plishment of it, Book iv. Her appearance on the Throne, with the Sciences led in triumph, iv. 21, &c. Tragedy and Comedy silenced, General assembly of all her Votaries, 73. Her Patrons, 95. Her Critics, 115. Her sway in the Schools, 149 to 180. and Universities, 189 to 274. How she educates Gentlemen in their Travels, 293 to 334-Constitutes Virtuosi in Science, 355, &c. Freethinkers in Religion, 459. Slaves and Dependents in Government, 505. Finally turns them to Beasts, but pre- serves the form of Men, 525. What sort of Comforters she sends them, 529, &c. What Orders and Degrees she confers on them, 565. What Performances she expects from them, according to their several Ranks and Degrees, 583. The powerful Yawn she breathes on them, 605, &c. Its Progress and Effects, 607, &c. till the Consummation of All, in the total Extinction of the reasonable Soul, and Resto- ration of Night and Chaos, usq. ad fin. Dispensary of Dr Garth, ii. 140.
De Foe, Daniel, in what resembled to William Prynne, i. 103.
De Foe, Norton, a scandalous writer, ii. 415. DENNIS (John), his Character of himself, i. 106. Senior to Mr Durfey, iii. 173.
Esteemed by our Author, and why, ibid. His love of Puns, i. 63.
And Politics, i. 106. ii. 413.
His great Loyalty to King George, how
A great Friend to the Stage
- and to the State, ii. 413.
How he proves that none but Non-jurors and disaffected persons writ against Stage- plays, ibid.
His respect to the Bible and Alcoran, ibid. His excuse for Obscenity in Plays, iii. 179. His mortal fear of Mr Pope, founded on
Mr Curl's assurances, i. 106.
Of opinion that he poisoned Curl, ibid.
Good nature of our author; Instances of it in this work, i. 328. ii. 282.
Good Sense, Grammar, and Verse, desired to give place for the sake of Mr Bes. Morris and his Works, iii. 168.
His reason why Homer was, or was not in GILDON (Charles), abused our Author in many
His Accusations of Sir R. Blackmore,
As no Protestant, ii. 268.
Printed against Jesus Christ, i. 296. GILDON and DENNIS, their unhappy difference lamented, iii. 173.
His wonderful Dedication to G. D. Esq. Gentleman, his Hymu to his Creator, by Wel-
Drams, dangerous to a Poet, iii. 146.
Gazetteers, the monstrous price of their Writ- ings, ii. 314. the miserable fate of their Works, ibid.
Lord Mayor's Show, i. 85.
OLDMIXON (John) abused Mr Addison and Mr Pope, ii. 283. Falsify'd Daniel's History, then accused others of falsifying Lord Clarendon's; proved a Slanderer in it, ibid.
abused Mr Eusden and my Lord Chamber- lain, i. 104.
Odyssey, Falshoods concerning Mr P. s pro- posals for that work, Test.
Disproved by those very Proposals, ibid. Owls and Opium, i. 271.
Oranges, and their use, i. 236.
Opera, her advancement, iii. 301. iv. 45, &c. Opiates, two very considerable ones, ii. 370. Their Efficacy, 390, &c.
OSBORNE, Bookseller, crowned with a Jordan, ii.
OSBORNE (Mother), turned to stone, ii. 312.
Libeller [see EDWARDS, Tho.], a Grub-street Cri- Owls, desired to answer Mr Ralph, iii. 166.
tic run to seed, iv. 567.
Library of Bays, i. 131.
Liberty and Monarchy mistaken for one another,
Madmen, two related to Cibber, i. 32. Magazines, their character, i. 42. Molière, crucify'd, i. 132.
MOORE (James), his story of six Verses, and of ridiculing Bishop Burnet in the Memoirs of a Parish Clerk, proved false, by the Testi- monies of
The Lord Bolingbroke, Test. Hugh Bethel, Esq. ib.
Earl of Peterborough, ibid. Dr Arbuthnot, ibid.
His Plagiarisms, some few of them, ibid. and ii. 50. What he was real author of (beside the Story above mentioned.) Vide List of scurrilous Papers.
Erasmus, his advice to him, ii. 50. MILBOURNE, a fair Critic, and why, ii. 349. Madness, of what sort Mr Dennis's was, accord- ing to Plato, i. 106.
according to himself, ii. 268.
how allied to Dulness, iii. 15. Mercuries and Magazines, i. 42.
May-pole in the Strand, turned into a Church, ií. 28.
MORRIS (Besaleel), ii. 126. iii. 168.
Monuments of Poets, with Inscriptions to other Men, iv. 131, &c.
Pope (Mr), [his Life], Educated by Jesuits-by a Parson-by a Monk-at St Omer's-at Oxford -at home-no where at all, Test. init. His father a Merchant, a Husbandman, a Farmer, a Hatter, the Devil, ibid.
His Death threatened by Dr Smedley, ibid. but afterwards advised to hang himself or cut his throat, ibid. To be hunted down like a wild beast, by Mr Theobald, ibid. unless hanged for Treason, on information of Pasquin, Mr Dennis, Mr Curl, and Concanen, ibid. Poverty, never to be mentioned in Satire, in the opinion of the Journalists and Hackney-writers -The Poverty of Codrus, not touched upon by Juvenal, ii. 143. When, and how far Po- verty may be satirized, Letter, p. 357. When- ever mentioned by our Author, it is only as an Extenuation and Excuse for bad Writers, ii.
Personal abuses not to be endured, in the opinion of Mr Dennis, Theobald, Curl, &c. ii. 142. Personal abuses on our Author, by Mr Dennis, Gildon, &c. ibid.-By Mr Theobald, Test.- By Mr Ralph, iii. 165.-By Mr Welsted, ii. 207-By Mr Cooke, ii. 138-By Mr Concanen, ii. 299-By Sir Richard Blackmore, ii. 268- By Edw. Ward, iii. 34-and their Brethren, passim.
Personal abuses of others. Mr Theobald of Mr Dennis for his poverty, i. 106. Dr Dennis of Mr Theobald for his livelihood by the Stage, and the Law, i. 286. Mr Dennis of Sir Richard Blackmore for Impiety, ii. 268. D. Smedley of Mr Concanen, ii. 299. Mr Oldmixon's of Mr Eusden, i. 104. Of Mr Addison, ii. 283. Mr Cook's of Mr Eusden, i. 104.
Politics, very useful in Criticism, Mr Dennis's, i. 106. ii. 413.
Pillory, a post of respect, in the opinion of Mr Curl, iii. 34.
and of Mr Ward, ib. Plagiary described, ii. 47, &c.
Priori, Argument a priori not the best-to prove a God, iv. 471.
Poverty and Poetry, their Cave, i. 33. Profaneness not to be endured in our Author, but very allowable in Shakespear, i. 50. Party-writers, their three Qualifications, ii. 276. Proteus (the fable of), what to be understood by it, i. 31.
Palmers, Pilgrims, iii. 113.
Pindars and Miltons, of the modern sort, iii. 164.
Shakespeare, to be spelled always with an e at the end, i. I. but not with an e in the middle, ibid. An Edition of him in marble, ibid. Mangled, altered, and cut by the Players and Critics, i. 133. very sore still of Tibbald, ibid. Sepulchral Lies on Church Walls, i. 43. SETTLE (Elkanah), Mr Dennis's account of him, iii. 37. And Mr Welsted's, ibid. Once pre- ferred to Dryden, iii. 37. A Party-writer of Pamphlets, ibid. and iii. 283. A writer of Farces and Drolls, and employed at last in Bartholomew fair, iii. 283.
Sawney, a Poem: The author's great ignorance in Classical Learning, i. 1.
Swiss of Heaven, who they are, ii. 358. A slipshod Sibyl, iii. 15. Silenus described, iv. 492. Scholiasts, iii. 191. iv. 211, 232..
Supperless, a mistake concerning this word set right with respect to Poets and other tempe- rate Students, i. 115.
Sevenfold face, who master of it, i. 244. Soul (the vulgar Soul), its office, iv. 441. Schools, their homage paid to Dulness, and in what, iv. 150, &c.
TIBBALD, not Hero of this Poem, i. init. Pub- lished an edition of Shakespear, i. 133. Author, secretly, and abettor of Scurrilities against Mr P. Vid. Testimonies and List of Books. Thule, a very Northern Poem, puts out a fire, i. 258.
Tailors, a good word for them, against Poets and ill Paymasters, ii. 118.
Thunder, how to make it by Mr Dennis's receipt, ii. 226.
Travelling described, and its advantages, iv. 293, &c.
Verbal Critics. Two points always to be granted them, ii. 1.
Venice, the City of, for what famous, iv. 308. University, how to pass thro' it, iv. 255, 289. UPTON (John), a Renegado Scholiast, writes notes on the FIRE-SIDE, iii. 173.
WARD (Edw.), a Poet and Alehouse-keeper in Moor-fields, i. 233. What became of his Works, ibid.
His high opinion of his Namesake, and his respect for the Pillory, iii. 34. WELSTED (Leonard), one of the authors of the Weekly Journals, abused our Author, &c. many years since, ii. 207. Taken by Dennis for a Didapper, ibid. The character of his Poetry, iii. 170
Weekly Journals, by whom written, ii. 280. Whirligigs, iii. 57.
His Praises on himself above Mr Addison, Wizard, his Cup, and the strange Effects of it,
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