Complete Works of Samuel Johnson

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Complete Works of Samuel Johnson Page 876

by Samuel Johnson


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  Habeas Corpus, ii. 73. Habeas Corpus Bill of 1758, iii. 233, n. 1. HABERDASHERS’ COMPANY, i. 132, n. 1. HABITATIONS, attachment to, ii. 103. HABITS, early, force of, ii. 366. HACKMAN, Rev. Mr., Boswell attends his trial, iii. 383; and execution, iii. 384, n. 1; altercation about him, iii. 384-5; described in Love and Madness, iv. 187, n. 1. HADDINGTON, seventh Earl of, iii. 133. HADDO, Professor, v. 64. HADDOCKS, dried, v. 110. Hadoni exequioe, iv. 159, n. 1. HAGLEY, described by Walpole, v. 78, n. 3, 456, n. 2; Johnson visits it, v. 456-7. HAGUE, v. 25, n. 2. HAILES, Lord (Sir David Dalrymple), account of him, i. 432; v. 48; Annals of Scotland, a new mode of history, ii. 383; accuracy, ii. 421; a book of great labour, iii. 372; exact, but dry, iii. 404; praised by Gibbon, ib., n. 3; revised by Johnson, ii. 278-9, 283-4, 287, 293. 333, 379-80, 383-4, 387, 411-12, 421; iii. 120, 216, 219, 360; praised by him, iii. 58; Boswell, letters to, i. 432; v. 406; Catalogue of the Lords of Session, v. 213; Chesterfield’s ‘respectable Hottentot,’ on, i. 267; consulted on the entail of Auchinleck, ii. 415, 418, 420-22; critical sagacity, ii. 201; v. 48; Elgin Cathedral, account of, v. 114; Inch Keith, account of, v. 55; Johnson, introduced to, v. 48; asks, to write a character of Bruce, ii. 386-7; compares, with Swift, i. 433; is not convinced by his Suasorium, iii. 91; records a talk with him, v. 399; sends him anecdotes for his Lives, iii. 396-7; drinks a bumper to him, i. 451; love for him, ii. 293; Knight, the negro’s case, iii. 216, 219; La crédulité des Incrédules, v. 332; Lactantius, edits, iii. 133; modernizes John Hales’s language, iv. 315; Ossian, faith in, ii. 295; Percy, resemblance to, iii. 278; Prior, censures, iii. 192; Remarks on the History of Scotland, v. 38-9; Sacred Poems, iii. 192; Stuarts, unfair to the, v. 255; Vanity of Human Wishes, corrects the, v. 49; Walton’s Lives, proposal to edit, ii. 279, 283, 285, 445; mentioned, ii. 294; iii. 102, 129, 155; iv. 157, 216, 232, 241; v. 394. HAIR, growth of the, iii. 398, n. 3. HAKEWILL, Rev. George, i. 219. HALL, Sir Matthew, devoted to his office, ii. 344; knowledge varied, ii. 158; Life by Burnet, iv. 311; Primitive Origination of Mankind, i. 188, n. 4; rules of health and study, iv. 310; sentenced witches to death, v. 45, n. 5. HALES, John, of Eton, iv. 315. HALES, Stephen, On Distilling Sea-Water, i. 309; Statical Essays, v. 247, n. 1. HALIFAX, Dr., ii. 97, n. 1. HALKET, Elizabeth, ii. 91, n. 2. HALL, Dr., Master of Pembroke College, iv. 298, n. 2. HALL, General, iii. 361, 362, n. 1. HALL, John, the engraver, iii. 111; iv. 421, n. 2. HALL, Mrs., account of her, iv. 92; Johnson turns Captain Macheath, iv. 95; talks of the resurrection, iv. 93. HALL, Rev. Robert, influenced by a metaphysical tailor, iv. 187, n. 2; studied at Aberdeen, v. 85, n. 2. HALL, Rev. Westley (Wesley’s brother-in-law), iv. 92, n. 3. HALL, —— , v. 98. HALLAM, Henry, ii. 210, n. 3. HALLAM, Henry, the younger, ii. 94, n. 2. HALLE, University of, i. 148, n. 1. HALLS, fire-place in the middle, i. 273; in squires’ houses, v. 60. HALSEY, Edmund, i. 491, n. 1. HAM, posterity of, i. 401. HAMILTON, Archibald, the printer, ii. 226. HAMILTON, Captain, iv. 295, n. 5. HAMILTON, sixth Duke of, v. 359. n. 2. HAMILTON, eighth Duke of, ii. 50, n. 4; ii. 219; v. 43, 353, n. 1. HAMILTON, Gavin, ii. 270. HAMILTON, Lady Betty, v. 354, 358. HAMILTON, Sir William, member of the Literary Club, i. 479. HAMILTON, William, of Bangour, Johnson talks slightingly of him, iii. 150-1; verses on Holyrood, v. 43; to the Countess of Eglintoune, v. 374, n. 3. HAMILTON, William, of Sundrum, v. 38. HAMILTON, William Gerard, Boswell’s Johnson, pays for a cancel in, i. 520; Burke, engagement and rupture with, i. 519; ranks very high, iv. 27, n. 1; character by H. Walpole and Miss Burney, i. 520; ‘eminent friend,’ an, iv. 280, n. 2; Jenyns’s character, iii. 289, n. 1; Johnson accompanied him to the street-door, i. 490; arguing on the wrong side, iv. 111, n. 2; bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; complaint of the Ministry, ii. 317; death makes a chasm, iv. 420; engaging in politics with him, i. 489, 518-20; ‘envied but one thing,’ he had said, iv. 112; esteem for him, i. 489; long intimacy, ii. 317; as a fox-hunter, i. 446, n. 1; generous offer to, iv. 245, 363, n. 1; letters to him, iv. 245, 363; pension, ii. 317; on public speaking, ii. 139; Junius, suspected to be, iii. 376, n. 4; Parliamentary Logick, i. 518; satisfactory coxcomb, describes a, iii. 245, n. 1; ‘Single-speech,’ i. 489, n, 4; Warton, Dr., letter to, i. 519; mentioned, iv. 1, n. 1, 159, n. 3, 344. HAMILTON and BALFOUR, booksellers, iii. 334, n. 2. Hamlet, an Essay on the Character of, iv. 25, n. 4; rescued from rubbish, ii. 85, n. 7, 204, n. 3. HAMMOND, Dr. Henry, iii. 58. HAMMOND, James, Life, by Johnson, iii. 30, n. 1; Love Elegies, iv. 17; v. 268. HAMPDEN, Dr., Bishop of Hereford, iv. 323, n. 3. HAMPSTEAD, Mrs. Johnson’s lodgings, i. 192, 238; Johnson composes most of The Vanity of Human Wishes there, i. 192; takes an airing to it, iv. 232; mentioned, v. 223. HAMPTON, James, Translation of Polybius, i. 309. HAMPTON COURT, Johnson’s application for a residence in it, iii. 34, n. 4; mentioned, iii. 400, n. 2. HANDASYD, General, ii. 218, n. 1. HANDEL, musical meeting in his honour, iv. 283; his poet, v. 350, n. 1. HANMER, Sir Thomas, epitaphs on him, i. 177; ii. 25; Hervey’s Letter to Sir Thomas Hanmer, ii. 32, n. 1, 33, n. 2; Shakespeare, edits, i. 175, 178; v. 244, n. 2. HANNIBAL, iii. 40. HANOVER, House of, Johnson attacks it, i. 141: asserts its unpopularity, iii. 155; calls it isolée, iv. 165; says that it is weak because unpopular, v. 271; oaths as to the disputed right, ii. 220; pleasure of cursing it, i. 429; right to the throne, v. 202-4; unpopular at Oxford, i. 72, n. 3 (see under OXFORD, Jacobite); becomes generally popular, iv. 171, n. 1 (see under GEORGE III, unpopularity). HANOVER RAT, ii. 455. HANWAY, Jonas, Eight Days’ Journey, i. 309; ii. 122; Essay on Tea, i. 309. 313-4, 348, n. 3; iii. 264, n. 4; v. 23; Johnson’s rejoinder, i. 314. HAPPINESS, attained by studying little things, i. 433, 440; iii. 165; business of a wise man, iii. 135; cannot be found in this life, v. 180; counterfeited, ii. 169, n. 3; cultivated, to be, iii. 164; experience shows that men are less happy, iii. 237; hope the chief part of it, i. 234, n. 2; ii. 351; Hume’s notion, ii. 9; iii. 288; inn, produced most by a good, ii. 452; its throne a tavern chair, ib., n. 1; one solid basis of it, iii. 363; Pantheon, at the, ii. 169; pleasure, compared with, iii. 246; present time never happy but when a man is drunk, ii. 350, 435, n. 7; iii. 5; or when he forgets himself, iii. 53; public matters, little affected by, ii. 60, n. 4, 170; schoolboys, happiness of, i. 451; struggles for it, iii. 199; Swift, defined by, ii. 351, n. 1; virtue, not the certain result of, i. 389, n. 2. Happy Life, The, ii. 25. HARCOURT, Lord Chancellor, i. 75, n. 3. HARCOURT, Lord, iii. 426, n. 3. HARDCASTLE, Mrs., in She Stoops to Conquer, i. 213, n. 5. HARDING, —— , a painter, iv. 421, n. 2. HARDINGE, first Viscount, ii. 183, n. 1. HARDWICKE, Lord Chancellor, Dirleton’s Doubts, on, iii. 205; Dr. Foster becomes popular through him, iv. 9, n. 5; prime minister, on the office of a, ii. 355, n. 2; Radcliffe’s trial, i. 180, n. 2; Spectator, paper in the, iii. 34; mentioned, ii. 157, n. 3. HARDWICKE, second Lord, i. 260, n. 3. HARDYKNUTE, ii. 91. HARE, James, iii. 388, n. 3. HARE, W., the murderer, v. 227, n. 4. HARGRAVE, —— , the barrister, iii. 87, n. 3. HARINGTON, Dr., iv. 180. HARINGTON, Sir John, iv. 180, n. 3; 420, n. 3. HARLEIAN Library and Catalogue, i. 153, 158. Harleian Miscellany, Preface to the, i. 175. HARRINGTON, Countess of, iii. 141. HARRIS, James (Hermes Harris), account of him, ii. 225, n. 2; a coxcomb, v. 377; Hermes or Philological Inquiries, iii. 115, 245, 258; v. 377; Johnson’s Dictionary, praises, iii. 115; talk with, iii. 256-9; pleasantry, his sense of, v. 378, n. 2; scholar and prig, iii. 245; mentioned, ii. 365. HARRIS, Thomas, of Covent Garden Theatre, iii. 114. HARRISON, Rev. Cornelius, iv. 401, n. 3. HARRISON, Elizabeth, Miscellanies, i. 309, 312. HARRISON, John, the inventor of the chronometer, i. 301, n. 3. HARRISON, —— , iv. 222, n. 2. HARROGATE, i. 287, n. 3; iii. 45, n. 1. HARRY, Miss Jane, iii. 298, n. 2. HARTE, Dr. Walter, companionable and a scholar, ii. 120; Essays on Husbandry, iv. 78; History of Gustavus Adolphus, ii. 120; iv. 78; Johnson and the screen, i. 163, n. 1; tutor to Eliot and Stanhope, iv. 78, 333. HARTLEBURY, v. 455. HARVEST OF 1777, iii. 226, n. 2; of 1775, iii. 313, n. 3. HARVEY. See HERVEY. HARWICH, i. 471; stage-coach, 465. HARWOOD, Dr. Edward, Liberal Translation of the New Testament, iii. 38. HASLERIG, Sir Arthur, ii. 118. HASTIE, a Scotch schoolmaster, his cas
e, ii. 144, 146, 156, 157; Johnson’s argument for him, ii. 183; Mansfield’s speech, ii. 186; had his deserts, ii. 202. HASTINGS, Warren, Boswell, letter to, iv. 66; charges against him, iv. 213; Johnson, letters from, iii. 455; iv. 66, 68-70; Macaulay on his answer to Johnson, iv. 70, n. 2; scheme about Oxford and Persian literature, iv. 68, n. 2; trial, iv. 66, n. 1; Westminster School, at, i. 395, n. 2. HATE, steadier than love, iii. 150. HATSEL, Mrs., iv. 159, n. 3. HATTER, anecdote of a, ii. 287, n. 2. HAVANNAH EXPEDITION, i. 191, n. 5, 242, n. 1, 382. HAWES, L., i. 183, n. 1. HAWKESBURY, Lord. See JENKINSON, Charles. HAWKESTONE, v. 433-4. HAWKESWORTH, Dr. John, edits the Adventurer, i. 234; Cook’s Voyages, edits, ii. 247; iii. 7; payment for it, i. 341, n. 4; ii. 247, n. 5; passage against a particular providence, v. 282; Courtenay’s lines on him, i. 223; death, causes of his, v. 282, n. 2; Debates, continues the, i. 512; Ivy Lane Club, member of the, iv. 436; Johnson’s imitator, i. 233, 252; ii. 216; tribute to him, i. 190, n. 3; Psalmanazar, anecdote of, iii. 443; spoilt by success, i. 253, n. 1; Swift, Life of, i. 190, n. 3; ii. 319, n. 1; mentioned, i. 241, 242; ii. 118. HAWKINS, Sir John, account of him, i. 27-8; Addison’s style, i. 224, n. 1; ‘Attorney, an,’ i. 190; Barber, attacks, iv. 370, 402, n. 2; 440; Boswell attacks him indirectly, i. 226, n. 3; slights, i. 28, n. 1, 190, n. 4; ‘bulky tome,’ his, ii. 452, n. 1; Burke, rudeness, to, i. 480; ill-will towards, ii. 450; Cave, Edward, i. 113, n. 1; Dodd, Dr., iii. I20, n. 2; English lexicographers, i. 186; gentility, on, i. 162, n. 3; Goldsmith at the Club, i. 480, n. 1; Hector’s notes of Johnson, iv. 375; History of Music, v. 72; Hogarth’s physicians, iii. 288, n. 4; inaccuracy, his general, i. 27, n. 1; iii. 229; iv. 327, n. 5, 371; instances of it — Addison’s notanda, i. 204; Essex Head Club, iv. 254, 437; ignorance for arrogance, iv. 138, n. 2; Irene, reception of, i. 197, n. 5; Johnson’s Adversaria, i. 208, n. 1; ‘enmity’ to Milton, i. 230; fear of death, iv. 395; fondness for his wife, i. 234; and Heely, ii. 31, n. 1; loan of books, iv. 371, n. 2; and Millar, i. 287, n. 2; mother’s death, i. 339, n. 2; operating on himself, iv. 399, n. 6, 418, n. 1; ‘ostentatious bounty to negroes,’ iv. 402, n. 2; warrants against, i. 141; wife’s apparition, i. 240; will, iv. 370; Literary Club, i. 479-80; Rasselas, i. 341; Review of Burke’s Sublime and Beautiful, i. 310; Vicar of Wakefield, sale of the copy of the, i. 415; Ivy Lane Club, iv. 253; Johnson’s apologies, iv. 321, n. 1; bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; executors, one of, iv. 402, n. 2; funeral, iv. 420, n. 1; house in Johnson’s Court, ii. 5, n. 1; humour, ii. 262, n. 2; letters to him, iv. 435; London and Savage, i. 125, n. 4; mode of eating, i. 468, n. 2; not a stayed, orderly man, iv. 371, n. 2; praise of a tavern chair, ii. 452, n. 1; quickness to see good in others, i. 161, n. 2; readiness to forgive injuries, iv. 349, n. 2; said to have slandered, iv. 420, n. 1; separation from his wife, i. 163, n. 2; sinking into indolence, iii. 98, n. 1; title of Doctor, i. 488, n. 3; will, iv. 402; Works, edits, i. 190, n. 4; writing for money, iii. 19, n. 3; knighted, i. 190, n. 4; Literary Club, account of the, i. 478, n. 2, 479; Pitt and Pulteney, oratory of, i. 152; pockets Johnson’s Diary, iv. 406, n. 1; Porson, satirised by, ii. 57, n. 5; iv. 370, n. 5, 406, n. 1; ‘rigmarole,’ his, i. 351, n. 1; Thrale’s, Mrs., second marriage, iv. 339; unclubable, i. 27, n. 2, 480, n. 1; iv. 254, n. 2. HAWKINS, Miss, ‘Boswell, Mr. James,’ i. 190, n. 4; Burke’s estimate of his son, iv. 219, n. 3; Hawkins’s attack on the Essex Head Club, iv. 438. HAWKINS, Rev. Professor William, member of Pembroke College, i. 75; quarrel with Garrick, ib., n. 2; iii. 259. HAWKINS, —— , under-master of Lichfield School, i. 43. HAWTHORNDEN. See DRUMMOND, William. HAY, Lord, v. 105. HAY, Lord Charles, at the Battle of Fontenoy, iii. 8, n. 3; his courtmartial, iii. 9. HAY, Sir George, i. 349. HAY, Dr., i. 349, 351, n. 1. HAY, John, v. 131, 137, 144. HAY, William, a translation of Martial, v. 368. HAYES, Rev. Mr., iii. 181. HAYLEY, William, correspondence with Miss Seward, iv. 331, n. 2; dedication to Romney, iii. 43, n. 4. HAYMAN, Francis, i. 263, n. 3. HAYWARD, Abraham, Thraliana, iv. 343, n. 4. HAZLITT, William, Baxter at Kidderminster, iv. 226, n. 2; Dr. Foster’s popularity, iv. 9, n. 5; grieves at the defeat of Napoleon, iv. 278, n. 3. See under NORTHCOTE,Conversations of Northcote. HEALE, iv. 234-9. HEALTH, rules to restore it, iv. 153. Heard, Johnson’s pronunciation of, iii. 197. HEARNE, Thomas, Duke of Brunwick’s accession-day, i. 72, n. 3; Leland’s Itinerary, v. 445, n. 3; Pembroke College Chapel, i. 59, n. 1; Psalmanazar at Oxford, iii. 449. HEATH, Dr., iv. 73. HEATH, James, the engraver, iv. 421, n. 2. HEAVEN, degrees of happiness in it, iii. 288. See FUTURE STATE. HE-BEAR AND SHE-BEAR, iv. 113, n. 2. HEBERDEN, Dr., account of him, iv. 228, n. 2; Johnson, attends, iv. 230-1, 260, n. 2, 262; bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; Markland, assists, iv. 161, n. 3; ultimus Romanorum, iv. 399, n. 4; timidorum timidissimus, iv. 399, n, 6; mentioned, ii. 311; iv. 353-4, 355, n. 1. HEBREW, Leibnitz traces all languages up to it, ii. 156. HEBRIDES. See under BOSWELL, Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides; Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland; and SCOTLAND, Highlands. HECTOR, Edmund, Birmingham, his house in, ii. 456, n. 2; Boswell and Johnson visit him in 1776, ii. 456, 457; 459-461; Johnson’s chastity, i. 164; early life, gives Boswell particulars of, ii. 459; iv. 375, n. 2; early verses, i. 157, n. 5; friendship for him, iv. 135, 147, 270; last visit to him, iv. 375; letters to him: see under JOHNSON, letters; will, not in, iv. 402, n. 2; sister, his, Mrs. Careless, ii. 459. HEELY, Mr. and Mrs., ii. 30-1; iv. 370; Johnson’s letter to Heely, iv. 371. Heinous, ii. 172. HEIRS AT LAW, right, their, ii. 432. HEIRS GENERAL, ii. 414. HELL, Johnson’s dread of it, iv. 299; its pavement of good intentions, ii. 360; of infants’ skulls, iv. 226, n. 2; subsists by truth, iii. 293. HELMET, hung out on a tower, iii. 273. HELOT, the drunken, iii. 379. HELVETIUS, advises Montesquieu to suppress his Esprit des Lois, v. 42, n. 1; Warburton ‘would have worked him,’ iv. 261, n. 3. HELVOETSLUYS, i. 471. Hemisphere, ii. 81. HÉNAULT, ii. 383, n. i, 412, 421. HENDERSON, John, the actor, his mimicry of Johnson not correct, ii. 326, n. 5; visits him, iv. 244, n. 2. HENDERSON, John (of Pembroke College), account of him, iv. 298-9; Johnson and the nonjurors, iv. 286, n. 3; mentioned, iv. 151, n. 2. HENLEY-IN-ARDEN, ii. 452, n. 2, 456. HENLEY-ON-THAMES, v. 454, n. 2. HENN, Mr., i. 132, n. 1. HENRY II. gives Langton a grant of free-warren, i. 248; History of him by Lyttelton, ii. 38. Henry V, Johnson proposes to act it in Versailles, ii. 395, n. 2. HENRY VIII. threatens the House of Commons, iii. 408. HENRY IV. of France, Johnson censures his epitaph, iv. 85, n. I. HENRY, Prince, of Portugal, happy for mankind had he never been born, iv. 250. HENRY, Robert, History of Great Britain, iii. 333; sale maliciously injured, in. 334, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 55, n. 1. HENS feeding their young, iv. 210. HEPHAESTION, iv. 274. HERALD’S OFFICE, i. 255. HERALDRY, i. 492. HERBERT, George, ‘Hell is full of good meanings,’ ii. 360, n. 1. HERCULES, his shirt, iii. 358; Johnson, the Hercules who strangled serpents, ii. 260; ‘You, and I and Hercules,’ iv. 45, n. 3. HEREDITARY OCCUPATIONS, v. 120. HEREDITARY TENURES, ii. 421. Hermes, or a Philosophical Inquiry concerning Universal Grammar, ii. 225, n. 2. HERMETICK PHILOSOPHY. See Hermippus Redivivus. Hermippus Redivivus, i. 417; ii. 427, n. 4. Hermit. See under BEATTIE and PARNELL. Hermit of Teneriffe. See Theodore the Hermit. HERMITS, v. 62. HERNE, Elizabeth, iv. 402, n. 2, 439. HERODOTUS, Egyptian mummies, iv. 125, n. 4. Heroic Epistle. See MASON, W. HERTFORD, first Earl of, Cock-lane ghost, goes to hear the, i. 407, n. 1; Hume, gets a pension for, ii. 317, n. 1; Johnson, correspondence with, iii. 34, n. 4. HERTFORD, Lady, i. 173, n. 3; iii. 139, n. 4. HERVEY, Hon. Henry, ‘Harry Hervey,’ i. 106; Johnson’s love for him, i. 106; intimacy with his family, i, 194; story of Johnson’s ingratitude, iii. 195. HERVEY, Rev. James, Meditations, v. 351; parodied by Johnson, v. 352. HERVEY, Hon. Thomas, Beauclerk’s story of him and Johnson, ii. 32; Johnson, payment to, ii. 33; separation from his wife, ii. 32, 33, n. 2; vicious and genteel, ii. 341. HERVEY, Mrs., iii. 244, n. 2. HERVEY, Miss, iii. 195, n. 1. HERVEY, Miss E., iii. 435; n. 4. HESIOD, Pasoris Lexicon, iii. 407; quoted, v. 63. HESKETH, Lady, iii. 36, n. 3. HESSE, Landgrave of, v. 217. HETHERINGTON’S CHARITY, ii. 286. HEYDON, John, iv. 402, n. 2. HEYWOOD, i. 84, n. 2. HICKES, Rev. Dr., account of him,
v. 357, n. 4; mentioned, iv. 287. HICKY, Thomas, ii. 340. HIERARCHY, English, Johnson’s reverence for it, iv. 75, 197, 274; v. 61; its theory and practice, iii. 138. Hierocles, Jests of, i. l50; v. 308, n. 1. HIGGINS, Dr., iii. 354, 386. High, Johnson’s use of the word, iii. 118, n. 3. HIGH DUTCH, resemblance to English, iii. 235. High Life below Stairs, iv. 7. HIGHWAYMEN, evidence of H. Walpole, Wesley, and Baretti as to their frequency, iii. 239, n. 1; Gay their Orpheus, ii. 367, n. 1; question of shooting them, iii. 239, 240, n. 1. HILL, Dr. Sir John, account of him, ii. 38, n. 2, 39, n. 2; wrote Mrs. Glasses Cookery, iii. 285; in the Heroic Epistle, iv. 113, n. 3. HILL, Joseph (Cowper’s friend), i. 395, n. 2. HILL, Miss, of Hawkestone, v. 433-4. HILL, Professor, of St. Andrews, v. 64-5. HILL, Sir Rowland, of Hawkestone, v. 433. HILL, Thomas Wright, v. 455, n. 1. HINCHCLIFFE, John, Bishop of Peterborough, member of the Literary Club, i. 479; hated Whiggism, iii. 422. HINCHINBROOK, iii. 383, n. 3. HINCHMAN, —— , iv. 402, n. 2. HINDOOS, iv. 12, n. 2. Histoire de Pascal Paoli, ii. 3, n. 1. Historia Studiorum, Johnson’s, iii. 321. HISTORIAN, great abilities not needed, i. 424; inferiority of English, i. 100, n. 1; ii. 236, n. 2; licence allowed, i. 355. HISTORY, almanac, no better than an, ii. 366; authentic, little, ii. 365; Bolingbroke’s caution about reading it, ii. 213, n. 3; Bolingbroke, Burke, and Fox on it, ii. 366, n. 1; character and motives generally unknown, ii. 79; iii. 404; colouring and philosophy conjecture, ii. 365; Johnson’s indifference to general history, iii. 206, n. 1; recommendation of many histories, iv. 312, n. 1; manners and common life, of, iii. 333; v. 79; oral at first, v. 393; ‘painted form the taste of this age,’ iii. 58; records only lately consulted, i. 117; v. 220; spirit contrary to minute exactness, i. 155; shallow stream of thought in it, ii. 195; unsupported by contemporary evidence, v. 403. History of the Council of Trent, i. 107. History of England, in Italian. See MARTINELLI. History of John Bull, i. 452, n. 2; written by Arbuthnot, i. 452, n. 2; quoted by Johnson, ii. 235, n. 1. History of the War, projected, i. 354. Historyes of Troye, v. 459, n. 2. HITCH, Charles, i. 183. HOADLEY, Archbishop, i. 318, n. 4. HOADLEY, Dr. Benjamin, Suspicious Husband, The, ii. 50, n. 2. HOADLEY, Dr. John, letter to Garrick, ii. 69, n. 1. Hob in the Well, ii. 465. HOBBES, Thomas, Bathurst’s verses to him, iv. 402, n. 2; mentioned, iii. 448. HOCKLEY-IN-THE-HOLE, iii. 134, n. 1; 454. HODGE, the cat, iv. 197. HODGES, Dr., ii. 341, n. 3. HOG, William, i. 229. HOGARTH, William, Garrick’s acting, describes, iii. 35, n. 1; Johnson’s belief, describes, i. 147, n. 2; conversation, ib.; finds more like David than Solomon, iii. 229, n. 3; like his Idle Apprentice, i. 250; takes for an idiot, i. 146; Modern Midnight Conversation, iii. 348; partisan of George II, i. 146; physicians, his, iii. 288, n. 4; prints, his, at Slains Castle, v. 102; at Streatham, iii. 348; Wilkes, print of, v. 186. HOGG, James, Jacobite Relics, v. 142, n. 2. Hogshead of sense, v. 341. HOLBACH, Baron, anecdote of Hume and seventeen Atheists, ii. 8, n. 4; Système de la Nature, v. 47, n. 4. HOLBROOK, —— , Usher at Lichfield School, i. 44. HOLDER, —— , an apothecary, iv. 137, 144, 402, n. 2. HOLIDAYS OF THE CHURCH, ii. 458. HOLINSHED, quoted by Boswell, iv. 268, n. 2. HOLLAND, exportation of coin free, iv. 105, n. 1; Dutch fond of draughts and smoking, i. 317; free from spleen, iv. 379; English books printed there, iii. 162; France, pressed by, in 1779, iii. 408, n. 4; Johnson’s proposed tour there, i. 470; iii. 454; lead from two Cathedrals shipped to it, v. 114, n. 2; populous, iii. 233; Scotch regiment at Sluys, iii. 447; suspension of arms in 1782-3, iv. 282, n. 1; torture employed there, i. 466; trade, i. 218, n. 3. HOLLAND, the actor, iv. 7. HOLLAND, Dr., ii. 94, n. 2. HOLLAND, first Lord, iv. 174, n. 5, 219, n. 3. HOLLAND, third Lord, Boswell and Horace Walpole, iv. 314, n. 5; Jeffrey’s ‘narrow English,’ ii. 159, n. 6; Johnson and Fox, iv. 167, n. 1; and Garrick, i. 216, n. 3. HOLLAND HOUSE, iv. 174, n. 5. HOLLIS, Thomas, iv. 97. HOLLOWAY, Mr. M. M., autograph letters of Johnson, iv. 260, n. 2; v. 405, n. 1, 454. HOLROYD, John (Lord Sheffield), i. 465, n. 1; ii. 150, n, 7; iii. 178, n. 1. HOLY LAND, iii. 177. HOME, Francis, Experiments on Bleaching, i. 309. HOME, Henry. See LORD KAMES. HOME, John, Agis, ii. 320, n. 1; v. 204; Athelstanford, minister of, iii. 47, n. 3; Bute’s errand-goer, ii. 354; and favourite, i. 386, n. 3; Carlyle, Dr. A., described by, v. 362, n. 1; Derrick’s lines, parodied, i. 456; Douglas, Garrick rejects it, v. 362, n. 1; Hume and Scott admire it, ii. 320, n. 1; Johnson despises it, ii. 320; not ten good lines in it, v. 360-2; Sheridan gives the author a gold medal for it, ii. 320; v. 360; lines in it applicable to Johnson, iii. 80; quotations from it, v. 361, n. 1; Elibank, Lord, his patron, v. 386; History of the Rebellion of 1745, iii. 162, n. 5; Hume’s bequest to him, ii. 320, n. 1; dislike of the Whigs, iv. 194, n. 1; remark on the incapacity of the period, iii. 46, n. 5; Settle, likened to, iii. 76; Shakespeare of Scotland, iv. 186, n. 2; better than Shakspeare, v. 362, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 53, n. 1, 381, n. 1. HOMER, advice given to Diomed (Glaucus), ii. 129; antiquity, his, iii. 331; quoted by Thucydides, ib.; characters, does not describe, v. 79; detached fragments, not made up of, v. 164; Iliad, a collection of pieces, iii. 333; prose translation of it suggested, ib.; Latin version, ib., n. 2; Johnson’s early translation from him, i. 53; knowledge of him, iv. 218, n. 3; v. 79, n. 2; ‘machinery,’ his, iv. 16; Odyssey, Johnson’s liking for it, iv. 218; Fox’s, ib., n. 3; Life of Johnson likened to it, i. 12; quoted, iv. 444; prince of poets, ii. 129; Sarpedon, Earl of Errol likened to, v. 103, n. 1; shield of Achilles, iv. 33; v. 78; translated by Cowper, iii. 333, n. 2; by Dacier, ib.; by Macpherson, ii. 298, n. 1; iii. 333, n. 2; by Pope, iii. 256; Virgil, compared with, iii. 193; v. 79, n. 2; less talked of than, iii. 332. HOMFREY, family of, iv. 268, n. 1. Homo caudatus, ii. 383. HONESTY, iii. 237. HONITON, iii. 287, n. 1. HOOD, James, v. 66. HOOKE, Dr. (at St. Cloud), ii. 397. HOOKE, Nathaniel, writes the Duchess of Marlborough’s Apology, v. 175. HOOKER, Richard, i. 219. HOOLE, John, account of him, ii. 289, n. 2; iv. 70; Ariosto, iv. 70; Cleonice, ii. 289, n. 3; dinners and suppers at his house, ii. 334; iii. 37, 342; iv. 88, 251; Essex Head Club, member of the, iv. 258; Johnson’s bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; collects a City Club for, iv. 87; friendship with him, iv. 360; and Goldsmith, i. 414, n. 4; last days, iv. 399, n. 1, 406, 410, n. 2, 414; letters to him, ii. 289; iv. 359-60; recommends him to Warren Hastings, iv. 70; writes the dedication of his Tasso, i. 383; regularly educated, iv. 187; uncle, his, the metaphysical tailor, iii. 443; iv. 187; mentioned, iv. 266. HOOLE, Mrs., iv. 359. HOOLE, Rev. Mr., Johnson’s bequest to him, iv. 402, n. 2; reads the service to, iv. 409; mentioned, iii. 436, n. 2. Hop-Garden, The, ii. 454. HOPE, ‘A continual renovation of hope,’ iv. 222, n. 5; Prince of Wales’s enjoyment of it, iv. 182; a species of happiness, i. 368; ii. 351. HOPE, Dr., of Edinburgh, iv. 263-4. HOPE, Professor, of Edinburgh, v. 404. HOPE, Sir William, v. 66. HOPETON, second Earl of, iv. 43, n. 1. HORACE, Art of Poetry, a contested passage in the, iii. 73-5; Carmen Seculare set to music, iii. 373; Mr. Tasker’s version, ib., n. 3; cheerfulness, iii. 251; inconstancy, ib.; editions collected by Douglas, iv. 279; gratitude to his father, iii. 12; Hamilton’s Imitations, iii. 151; Johnson translates Odes, i. 22, and ii. 9; i. 51-2; and Ode, iv. 7; iv. 370; Journey to Brundusium mentioned, iii. 250; metres, ii. 445, n. 1; middle-rate poets, on, ii. 351; Nil admirari, ii. 360; read as far as the Rhone, iv. 277; religion, absence of, iv. 215; ‘sapientiae consultus,’ iii. 280; translations of the lyrics, iii. 356; Francis’s, ib.; villa, iii. 250; quotations: 1 Odes, i. 2, i. 244; 1 Odes, ii. v. 101, n. 2; 1 Odes, ii. 21, i. 483, n. 4; 1 Odes, xii. 46, iv. 356, n. 3; 1 Odes, xxii. 5, ii. 140; 1 Odes, xxiv. 9, iv. 290, n. 4; 1 Odes, xxvi. 1, ii. 140; 1 Odes, xxxiv. 1, iii. 279; 1 Odes, xxxiv. 1, iv. 215, n. 4; 2 Odes, i. 4, i. 207; 2 Odes, i. 24, iv. 374, n. 3; 2 Odes, xvi. 1, v. 163; 2 Odes, xiv., iii. 193; v. 68, n. 2; 2 Odes, xx. 19, iv. 277, n. 2; 3 Odes, i. 34, ii. 207; 3 Odes, ii. 13, i. 181, n. 1; 3 Odes, xxiv. 21, iii. 160, n. 1; 3 Odes, ii., iii. 204; 3 Odes, xxx. 1, ii. 291, n. 3; 4 Odes, iii. 2, i. 351, n. 1; iv. 57, n. 4; 4 Odes, ix. 25, v. 415, n. 3; Epodes, xv. 19, iv. 320, n. 1; 1 Sat. i. 66, iii. 322, n. 2; 2 Sat. i. 86, iv. 129, n. 3; 1 Sat. iii. 33, iv. 180, n. 5; 1 Sat iv. 34, ii. 79; 2 Sat. ii. 3, i. 105, n
. 1; 1 Epis. i. 15, v. 283, n. 2; 1 Epis. ii. 41, iv. 120, n. 3; 1 Epis. vi. 1, ii. 360, n. 3; 1 Epis. vii. 96, ii. 337, n. 4; 1 Epis. xi. 29, v. 381, n. 2; 1 Epis. xiv. 13, iii. 417, n. 1; 2 Epis. ii. 84, ii. 337, n. 3; 2 Epis. ii. 102, i. 200; 2 Epis. ii. 110, i. 220; 2 Epis. ii. 212, iv. 355, n. 2; Ars Poet., line. 11, iii. 281, n. 4; l. 15, iv. 38, n. 5; l. 25, v. 78, n. 5; l. 39, iii. 404, n. 6; l. 41, ii. 126; l. 48, i. 221; l. 97, v. 399, n. 3; l. 126, v. 348, n. 1; l. 128, iii. 73; l. 142, ii. 13, n. 2; l. 161, v. 283, n. 3; l. 188, iii. 229, n. 3; l. 221, v. 375. n. 5; l. 317, i. 165: l. 372, ii. 351; l. 388, i. 196. HORNE, Dr., President of Magdalen College, (afterwards Bishop of Norwich), Garrick’s funeral, lines on, iv. 208, n. 1; Garrick and Mickle, anecdote of, ii. 182, n. 3; Johnson’s character, iv. 426, n. 3; Letter to Adam Smith, v. 30, n. 3; neglected state of churches, v. 41, n. 3; Walton’s Lives, projected edition of, ii. 279, 283-4, 445. HORNE, Rev. John. See TOOKE, Horne. HORNECK, The Misses, i. 414, n. 1; ii. 209, n. 2, 274, n. 5; iv. 355, n. 4. HORREBOW, Niels, iii. 279. HORSE-TAX, v. 51. HORSEMAN, —— , iv. 435. HORSES, old, iv. 248, 250. HORSLEY, Dr. (afterwards Bishop of Rochester), account of him, iv. 437; member of the Essex Head Club, iv. 254. HORTON, Mrs., ii. 224, n. 1. Hosier’s Ghost, v. 116, n. 4. HOSPITALITY, ancient, ii. 167; less need for it now, iv. 18; elaborate attention, iv. 222; in London, ii. 222; promiscuous, ii. 167; waste of time, iv. 221. HOSPITALS, their administration, iii. 53. HOSTILITY, temporary, iv. 266. HOT-HOUSES, iv. 206. ‘HOTTENTOT, a respectable,’ i. 266; not Johnson, i. 267, n. 2. HOUGHTON COLLECTION, iv. 334, n. 6. HOUSE OF COMMONS, afraid of the populace, v. 102; Bolingbroke, described by iii. 234, n. 2; bribed, must be, iii. 408; coarse invectives in 1784, iv. 297; city, contest with the, in 1771, ii. 300, n. 5; iv. 139; corruption, iii. 206, 234; Crosby the Lord Mayor committed by it to prison, iii. 459; debates: see DEBATES; dissolution of 1774, ii. 285; v. 460; of 1784. iv. 264, n. 2; election-committees, iv. 74; figure made by insignificant men, v. 269; influence of the Crown, motion on the, iv. 220; influence of the peers, v. 56; Johnson’s account of it as it originally was, iii. 408; anecdote of Henry VIII, ib.; only once inside the building, i. 503-4; Middlesex Election: See under MIDDLESEX ELECTION; mixed body, iii. 234; Nowell’s sermon on January 30, iv. 296; power of the nation’s money, iv. 170; relation to the people, iv. 30; speaking at the bar, iii. 224; Wilkes’s advice, ib.; speaking before a Committee, iv. 74; counsel paid for speaking, iv. 281; speeches, how far affected by, iii. 234-5; tenacity of forms, iv. 104; Wilkes, afraid of, iv. 140, n. I; resolution to expel him expunged, ii. 112. HOUSE OF LORDS, Copy-right Case, ii. 272; Corporation of Stirling Case, ii. 374; dissatisfaction with its judicature, ii. 421, n. 1; Douglas Cause, ii. 230, n. 1; lay peers in law cases, iii. 345; ‘noble stands,’ made, v. 102; Scotch Schoolmaster’s Case, ii. 144, 186; wise and independent, iii. 204. HOUSEBREAKERS, iv. 127. HOVEDEN, iv. 310, n. 3. HOWARD, Hon. Edward, ii. 108, n. 2. HOWARD, General Sir George, ii. 375, n. 1. HOWARD, Lord, v. 403, n. 2. HOWARD, Sir Robert, ii. 168, n. 2. HOWARD, — , of Lichfield, i. 80, 515, 516; iii. 222. HOWARD, — , of Lichfield, the younger, iii. 222. HOWELL, James, in the Fleet, v. 137, n. 4; ‘Stavo bene,’ &c., ii. 346, n. 6. Howell’s State Trials, Somerset’s Case, iii. 87, n. 3. HUDDESFORD, Rev. Dr., Vice-Chancellor of Oxford, i. 280, 322; Johnson’s letter to him, i. 282. Hudibras. See BUTLER, Samuel. HUET, Bishop, iii. 172, n. 1. HUGGINS, William, quarrel with Warton, iv. 6; mentioned, i. 382. HUGHES, John, Memoir by Duncombe, iii. 314, n. 2; Sieges of Damascus, iii. 259, n. 1; Spenser, edits, i. 270; mentioned, iv. 36, n. 4. HUGILL, an attorney, iii. 297, n. 2. HULK, The Justitia, iii. 268. HUMANITY, its common rights, iv. 191, 284. HUMBLE-BEE, v. 380, n. 3. HUME, David, account of his publications, v. 31, n. 1; Adams, Dr., answers his Essay on Miracles, i. 8, n. 2; ii. 441; iv. 377, n. a; v. 274; Adams the architects, ii. 325, n. 3; Agutter’s sermon, attacked in, iv. 422, n. 1; American war, iv. 194, n. 1; ancient history, ii. 237, n. 4; art, indifference to, i. 363, n. 3; atheists in Paris, dines with seventeen, ii. 8, n. 4; attacks, reply to, ii. 61, n. 4; benefited by some, v. 274; Beattie’s Essay on Truth: see BEATTIE; Blacklock, the blind poet, i. 466, n. I; v. 47, n. 3; books, the small number of good, iii. 20, n. 1; Boswell intimate with him, ii. 59, n 3,437; n. 2; v30; preserves memoirs of him, ib.; Boufflers, Mme. de, ii. 405, n. 2; Carlyle’s, Dr., account of him, v. 30, n. 1; change of ministry in 1775, expects a, ii. 381, n. 1; Charles II, partiality for, ii. 341, n. 2; Cheyne, Dr., letter to, iii. 27, n. 1; composed with facility, v. 66, n. 3; conceit, his, v. 29; conversation, ii. 236, n. 1; death, said that he had no fear of, ii. 106; iii. 153; dedications, iv. 105, n. 4; Deist, denied that he was a, ii. 8; Dialogues on Natural Religion, i. 268, n, 4; dines with those who had written against him, ii. 441, n. 5; Douglas Cause, ii. 230, n. 1; education and disposition, opinion on, ii. 437, n. 2; England on the decline, ii. 127, n. 4; English and French politeness, iv. 237, n. 3; English, his hatred of the, ii. 300, n. 5; v. 19, n. 4; neglect of polite letters, ii. 447, n. 5; prejudice against the Scotch, ii. 300, n. 5; prose, iii. 257, n. 3; and Scotch education, iii. 12, n. 2; Essays Moral and Political, sale of his, iv. 440; fame, his, v. 31; Fergusson’s Essay on Civil Society, v. 42, n. 1; France on the decline, thinks, ii. 127, n. 4; his reception there, ii. 401, n. 4; French, ignorance of, i. 439, n. 2; French prisoners, account of the, i. 353, n. 2; Germany, barbarians of, ii. 127, n. 4; Gibbon’s praise of him, ii. 236, n. 3; Glasgow professorship, sought a, v. 369, n. 2; ‘gone to milk the bull,’ i. 444; happiness, equality in, ii. 9; iii. 288; happy with small means, i. 372, n. 1; Henry’s History, reviews, iii. 334, n. 1; History of England, his alterations in it on the Tory side, iv. 194, n. 1; Adam Smith’s Letter prefixed, v. 30, n. 3; slow sale of the first volume, v. 31, n. 1; written for want of occupation, iii. 20, n. 1; mentioned, iv. 78, n. 2; Hobbist, a, v. 272; Home, John, and Shakespeare, ii. 320, n. 1; Home, bequest to, ii. 320, n. 1; house, his, in James Court, v. 22, n. 2; in St. David Street, v. 28, n. 2; Hurd and the Warburtonian school, iv. 190, n. 1; hypocrite, longs to be a successful, iv. 194, n. 1; ‘infidel pensioner,’ called an, ii. 317; infidels, attacks, iii. 334, n. 1; infidelity, his death-bed, iii. 153; infidelity, his, less read, iv. 288; Johnson and Convocation, i. 464; Dictionary, absurdities in, ii. 317, n. 1; in the Green Room, i. 201; had not (in 1773) read his History, ii. 236; likes him better than Robertson, v. 57, n. 3; violent against him, v. 30; Kames and Voltaire, ii. 90, n. 1; Keeper of the Advocates’ Library, v. 40, n. 1; Leechman’s Sermon on Prayer, v. 68, n. 4; Life, with Adam Smith’s letter prefixed, iii. 119; Macdonald, Sir James, i. 449, n. 2; Macpherson’s Homer and History of Britain, ii. 298, n. 1; Mallet and Bolingbroke, i. 268, n. 4; Mallet’s Life of Marlborough, iii. 386, n. 1; middle class in Scotland, absence of a, ii. 402, n. 1; Millar, Andrew, i. 287, n. 3; ministry, imbecility of Lord North’s, iii. 46, n. 5; Miracles, Essay on, i. 444; iii. 188: see under Dr. ADAMS and BEATTIE; Monboddo’s Origin of Language, ii. 259, n. 5; Murray (Lord Mansfield), at Lovat’s trial, speech of, i. 181, n. 1; national debt, ii. 127, n. 4; neglect of a book, iii. 375, n. 1; New Testament, ignorance of the, ii. 9; iii. 153; Ossian, ii. 302, n. 2; Parties in General, iii. 11, n. 1; Parties of Great Britain, ii. 402, n. 1; pension, ii. 317, n. 1; philosopher, anecdote of a, iii. 305, n. 2; Poker Club, ii. 376, n. 1; Political Discourses, ii. 53, n. 2; Pretender’s base character, v. 200, n. 1; visit to London, i. 279, n. 5; v. 201, n. 3; priests and dissenters, v. 255, n. 5; ‘principle, has no,’ iv. 194, n. 1; v. 272; Reynolds’s allegorical picture, v. 273, n. 4; resistance, doctrine of, ii. 170. n. 2: Robertson’s Scotland, price offered for, iii. 334, n. 2; Rousseau’s visit to England and his pension, ii. 11, n. 4, 12, n. 1; Russia, barbarians of, ii. 127, n. 4; Sanquhar’s trial, v. 103, n. 2; Scotch writers, foolish praise of, iv. 186, n. 2; Scotticisms, ii. 72; corrected by Strahan, v. 92, n. 3; second-sight, ii. 10, n. 3; Select Society, member of the, v. 393, n. 4; sentiments, unanimity and contrariety of, iii. 11, n. 1; Smith’s, Adam, Letter, v. 30; answered by Dr. Home, ib., n. 3; Smith’s, suggested knocking of his head against, iii. 119; soldiers, iii. 9, n. 3; Strahan, le
aves his MSS. to, ii. 136, n. 6; style, i. 439; Swift’s style, ii. 191, n. 3; Tory by chance, iv. 194; v. 272; Toryism, growth of his, iv. 194, n. 1; touchstones of party-men, i. 354, n. 1; tragedy, anecdote of a, iii. 238, n. 2; Treatise of Human Nature, i. 127, n. 1; Tytler, attacked by, v. 274; ‘Voltaire, an echo of,’ ii. 53; mentioned, ii. 160, n. 2. HUME, Mrs., James Thomson’s grandmother, iii. 359. Humiliating, ii. 155. HUMMUMS, The, iii. 349. HUMOUR. See GOOD HUMOUR. HUMOUR, Scotch nation not distinguished for it, iv. 129. Humours of Ballamagairy, ii. 219, n. 1. HUMPHRY, Ozias, account of him, iv. 268, n. 2; Johnson’s letters to him, iv. 268-9; his miniature, iv. 421, n. 2. Humphry Clinker. See SMOLLETT. HUNGARY, hospitality to strangers, iv. 18. HUNTER, John, the surgeon, i. 243, n. 3; iv. 220, n. 1. HUNTER, Dr. William, iv. 220. HUNTER, —— , Johnson’s schoolmaster, i. 44-6; ii. 146, 467. HUNTER, Miss, iv. 183, n. 2. HUNTER, Mrs., i. 516. HUNTING, v. 253. HUNTINGDON, tenth Earl of, iii. 84, n. 1. HURD, Richard, Bishop of Worcester, accounts for everything systematically, iv. 189; Addison, impertinent notes on, iv. 190, n. 1; archbishop, declined to be, iv. 190; Boswell attacks him, iv. 47, n. 2; Cowley’s Select Works, edits, iii. 29, 227; evil spirits, on, iv. 290; v. 36, n. 3; Horace, notes on, iii. 74, n. 1; Hume, attacks, iv. 190, n. 1; Johnson praises him, iv. 190; Moral and Political Dialogues, iv. 190; Parr’s Tracts by Warburton and a Warburtonian, iv. 47, n. 2; mentioned, i. 404, n. 1; ii. 36, n. 2; iv. 407, n, 4. ‘HURGOES,’ i. 502. HUSSEY, Rev. John, Johnson’s letter to him, iii. 369. HUSSEY, Rev. Dr. Thomas, iv. 411. HUTCHESON, Francis, on merit, iv. 15, n. 5. HUTCHINSON, John, Moral Philosophy, iii. 53. HUTCHISON, William, of Kyle, v. 107, n. 1. HUTTON, the Moravian, iv. 410. HUTTON, William (of Birmingham), Bedlam, visits, ii. 374, n. 1; Birmingham, cost of living at, i. 103, n. 2; Derby, History of, iii. 164, n. 1; sufferings as a factory-boy, iii. 164, n. 1. HYDER ALI, v. 124, n. 2. HYPOCAUST, a Roman, v. 435. HYPOCHONDRIA, i. 66, 343; iii. 192. See under BOSWELL, JOHNSON, and MELANCHOLY. Hypochondriack, The, iv. 179, n. 5. HYPOCRISY, little suspected by Johnson, i. 418, n. 3; middle state between it and conviction, iv. 122; no man a hypocrite in his pleasures, iv. 316. Hypocrite, The, ii. 321.

 

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