Contemplation of her Works, 79, &c. And of her X 2 grefs grefs and Effects, 607, &c. till the Confummation of All, in the total Extinction of the reasonable Soul, and Restoration of Night and Chaos, ufq. ad fin. Difpenfary of Dr. Garth, ii. 140. De Foe, Daniel, in what resembled to William Prynn, i. 103. De Foe, Norton, a fcandalous writer, ii. 415. DENNIS, (John) His Character of himself, i. 106. -Esteemed by our Author, and why, ibid. -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 difaffected Perfons writ against Stage-plays, ibid. His refpect to the Bible and Alcoran, ibid. His excufe for Obfcenity in Plays, iii. 179. -His mortal fear of Mr. Pope, founded on Mr. Curll's affurances, i. 106. Of opinion that he poifoned Curl, ibid. His reafon why Homer was, or was not in debt, ii. 118. His Accufation of Sir R. Blackmore, As no Proteftant, ii. 268. As no Poet, ibid. His wonderful' Dedication to G. D. Efq; iii. 179Drams, dangerous to a Poet, iii. 146. Dedicators, ii. 198, &c. Dunciad, how to be correctly fpelled, i. 1. E EDWARDS (Thomas) iv. 567. A Gentleman of the last edition, ibid. EUSDEN (Laurence) i. 104. Taxed by Oldmixon with Nonsense, ibid. Ears, Ears, fome people advised how to preserve them, iii, 214. F FALSEHOODS, told of our author in Print. Of his taking verfes from James Moore, Teft. And of his intending to abuse bishop Burnet, ibid. By John Dennis, of his really poisoning Mr. Curll, 106. And of Contempt for the facred Writings, ii. 268. By Edward Ward, of his being bribed by a Dutchess to satirize Ward of Hackney in the pillory, iii. 34. By Mift the Journalist, of unfair proceeding in the undertaking of the Odyffey and Shakespeare, Teft. Difproved by the Teftimony of the Lords Harcourt and Bathurst. By Mift the Journalist, concerning Mr. Addison and him, two or three Lies, Test. By Pafquin, of his being in a Plot, iii. 179. By Sir Richard Blackmore, of his burlesquing Scripture, upon the authority of Curll, ii. 268. Fleas and verbal Critics compared, as equal judges of the human frame and wit, iv. 238. Fletcher, made Cibber's Property, i. 131. Mac Fleckno, not fo decent and chafte in the Diction as the Dunciad, ii. 75. Friendship, understood by Mr. Dennis to be fomewhat elfe in Nifus and Euryalus, &c. iii. 179. French Cooks, iv. 553. Furius, Mr. Dennis called fo by Mr. Theobald, i. 106. Fleet-ditch, ii. 271. Its Nymphs, 333. Difcoveries there, ibid. Flies, not the ultimate Object of human study, iv. 454. Falfehoods and Flatteries permitted to be inscribed on Churches, i. 43. G Good Nature of our Author; Inftances of it in this work, i. 328. ii. 282. X 3 Good Good Senfe, Grammar and Verfe, defired to give place for -Printed against Jefus Chrift, i. 296. GILDON and DENNIS, their unhappy Difference la- Gentleman, his Hymn to his Creator, by Welfted, ii. 207. Gazetteers, the monftrous Price of their Writings, ii. H HANDEL, an excellent musician, banished to Ireland Heydeggre, a ftrange bird from Switzerland, i. 290. -Did not know what he was about when he HENLEY (John the Orator) his Tub and Eucharist, ii. Hints, extraordinary ones, ii. 268. HORNECK and ROOME, two Party-Writers, in. 152. -never bowed the knee to Senfe. -cuts down the Groves of the Academy, iii. 334. -and tramples on the fallen Dagon of Newtonian I Index-Learning, the ufe of it, i. 279. Journals, how dear they cost the nation, ii. 314. Jus Jus Divinum, iv. 188. Impudence, celebrated in Mr. Curll, ii. 159. 186. in Mr. Henley, iii. 199. in Mr. Cibber, jun. iii. 139. L Lord Mayor's Show, i. 185. Libeller, a Grubstreet Critic run to feed, iv. 567. Liberty and Monarchy, mistaken for one another, iv. 181. Lud (King) ii. 349. Log (King) i. ver. ult. Lintot (Bernard) ii. 53. Laureate; his Crown, of what compofed, i. 303. M Madmen, two related to Cibber, i. 32. MOORE (James) his Story of fix Verses, and of ridicu- The Lord Bolingbroke, Teft. -Hugh Bethel, Efq; ibid. -Earl of Peterborough, ibid. -Dr. Arbuthnot, ibid. -His Plagiarisms, fome few of them, ibid. and ii. MILBOURNE, a fair Critic, and why, ii. 349. Madness, of what fort Mr. Dennis's was, according to according to himself, ii. 268, Mer- |