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what proper for dancers,

what fort improper for walkers,

Scavengers, their duty,

Stage-coaches, an observation upon them,

Shoe-cleaning boys, the time of their first appearance,

Shoes, when to provide them,

i. 15

i. 25

i. 23

i. 29

i. 33

i. 30

ibid.

Surtout, Kerfey, its defcription,

what most proper for walkers,

i. 55

i. 191

Shower, a man in one described,

Superftition to be avoided,

Shins, what they betoken when fcorched,
Signs creaking, what they betoken,

i. 137

i. 157

i. 175

Swithin, St. his festival,

Smallcoal-man, by whom to be avoided,
Summer, foreign to the author's defign,
Signs, the use of them,

Seven dials of St. Giles's parish described,

ii. 80

Stockings,

i. 183

ii. 35

ii. 3.5

il. 67

Streets, narrow ones to be avoided,

Stockings, how to prevent their being fpattered, ii. 91

ii. 247

Snowy weather,

ii. 320

Shoes, how to free them from snow,

ii. 325

Snow-balls, coachmen pelted with them,

ii. 329

Schoolboys, mifchievous in frofty weather,

ii. 331

Sempftrefs, the description of her in a frosty morning,

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Thefeus in the labyrinth of Crete,

Trivia, the Goddess of streets and highways, invoked,

Trades prejudicial to walkers,

Tradefmen, in what to be trufted,

i. s

ii. 25

ii. 71

ii. 83

ii. 244

Thames-street,

Trades

Trades offenfive to the smell,

Tea-drinkers, a neceffary caution to them,

ii. 246

ii. 296

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i. 245

i. 253

i. 263

i. 2:5

ii. 470

metamorphofed to a country farrier,

the inventor of hobnails and sparables,

the inventor of pattens,

Upholder, where he frequents,

W

Winter, the beginning of it defcribed,

Weather, figns of cold,

figns of fair,

figns of rainy,

Witney broad-cloth proper for horsemen,

Wig compared to Alecto's fnakes,

to Glaucus's beard,

what to be worn in a mist,

i. z

i. 133

i. 143

j. 157

i. 47

i. 202

i. 205

i. 125

Waterman,

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Walking advantageous to learning,

Women, the ill confequence of gazing on them,

Wheel-barrows, how they prejudice walkers,

Whore, how to know one,

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Watchmen, the method of treating with them,
their signal to their fellows,

iii. 307

iii. 311

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MADAM, to all your cenfures I fubmit,

And frankly own I fhould long fince have writ, You told me, filence would be thought a crime, And kindly ftrove to teaze me into rhyme : No more let triffing themes your Muse employ ; Nor lavish verfe, to paint a female toy : No more on plains with rural damfels fport; But fing the glories of the British court. By your commands and inclination sway'd, I call'd th' unwilling Mufes to my aid:

Refolv'd

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