyme not suited
for, iii. 395.

BLENHEIM, 'called forth all the verse-men,'
ii. 186.

BLOIS, ii. 85.

BLOUNT, Lister, of Mapledurham, father of
Martha and Teresa, iii. 274.

BLOUNT, Mr., of Twickenham, Broome's
payment for Odyssey, iii. 78 n. 4.

BLOUNT, Mr., Garth, carried the Father to,
ii. 63 n. 2; Pope, a Whig, iii. 140 n. 5.

BLOUNT, Martha, Allens, quarrel with the,
iii. 190 n. 3, 195; birth, &c., 274; Boling-
broke's rudeness, 190; death, 275; Gay's
lines on her, 274; manner and conversation,
275; personal appearance, 274, 275; Pope,
becomes acquainted with, 185 m. 7; P.'s be-
quest, 190 n. 4, 195; P.'s Characters of
Women addressed to her, 175, 274; P.,
coming in cheered, 190 n. 3; P., influence
over, 195; P.'s last illness, 190; P.'s letters
to her, 274; P., relations with, 190, 274;
Swift's Letter to a Lady on her marriage,
42 n. 5; Warburton's spite to her, 175 n. 2.
BLOUNT, Teresa, Pope, acquaintance with,
iii. 185 n. 7; P.'s letters to her, 274; personal
appearance, 274; wit, 275.

BOARD OF TRADE, literary associations, ii.
184 n. 5.

BOCCACCIO, Homer, composed prose version
for Petrarch, iii. 317 n. a; regretted his
writings, i. 290 n. 6.
BOCCALINI, ii. 160.

BOCHART, Samuel, i. 229, 230.
Boddice, iii. 197.

BOERHAAVE, Dr. Herman, ii. 334 n. 2,
433 n. 4.

BOIARDO, i. 454.

BOILEAU, Addison's Latin poems, ii. 82;
A., meeting with, i. 471 n. 4, ii. 82 n. 6;
Aristotle and Corneille, i. 471 n. 4; celestial
interposition, 385; couplets, 443 n. 8, iii.
250 n. 4; declamations round medals, 260
n. 2; Epitre à mes vers, and Pope's Prol. to
the Satires, 177; Equivoque, i. 388; great
burlesque, i. 323 n. 3; gunpowder, 430; in-
scriptions on Lewis XIV's 'Victories,' ii. 184;
La Bruyère's Caractères, 93; levity on sacred
subject, i. 404 n. 3; Le Lutrin and Rape
of the Lock, iii. 234; model to Pope and
Johnson, i. 224 n. 1; modern Latin poetry,
contempt for, ii. 82, iii. 182; Molière's
burial, ii. 220 n. 1; morality, nothing to
shock, iii. 301 n. 3; mourir par métaphore,'
ii. 315 n. 5; mysteries of religion and verse,
i. 182 n. 1; Ode sur la prise de Namur,
Pope refers to it, 289 n. 6; Prior's burlesque,

ii. 203;
petty lie to Louis XIV, 213;
'qu'on me lise, non pas me loue,' 214 #. 2;
rhyme, i. 200; à rien faire or à ne rien
faire, 225; Rochester's favourite author, 221;
Roscommon borrows from him, 237; Satire
sur les Femmes and Pope's Characters of
Women, iii. 245; Satire sur l'Homme and
Rochester's Satire against man, i. 226;
translations, iii. 237 n. 45 quotations,
L'Art poétique, i. 6 n. 7, 182 n. 1, 443 n. 8;
Epitres, 404 n. 3, ii. 220 n. 1; Satires, i.
200, 225 n. 2, ii. 315 n. 5.

Bois, Mr., i. 17.

BOLINGBROKE, Henry St. John, first Vis-
count, Attainder Bill, ii. 292; Battersea,
visited like a shrine at, iii. 195 n. 2; being
of a superior order,' 191 n. 5; Burke on his
writings, 408 n. 1; Cato and Booth, ii. 101;
'charged blunderbuss against religion,' iii.
407 n. 4; conversation, inattentive in, 201
n. 2, 209 n. 1; Dryden, visits, i. 388 n. 5,
407; established errors useful to maintain
society, iii. 163 n. 3; Europe's happiness
and liberties, game of his youth, 193 #. 1;
Familiar Epistle to the most impudent man
living, 195 n. 2; 'feast of reason and the
flow of soul,' 135 n. 1; Fenton, promised
employment to, ii. 258; Foster's sermon,
387 n. 1; French idioms, iii. 250; Garth's
good nature, ii. 62 n. 3; 'going down the hill,'
iii. 189 n. 2; Good Friday dinner to Addison
and Swift, ii. 125 n. 2; Granville, 295 n. 1;
Harley, charges against, iii. 17 n. 3; H.,
quarrel with, 24, 26; impeached by Walpole,
ii. 192 n. 3; intimacy with him, no good
man would wish it known to posterity, iii.
206; kindness, difficult to gain or keep, 407;
letter, long artificial, 159; 1. to Queen Anne,
ii. 188; 1., Prior, 189, 190; 1., Swift, 194 n. 3;
Lyttelton, flattered, iii. 449 n. 2; Mallet's
edition of his Works, 407, 408 n. 1; M.
employed by him to blast Pope's memory,
407; Patriot King, original in British
Museum, 193 n. 4; Pope refers to it, 195 n. 1;
published, 193 n. 2; school declamation,'
193 n. 1; secret edition burnt, 193;
peace mission to Paris, ii. 189; Philips, J.,
patron of, i. 313, 316, 318; poetry, in youth
cultivated, 407; Pope's 'Atossa,' iii. 272;
P.'s breach of trust, 193, 214, 407; P., con-
cealed his opinions from, 169; P.'s deathbed,
grief at, 191, 194; P., priest's visit to, enraged
by, 191 n. 7; Essay on Man, address to him
in, 194 n. I; ascribed to him, 161 я. 2; his
share in it, 163, 169; P.'s exaggerated praise of
him, 169 n. 3, 206 n. 3; P., friendship with,
191; Iliad, obtained original copy, 119; P.'s
last illness, 189; P.'s memory, sets to work to
blast, 193, 407; P.'s papers bequeathed to
him, 119 n. 3, 192; Sober Advice from Horace,
176 n. 1; P.'s tender heart, 191; P. and trans-
lation, 110 n. 2;
'refinement,' 15 n. 3;
sacramental test, takes, 13 n. 1; Savage, praised

by, ii. 392; Swift's bagatelles, iii. 46 n. 1;
S. and Duchess of Somerset, 69; S. and Eng-
lish living, 62; S.'s exaggeration of danger,
36 n. 1; Free Thoughts on Present State of
Affairs, 26 n. 3; S.'s friend,' descended to be,'
206 n. 3; S., got £10 o Treasury order for, 23
n. 1; Hist. of Four last Years of Queen Anne,
27 n. 5, 28 n. 2; S.'s journey to France, ad-
vises against, 39 n. 1; S.'s love of money, 57
n. 1; S. and Pope, confederacy with, 212 n. 3;
S. and Stella, 41 n. 5; S., warned never to
appear cold by, 7 n. 4; Twickenham,

visits, 135 n. 1; Voltaire on his maximall
is for the best,' 144 n. 2; Warburton, hatred
of, 167 n. 2, 169; W.'s vindication of Pope,
answers, 195.

BOLINGBROKE, Lady, iii. 200.
BOLTON, Duchess of, see FENTON, Lavinia.
BONA, Cardinal, Divina Psalmodia, ii. 56.
BOND, Mr. William, ii. 341 n. 7.
BONSTETTEN, M. de, Gray's friend, iii. 430
n. 3, 431 nn., 445.

BONTEMS, Madame, iii. 287 n. 5.
BONWICKE, Ambrose, ii. 258.

BOOKSELLERS, generous liberal-minded
men,' i. 407 n. 3; 'mercantile ruggedness,'
407; oppress the genius by which they are
supported,' ii. 367.

BOOTH, Barton, the actor, ii. 101.
BORDELON, Laurent, iii. 182 n. 4.
BORROW, George, Otway, Milton and
Butler, i. 248 n. I.
BOSCAN, i. 193 n. 6.

BOSCAWEN, Hugh, first Viscount Falmouth,
ii. 191, 192.

BOSCAWEN, Mrs., iii. 388.

BOSWELL, James, Critical Strictures, iii.
408 n. 3; Croft's Life of Young, 361 n. 1;
Johnson's inattention to minute accuracy, 281
n. 4; Temple and he read Gray all night,
429 n. 4; Thomson's Life, assists Johnson in,
281 nn., 295.

BOSWELL, James, Junior, Pope and Carew,
iii. 267 n. 1; Whetstone's epitaph on Dyer,
269 n. 3.

BOUHOURS, Father Dominic, i. 326, 378
n. 5, 379 n. 3.

BOULTER, Hugh, Archbishop of Armagh,
account of him, iii. 322; death, 323 n. I;
Irish coinage, 71; Johnson's praise, 322;
Philips, A., literary associate and patron of,
322; Swift, reproves, 37.

BOURNE, Vincent, In Miltonum, i. 150 n. 4;
verses thanking Addison's physician, ii. 111
n. 5.

BOWEN, Lord, Dryden's Virgil, i. 449
n. 3.

BOWER, Archibald, iii. 448 n. 7, 451, 459.
BOWLAND FOREST, ii. 57 n. 2.

BOWMAN, Mrs., the actress, ii. 215 n. 6.
BOWYER, Sir William, i. 479.

BOYLE, Charles, fourth Earl of Orrery,
account of him, ii. 258 n. 3; Fenton, his

secretary, 258; Phalaris, i. 332 n. 4, ii. 60
n. 2, iii. II n. 4.

BOYLE, Henry, Chancellor of the Exchequer,
ii. 88.

BOYLE, John, fifth Earl of Orrery, ii. 258
n. 4. See ORRERY.

BOYLE, Richard, second son of Earl of
Burlington, i. 305 n. 2.

BRACEGIRDLE, Mrs., ii. 215 n. 6, 227 n. 4.
BRADFORD, Francis Newport, Earl of, iii.362.
BRADY, Dr. Nicholas, Aeneid, versified, i.
453; metrical version of Psalms, ii. 249.
BRAGGE, Ben, i. 324.

BRAMHALL, John, Archbishop of 'Armagh,
i. 117.

BRENT, Mrs., Swift's housekeeper, iii. 45 n. I.
BRESSE, Mary, Waller's second wife, i. 254.
BRETT, Anna Margaretta, Savage's half-
sister, ii. 376 n. 2; George I's mistress, 438;
marriage, 439.

BRETT, Col., Countess of Macclesfield's
second husband, account of him, ii. 438;
Addison's companion, 122; anecdotes of
him, 377 n. 5,438; marriage, 323; death,438.
BRETT, Mrs., see MACCLESFIELD, Countess
of.

BRIDEKIRK, ii. 304.

BRIDGES, Rev. Ralph, iii. 252.
BRIDGMAN, Mr., i. 480.

BRIDGEMAN, Sir Orlando, Chief Justice of
the Common Pleas, i. 127 n. 4.

BRIDGEWATER, John Egerton, first Earl of,
lord president of Wales, i. 92.

BRIDGEWATER, John Egerton, second Earl
of, Comus, elder brother in, i. 92; Milton's
Defensio, 92 n. 3.

BRIGHT, Mr. Henry, Butler's schoolmaster
at Worcester, i. 201.

BRISTOL, George Digby, second Earl of, i.
278 n. 2.

BRISTOL, Guildhall, ii. 427 n. 4; Newgate,
421; St. Peter's, 429; Savage at, 414, 417–
29; White Lion, 420.

Britain, iii. 266 n. 3.
Broad-piece, i. 259 n. I.

BROCKET, Rev. Lawrence, Professor of
Modern History at Cambridge, iii. 427,
428 n. 3.

BROÉ, S. de, Histoire de deux Triumvirats,
i. 246 n. 3.

BROMLEY, Rt. Hon. William, ii. 45, 48.
BROOKE, Henry, author of Gustavus Vasa,
iii. 179 n. 6, 292.

BROOME, Richard, Ben Jonson's follower,
iii. 81 n. 3.

BROOME, William, Anacreon, translations
from, iii. 80; Barnes, line resembling, 81;
birth, &c., 75; buried in Bath Abbey, 80;
Cambridge life, 75; C., LL.D. degree, 79;
character described by Ford, 75; Charles
Chester,' M.D., 80; death, 80; ecclesiastical
preferment, 79, 80; Eton, 75; Fenton,
friend and associate of, ii. 261, 265; Ford,

his friend, 261, iii. 75; Gent. Mag., con-
tributed to, 80; Henley's distich, 81;
'Homeric lyre,' 276; Iliad, translation with
Ozell and Oldisworth, 76; I., versifies parts
in style of Milton,' 76 n. 4; see BROOME,
Pope's Iliad; King's Coll., Camb., no vacant
scholarship, 75; marriage, 79; Merry Wives
of Windsor, ii. 261; Miscellany of Poems,
iii. 79; Odyssey, Bks. xi and xii, version of,
ii. 260 n. 1; payments received, Miscellaneous
Poems, iii. 79 n. 5; p. r., Pope's Odyssey, 78;

Merry

Pope's advice, 221 n. 2; Bathos and
Dunciad, attacked in, 78, 79; P.'s enemies,
attacked by, 79 n. 2, 81; P., extravagant
compliments to, 79 n. 4; P., coldness with,
78; Iliad, aided in notes, 76, 77 n. 2, 115,
116; P., introduced to, 76; P.'s letter to him
on Fenton's death, ii. 265; P.'s Miscellanies,
contributed to, iii. 76; Odyssey, his part in,
ii. 259, iii. 76-8, 140, 141, 142 n. 2, 231 n. 2,
241; P., reconciled with, 79; Shakespeare,
139 n. 5; P.'s tool and dupe, 77 n. 3;
rector of Pulham, ii. 265, iii. 80; rhymes,
faulty, 80 n. 7; St. John's College, Cam-
bridge, 75; Walpole, flattered, 80 n. 1;

quotations, Epistle to Fenton, 80 n. I,
81; Melancholy, 80 n. 7; To Mr. Pope upon
the edition of his Works, 1725, 79 n. 4,
139 n. 5; To Mr. Pope, who corrected my
Verses, 79 n. 4.

BROUNCKER, Lord, i. 83.

BROWN, Sir George, 'Sir Plume' of Rape
of the Lock, iii. 102.

BROWN, Hawkins, Imitations of Eng. Poets,
On Tobacco, iii. 209 n. 5.

BROWN, Thomas, Dryden's dislike of priests,
i. 403; D.'s funeral, burlesque verses on, 381
n. 3; D.'s Life of Xavier, 379; Reasons of
Mr. Bayes's changing his religion, 381, 382;
Reasons of Mr. Hains the player's conversion,
381.

BROWNE, Sir Thomas, 'Do the devils lie?'
i. 269 n. 6; Pembroke College, Oxford,
member of, iii. 359, 360; Religio Medici and
Dryden's Religio Laici, i. 442.
BROWNING, Robert, iii. 360.

BROWNLOW, Anne, Lord Tyrconnel's sister,
ii. 440.

BRUEYS, Le Grondeur and L'Avocat Patelin,
i. 242 n. 2.

BRUTUS, THE TROJAN, iii. 188.
BUBB, Oxford wit, ii. 304 n. 1.
BUCER, Martin, i. 196.

BUCKHURST, Lord, see sixth Earl of DORSET.
BUCKINGHAM, George Villiers, first Duke
of, i. 288.

BUCKINGHAM, George Villiers, second Duke
of, Butler, attacked by, i. 205 n. 7, 206; B.,
neglects, 205; Chancellor of Cambridge, 205;
Cowley's lease of Queen's lands, 16, 67; C.'s
pall-bearer, 17 n. 8; Dryden, attacked by,
205 n. 4, 206 n. 1, 368 n. 9; D., attacks,
368; philosopher's stone, 206 n. 2; Pope,

attacked by, 205 n. 4; profanity, 277; Re-
hearsal, The, 368; Rochester, praised by,
303 n. 8; Sprat, his chaplain, ii. 33.

BUCKINGHAM, Catharine, Duchess of, Shef-
field's wife, account of her, ii. 173; divorced
from Earl of Anglesey, 28; Pope's 'Atossa,'
173 n. 12, iii. 273; P.'s Odyssey, sub-
scribed for, 142 n. 4; pride, her, ii. 167 n. 1,
173 nn. 7, 12.

BUCKINGHAM, Edmund Sheffield, second
Duke of, ii. 173; Pope's epitaph on him, iii.
270.

BUCKINGHAM, John Sheffield, Duke of, see
SHEFFIELD.

BUCKLEY, Samuel, publisher of Daily Cou-
rant, ii. 385 n. 2.

BUCKNILL, Sir John Charles, M.D., iii. 4 n. 7.
BUDGELL, Eustace, account of him, iii. 325;
Addison, lodged in same house as, ii. 122, iii.
325; A., stamped himself' into acquaintance
with, 325; calls Addison cousin, 315, 325;
Bee, The, ii. 96 n. 5; Bentley and Boyle, iii.
II n. 4; Devonshire man, 326; Epilogue to
Distrest Mother, 315; Moral Characters of
Theophrastus, ii. 95; place, gets a, iii. 316
n. 1; Pope's Three Gentle Shepherds, one of,
ii. 122 n. 6; 'Sir Roger de Coverley,' 96;
suicide, iii. 326.

Bulk, ii. 399.

BULLOCK, Christopher, ii. 330.
Bulls, iii. 97.

BUNYAN, John, passed over by Hume, i.
235 n. 3.

BURFORD, i. 219.

BURGESS, Anne, see HUGHES, Mrs.

BURGESS, Daniel, the preacher, ii. 300;
'thorough paced doctrine,' 301 N. I.
BURGHFIELD, iii. 62 n. 3.

BURGHLEY, William Cecil, first Lord, bene-
factor of St. John's, Cambridge, ii. 181 n. 7;
mentioned, iii. 372.

BURGHLEY, Lord, Young's pupil, iii. 369.
BURKE, Edmund, Addison on immortality,
ii. 149 n. 4; Beggar's Opera, 277 n. 1; Board
of Trade and literature, 184 n. 5; Boling-
broke's writings, iii. 408 n. 1; Chatham and
Woollen Act, joke on, 345 n. 1; Croft's Life
of Young, 361 n. 1; Dryden's extravagant
panegyrics, 400 n. 1; D., style formed on,
418 n. 5; Hist. of Four last Years of Queen
Anne, iii. 28 n. 2; Journal to Stella, 23 n. 4;
mankind, thinks better of, ii. 430 n. 2; ‘meta-
physic,' i. 68; music, no relish for, iii. 228
n. 5; Swift's sermons, 54 . 3; 'where
mystery begins justice ends,' ii. 387 n. 1.
BURLEIGH, Mrs., the bookseller, ii. 247 n. 4-
BURLESQUE, i. 216, 218, 323.

BURLINGTON, Richard Boyle, first Earl of,
i. 232.

BURLINGTON, Richard Boyle, third Earl of,
architecture, knowledge of, iii. 206 n. 2; Gay,
assists, ii. 272; Pope's intimacy with him,
iii. 199 n. 2, 206; P.'s Dunciad, one of

1

nominal publishers of, 148 n. 6; Walpole,
praised by, 206 n. 2.

BURNET, Gilbert, Bishop of Salisbury,
accident, iii. 143 n. 3; Buckingham's chemi-
cal pursuits, i. 206 n. 2; Dryden, satirized
by, 380 n. 2; Duchess of York's Italian de-
ception, ii. 287 n. 6; Eikon Basilike, i. 197;
funeral sermon on Young's father, iii. 363;

Hist. of my own Times, Granville an-
swers, ii. 292; parodied by Pope, iii. 144;

impartiality, protests, ii. 292 n. 7;
inaccuracy, i. 128; knight errant against
popery, iii. 20 n. 3; Life and Death of
Rochester, i. 222; Milton's escape, 128;
Monk, calumnies on, ii. 292; Paradise Lost,
i. 198; playhouses in Dryden's time, 365
n. 7; Reflections on Varillas's History, 379
n. 4; Rochester's conversion, 220, 221; ser-
mon before House of Commons, ii. 37; Sprat's
rival, 37;
Swift, disliked by, iii. 20;
Dissentions in Athens and Rome, ascribed
to him, 10;
' venomously nice in his
commendations,' i. 280 n. 2; Waller's parlia-
mentary eloquence, 280; Wharton, Lady
Anne, iii. 367.

BURNET, Thomas, Judge of the Common
Pleas, Granville's criticism on Hist. of my
own Times, answers, ii. 293; Mohawk, a,
iii. 136 n. 4; Pope's Iliad, criticized, 136;
P.'s Dunciad, inserted in, 151.

BURNEY, Dr. Charles, iii. 297 n. 3.
BURNEY, Dr. Charles, junior, Johnson's
Cicero, purchased, i. 320 n. 2; Milton's
Greek poetry, 91 n. 9.

BURNEY, Frances, Hawkesworth's talk, iii.
67; Johnson accuses her of writing Scotch,
187 n. 3; proof sheets of Life of Pope, 82 n. 1.
BURNS, Robert, Addison's Vision of Mirza
and 'How are thy servants bless'd,' ii. 144 n.
6; not indebted for praise to charitable con-
sideration of origin, 180 n. 3; Paradise Lost,
Satan its hero, i. 176 n. 3; Pastoral Poetry,
iii. 317 n. 1; Poet's Epitaph, ii. 434 n. 1;
Shenstone's Elegies, iii. 355 n. 1; Young's
Night Thoughts, 395 n. 4.

BURTON, Rev. John, B.D., Genuineness of
Clarendon's Hist. Vindicated, ii. 18; Oldis-
worth's character of Smith, 1.

BURTON, Dr. John Hill, Collins's Ode on
the Superstitions of the Highlands, iii. 340
n. 3; Thomson's scenery, 282 n. I.

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BURTON, Robert, poverty the Muses' patri-
mony, i. 400 n. 2; 'sapiens dominabitur
astris,' 137 n. I.

BURTON, Rev. John, D.D., head master of
Winchester, iii. 334.

BUSBY, Rev. Dr., head master of Westmin-
ster, account of him and his scholars, i. 332
n. 4; Dryden's reverence for him, 332, 447
n. 5; Johnson, praised by, 416, ii. 66; poets
educated by him; i. 332 n. 4; promising
boys detained, ii. II; transmitted scholars to
Christ Church, i. 312.

BUSENELLO, ii. 242 n. 8.

BUSH, Mr., secretary to Earl of Berkeley,
iii. 8.

BUTE, third Earl of, iii. 427.

BUTE, Lady, iii. 202 n. 2.

BUTLER, Samuel, Aubrey, friendship with,
i. 201 n. 10, 207 n. 1; authorities for his
life, 201; birth, &c., 201; Buckingham, neg-
lected by, 205; 'bye-paths of literature,'
212; Cambridge, 201, 202 n. 2; Charles II's
reported bounty, 205; Clarendon's unful-
filled promises, 204; clerk to Mr. Jefferys,
J.P., 202; Common law, studies, 204; com-
monplace book, 213; Cooper, Samuel,
friendship with, 202; Countess of Kent, in
service of, 203; death, 206; Dryden's lines
on him, 207 n. 5; education, 201, 202;
Elephant in the Moon, 208 n. 5; extrava-
gant panegyrics, 400 n. 1; funeral, 207;
Genuine Remains, 208 n. 4; 'glory and
scandal of his age,' 207 n. 4; gout, 206 n. 6;

Hudibras, abrupt ending, 206; Addi-
son's criticism, 217 nn.; admired for wrong
parts, 217 n. 4; another Hudibras would not
obtain same regard, 218; astrology satirized,
216; 'bear and fiddle,' 211; begun in Sir
Samuel Luke's service, 203; bullion which
will last, 214 n. 2; composition, 213; court,
admired at, 204; dialogue, 211; diction,
217; discontinuity of action, 211; doggerel
rhymes oftenest quoted, 217 n. 4; Don
Quixote, contrasted with, 209; 'drum ecclesi-
astic,' 217 n. 4; Dryden's criticism, 217 n.
2; English only read it, 209 n. 4; first part
published, 204; Grey's edition, 214 n. 2;
Hudibras's flagellation, 216; H., representa-
tive of Presbyterians, 210; Hume's estimate
of it, 212 nn.; humour often lost, 214; learn-
ing, 212 n. 6; moon, description of, 217 n.
I, iii. 300 n. 1, 417; paucity of events, i.
211; Pepys finds it silly, 204 nn.; perishable
part, 213; 'pious frauds,' 379 n. 1; plan,
wants, ii. 205; Prior's Alma, compared
with, ii. 205; probability required by bur-
lesque, violates, i. 216; proverbial axioms, i.
213; Puritan scruples, 214-6; Ralpho,
Independent enthusiast, 210; reputation in
eighteenth century, 214 n. 2; royalists, ap-
plauded by, 204; second part published,
204; seldom read, 214 n. 2; Sidrophel and
Whacum, 211; Sir Samuel Luke, 203; third
part published, 206; 'true as the dial to the
sun,' 217 n. 1; versification, 217; Voltaire's
estimate, 209 n. 4, 214 n. 2; Withers, Pryn,
and Vickars,' 452 n. 5;
'Hudibras,'
fashion of calling him, 201 n. 1; interred
on tick,' 207 n. 4; knowledge of human
nature, 213; Longueville, his friend and
patron, 201, 206, 208 n. 3; Luke, Sir
Samuel, enters family of, 203; marriage, 204;
Milton and Salmasius, 113 n. 7; monument
in Westminster Abbey, 208; music and
painting, his amusements, 202; 'name can

only perish with language,' 209; Nash's
Worcestershire, 201, 202; neglected, 205
n. 3; obscurity of life, 209; Oldham's and
Otway's lines on him, 207 nn.; pension,
alleged, 207; pictures at Earl's Croombe,
202; posthumous works, 208; poverty, 208
n. 3, 209; praise, his whole reward, 204;
Prior, praised by, 218 n. 1; Prynne, fathers
letters on, 201 n. 3; Rehearsal, aids in, 368;
Rochester, praised by, 303 n. 8; Royal
Society, ridicules, 208; secretary to Duke of
Buckingham, 205; secretary to President of
Wales, 203; Selden, employed in literary
business by, 203; starved, 207 nn.; Steward
of Ludlow Castle, 203; thinking,' his, 209
n. 3; Wesley's epigram on his monument,
208 n. 1; wife's fortune lost, 204; wit in-
exhaustible, 212; Wood's account of him,
201, 202, 204; Wycherley and Buckingham,
205; quotations, Hudibras (1. 1, Argu-
ment), i. 211 n. 1; (1. 1. 11), 217 n. 4; (1. I.
13), i. 210 n. 1; (1. 1. 225), i. 215 n. 2; (1. 1.
645), 452 n. 5; (1. 2. 1), 217 n. 4; (1.1.903),
203 n. 3; (2. 1. 905), 217 n. 1, iii. 300 n. 1;
(3. 2. 169), i. 217 n. 1; Heroical Epis. to
Sidrophel, iii. 187 n. 2; Panegyric on Denham,
i. 72 n. 3, 83; Fragments, i. 113 n. 7.

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BUTTON, Coffee-house keeper, ii. 122. See
also Button's coffee-house under LONDON.
Buxom, iii. 435 n. 3.

BYNG, Admiral, iii. 408.

BYRON, Lord, Marino, i. 69; Paradise Lost,
its metre, 194 n. 1; Pope's Sporus,' iii.
246 n. 6; punctuation, 453 n. 6; Venice Pre-
served, i. 246 n. 2.

CADELL, Thomas, the publisher, i. 160 n. 4.
CAEN, Protestant University, i. 229.
CALAMY, Edmund, i. 102 n. 3.
CALIGULA, iii. 166 n. 1.
CALPHURNIUS, iii. 316.
CALTHORP, iii. 344.

CAMBRIDGE, Duke of, see GEORGE II.
CAMBRIDGE, Akenside's degree, iii. 415;
Butler's doubtful residence, i. 202; CHRIST'S
COLLEGE, Chapell, Milton's tutor, 88 n. 5;
Milton, a member, 86, 88 nn.; King, Edward,
a fellow, 88 n. 4; degrees by mandamus,
iii. 415 n. 3; EMMANUEL COLLEGE, Farmer,
Dr., Master, 75 n.4; Granville's M. A. degree,
ii. 286 n. 6; JESUS COLLEGE, Fenton, a
member, 257 n. 4; KING'S COLLEGE, George,
Dr., Provost, i. 150 n. 4; scholarships from
Eton, iii. 75 n. 2; Waller, a member, i. 250;
PEMBROKE HALL, Gray removes to it, iii.
425; Mason, a fellow, 424; Ridley, Spenser,
and Pitt, members, 425 n. 7; PETERHOUSE,
Garth, a member, ii. 57; Gray, a member, iii.
421, 424, 425; Pomfret's degrees, i. 301 n. 2;
Prince of Wales's (Charles II) visit, 5; Profes-
sorship of Modern History, no duty performed
or expected, iii. 428 n. 4; Sir James Lowther's
tutor preferred to Gray, 427; Rose Inn, ii.

193 n. 6;
ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE, Lord
Burghley exhibitions, 181 n. 7; Philips, Am-
brose, subsizar and fellow, iii. 312 . 1; Prior,
scholar and fellow, 180 n. 2, 181, 193; prose
more in fashion than verse, ii. 181 n. 4;
subscriptions to books, iii. 110 2. I; tests, ii.
257.3; - TRINITY COLLEGE, Bentley and
Colbatch, 293 n. 3; Charles II, when Prince
of Wales, visits it, i. 5 n. 1; Comber, D.,
Master, 4 n. 8; Cowley, a scholar and minor
fellow, 4, 5, 65; Dryden, a scholar, 332;
entries in Conclusion Book, 333 n.4; D. reads
Plutarch in library, 333 n. 5; Duke, scholar
and fellow, ii. 24, 25; Halifax, fellow com-
moner, 42; Montagu, Dr., Master, 41; Power,
Thomas, a member, iii. 183 n. 1; Stepney,
scholar and fellow, i. 309 n. 3; translators of
the Bible, fellows, 65;
TRINITY HALL,
Fenton removed to it, ii. 257 n. 4.
Cambridge Latin Dictionary, i. 120.
CAMDEN, Lord Chancellor, i. 141 n. 3.
Camilla, ii. 165.

CAMPBELL, Thomas, corrector, great, iii.
222 n. 1; Cowper's Homer, 276; Parnell, ii.
54 n. 4; turn of Savage about him, 373 #. 2;
Young's Night Thoughts, iii. 396 n. 1.
CANNING, George, i. 465 n. 4.
CANONS ASHBY, i. 331.

Cant, iii. 91, 436 n. 8.

CAPEL, Henry, Lord, iii. 7.

CARBERY, Richard Vaughan, second Earl of,
Lord President of Wales, i. 203.
CARDINALS, i. 95 n. I.

CAREW, Thomas, iii. 267 n. 1.

CAREY, Henry, Namby Pamby, parody on
Ambrose Philips, iii. 326.

CAREY, John, of New College, ii. 122 n. 6.
CAREY, Walter, M.P., Addison's companion,

ii. 122.

CAREY, Oxford wit, ii. 304 n. I.
CARLISLE, fifth Earl of, ii. 318 n. 9.
CARLYLE, Dr. Alexander, Blackmore's Prince
Arthur, ii. 238 n. 2; Collins's Ode on the
Superstitions of the Highlands, iii. 340 #. 3;
Shenstone, describes, 353 n. 6.

CARLYLE, Thomas, Coleridge's death, i. 150
n. 1; Gray's letters, iii. 431 n. 7; G.'s poetry,
440 n. 9; pony Shenstone,' 358 n. 1.

CARO, Hannibal, Aeneid, translated, i. 414
1. 5.

CAROLINE, Queen, Duck's patroness, ii. 404 ;
freethinker, 383 n. 3; Gay's Captives, 274;
G.'s What d'ye call it, 271; Milton's daughter,
bounty to, i. 159; Oldfield, Mrs., ii. 336 n. 1;
Pope, rumour of intended visit to, iii. 171;
P.'s Dunciad presented to her, 148, 150; Rich-
mond, garden and cave at, ii. 396; Savage's
pardon, ii. 351; S.'s subscription proposals,
404; S.'s 'volunteer laureates,' 382; Swift
courts her, iii. 39,73; Swift's promised medals.
iii. 39, 73; Thomson's Sophonisba dedicated
to her, 286 n. 9; Wanton Wife, when Princess
of Wales, sees, ii. 221 n. 5; Woolaston's Re-

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