. ii. 81 n. 4; Catherine Street, Strand, Tonson's shop opposite, i. 160 n. 4; Cheap- side, Blackmore's residence, ii. 236; pendent es gardens, iii. 286 n. 1; Cock, Bow Street, i. 304; Cock-Lane, Shoreditch, 159; Coleman Street conventicle, 66; Cornhill, Gray's house, iii. 421; Covent Garden Churchyard, Butler's grave, i. 207; C. G. Coffee-house, 335 m. 3; COVENT GARDEN THEATRE, Gay's Achilles and Distrest Wife, ii. 281 n. 6, 282 n. 2; Rich, manager, 275 n. 5; Sir Thomas Overbury, 341 N. 3; Dallow's Glass- i house, 399 n. 2; Dick's Coffee-house, 123 . 65$ 1, 236 n. 5; DRURY LANE THEATRE, Addison's Rosamond, 89 n. 1; Almida, iii. 409; Arsinoe, first Italian opera, ii. 165; author's nights, i. 366 n. 2; Beggar's Opera, refused, ii. 275; Distrest Mother, iii. 315 n. 1; Garrick, opened by, i. 243 n. 2; Gay's Captives, ii. 274; Hughes's Apollo and Daphne, 162 n. 8; H.'s Siege of Damascus, 163 n. 5; Mallet's Eurydice, Mustapha, and Britannia, iii. 402 n. 3, 406, 408; Otway's Friendship in Fashion and Caius Marius, revived, i. 243, 247 n. 2; patent rights, ii. 166; Savage's Love in a Veil and Sir Thomas Overbury, 330 n. 5, 340 n. 5; Thomson and Mallet's Alfred, iii. 404; Thomson's Sophon- isba, 288 n. 1; Young's Busiris and Revenge, 368, 397 nn.; Duke of York's Theatre, Cutter of Coleman Street, i. 66; Dryden's and Lee's Oedipus, 362 n. 5; Otway's Caius Marius, 247 n. 2; Earl's Court, Black- more's house, ii. 236 n. 4; Essex Head Club, i. 17 n. 7; Fleet Rules, ii. 411 n. 1; Fleet Street, Cowley's birth, i. 1 n. 4; Fox Court, ii. 439; Gate-house, Westminster, 345; Ger- rard Street, Soho, Dryden's house, i. 389 n. 4, 486; Goring House, 196; Gray's Inn, Milton visits, 101; Grosvenor Square, Thrale's house, ii. 398 n. 4; Grosvenor Street, i. 158; Grub Street, 133 n. 6, ii. 154; Haberdashers' Hall, i. 76 n. 1, iii. 304 n. 1; Hanover Square, Granville's death, ii. 293; Haymarket, Addi- son's garret, 87 n. 6; Haymarket Theatre, Congreve and Vanbrugh, managers, 224 n. 1; Holborn, Milton's house, i. 110, 126 n. 6, 131 n. 1; Holland House, ii. 118, 156; Holloway, i. 158 n. 5, 159; Hyde Park Cor- ner, Pope's seminary, iii. 84, 86 n. 1; H. P. C. tavern visited by Steele, ii. 331; INNER TEMPLE, Chancellor West's portrait, iii. 423 1. 4; Smith, a member, ii. 14 n. 1; Inner Temple Gate, Robinson's bookshop, iii. 167 n. 3, 168 n. 3; Islington, Collins's visit, 339; Jewin Street, Milton's house, i. 131; Justice Hall, ii. 138; King's Playhouse, i. 362 n. 5, 367 n. 3; life on £30 a year, ii. 398 n. 1; Lincoln's Inn Fields, Richardson's, Jonathan, house, iii. 188 n. 2; - LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS THEATRE, opening, ii. 218; Beggar's Opera, 275; Bullock, Christopher, joint-manager, 330 n. 4; Congreve's Love for
Love and Mourning Bride, 218; Fenton's Mariamne, 260; Rich, manager, 275; LINCOLN'S INN, Denham and Waller mem- bers, i. 70, 250 n. 1; Warburton appointed preacher, iii. 169; Little Britain, Mr. Rowe's academy, 303 n. 1; Lombard Street, Pope born in, 83 n. 1; London Bridge, book- sellers on, 153 n. 5; traitors' heads, i. 435 ". 3; Long Room, Villars Street, ii. 341 n. 7; MIDDLE TEMPLE, Rowe and Congreve, members, 66, 213; Mint, asylum for debtors, 72 n. 4; Monument, iii. 173 n. 3; New Ex- change, i. 17 n. 8; NEWGATE, Bernardi imprisoned, iii. 258 n. 3; noisome state, ii. 346 n. 1; Press Yard, 346; Savage imprisoned, 345; Old Bailey Sessions House, 138 n. 2; Old Man's Coffee-house, Charing Cross, iii. 297 n. 7; petty competition and private malignity, too wide for, 283; Petty France, Milton's garden house, i. 126 n. 6; Prior's Rhenish Wine House, ii. 180 n. 4; Rainbow Tavern, 123 n. 1; Ratcliffe Highway, 399 n. 2; Red Lion Fields, Milton's house near, i. 131 n. 1; Robinson's Coffee-house, Char- ing Cross, ii. 345; Roebuck Tavern, i. 206; Rose, near Drury Lane, iii. 408 n. 3; Rose Alley, ii. 179; Rosemary Lane, 399 n. 2; Rummer Tavern, Charing Cross, 180 n. 4; Russell Street, Covent Garden, literary me- mories, 122 n. 11; R. St., Lewis's bookshop, iii. 98 n. 2; St. Andrew's, Holborn, ii. 439; St. Anne's, Soho, Dryden's burial, i. 486; St. Benet Fink, iii. 83 n. 1; St. Bride's Churchyard, Milton's lodging, i. 98; St. Dun- stan's, Fleet Street, 2; St. Edmund's, Lom- bard St., Addison's marriage, ii. 110 n. 3; St. Giles's, Cripplegate, Milton buried, i. 149; St. James's Place, Addison's lodgings, ii. 122 n. 9; St. James's Square, Johnson and Savage walk round it, 398 n. 4; St. James's, West- minster, i. 275 n. 5; St. Margaret's, Westminster, Milton's second wife's burial, 116 n. 6; Outram, Dr., vicar, ii. 34 n. 1; Pope's epitaph on Mrs. Corbet, iii. 262; Sprat, vicar, ii. 34; St. Martin's Church, i. 275 n. 5; St. Martin's-le-Grand Lane, 107; St. Michael at Querne, Cheapside, I n. 4; St. Paul's Cathedral, restoration in Charles I's reign, 289 n. 2; St. Paul's, Covent Garden, 207 n. 2; St. Swithin's Church, Cannon Street, Dryden's marriage, 393 n. 3; St. Thomas's Hospital, iii. 415; Shug Lane, Haymarket, Millan the bookseller, 284 n. 2; Southampton Row, Gray's lodgings, 427 n. 1; Spitalfields, i. 158, 159; Spring Gardens, Milton's lodg ings, 126 n. 6; Temple-gate, Stevens, a hatter, iii. 389; Thatched House, Islington, i. 159 n. 5; Three Cony Walk, Lambeth, ii. 31 n. 3; Tower Hill, i. 220, 244 n. I, 247; Trumpet, Shoe Lane, ii. 157; Turk's Head Coffee-house, i. 126 n. 1; Warwick Lane, College of Physicians, 486; Whitehall, Mil- ton's official residence, 126 n. 6; Whitehall
Theatre, 348 n. 9; WILL'S COFFEE-HOUSE, 408, iii. 87, 93.
London Magazine, iii. 429 n. 4, 443. LONG PARLIAMENT, i. 256, 269. LONGINUS, i. 412, ii. 208.
LONGUEVILLE, Mr., Butler's friend and patron, i. 206, 208 n. 3.
LONGUEVILLE, Charles, son of Butler's friend, i. 201, 208 n. 4,
LOPEZ DE VEGA, i. 367 n. 4.
LORD CHAMBERLAIN, ii. 279 n. 2. LOUISA, Princess, daughter of George II, ii. 274.
LOVE, 'romantic omnipotence' of, i. 361. LOVEDAY, Robert, Letters, iii. 159. Lover, The, ii. 95 n. 8.
LOWELL, James Russell, Milton's odd con- structions, i. 190 n. 5.
LOWNDES, William, Secretary to the Trea- sury, i. 207.
LOWTH, Robert, Bishop of London, Pope's grammar, iii. 249 n. 2; Praelectiones, i. 453 n. 2; scepticism and popery, ii. 63.
LOWTHER, Sir James, iii. 427.
LOYALTY, neglect, 'common reward' of, i. 248.
LUCAN, Lady, iii. 452 n. 3.
LUCAN, Pharsalia, Cato, an unfortunate hero, i. 176; translated by May, 12 n. 4; t. by Pitt, iii. 277; t. by Rowe, ii. 77; quoted, 116.
LUCAS, Charles, M.D., iii. 28. LUCCA, i. 97.
LUCILIUS, ii. 205.
LUCK, Robert, Master of Barnstaple School, ii. 267.
LUCRETIUS, i. 320, ii. 7.
LUDLOW CASTLE, i. 92, 203. LUKE, Sir Samuel, i. 203. LUNEVILLE, iii. 456 n. 4. LUTON, i. 301.
LUXBOROUGH, Lady, Bolingbroke's half- sister, iii. 193 n. 3; letters to Shenstone, 351 n. 6.
LYON, Rev. Dr. John, iii. 36 n. 3, 43 n. 2. LYTTELTON, Sir George or Mr., see LYTTEL- TON, Lord.
LYTTELTON, George, Lord, Account of a Journey into Wales, iii. 451, 459; Advice to Belinda, 457; baronetcy, succeeds to, 450; birth, &c., 328 n. 3, 446; Blenheim, 446, 456; Bolingbroke's panegyric, 449 n. 2; Bower, 451; Chancellor of Exchequer, ib.; charity, 454; Chatham, quarrels with, 329 n. 8; Christ Church, Oxford, 446; Christianity, 330, 450, 455; coarseness of manners, 458; Cofferer, 451; Critical Reviewers, thanks, 452; death, 454-6; described by Chesterfield and Her- vey, 454 n. 4, 455 n. 1; Dialogues of the Dead, 451; Epistle to Mr. Pope, 457 n. 2; Eton, 446; friendship favourably prejudiced mankind, ii. 313; gentle elegiac person,'
iii. 456 n. 7; Hagley Park, 351, 450; Ham- mond, friendship with, ii. 313; health, iii. 455 n. I; Hist. of Henry II, account of publication, 453; criticisms, 453 n. 1; punctuation and errata, 454; Laputan,
Îike a, 455 n. 1; liberty, early ardour for, 446; Lord of the Treasury, 293 n. 5, 449, 460; Lucy, his,' 330 n. I; marriages, 449; meals, behaviour at, 455 m. 1; melancholy, 454 n. 6; Methodist,' a, 450 n. 3; Monody on wife's death, 449, 458; monument, 456; Montagu's, Mrs., moppet,' 458; Moore, James, courted by, 448; Observations on the Conversion of St. Paul, 330, 450; opposition, in first rank of, 448; Paris, 455 n. 1; Parlia- ment, speeches and votes in, 447, 451 n. 2; pastoral passages, 446, 456, 458; payment received, Hist. of Henry II, 454 n. I; peer- age, 452; Persian Letters, 446; personal appearance, 454; pleasure always in the next box,' 454 n. 6; 'poor Lyttelton,' 452 n. 3; Pope, praised by, 180 n. 2, 448 n. 1, 449 n. 1; P.'s Iliad and blank verse, 238 n. 3; P., reproached for friendship with, 180, 449; Prince of Wales, secretary to, 291, 447, 448, 449 n. 9; Privy Councillor, 451; Progress of Love, 446, 456; respectable Hottentot,' 454 n. 4; Shenstone's dedication, 350; S.'s neigh- bour and rival, 351; sing-song warbler,' 457 n. 2; Smollett, satirized by, 448 n. 7, 458; see SMOLLETT; sportsman, no, 456 n. 4; Thomson's friend and patron, 293, 294, 448, 460; Castle of Indolence, 294 n. 6, 448 n. 5; Coriolanus, 294; Liberty, shortens, 290; T.'s reading of Autumn, 290 n. 1; Seasons, MS. alterations, 290 n. 1, 301 n. 1;
Swift and Prince of Wales, 448 n. 1; Tom Jones dedicated to him, 330 n. 3, 450 n. 3, 456 n. 1; travels in France and Italy, 447, 456 n. 4; ungraciousness, 458; Voltaire, 452 n. 1; Walpole's, Horace, estimate, 457 n. 2; Walpole, Sir R., opponent of, 447; West's cousin and friend, 328 n. 3, 330, 446 n. 2; West Wickham, 330; Whiggery and piety, 453 n. 1; World, The, 448 n. 7 ;
quotations, Advice to a Lady, 457 n. 1; Monody, 458; Ode to his Wife, 330 n. 1; Prologue to Coriolanus, 295 n. 1, 301. LYTTELTON, Elizabeth (Rich), Lady, the poet's second wife, iii. 449 n. 7.
LYTTELTON, George William, Lord, ii. 12
LYTTELTON, Lucy (Fortescue), Lady, the poet's first wife, iii. 330 n. 1, 449.
LYTTELTON, Sir Thomas, the poet's father, iii. 446; Commissioner of the Admiralty, 447; letter to his son, 450; Thomson's reading of Autumn, 290 n. 1; death, 450.
LYTTELTON, Lady, the poet's mother, iii. 328 n. 3, 446 n. 2.
MACARTNEY, Earl of, i. 418 n. 5.
MACAULAY, Lord, Addison and Rape of the
Lock, iii. 103 n. 6; A.'s Drummer, ii. 106 n. 6; 'little Dicky,' 155; A., marginal notes on, 158; A.'s Life, peculiarly his own,' 79 n. 1; A.'s official inefficiency, 109 n. 1; A. and Steele controversy, 115 n. 4; A.'s timidity in speaking, 111 n. 3; Whig Ex- aminers, 107 n. 6; Akenside's Epistle
to Curio, iii. 419 n. 3; Atterbury and Clarendon's History, ii. 18 n. 3; Blackmore's Prince Arthur, 238 n. 2; Boiardo and Berni, i. 454 m. 4; Burnet's History, 128 n. 5; Caryll, uncle and nephew confused, iii. 102 n. I; Congreve's Mourning Bride, ii. 230 n. 1; C.'s Way of the World, 223 n. 6; Dry- den's Aurengzebe, i. 361 n. 1; D.'s slovenly haste, 423 . 4; D. and Tonson, 407 n. 2; Eikon Basilike, 197; Garth's Epilogue to Cato, ii. 62 n. 5; Halifax's self-knowledge, 47 n. 4; Holland House, 156; Johnson on Thomson's Castle of Indolence, iii. 294 n. 1; Ken and Watts, 305 n. 2; Leigh Hunt and Collier, ii. 220 n. 5; Long Parliament, i. 256 n. 5; moods for writing, iii. 433 n. 4; Paradise Lost, i. 170 n. 1; Pope's dedication to Congreve, iii. 205 n. 6; Sprat's prose, ii. 38 n. 1; Statius, iii. 92 n. 5; Sunderland, ii. 113 n. 1; Swift's affectation of familiarity with the great, iii. 61 n. 2; S.'s Hist. of Four last Years of Queen Anne, 28 n. 2; Tickell's Elegy on Addison, ii. 310 n. 6; Walpole's reward of literary merit, iii. 322 n. 6; Warwick, Countess of, ii. 155; York, Duchess of, 287 n. 6.
MACAULAY, Mr. G. C., Seasons, MS. altera- tions in copy of, iii. 301 n. I.
MACAULAY, Archibald, iii. 385.
MACCLESFIELD, Charles Gerard, second Earl of, account of him, ii. 437; divorce bill, 322; kills a boy, 436, 438; marriage, 437; want of male issue causes duel, 322 n. 3.
Macclesfield, Thomas Parker, Earl of, Lord Chancellor, Hughes continued in office, ii. 163; Rowe's patron, 72; Young's dedica- tion, iii. 370.
MACCLESFIELD, Anne, Countess of, Savage's reputed mother, alive in 1744, ii. 353 n. 1 ; death, 438; divorce, 322, 437; illegitimate daughter, 324 n. 1, 439; illegitimate son, 323; declares he is dead, 326; see also SMITH, Richard; kindness, character for, 324 n. I; marriage to Col. Brett, 323, 438; personal appearance, 337, 429 n. 2; Savage's Bastard, leaves Bath on publication of, 378; S., refuses to acknowledge, 329; see under SAVAGE; settlement on divorce, 323 nn.; South Sea losses, 335; taste and judgement, 377 n. 5.
MACGREGOR, Clan, ii. 193 n. 3, iii. 400. MACHINERY OF POEM, i. 175 n. I. MACKAY, Mr., Master of the Packet-Boats, ii. 188.
MACKENZIE, Sir George, i. 333 n. I. MACKENZIE, Henry, iii. 340 n. 3.
MACKINTOSH, Sir James, Collins's Ode on the Superstitions of the Highlands, iii. 340 n. 3; Pope and Addison, 129 n. 1; Mason's Gray, 442; Swift's style, 52 n. 2. MACLEOD, - of Ulinish, iii. 67.
MACREADY, William Charles, actor's art, i. 162 n. 6; censure, troubled by, 370 n. 8; Congreve's Love for Love, adapted, ii. 218 n.5; D.'s Cleomenes, i. 363 n. 5; D.'s King Arthur, revived, 364 n. 3; Drury Lane patent rights, ii. 166; Hughes's Siege of Damascus, 163 n. 4; King Lear, restored original, 249 n. 5; Ot- way's Orphan, i. 245 n. I; Philips's Distrest Mother, iii. 315 n. 3; 'physical pain of stage,' ii. 69 n. 6; Rowe's Jane Shore, 70 n. 1; R.'s Tamerlane, 78; Tempest, i. 341 n. 3; Young's Revenge, iii. 397 n. 3.
MACSWINNEY, Owen, i. 409 n. 2. MADAN, Mr. Falconer, iii. 415 n. 3. MADDEN, Rev. Dr. Samuel, ii. 131, iii. 30,
MADINGLEY, near Cambridge, iii. 76. MADRAS, see FORT ST. GEORGE.
Magazine of Magazines, iii. 442, 443.
MAGEE, Alexander, Swift's servant, iii. 56
MAGRATH, Rev. J. R., D.D., Provost of Queen's College, Oxford, ii. 304 n. 3. MAHOL, i. 29.
MAIMBOURG, Louis, i. 378, 483. MAINE,, Gay's friend, ii. 281 n. 2. MAINWARING, Arthur, Congreve's Old Batchelor, recommended, ii. 215; Iliad i., translated, iii. 132; 'preferred' by Dorset, i. 309 n. 5.
MALBRANCHE, iii. 310. MALESPINI, ii. 201 n. 8.
MALHERBE, anecdote of him, i. 428; Boileau's L'Art poétique, praised in, 443 n. 8; stockings, wore many pairs of, iii. 197 n. 7.
MALLET, David, Alfred, iii. 404, 406; see also THOMSON; Amyntor and Theodora, 406; birth, &c., 400; blank verse, 406, 410; Bolingbroke's Works, edits, 407; Britannia, 408; Byng, writes against, ib.; character may sink into silence,' 410; con- versation, charm of, ib.; death, 409; Dou- glas Cause, 409 n. 1; dramas, forgotten, 410; dress, 409; Edinburgh High School, 400; E. University, 402 n. 6; Elvira, 405 n 1, 408; Eurydice, 402; Excursion, 401; Field- ing, praised by, 404 n. 1; France, resided in, 409; Garrick, fools, 404; Gibbon's remarks on him, 404 n. 1, 410 nn.; Hume's scot- ticisms, 402 n. 5; 'job, ready for any dirty,' 408 n.6; Johnson's enmity, 410 n. 2; Keeper of the Entries at Port of London, 408; licked feet of Pope and Bolingbroke, 194 n. 4; Life of Bacon, 404, 410; London, comes to, 400, 402 n. 5; Macgregors, descent from, 400; Malloch, original name, 400, 402; Marl- borough, Life of, undertakes, 404; never begins it, 405; marriages, 409; Mustapha,
179 n. 6; 406; Oxford degrees, 402 n. 5; payment received, Amyntor and Theodora, 406 n. 6; pension, 408; personal appearance, 409; plagiarism, 401; Pope's Essay on Man, blunders over, 403; P.'s friend and flatterer, 402, 403, 407 n. 2; P.'s Iliad, MS., 119; P.'s last illness, 189 n. 3, 403 n. 3; P.'s memory, attacked, 194, 407; Prince of Wales's under-secretary, 404, 448; Prologue to Thomson's Agamemnon, 406; St. Mary Hall, Oxford, 402 n. 5; Savage's tragedy, ii. 415; Scots, only Scot not commended by, iii. 403; Scotch accent, 'cleared tongue' from, 402; Thomson, 'echo' of, 401, 410; T.'s Sophonisba, share in Prologue, 288; T.'s Winter, 284 n. 1, 286; travels abroad, 400; tutor to Duke of Montrose's sons, 283, 400; Verbal Criticism, 401; Warburton, attacked by, 403 n. 3, 404 n. 2; William and Margaret, 401, 403 n. 3.
MALLET, Mrs. Lucy (Elstob), the poet's wife, iii. 409 n. 5.
MALMESBURY, ii. 118 n. 6.
MALONE, Edmund, Blount, Martha, iii. 275; Burke and Dryden, i. 418 n. 5; Congreve's first publication, ii. 214 n. 6; Dryden's Alexander's Feast, i. 456 n. 4; D.'s birth, 331 n.2; D. at Cambridge, 333 n.4; D. and a City and Country Mouse, ii. 182 n. 4; D. and Creech, i. 396 n. 4; D.'s death, date of, 389 n. 2; Essay of Dramatic Poesy, and Dorset, 307 n. 4; D.'s funeral, 392 n. 1; D.'s in- come, 484; Indian Emperor, Preface, 339 n. 5; D. and Milbourne, 449 n. 4; D.'s per- sonal appearance, 394 n. 3; D.'s payments, 387 n. 4, 406 n. 2 ; Essay on Satire, ii. 179; Johnson's Milton, i. 84 n. 1; Notes and Observations on Empress of Morocco, 342 n. 5; Pope's Shakespeare, iii. 139 n. 2; Rowe's widow, 261 n. 3; Shenstone's death, 353 n. 2; Stella's father, 74; Swift and Dryden, 7 n. 10; tragedies in rhyme, i. 337 n. 5. MALTHUS, Thomas Robert, iii. 353 n. 6. MANCHESTER, Anne, Countess of, Halifax's wife, ii. 42.
MANCHESTER, Henry Montagu, first Earl of, ii. 41.
MANDAMUS, iii. 415 n. 3.
MANDEVILLE, Bernard, Addison, ii. 123; private vices public benefits,' i. 157 n. I. MANKIND characterless for the most part, iii. 263; opinions of Burke and Johnson, ii. 430 n. 2.
MANLEY, Mrs., account of her, ii. 187 n. 5; Examiner, contributed to, 187; Lucius, 204 n. 9; quoted, iii. 435 n. 5.
MANNICK,, Pope's cousin, iii. 89 n. 1. MANSFIELD, William Murray, Earl of, 'drank champagne with the wits,' ii. 204 n. II; Pope dines with him, iii. 199 n. 2; P. introduces Warburton, 169; P.'s portrait of Betterton, 107.
MANSO, i. 96, 97, 121.
MANTUAN, iii. 317.
Many-twinkling, iii. 437 n. 2. MAPLEDURHAM, iii. 274.
MARCHMONT, Hugh, third Earl of, Blount, Martha, polite to, iii. 190; Johnson's aversion to transpire,' 250 n. 5; J. had heard no ill of him, 205 n. 8; J. visits him, 190 n. 1; Pope's Epil. to the Satires and Grotto, men- tioned in, ib.; P.'s executor, 192; P.'s lines on Hervey and Fox, 180 n. 2; P.'s re- ported MS. Life of Swift, 214; P. sleeping in company, 198 n. 4.
MARINO, i. 22, 69, 337 n. 3. MARLAY, Chief Justice, i. 456 n. 4. MARLBOROUGH, Henrietta, Duchess of, ii.
MARLBOROUGH, John, Duke of, Addison's BOROUGH Campaign and Rosamond, ii. 130, 131; Barnes's Anacreon dedicated to him, 89; cost of patronage, disliked, 259; Fenton's praise, ib.; Garth and Steele knighted with his sword, 61 n.6;' general for life,' 101 n. 3, iii. 19; Mallet's projected Life, 405; Philips's Blenheim, i. 317; Swift's estimate of him, iii. 18 n. 5.
MARLBOROUGH, Sarah, Duchess of, Addi- son's Rosamond dedication, ii. 89; Congreve and younger Duchess, 227 n. 3; Garth, present to, 61 n. 6; lavish in Duke's honour, 259 #. 2; Marlborough's Life, testamentary instructions on, iii. 405 n. 4; Pope's alleged ingratitude, 272; P.'s Atossa,' supposed to be, 175, 272; P. sleeping in company, 198 n. 4; without poetry or literature, ii. 89.
MARLOW, Mr. Arthur, iii. 162 n. 4. MARSH, Narcissus, Archbishop of Armagh, ii. 28, iii. 14 n. 3.
MARSHALL, Mr. John, i. 35 n. 1, ii. 176 n. 4.
MARSHALL, Judge, iii. 36 n. 3. MARTIAL, i. 41 n. 6, 212, 218.
MARTIN, Lieut.-Col. Edmund, Collins's uncle, iii. 336 n. 3.
MARTINEAU, Harriet, Milton's Psalm, i. 87 n. 3.
MARVELL, Andrew, Ad Christinam, i. 114 n. 7; Milton, befriends, 129, 130 n. 3; M.'s 'retired silence,' 132 n. 2; On Paradise Lost, 192 n. 7, 358 n. 7, 359; Rochester, 222 #. 5. MARY OF MODENA, described by Burnet and Macaulay, ii. 287 n. 6; Dryden's flattery, i. 359; Granville's panegyrics, ii. 287; 'im- prudent piety,' ib.; vows to St. Francis Xavier, i. 379.
MARY, Queen, wife of William III, Con- greve's Double Dealer and Old Batchelor, ii. 217; Dryden's Spanish Friar, 'unhappy ex- pressions' in, i. 357 n. 1; elegies on her, ii. 183, 217.
MASHAM, Mrs., iii. 39, 68.
MASON, Lady, Countess of Macclesfield's mother, ii. 324 n. 4, 325, 327, 328.
MASON, Sir Richard, of Sutton, ii. 324 n. 4.
MASON, Rev. William, Akenside, inferior to, iii. 420 n. 2; Gray's Elegy, suggested title, 442; 'sunt lacrymae rerum,' 445; French, 442; G., friendship with, 424; G.'s Latin poetry, ib.; G.'s method of composition, 433 n. 2; Memoirs of Gray, 424, 442; Temple's character of Gray, adopts, 429; Pembroke College, Cambridge, 424; West's Ode to May, 423.
MASSEY, John, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford, i. 312 n. 5.
MASSON, Professor, 'legendary Miltons of Milton,' i. 84 n. 5; Milton's Accidence com- menced Grammar, 132 n. 3; M.'s contribution to rhyme controversy, 339 n. 6; M.'s danger at Restoration, 127 n. 4; M.'s income after Re- storation, 153 n. 6; M. and Regii Sanguinis Clamor, 117.11; M.'s subscription to Thirty- Nine Articles, 91 n. 4; Paradise Lost editions and translations, 199; publication of first edition, 141 nn., 142 n. 1; Paradise Re- gained and Samson Agonistes, 146 n. 5.
MASTER OF THE REVELS, iii. 292 n. 1. MATHESON, Mr. P. E., ii. 317 n. 5. MATY, Dr. Matthew, second librarian in British Museum, Hammond and Chesterfield, ii. 314; Pope's Iliad MS., iii. 119. MAULDEN, Bedfordshire, i. 301 n. 2. MAUSSAC, i. 112 n. I.
MAY, Thomas, latinity, i. 12, 13,66; Lucan's Pharsalia translated, 12 n. 4, 63, 373 n. 9; Supplementum Lucani, 12 n. 4; tomb in Westminster Abbey, ib.
MAYNARD, Serjeant, i. 240 n. I. MAZARIN, Cardinal, i. 268 n. 2. MEAD, Dr. Richard, Pope and Bentley meet at his house, iii. 213 n. 2; Pope's latinity, 201 n. 7.
Mediocrist, ii. 164 n. 8.
MELCOMBE, Lord, see DODINGTON. MELMOTH, William, Pliny's Letters, trans- lator of, ii. 77 n. 3; Swift's metaphors, iii. 51
MEMMIUS, Henricus, i. 227.
Memoirs of Scriblerus, iii. 181.
Men are but men, iii. 32.
MENANDER, iii. 237. MENDEZ, John, ii. 415 n. I.
MERCHANT, Mr., tried with Savage for murder, ii. 344, 346, 350.
Mercurius Aulicus, ii. 94.
MESNAGER, M., French plenipotentiary, ii.
METAPHORS,' drawn from Art degrades Na- ture,' iii. 437; French and Italians fearful of them, i. 421 n. 3; Swift, rarely used by, iii. 51. Metaphrase, i. 422 n. 5. Metaphysical, i. 67.
METAPHYSICAL POETS, account and criti- cism, i. 18-35; criticisms by later writers, 67; examples from Cleveland, Cowley, and Donne, 23-35; Johnson values dissertation on them, I n. I.
METHODISTS, iii. 330 n. 3, 450 n. 3. MIDDLESEX, Charles Sackville, Earl of, afterwards second Duke of Dorset, described by Walpole, iii. 255 n. 2; Dunciad dedicated to him, ii. 360, iii. 147.
MIDDLESEX, Lionel Cranfield, third Earl of, Dorset's uncle, i. 305 n. 4.
MIDDLE STATE OF LIFE, ii. 395. MIDDLETON, Conyers, iii. 432 n. 3. MIDLETON, Alan Brodrick, Viscount, Lord Chancellor of Ireland, iii. 34 n. 4, 72.
MILBOURNE, Rev. Luke, Dryden, praises, i. 449 n. 4; Dryden's Virgil, attacks, 388, 401, 403, 449-52; D.'s Epistle to John Driden, ii. 240 n. 3; D.'s Preface to Fables, mentioned in, i. 401; 'fairest of critics,' 388; Pope's Essay on Criticism, mentioned in, 449
MILBROOK, i. 301 n. 2.
MILES, Mr., of the Turk's Head Coffee- house, i. 126 n. 1.
MILL, John Stuart, Addison and Goldsmith, ii. 150 n. 1; Pope's Essay on Man, iii. 244 n. 9.
MILLAN, John, the bookseller, iii. 284.
MILLAR, Andrew, the bookseller, successor to the Tonsons, i. 160 n. 4; Hume's letters to him, iii. 405 n. 6, 407 n. 7; 'Maecenas of the age,' 407 n. 7; Mallet's Bolingbroke, published, 407; Thomson's publisher, 284 n. 3.
Millar v. Taylor, iii. 284 n. 3.
MILLER, Rev. James, the playwright, ii. 402
MILLER, Philip, the gardener, i. 319. MILLER, Mr., of Gray's Inn, i. 101 n. 4. MILLER, Mr., iii. 351 n. 6.
MILSTON, near Amesbury, ii. 79. MILTON, near Thame, i. 84.
MILTON, Anne, the poet's sister, married to Edward Phillips, i. 85; sons educated by Milton, 86, 98; second marriage and daugh- ters, 158.
MILTON, Anne, the poet's eldest daughter, birth, i. 107 n. 3; deformity and defective speech, 144, 158; excused from reading, 144; makes her mark to document, 159 n. 6; marriage and death, 158.
MILTON, Catherine, Milton's niece, i. 158. MILTON, Sir Christopher, the poet's brother, royalist and judge, i. 85; children, 158; lives with his father, 104 n. 5; Milton's late studies, 152 n. 2; M.'s nuncupative will, 153 n. 8.
MILTON, Deborah, the poet's daughter, Addison's interview with her, i. 159, 199; amanuensis and reader to her father, 139 n. I, 145 n. 1, 158, 199; death, 158; good sense and genteel behaviour, 200; marriage and children, 158, 159; poverty, 160 n. 4, 200; Queen Caroline's present to her, 159; repeti- tion of Greek and Latin lines, 158, 199; resembled her father, 199; signature, 159 n. 6.
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