Q QUERIES in love answered, N. 625. Question, a curious one by a schoolman about the choice of pro Quid-nunc (Tho.) letters to the Spectator on news, N. 625. R RAKE, a character of one, N. 576. Rattling Club got into the church, N. 630. Ramsey (Wm.) the astrologer, description of night, N. 582. Rosicrusian, a pretended discovery made by one, N. 574. S ST. PAUL's eloquence, N. 633. Satire, whole duty of man turned into one, N. 568. Scarfs, vanity of some clergymen wearing them, N. 609. Self-love, the narrowness and danger of it, N. 588. Seneca, his saying of drunkenness, N. 569. Shakspeare, his excellence, N. 562. Shalum the Chinese,. his letter to the princess Hilpa before the Sight (Second) in Scotland, N. 604. Singularity, when a virtue, N. 576; an instance of it in a north- Socrates, his saying of misfortunes, N. 558. Space (infinite) Sir Isaac Newton's noble way of considering Spartan justice, an instance of it, N. 564. Spectator breaks a fifty year's silence, N. 556; how he recover- Stars, a contemplation of them, N. 565. Syncopists, modern ones, N. 567. Syracusan prince, jealous of his wife, how he used her, N. 579. T TEMPER (serious) the advantage of it, N. 598. Torre in Devon, unchaste widows punished there, N. 614. Tully praises himself, N. 562; what he said of the immortality V UBIQUITY of the godhead considered, N. 571; farther con- Verses by a despairing lover, N. 591; on Phebe and Colin, 603; Vice as laborious as virtue, N. 624. Vision of human misery, N. 604. Vulcan's dogs, the fable of them, N. 579. W WEST ENBRONE in Berkshire, a custom for widows, N. 614; Whole Duty of Man, that book turned into a satire, N. 568. Writing, the difficulty of it to avoid censure, N. 568. X XENOPHON, his account of Cyrus's trying the virtue of a Ꮓ ZEMROUDE, Queen, her story out of the Persian tales, N. 578. FINIS. |