Obrazy na stronie
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Holland, Philemon, i. 154.
Hearne, Thomas, iii. 185.
Horneck, Philip, iii. 152.

Gregorians and Gormogons, Prynn, William, i. 103.

iv. 575.

Philips, Ambrose, i. 105; iii.
326.
Paridel, iv. 341.

Quarles, Frances, i. 140.

Haywood, Eliza ii 17 &c.

Querno, Camillo, ii. 15.

Howard Edward, i. 297.

3

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Henley, John, the Orator, ii. 2, Ralph, James. i. 216; iii. 165.

Heywood, John, i. 98.

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Roome, Edward, iii. 152.

Ridley, Tho., iii. 327.

Ridpath, George, i. 208; ii. 149.
Roper, Abel, ii. 149.
Rich, iii. 261.

Settle, Elkanah, i. 90, 146; iii-
37.

Smedley, Jonathan, ii. 291, &c.
Shadwell, Thomas, i. 240; iii.

22.

Scholiasts, iv. 231.
Silenus, iv. 492.

Sooterkins, i. 126.

Theobald, or Tibbald, i. 133,

286.

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Tate, i. 105, 238.

Log, King, i. lin. ult.

More, James, ii. 50, &c.

168.

Mist, Nathaniel, i. 208.

Tutchin, John, ii. 148.

Morris, Besaleel, ii. 126; iii. Toland, John, ii. 399; iii. 212.

Milbourn, Luke, ii. 349.

Mahomet, iii. 97.

Mears, William, ii. 125; iii. 28.

Motteux, Peter, ii. 412.

Monks, iii. 52.

Mandevil, ii. 414.

Morgan, ib.

Montalto, iv. 105.

Mummius, an antiquary, iv. 371.

Newcastle, Duchess of, i. 141.
Nonjuror, i. 253.

Ogilby, John, i. 141, 328.
Oldmixon, John, ii. 283.
Ozell, John, i. 285.
Ostrogoths, iii. 93.
Omar, the Caliph, iii. 81.
Owls, i. 271, 290; iii. 54.

Athenian, iv. 362.

Osborne, bookseller, ii. 167.
Osborne, mother, ii. 312.

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INDEX OF MATTERS

CONTAINED IN THIS POEM AND NOTES.

(The first Number denotes the Book, the second the
Verse and Note on it. Test. Testimonies.

ADDISON (Mr.), railed at by A. |
Philips, iii. 326.

abused by J. Oldmixon, in
his Prose Essay on Criticism,
&c. ii. 283.

abused by J. Ralph, in a
London Journal, iii. 165.

celebrated by our author-
Upon his Discourse of Medals
-In his Prologue to Cato-In
his Imitation of Horace's
Epistle to Augustus-and in
this poem, ii. 140.

False Facts concerning him
and our Author related by
anonymous persons in Mist's
Journal, &c. Test.

Disproved by the Testi-
monies of

The Earl of Burlington,
Mr. Tickel,

Mr. Addison himself, ib.
Anger, one of the characteristics
of Mr. Dennis's Critical Wri-
tings, i. 106.

Affirmation, another: Test.
[To which are added by Mr.
Theobald, Ill-nature, Spite,
Revenge, i. 106.]

Altar of Cibber's Works, how
built, and how founded, i.
157, &c.
Eschylus, iii. 313.

Asses, at a citizen's gate in a
morning, ii. 247.
Appearances, that we are never
to judge by them, especially
of poets and divines, ií. 426.

Alehouse, one kept by Edward
Ward, i. 233.

and by Taylor the Water-
Poet, iii. 19.
Arnall, William, what he re-
ceived out of the Treasury for
writing pamphlets, ii. 315.

Bedlam, i. 29.

Banks, his resemblance to Mr.
Cibber in tragedy, i. 146.
Broome, Ben Jonson's man,
ibid.

Bavius, iii. 24; Mr. Dennis, his
great opinion of him, ibid.
Blackmore (Sir Rich.), his quan-
tity of works, ii. 268; his
abuse of Mr. Dryden and Mr.
Pope, ibid.

Bray, a word much beloved by
Sir Richard, ii. 260.
Braying, described, ii. 247.
Birch, by no means proper to be
applied to young noblemen,
iii. 334.

Bl-d, what became of his
works, i. 231.

Broome (Rev. Mr. Will), his
sentiments of our author's
virtue, Test.

Billingsgate language, how to
be used by learned authors,
ii. 142.

Bond, Besaleel, Breval, not
living writers, but phantoms,
ii. 126.
Booksellers, how they run for a
poet, ii. 31, &c.

Bailiffs, how poets run from
them, ii. 61.
Bridewell, ii. 269.
Bow-bell, iii. 278.

Balm of Dulness, the true and
the spurious, its efficacy, and
by whom prepared, iv. 544.

Cibber, hero of the poem, his
character, i. 107; not abso-
lutely stupid, 109; not unfor-
tunate as a coxcomb, ibid.;
not a slow writer, but !precipi-
tate, though heavy, 123; his
productions the effects of
heat, though an imperfect
one, 126; his folly heightened
with frenzy, 125; he borrowed
from Fletcher and Molière,
131;
mangled Shakespear,
133; his head distinguished
for wearing an extraordinary
periwig, 167; more than for
its reasoning faculty, yet not
without furniture, 177; his
elasticity and fire, and how he
came by them, 186; he was
once thought to have written
a reasonable play, 188; the
general character of his verse
and prose, 190; his conversa-
tion, in what manner exten-
sive and useful, 192, &c. ; once
designed for the Church, where
he should have been a bishop.
200; since inclined to write
for the Minister of State, 213;
but determines to stick to his
other talents, what those are,
217, &c.; his apostrophe to
his works, before he burns
them, 225. &c. ; his repentance
and tears, 243; dulness puts
out the fire, 257; inaugurates
and anoints him, 287; his
crown, by whom woven, 223;
of what composed, i. 303; who
let him into court, 300; who
his supporters, 307; his entry,
attendants, and proclamation,
usque ad fin.; his enthroniza-
tion, ii. i.; passes his whole
reign in seeing shows, through
Book ii.; and dreaming dreams,
through Book iii.; Settle ap-
pears to him, iii. 35; resem-
blance between him and Settle,
iii. 37 and i. 146; Goodman's
prophecy of him, iii. 232; how

he translated an opera, with-
out knowing the story, 305;
and encouraged farces because
it was against his conscience,
266; declares he never mounted
a dragon, 268; apprehensions
of acting in a serpent, 287;
what were the passions of his
old age, 303, 304; finally sub-
sides in the lap of Dulness,
where he rests to all eternity,
iv. 20, and Note.
Cibber's father, i. 31; his two
brothers, 32; his son, iii. 142;
his better progeny, i. 228.
Cibberian forehead, what is
meant by it, i. 218.

read by some Cerberian,
ibid. Note.

Cooke (Tho.), abused Mr. Pope,
ii. 138.

Concanen (Mat.), one of the
authors of the weekly jour-
nals, ii. 299.

declared that when this
poem had blanks, they meant
treason, iii. 297.

of opinion that Juvenal
never satirized the poverty of
Codrus, ii. 144.

Critics, verbal ones, must have
two postulata allowed them,
i. 330.

Cat-calls, ii. 231.
Curl (Edm.), his panegyric, ii.
58.

his Corinna, and what she
did, 70.

his prayer, 80; like Erida-

nus, 182.

much favoured by Cloacina,

97, &c.

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&c., to 108; her appearance
to Cibber, 261; she manifests
to him her works, 273, &c.;
anoints him, 287, &c. ; insti-
tutes games at his coronation,
ii. 18, &c.; the manner how
she makes a wit, 47; a great
lover of a joke, 34; and loves
to repeat the same over again,
132; her ways and means to
procure the pathetic and ter-
rible in tragedy, 225, &c.; en-
courages chattering and bawl-
ing, 237, &c.; and is patroness
of party-writing and railing,
276, &c.; makes use of the
heads of critics as scales to
weigh the heaviness of authors,
367; promotes slumber with
the works of the said authors,
ibid.; the wonderful virtue of
sleeping in her lap, iii. 5, &c.;
her elysium, 15, &c.; the
souls of her sons dipped in
Lethe, 23; how brought into
the world, 29; their transfigu-
ration and metempsychosis,
50; the extent and glories of
her empire, and her conquests
throughout the world, 67 to
138; a catalogue of her poeti-
cal forces in this nation, 139
to 212; prophecy of her restora-
tion, 333; accomplishment of
it, Book iv.; her appearance
on the throne, with the
Sciences led in triumph, iv.
21, &c.; Tragedy and Comedy
silenced, 37; general assembly
of all her votaries, 73; her
patrons, 95; her critics, 115;
her sway in the schools, 149 to
180; and universities, 189 to
274; how she educates gentle-
men in their travels, 293 to
334; constitutes virtuosi in
science, 353; free-thinkers in
religion, 459; slaves and de-
pendents in government, 505;
finally turns them to beasts,
but preserves the form of
men, 525; what sort of com-
forters she sends them, 529;
what orders and degrees she
confers on them, 565; what
performances she expects from
them, according to their seve-
ral ranks and degrees, 583;
the powerful yawn she

breathes on them, 605, &c.;
its progress and effects, 607;
till the consummation of all,
in the total extinction of the
reasonable soul, and restora-
tion of Night and Chaos, usq.
ad fin.

Dispensary of Dr. Garth, ii. 140.
De Foe (Daniel), in what re-
sembled to William Prynn, i.
103.

De Foe (Norton), a scandalous
writer, ii. 415.

Dennis (John), his character of
himself, i. 106.

senior to Mr. Durfey, iii.
173.

esteemed by our author,
and why, ibid.

his love of puns, i. 63.
and politics, i. 106; ii. 413.
his great loyalty to King
George, how proved, i. 106.

a great friend to the stage,
-and to the state, ii. 413.

how he proves that none
but nonjurors and disaffected
persons wrote against stage-
plays, ibid.

his respect to the Bible and
Alcoran, ibid.

his mortal fear of Mr. Pope,
founded on Mr. Curl's as-
surances, i. 106.

of opinion that he poisoned
Curl, ibid.

his reason why Homer was,
or was not in debt, ii. 118.
Drams, dangerous to a poet, iii.

146.

Dedicators, ii. 198.
Dunciad, how to be correctly
spelled, i. 1.

Eusden (Laurence), i. 104.
Ears, some people advised how
to preserve them, iii. 214.

Falseholds, told of our author
in print,

Of his taking verses from
James Moore, Test.
And of his intending to abuse
Bishop Burnet, ibid.

By John Dennis, of his really
poisoning Mr. Curl, i. 106.
And of contempt for the sacred
writings, ii. 268.

By Edward Ward, of his being

sted, Test.

did not know what he was
about when he wrote his Art
of Poetry, ibid.

bribed by a duchess to sati- | Horace, censured by Mr. Wel-
rize Ward of Hackney in the
pillory, iii. 34.
By Mist, the journalist, of un-
fair proceeding in the under-
taking of the Odyssey and
Shakespear, Test.
Disproved by the testimony
of the Lords Harcourt and
Bathurst.

By Mist, the journalist, con-
cerning Mr. Addison and
him, two or three lies, Test.
By Pasquin, of his being in a
plot, fii. 179.

By Sir Richard Blackmore, of
his burlesquing Scripture
upon the authority of Curl,
ii. 268.

Fleas and verbal critics com-
pared, as equal judges of the
human frame and wit, iv. 238.
Fletcher, made Cibber's pro-
perty, i. 131.

French cooks, iv. 553.
Furious, Mr. Dennis called so,
by Mr. Theobald, i. 106.
Fleet-ditch, ii. 271; its nymphs,
333; discoveries there, ibid.
Flies, not the ultimate object of
human study, iv. 454.
Falsehoods and flatteries per-
mitted to be inscribed on
churches, i. 43.

Good-nature of our author; in-
stances of it in this work, i.
328; ii. 282.

Good sense, grammar, and verse,
desired to give place for the
sake of Mr. Bes. Morris and
his works, iii. 168.
Gildon (Charles), abused our
author in many things. Test.
i. 296.

printed
Christ, i. 296.
Gildon and Dennis, their un-
happy difference lamented,
iii. 173.

against Jesus

Gentleman, his Hymn to his
Creator, by Welsted, ii. 207.
Gazetteers, ii. 314.

Handel, an excellent musician,
banished to Ireland by the
English nobility, iv. 65.
Heideggre, a strange bird from
Switzerland, i. 290.

Henley (John the Orator), his
Tub and Eucharist, ii. 2; his
history, iii. 199; his opinion
of ordination and Christian
priesthood, ibid.; his medals,
ibid.

Haywood (Mrs.), what sort of
game for her, ii. 157; won by
Curl, 187; the offspring of her
brain and body (according to
Curl), 157; not undervalued
by being set against a jordan,
165.
Horneck and Roome, two party-
writers, iii. 152.

Index-learning, the use of it. i.

279.

Jus Divinum, iv. 188.
Impudence, celebrated in Mr.
Curl, ii. 58, 186.

415.

in Mr. Norton de Foe, ii.

in Mr. Henley, iii. 199.
in Mr. Cibber, jun. iii. 139.
in Mr. Cibber, sen. passim

Lord Mayor's show, i. 85.
Library of Bays, i. 131.
Lud (King), ii. 359.
Log (King), i. 330.
Lintot (Bernard), ii. 53.
Laureate, his crown, of what
composed, i. 303.

Madmen, two related to Cibber,
i. 32.

Magazines, their character, i.

42.

Molière, crucified, i. 132.
Moore (James), his story of six
verses, and of ridiculing Bishop
Burnet in the Memoirs of a
Parish-clerk, proved false by
the testimonies of

The Lord Bolingbroke, Test.
Hugh Bethel, Esq. ibid.
Earl of Peterborough, ibid.
Dr. Arbuthnot, ibid.

his plagiarisms, some few of
them, ibid., and ii. 50; what
he was real author of (beside
the story above mentioned).
Vide List of scurrilous Papers.

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