N. 311. Coscern- 9 Honeycomb (Will) his great insight into gallan. . choice of a husband, after he is married ject with their former letter, ibid. From the parish who has overdeckt the church with From the clerk in his own justification, N. 28.4. From of Cambridge, indufting which is the most beautiful, a ratr or** brown complexiet, ibid. presented by Sir Andrew Freeport to the Peter Morteux, who from an author is turn- to play the part of Orested, in a new tragedy called the Distret Mother, 290. Frört som phia, to know if the gentleman fhe law in Spectator, ibid. The The Spectator's answer, ibid. To the Spectator: from. Jezebel a wo- Fribbłe on pin-money, N. .225 From J. From Barbara Crabtree, to know if Aurelia "Careless, converning the use of the wife is a great orator, ibid. From Lydia :: From Sutannah Lovebane,'again?tlarpooners, Harriot's answer, ibid. To the Spectator, Trot, ibid. From Chaitity Loveworth, on Mr. Clayton, &c. ibid: Froin jack Afterday, nah Loveworth, on the behaviour of married qther pleasures but that of being worth lanthropos, on tie terms of conversation with ibid. The sons answer, ibid.: To the Specs der, a silent lover, N. 304. From Parthenilla, closed from Sir Roger de Coverley, No. 264. 306, from Corinnato Ainitcar, on the Yame on the education of children, N. From a tradesman married to a woman of about the new-fathioned hoods, paper called The Historian, ib. From Eli- , ibid. From by 500l. ib. From a discarded lover, with 'containing further thoughts on edu. plaining of his mistress, N: 314. From John Cross-stich the owner of madamoifelle, ibid. Samuel Slack on idleness, N. 316. From for him, N. 278. From Florinda, who with an account of the amours of Elcalus an eld A ing of the spectator's partiality. Od 309 R Recreation, the neceffity of it, N. 258. N. 292. SAN. 259 M N. 294. R. art of growing rich, ib. The proper use of riches, N. 294. the terror of Europe, N. 305. S. ALUTATION, subject to great enormities, N. 259. Scaramouch, an expedient of his at Paris, N. and that of her fister Martha, and the reasons School. masters, the ignorance and undiscerning of the generality of them, N. 313 sengers, N. 289. Illustrated by a story of a that play, N. 270. hath been so much perused, N. 289. Slavery, what kind of government the most re- moved from it, N. 287. Smithfield bargain, in marriage, the inhumanity of it, N. 304. learned, or philosophical solitude, N. 264. cation of children, N. 307. and the reason of it, N. 261. His acknow- ledgments to the public, N. 262. His advice to the British ladies, N. 265. His adventure with a woman of the town, N. 266. His description of a French puppet newly arrived, N. 277. His opinion of our form of go- vernment and religion, N. 287. Sometimes taken for a parith sexton, and why, N. 289. Starch political, its use, N. 304. T. HEMISTOCLES, his answer to a question the well-educating of their children, N. 313. puted, N, 316. tator, N. 304. Trade, the most likely means to make a man's private fortune, N. 283. V. CIRGIL, wherein short of Homer, N. 273- Virtue, when the sincerity of it may red- sonably be suspected, N. 266. W. ASPS and doves in public, who, N. 300. Widows, the great game of fortunea hunters, N. 311. fachers, N. 265. The general depravity of the inferior part of the sex, N. 274. They . N. 319. N. 390. N. 394: N. 339. A. ibid. The many advantages of a chearful A Calembris agreeable character Number 286, temper, 387. Admiration, when turned into contempt, Chocolate, a great heater of the blood in women, N. 365. the text as well as the preachers, N. 331. Age, the authority assumed by some people on Church work now work according to Sir the account of it, N. 336. Roger, 383. in a piece of cruelty, and the occasion of it, Commendation generally followed by detraction, N. 348. Commercial friendship preferable to generosity, N. 346. Complaisance, what kind of it peculiar to courts, Coverly (Sir Roger de) his reflections upon visitArtillery, the invention and first use of it, to ing the tombs in Westminster Abbey, N. 392 ;, a whom ascribed by Milton, N. 333. great friend to beards, 331: goes with the St. Asaph (the bishop of) his preface to his ser Spectator and captain Sentry to the play called mons, N. 384. the Difrejt Mother, 335; his behaviour and reAssurance, what, N. 373. marks at it, ibid. his uneasiness on the widow's Atheism, an enemy to chearfulness of mind, account, 359 ; his observations in his paffage N. 381. Two unanswerable arguments against with the Spectator to Spring-gardens, 383; in it, 389. In what manner Atheists ought to be what manner afironted on that occafion, ibid. treated, ibid. Courage and magnanimity inseparable, N. 350. Atticus, disinterested and prudent conduct in his Court intereft, the several ways of making it, friendships, N. 385. B. N. 339; the contemplations on creation a per- ibid. At what times the beards fourished most man, 393 D. Ancing beard, ibid. Bicknell (Mrs.) for what com ded by the what owin ibid. Useful on the stage, 370. Spectator, N. 370. Death, the benefit of it, N. 349. brought into the house for the better preserv Mr. Locke, N. 373. Detraction, the generality of it in conversation, N. 348. Devotée, the description of one, N. 354. Drums, customary but very improper inftru. с ments in marriage confort, N. 364. E. any other colour, N. 387. Emperor of the Mobocs arms, and how borne, detra&ion, N. 335. EffeMIT N. 331. C#5 AR"somoure the Englif press, N. 367. N. 342 N. 324. N. 323. a Generation not always to be commended, N. 372. H. on the user Efcoart the comedian, his extraordinary talents, into the world, 330; from James Difcipulus, N. 358. complaining of the nearnefa 'of his father as a Eugene (Prince the Spectator's account of him, great discouragement to him in the course of N. 340; in what manner to be compared with his studies, ibid. from Jack Lightfost, containAlexarder and Cæfar, ibid. ing an account of his sweaters, 332; from St. Ezrimond, the fingularity of his remarks, N. three country virtuous virgins, who are ambi349. tious of the characters of very good wives, F. ibid. from the author of the history of dancF Alfhood and diffimulation, the inconvenience ing, 334: from a young man complaining of of it perpetual, N. 352. an ill custom he has observed among old men, Female rakes described, N. 336. 336; from Rebecio the distressed, complaining Flav:lla, liberal of her snuff at church, N. 344. of a club of female rakes, ibid. from Fidel, his adventures and transformation into a with some other thoughts on education, 337 looking-glais, N. 392. and 353; from Physibulus, occasioned by the Friendthip, an essay upon it, N. 385; defined, epilogue to the Distref Morber, 338; from Phi. ibid. what sort of friend hip the most useful, lome:des, in answer to the foregoing letter, 341; ibid. from an officer concerning Sylvana's conduct Frolic, what ought truly to be termed fo, N. 358. in the absence of her husband, 342; from Jack Frugality, the true basis of liberality, N. 346. Freelove to his mistress, written in the perfon G. of a monkey, 343 ; to the Spalator from Epicure Mammon, a great trencherman, 344; from complaining of an extravagant cufGod, the heing of one, the greatest of certain tom among some women of taking snuff, ibid. ties, N. 331. from Taw Waw Eben Zan Kaladar emperor Gooseq: ill (William) clerk to the lawyer's club, of the Mobocs, with a manifesto, 347 ; from Mary, against detraction, 34%; from Hotspur, Grammar-school, a common fault observed in with the desciption of a devotée, 354 ; from the n, N. 353. Sophrofunius, complaining of the impudent beGreen, why called in poetry the chearful colour, haviour of people in the streets, ibid. from N, 287. in behalf of a genteel dress, 360 ; Gymnofophifts (Indian ) the method used by them from John Shallow, who had lately been at a in the education of their disciples, N. 337. concert of cat-calls, 361; from Tom Porrle, in commendation of Brooke and Hellier, 362; from Will Cymon, with an account of the improvefulness of looking-glasses, N. 325; his ments wrought in him by love, and the chaobservations upon the corruption of the age, racter of his mistress, ibid. from Philip Home352 ; he gives the club a brief account of his bred, upon travel, 364; from Robin Bridegroom amours and disappointments, 359. in Birchin-Lene, complaining of a set of drums Hudibras, a description of his bcard, N. 331. that awakened him with their thunder the I. morning after he was married, ibid. from AltaMpudence distinguished from assurance, N. mira, a prude, ibid. from with the 373 ; the most proper means to avoid the ima transiation of a Lapland song, 366; from Conputition of it, 390. flantia Comb-Brush, complaining that her mirIndifference in marriage not to be tafted by fenfi tress gives her caft-off cloaths to others, ibid. ble fpirits, N. 322. from Paul Regnaud to his friend, on the death Interelt; the ready way to promote our interest of Madam de Villacerfe, 368; to the Spectator in the world, N. 394. from on whims and humorists, 371; K. from Ralph Belfry, in commendation of Mr. Nowledge ought to be communicative, N. Powell, master of the motion, 372; from 379 Humphrey Transfer, on a moving club of parith L. clerks, ibid. from H. R. complaining of the lawyers club, ibid. from Michael Gander, on made advantageous even to the meaneit ca. the city watchman and his goose, 376; from p.cities, N. 353. Richard Watchful, on dancing, ibid. from MyrLengold, the last emperor of that name an expert tilla, defiring the Spełotor's advice in relation joiner, N. 353. to her lover, 380; from 7. S. animadverting Litters to the Sperlator, from Otavia married to on some persons behaviour at church, ibid. an ungrateful husband, N. 322 ; from Clarinda, from T. B. on vanity and the abundance of it witia hier journal, 323; from Philanthropos, in the female sex, ibidl. from Betty Lemon, who with an account of the Moboc club, 324 ; from had been presented with a guinea by a few, a countryman to her he very much respects, ibid. from the Sexton of St. Bride's on a new Mrs. Margaret Clark, ibid. from R. T. to the charity-school of fifty girls, erected in that Speriator upon a passage in Milton, 325 ; from parim, ibid. from a gentleman in Denmark, 393. a country gentleman lying under the misfor- Liberality, the true basis of it, N. 346. tune of having a very fine park, and an only Lillie, (Charles) his present to the Spectator, drugliter, 326 ; from Mrs. Mary Comfit at Mile End Grein, ibid. from 7. B. complaining of Longings in women, the extravagancies of them, his wife's expensive longings during her preg N. 326. nancy, ibid. from a married gentleman who is Longinus, an observation of that critic, N. 339. in a fair way of being undone by his virtuous Love, in what manner discovered to his mistress Jovely wife, 328; from S. B. recommending by one of Will Honeycomb's acquaintance, N. the patronage of young modeft men to such 325; the mother of poetry, 377. as are able to countenance and introduce them MAY, IME K N. 358. |