JOHNSON, his proposed tour to Italy for his health, iv. 350, 359. his will and codicil, iv. 438, 439, 442, 441.-Remarks On them, iv. 441, 442, 443. his burning his MSS. iv. 442. his MS. account of his own life, iv. 443, 444. his death, iv. 455. his funeral, iv. 457. his monuments and epitaphs, iv. 457, 461, 462. ....... bis peculiarities of person and manners i. 18, 69, 74, 348. .... his attention to small things, i. 444; iii. 316; iv. his candour, i. 384; iv. 205, 206. not a complainer, iv. 121, 184, 379; seldom courted not prone to inveigh against his own times, iii. 4, 246, never courted the great, iv. 121. never got entirely rid of his provincial pronunciation, ..... by what means he attained his extraordinary accuracy and ...... his visit to his native town, where he finds things altered, ... his library, i. 414. his love for the acquaintance of young persons, i. 423. his custom of talking to himself, i. 462. his watch-inscription, ii. 58. his amusements in his solitary hours, iii. 428. his company sought by few of the Great, iv. 121. general traits of his character and mode of living, i. 40, his course of study desultory and irregular, i. 408. his early acquisition of general knowledge, i. 424 JOHNSON, his manner of composing his Poetical Works, ii. 13. .... his censure of one of his his 'Rambler,' iii. 41. at a late period of life could have made his Ramblers his manner of composing his other works, iii. 62, n. wrote six sheets of translation from the French in one wrote a hundred lines of the Vanity of Wishes in a day, wrote seventy lines of the Vanity of Human Wishes wrote three columns of the Gentleman's Magazine, wrote forty-eight of the printed octavo pages of the ... his style formed on Sir William Temple's, a paper of his own remarks on, and masterly vindication of his his extraordinary memory, i. 16, 24. retained in it verses of obscure authours, ii. 132; iv. his superlative power of wit, ii. 237. his dexterity in retort, i. 372; iv. 198. his conversation eminently distinguished by fecundity of ..... nothing of the old man in it, iii. 363; iv. 197. his early, long, habitual, and systematick piety, i. 15, 43, 371; ..... his indepencence, i. 421. his superstition, i. 462; ii. 495. his awful fear of death, ii. 88, 103, 123, 312; iii. 86, JOHNSON, his general tenderness of nature, humanity, and affa- his warm and sometimes violent manner, i. 221; ii. 77, his placability, ii. 106; iii. 295. his charity, ii. 118. his occasional jocularity, i. 178, 248, 377, 406; ii. 76, ... his invariable regard to truth, i. 128, 229, 333, 415, ii. ........ his love of little children, iv. 208. his kindness to his servants, iii. 95; iv. 208. his fondness for animals which he had taken under his his bow to an Archbishop, iv. 209. his laugh, ii. 389. his engaging to write the history of the Authour's family, his respect to birth and family, i. 115, 117, 126, 426 ; ..... 306. his love of good eating, i. 445; ii 70, 203, 309; iv. his political character and opinions, i. 16, 287, 403, ... his pamphlets, i. 119, 120; ii. 108, 109, 135, 136, For his other works see their different titles, and see iv. 447. ... 463. catalogue of his works, i. xxvii. catalogue of works proposed to be executed by him, iv. stories to his prejudice refuted, iii. 212; iv. 180, 181. various portraits of him, iv. 459, 460. Journal, or diary of life, its utility, i. 312, 412; ii. 224, 369; iii. 187, 237, 248, 282; iv. 189. Ireland, and the Irish, i. 297, 298; ii. 247, 321; iii. 440. Irene,' Johnson's tragedy of, i. 77, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, Justitia hulk, an inadequate punishment, iii. 290. K. K ought to be retained in the words publick, musick, critick, &c. iv. 31. Kames, Lord, ii. 206. 380. his Elements of Criticism,' ii. 86. his Sketches of the History of Man, iii. 268, 367, 368, Kelly, Hugh, Johnson's prologue to his Word to the Wise,' iii. Kennedy, Rev. Dr. his, Astronomical Chronology,' i. 316. M. D. A singular Tragedy by, iii. 259. Kennicot, Mrs. iv. 306, 309. Rev. Dr., ii. 127. Kenrick, Dr., i. 476 ; ii. 62. Killaloe, Bishop of. See Barnard. Killingley, Mrs. her curious address to the Author, iii. 225. Kindness, actual, always in our power, through fondness not, iv. King, Rev. Dr. of St. Mary Hall, i. 257, 260, 328. King Charles I. II. James II. George I. II. III. and William III. see their respective initials. Kings, their situations, i. 403, 420; ii. 173, 381. Kippis, Dr., iii. 191. Kneller, Sir Godfry, anecdote of, iii. 257. Knowledge, ii. 174, 192, 225, 372, 382; iii. 35; iv. 231, 369, 468. however minute or inconsiderable, of some value, ir- Knowles, Mrs., iii. 308, 322, 323. Knox, Mr. the traveller, ii. 317. Rev. Vicessimus, iv. 352. his imitation of Johnson's style, iv. 426. L. Landlords and tenants, ii. 97; iii. 270; iv. 177. Langton, Bennet, Esq., i. 221, 296, 307, 312, 414; ii. 192; iïi- ..... Johnson's high praise of his moral character, iii. 176; iv. Johnson's letters to, i. 267, 301, 312, 313, 335; ii. 14, ...... ...... ...... his Johnsoniana,' iv. 1-33, Miss Jane, Johnson's letter to, iv. 292. Peregrine, Esq. account of his admirable and genteel Languages, i. 454; ii. 30, 79, 159, 193; iii. 256; iv. 338, 339. Latin, Johnson's accurate knowledge of, ii. 421. ..... poetry, modern, ii. 382. La Trobe, Rev. Mr., iv. 449. Lauder, William, his forgery against Milton, i. 207, 208, &c. Laughers, the, the use of sometimes living with them, iv. 196. |