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genealogy, Number 612. From Will Hopeless, about ambition, 63. From the
Temple, about beggars eloquence, ibid. From Monimia, to recover a loft lover,
ibid. From a country wit in the burlesque way, 616. From a pedant in his
pedantic way on the fame fubject, 617. About the tiles of letters, 613. An-
fwers to feveral, 619. About flattery, 621. From the love-cafuift about the
widow's tenure, and the black ram, 623. From the fame about love queries,
625. From one who recommended himself for a news-monger, ibid. About
the force of novelty, 626. About a croffed lover, 627. About eternity to
come, 628. About church mufic, 630. About the Rattling club's getting
into church, ibid.

Life, eternal, what we ought to be moft folicitous about, N. 575. Man's not
worth his care, ibid. Valuable only as it prepares for another, ibid.
Love cafuift, fome inftructions of his, N. 591, 607.

Lover, an account of the life of one, N. 596. A croffed one retires, 627.

M.

MAHOMETANS, their cleanlinefs, N. 631.
Marcia's prayer in Cato, N. 593.

Memoirs of a private country-gentleman's life, N. 622.

Man, the two views he is to be confidered in, N. 588. An active being, 624.
His ultimate end, ibid.

Merry part of the world amiable, N. 598.

Meffiah, the Jews mistaken notion of his worldly grandeur, N. 610.

Metaphors, when vicious, N. 595. An inftance of it, ibid.

Military education, a letter about it, N. 566.

Mischief rather to be fuffered than an inconvenience, N. 564.
Montague, fond of fpeaking of himself, N. 562.
Mufic, church, recommended, N. 630.

Mufician, burlefque, an account of one, N. 570.

N.

Scaliger's faying of him, ibid.

N EEDLEWORK recommended to ladies, N. 606.

A letter from Cleora against it, 609.

News, the pleasure of it, N. 625.

Newton, Sir Ifaac, his noble way of confidering infinite fpace, N. 564.

Night, a clear one defcribed, N. 565.

fey, 582.

Whimsically defcribed by William Ram-

No, a word of great ufe to women in love-matters, N. 625.
Novelty, the force of it, 626.

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BSCURITY often more illuftrious than grandeur, N. 622.
Orator, what requifite to form one, N. 633.

Ovid, his verses on making love at the theatre, translated by Mr. Dryden, 602.
How to fucceed in his manner, 618.

P.

PASSIONS, the work of a philofopher to fubdue them, N. 564. Inftances of

their power, ibid.

Patience, her power, N. 559.

Pedantic humour, N. 617.

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Penelope's web, the history of it, N. 606.

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Perfon, the word defined by Mr. Locke, N. 578.

Petition of John a Nokes, and John a Stiles, N. 577.

Petition from a cavalier for a place, with his pretences to it, N. 629.
Phebe and Colin, an original poem, N. 603.

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Philofophers, Pagan, their boaft of exalting human nature, N. 634.
Pittacus, a wife faying of his about riches, N. 574.
Pity, the reasonableness of it, N. 588.

Places,

Places, the unreasonableness of party pretences to them, Number 629.
Planting recommended to country gentlemen, N. 583. Again, 589.
Plato's faying of labour, N. 624,

Playhouse, how improved in ftorms, N. 592.

Politicians, the mifchief they do, N. 556. Some at the Royal Exchange, 568.
Pufs, fpeculations on an old and a young one, N. 626.

Pythagoras, his advice to his fcholars about examining at night what they had
done in the day, N. 586.

UERIES in love anfwered, N. 625.

Queftion, a curious one started by a schoolman about the choice of present
and future happiness and mifery, N. 575..

Quidnunc, Thomas, his letters to the Spectator about news, N. 625.
Quacks, an effay against them, N. 572.

RAKE, a character of one, N. 576.

R.

Rattling club got into the church, N. 630.

Ramfey, William, the aftrologer, his whimfical defcription of night, N. 582.
Revelation, what light it gives into the joys of heaven, N. 600.

Revenge of a Spanish lady on a man who boasted of her favours, N. 611.
Roficrucian, a pretended discovery made by one, N. 574.

Royal Progress, a poem, N. 620.

ST. Paul's eloquence, N. 633.

S.

Satire, Whole Duty of Man turned into one, N. 568.

Scarves, the vanity of fome clergymens wearing them, N. 609.

Scribblers, the moft offenfive, N. 582.

Self-love, the narrowness and danger of it, N. 588.

Seneca, his faying of drunkenness, N. 569.

Shakespeare, his excellence, N. 562.

Shalum the Chinese, his letter to the Princefs Hilpa before the flood, N. 584.
Sight, fecond, in Scotland, N. 604.

Singularity, when a virtue, N. 576. An inftance of it in a north country gen-
tleman, ibid.

Socrates, his faying of misfortunes, N. 558.

Space, infinite, Sir Ifaac Newton's noble way of confidering it, N. 564.
Spartan juftice, an inftance of it, N. 564.
Spectator breaks a fifty years filence, N. 576.
ibid. His politics, ibid. Loquacity, ibid.
of his, 558. Critics upon him, 568. He fleeps
599. His dream of Trophonius's cave, ibid.
lished, 652.

Spleen, it's effects, N. 558.

Stars, a contemplation of them, N. 565.
Sublime in writing, what it is, N. 592.

Syncopifts, modern ones, N. 567.

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How he recovered his fpeech,
Of no party, ibid. A calamity
as well as wakes for the public,
Why the eighth volume pub-

Syracufan prince, jealous of his wife, how he ferved her, N. 579.

T.

TEMPER, ferious, the advantage of it, N. 598.

Tender hearts, an entertainment for them, N. 627.

Tenure, the moft flippery in England, N. 623.

Thales, his faying of truth and falfhood, N. 594.

Theatre, of making love there, N. 602.

Torre in Devonshire, how unchafte widows are punished there, N. 614.
Townly, Frank, his letter to the Spectator, N. 560.

Tully

Tully praises himfélf, Number 562.
588. Of uttering a jeit, 616.
quired in his orator, 633.

What he faid of the immortality of the foul,
Of the force of novelty, 626. What he re-

V.

UBIQUITY of the Godhead confidered, N. 571. Farther confiderations

about it, 583.

Verfes by a defpairing lover, N. 591. On Phebe and Colin, 603. Tranflation
of pedantic verfes out of the Italian, 617. The Royal Progrefs, 620. To
Mrs.
on her grotto, 633.

Vice as laborious as virtue, N. 604.

Vision of human mifery, N. 604.

Vulcan's dogs, the fable of them, N. 579.

W.

WEST Enhorne, in Berkshire, a cuftom there for widows, N. 614. What

Lord Coke faid of the widows tenure there, 623.

Whichenovre bacon flitch, in Staffordshire, who intitled to it, N. 607.
Whole Duty of Man, that excellent book turned into a fatire, N. 568.
Widows club, an account of it, N. 561. A letter from the prefident of it to the
Spectator about her fuitors, 573. Duty of widows in old times, 606. A
custom to punish unchatte ones in Berkshire and Devonshire, 614. Inftances of
their riding the black ram there, 623.

Writing, the difficulty of it to avoid cenfure, N. 568.
Work neceffary for women, N. 606.

X.

XENOPHON, his account of Cyrus's trying the virtue of a young lord,
N. 564.

Z.

ZEMROUDE, Queen, hér ftory out of the Perfian Tales, N. 578.

FINIS.

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