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Hailes, Lord, his Annals of Scotland,' ii. 288, 290, 293, 295,
305, 347, 391, 393, 394, 397, 425, 426, 439; iii. 55, 129,
388, 402, 434.

... his opinion on entails, ii. 435.

Hale, Lord Chief Justice, anecdote of, iv. 334.

Hales, venerable John, his works, iv. 339.

Hall, General, iii. 390.

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Hamilton, Right Hon. William Gerard, i. 468; iv. 458.
his kindness to Johnson, iv. 260.

Johnson's Letters to, iv. 261, 392.

Hamilton's Poems, iii. 165.

Hammond, James, author of the Elegies, iv. 16.
Hanway, Jonas, i. 286; ii. 122.

Happiness, ii. 7; iii. 50, 313; See Life.

....

may

be obtained, if we apply our hearts to piety, i. 171.
... the reasonable hope of a happy futurity, the only solid
basis of happiness, iii. 391.

Harleian Miscellany, i. 154.

Harrington, Dr., his Nuge Antiquæ,' iv. 193.

Caroline, Countess of, iii. 152.

Harris, James, Esq. of Salisbury, ïi. 228; iii. 122, 265, 278, 279.
his high praise of Johnson's Dictionary, iii. 122.

Thomas, Esq. Proprietor of Covent Garden Theatre, iii.

121.

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Harte's History of Gustavus Adolphus, ii. 119; iv. 84.

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remarks on his Life of Johnson, i. 2, 180.

contradicted and corrected, i. 102, 119, 141, 180, 184,
208, 211, 217, 266, 286, 315, 394; ii. 33, 34, 470; iv. 351,
400, 401, 402, 431, 436, 444.

Rev. Thomas, Poetry Professor at Oxford, iii. 281,

Mr., Johnson's first instructor in Latin, i. 21.

Hay, Lord Charles, iv. 22.

Heard, the word how to be pronounced, iii. 215.

Heberben, Dr. iv. 240, &c. 427.

Hebrides, Johnson's visit to, i. 427; ii. 52, 142, 153, 275.
Johnson's Tour to them, ii. 27 5.

....

the pleasantest journey he ever made, iii. 96.


Johnson's Account of his Journey,' ii. 302, 314, 332,
374; ii. 105, 106, 150, 189, 325, 351.

commended by every body on various grounds, iii. 150.
Hector, Mr. Edmund, i. 23, 31, 66, 137, 143; ii. 474, 476; iv.
145, 290, 405.

Johnson's letters to, iv. 158, 409.

Verses on a sprig of Myrtle, written by Johnson for
him, i. 66.

Heely, Mr. and Mrs. ii. 33; iv. 400, 401.

Hell, paved with good intentions, ii. 371.

Helmet, hung out formerly, as a sign of hospitality, iii. 295.
Henderson, Mr. John, iv. 308, 320.

the Actor, ii. 339, n.; iv. 258.

Henry, the Historian, should have confined himself to the history

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Hon. Thomas, ii. 35, 355.

Hicky, Mr. the Painter, ii. 352, 353.

Highwaymen, the question of shooting them discussed, iii, 261.
Higher classes, more virtue found among them, than in inferiour
stations, iii. 381, 382.

Hill, Aaron, Esq. his account of Irene,' i. 174.

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Hinchliffe, Dr. John, Bishop of Peterborough, iii. 455.

History, and Historians, i. 404; ii. 78, 198, 226, 241, 377; iii.
15, 360.

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great abilities not requisite for writing it, i. 404.

of Manchester, by Whitaker, for the most part a dream,
iii. 360. See Henry.

of the House of Yvery praised, iv. 210.

Hogarth, i. 123.

Holydays, ii. 478.

none observed in Scotland, ib.

Hollis, Thomas, Esq., iv. 102.

Home, Mr. John, his Parody on Derrick, i. 412.

Home, Mr. John, his proposed History of the rising in 1745, .

178.

Homer, Johnson's translations from, i. 80.

......

.. critiques on, iiii. 211, 356, 359; iv. 77.
Hoole, John, his Tasso,' i. 363.

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his Ariosto,' iv. 75.

his ' Cleonice,' ii. 301.

Johnson's letters to, ii. 301; iv, 385.
curious anecdote of, iv. 200.

his attention to Johnson, iv. 444, 418.
the Rev. Mr. iv. 448.

Hope, life insupportable without, iii. 276.

Hope, Dr. iv. 282.

Horace, Johnson's translations from, i. 28, 29.

his Odes cannot be perfectly translated, iii. 384.-The
translation by Dr. Francis commended, ibid.

Horne, Rev. Dr. ii. 290, 465; iv. 466.

Horne Tooke, Mr. John, iii. 382.

Hospitality, iv. 17, 234.

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promiscuous, does not procure lasting regard, ii. 160.
in London, ii. 228.

Houghton Gallery, iv. 357.

House of Commons, iii. 438; iv. 79, 109.

how a Counsel should address that assembly,

iii. 244, 245; iv. 79.

Peers, iii. 373.

Howard, General, Sir George, ii. 386.

the Hon. Edward, a celebrated couplet of his misquoted,

ii. 105, n.

Hudibras, ii. 381; iii. 37.

Huggins, Mr. iv. 6.

Hume, David, Esq. his style French, i. 417.

his Scepticism, i. 422, 443; ii. 7, 462; i. 167, 168.
his Life, iii. 127.

his disbelief of a future state, ii. 102.

Humphrey, Ozias, Esq. iv. 288, 289.

Hunter, Mr., Johnson's school-master, i. 21.

......

Miss, iv. 196.

Hurd, Dr. (Bishop of Worcester,) i. 57, iii. 28, 76, 247; iv.

202, 312.

Hussey, Rev. Mr. John, iii. 398.

Rev. Dr. Thomas, iv. 419.

Hutton, Mr. iv. 449.

Hutton's History of Derby,' iii. 180.
Hypochondria, i. 41.

I AND J.

Jackson, Henry, (one of Johnson's early friends,) iii. 143.
Jacobite, Johnson's ingenious defence of that character, i. 410
Jackson, Mr., Johnson's school-fellow, ii. 482.

James II., his character, ii. 353.

James, Dr., his 'Medicinal Dictionary,' i. 138; iii. 22.
Dr., his death, iii. 4.

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January 30th, ii. 155.

Idea, the improper use of that word, iii. 214.
'Idler,' Johnson's, i. 306, 307.

Jenyns, Soame, his Origin of Evil,' i. 291.

......

his Evidence of the Christain Religion,' iii. 303, 313.
Impressions and internal impulses dangerous and deceitful, iv. 129.
Incidit in Scyllam, &c. traced to its source, iv. 195, n.
India, the Government of, iv. 226.

Infidel, an odious character, iii. 52.

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Intellectual pre-eminence, the highest superiority, ìi. 124.
nature abhors a vacuum, ii. 142.

.......

men do not, like others, become narrow in a narrow
place, iii. 267.

Johnson, Michael, (Dr. Johnson's father,) i. 12, & seq.
his death, i. 53.

Sarah, (Dr. Johnson's mother,) Johnson's letters to, i.

315, 317, 318.

........

her death, i. 319.

Nathaneal, (Dr. Johnson's brother,) i. 12.

Richard, Schoolmaster at Nottingham, i. 186, n.

JOHNSON, Dr. SAMUEL, his birth, i. 11.

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touched by Queen Anne for the evil, i. 20.

goes to school at Lichfield, i. 1—at Stourbridge, i. 26.
enters at Pembroke College, Oxon, i. 36.—Leaves it,

JOHNSON, becomes usher of Market-Bosworth School, i. 57. See

iv. 445.

........

removes to Birmingham, i. 59.

marries Mrs. Porter, i. 71.

opens an Academy at Edial, i. 72.
goes to London with Garrick, i. 77.

a writer in The Gentleman's Magazine,' i.. 91, &c.
See iv. 446.

endeavours to obtain the degree of A. M. to get a
School, i. 107, 108.

....

140.

his distressed circumstances, and filial piety, i. 139,

loses his wife, i. 211.

his extreme grief for her loss, i. 212, 254, 277 ; ii.
406; iii. 330, 451; iv. 375.

composes
her funeral Sermon, i. 217.
visits Oxford, i. 244; and again, i. 327; ii. 458; iv.
304, 406.

251.

obtains his degree of A. M. from that University, i.

his letters on that occurrence, i. 256, &c..-The dipo-
ma, i. 259.

declines taking holy orders, i. 296.

loses his mother, i. 315.

obtains a pension of £.300, per Ann. i. 353, & seq. ;

See i. 356; iv. 341.

346.

visits Cambridge, i. 465.

created LL.D. by Trinity College, Dublin, i. 466.

by Oxford University, ii. 443, 344, 345.

his intervew with the King, ii. 37.

appointed Professor of Ancient Literature in the Royal

Academy, ii. 67.

endeavours to get into Parliament ii. 137, & seq.
visits to the Hebrides, ii. 275. See Hebrides.
Wales, ii. 293.

France, ii. 395, 397.

his account of it, ii. 401, 402. 403, &c.
his various places of Residence, iii. 435, 436.
his long and gradual decline, iv. 239, 241.

his various disorders, iv. 253, 254, 272, 378, 399.
medi cal opinions on his case, iv. 279, 280, 281, 292.

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