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INDEX

OF PERSONS CELEBRATED IN THIS POEM.

The first Number Shows the Book, the fecond the Verfe.

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THE FIRST NUMBER DENOTES THE BOOK, THE SECOND THE VERSE AND NOTE ON IT. TIST. TESTIMONIES.

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AP. APPENDIX.

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Banks, his resemblance to Mr. Cibber in Tragedy, i. 146.

Bates (Julius) fee Hutchinfon (John).

Broom, Ben Jonfon's man, ibid.

Bavius, iii. 24. Mr. Dennis his great opinion of him, ib.

Bawdry, in plays, not difapproved of by Mr. Dennis, iii. 179.

Blackmore, (Sir Rich.) his impiety and irreligion, proved by Mr. Dennis, ii. 268.

his quantity of works, and various opinions of them-His abufe of Mr. Dryden and Mr. Pope, ibid.

Bray, a word much beloved by Sir Richard, ii. 260. Braying, defcribed, ii. 247.

Birch, by no means proper to be applied to young noblemen, iii. 334.

Bld, what became of his works, i. 231. Broome, (Rev. Mr. Will.) His fentiments of our author's virtue, Teft.

Our author of his, iii. 332.

Brooms (a feller of) taught Mr. John Jackfon his trade, ii. 157.

Billingfgate language, how to be used by learned authors, i. 142.

Bond, Befaleel, Breval, not living writers, but phantoms, ii. 126.

Book fellers, how they run for a poet, ii. 31, &c. Baniffs, how poets run from them, ii. 61. Bridewell, ii. 269.

Bow-bell, iii. 278.

Balm of Dulnefs, the true and the fpurious, its efficacy, and by whom prepared, iv. 544. C

Cibber, hero of the poem, his character, i. 107. not abfolutely ftupid, 109. Not unfortunate as a coxcomb, ibid. Not a flow writer, but precipitate, 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 Moliere, 131. Mangled Shakspeare, 133. His head diftinguished for wearing an extraordinary periwig, 167. more than for its reafoning faculty, yet not without furniture, 177. His elasticity, and fire, and how he came by them, 187. He was ence thought to have wrote a reasonable play, 188. The general character of his verfe and profe, 190. His converfation, in what manner extenfive and useful, 192, &c. Once defigned for the Church, where he should have been a Bishop, 200. Since inclined to write for the Minister of State, 213. but determines to ftick to his other talents; what thofe are, 217, &c. His apoftrophe to his works before he burns them, 225, &c. His repentance and tears, 243. Dulnefs puts out the fire, 257. Inaugurates and anoints him, 287. His crown, by whom woVen, 223. of what compofed, i. 303. who let 6

him into court, 300. who his fupporters, 307 His entry, attendants, and proclamation, ufque ad fin His enthronization, ii. 1. Paffes his whole reign in feeing shows, through book ii. And dreaming dreams, through book ini. Settle appears to him, iii. 35 Refemblance between him and Settle, iii. 37. and i. 146. Goodman's prophecy of him, iii 232. How he translated an opera, without knowing the ftory, 305. and encouraged farces because it was against his conscience, 266. Declares he never mounted a dragon, 268. Apprehenfions of acting in a ferpent, 287. What were the paffions of his old age, 303, 304. Finally fubfides in the lap of Dulnefs, where he refts to all eternity, iv. 25. and note.

Cibber, his father, i. 31. His two brothers, 33. His fon, iii. 142. His better progeny, i. 228. Ciberian forehead, what is meant by it, i. 218. -read by fome Cerbetian, ibid. note. Cooke (Tho.) abused by Mr. Pope, ii. 138. Concanen (Mat.) one of the authors of the Weekly Journals, ii. 299.

declared that when his poem had blanks, they meant treafon, iii. 297.

of opinion that Juvenal never fatirized the poverty of Codrus, ii. 144. Corncutter's Journal, what it coft, ii. 314. Critics, verbal ones, must have two postulata allowed them, ii. I. Cat-calls, ii. 231.

Curll (Edm ) his panegyric, ii. 58.

his Corinna, and what fhe did. 70.
his prayer, 80. Like Eridanus, 182.
Much favoured by Cloacina, 97, &c.
Toil in a blanket, and whipped, 151.
Pilloried, ii. 3.

Carolina, a curious flower, its fate, iv. 409, &c.
D

12.

Dulnefs, the goddefs; her original and parents, i Her ancient empire, 17. Her public col lege, i. 29. Academy for poctical education, 33. Her cardinal virtues, 45, &c. Her ideas, productions, and creation, 55, &c. Her furvey and contemplation of her works, 79, &c. And of her children, 93. Their uninterrupted fucceffion, 98, &c. to 108. Her appearance to Ciober, 261. She manifefts to him her works, 273, &c. Anoints him, 287, &c. Inftitutes games at his coronation, ii. 18, &c. The manner how the makes a wit, ii. 47. A great lover of a joke, 34. And loves to repeat the fame over again, 122. Her ways and means to procure the pathetic and terrible in tragedy, 225, &c. courages chattering and bawling, 237, &c, And is patronnefs of party-writing and railing, 276, &c. Makes ufe of the heads of critics as fcales to weigh the heavinefs of authors, 367. Promotes flumber with the works of the faid authors, ibid. The wonderful virtue of deeping inher lap, iii. 5,&c. Her Elyfium,15, &c. The fouls of her fons dipt in Lethc, 23. How brought into the world, 29. Their transfiguration and metempsychosis, 50. The extent and glories of her empire, and her conquefts throughout the world, iii. 67 to 138. A catalogue of her po

En

etical forces in this nation, 139 to 212. Pro-
phecy of her restoration, 333, &c. Accom..
plishment of it, book iv. Her appearance on
the throne, with the fciences led in triumph,
iv. 21, &c. Tragedy and Comedy filenced, 37.
General affembly of all her votaries, 73. Her
patrons, 95. Her critics, 115. Her fway in
the fchools, 149 to 180. And universities, 189
to 274. How the educates gentlemen in their
travels, 293 to 334. Conflitutes virtuofi in
fcience, 355, &c, Freethinkers in religion, 459.
Slaves and dependents in government, 505. Fi-
nally turns them to beafts, but preferves the form
of men, 525. What fort of comforters the fends
them, 529, &c. What orders and degrees fhe
confers on them, 565. What performances the
expects from them, according to their feveral
ranks and degrees, 583. The powerful yawn
the breathes on them, 605, &c. Its progrefs and
effects, 607, &c. till the confummation of all in
the total extinction of the reasonable foul, and
reftoration of Night and Chaos, ufq. ad fin.
Difpenfary of Dr. Garth, ii. 140..

De Foe, Daniel, in what refembled to William
Prynn, i. 103.

De Foe (Norton) a fcandalous writer, ii. 415.
Dennis, (John) his character of himself, i. 106.
Senior to Mr. Durfey, iii. 173.

Efteemed 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 ftage-and to the
ftate, ii. 413.

How he proves that none but Nunjurors
and difaffected persons 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 Curll, ibid.
His reafon why Homer was, or was not

in debt, ii. 118.

Hisaccufation of Sir Richard Blackmore,-
As no Proteftant, ii. 268.

As no poet, ibid.

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By Mift the Journalist, of unfair pro
ceeding in the undertaking of the Odyffey and
Shakspeare, Test.

Difproved by the teftimony of the Lords
Harcourt and Bathurst.

By Mift the Journalist, concerning Mr.
Addison and him, two or three lies, Teft.

179.

By Pafquin, of his being in a plot, iii.

By Sir Richard Blackmore, of his bur-
lefquing 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 Flecknoe, not fo decent and chaste in the dic
tion as the Dunciad, ii. 75.

Friendship, understood by Mr. Dennis to be fome.
what else 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. Discove.
ries there, ibid.

Flies not the ultimate object of human study, iv.

454.
Falfehoods and flatteries permitted to be infcribed
on churches, i. 43.

G

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

Good fenfe, grammar, and verfe, defired to give
place for the fake of Mr. Bef. Morris and his
works, iii..168.

Gildon (Charles) abufed our author in many
things, Teft. i. 296.

Printed against Jefus Chrift, f. 296.
Gildon and Dennis, their unhappy difference la
mented, iii. 173.

Gentleman, his Hymn to his Creator, by Welfted,
ii. 207.

His wonderful Dedication to G. D. Efq. Gazetteers, the monftrous price of their writings,

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ii. 314. the miferable fate of their works, ibid.

H

Handel, an excellent musician, banished to Ireland,
by the English nobility, iv. 65.
Heydeggre, a ftrange birdfrom Switzerland,i. 290.
Horace, cenfured by Mr. Welfted, Test.

Did not know what he was about when
he wrote his Art of Poetry, ibid.
Henley (John the Orator) his Tub and Eucharift,
ii. 2. His Hiftory, iii. 199. His opinion of
Ordination and Chriftian Priesthood, iiis 199.
His medals, ibid,

Haywood (Mrs.) What fort of game for her, ii.

157. Won by Curll, 187. Her great refpect
for him. The offspring of her brain and body
(according to Curil), ibid. Not undervalued
by being fet against a Jordan, 165.

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Index-learning, the use of it, i. 279.
Journals, how dear they cost the nation, ii. 314.
Jus Divinum, iv. 188.

Impudence, celebrated Mr. Curll, ii. 159. 186.
in Mr. Norton De Foe, ii. 415.
in Mr. Henley, iii. 199.
in Mr. Cibber, jun. iii. 139.
in Mr. Cibber, fen. paffim.
L

Lord Mayor's fhow, i. 185

Libeller, a Grub-street critic run to feed, iv. 567.
Library of Bays, i. 131.

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 composed, i. 103.
Lycophron, his dark lanthorn, by whom turned,
iv. 6.

M

Madmen, two related to Cibber, i. 32.
Magazines, their character, i. 42.
Moliere, crucified, i. 132.

Moore (James) his ftory of fix verses, and of ri-
diculing Bishop Burnet in the memoirs of a
parish clerk, proved falfe, by the Teftimonies of
The Lord Bolingbroke, Test.
Hugh Bethel, Efq. ibid.

Earl of Peterborough, ibid.
Dr. Arbuthnot, ibid.

His plagiarifms, fome few of them, ibid.
and ii 50. What he was real author of (be-
fide the story above mentioned) vide Lift of
fcurrilous Papers.

Erafmus his advice to him, ii. 50.
Milbourne, a fair critic, and why, ii. 349.
Madness, of what fort Mr. Dennis's was, accord-
ing to Plato, i. 106.

according to himself, ii. 268.
how allied to Dulness, iii. 15.
Mercuries and Magazines, i. 42.

May-pole in the Strand, turned into a church, ii.
28.

Morris (Befaleel) ii. 126. iii. 168.

Monuments of poets, with infcriptions to other
men, iv. 131, &c.

Medals, how fwallowed and recovered, iv. 375.
N

Nodding defcribed, ii. 391.

Needham's i. 324.

Nus, where wanted, iv. 244.

Pope, ii. 283. Falfified Daniel's Hiftory, then
accufed others of falfifying Lord Clarendon's;
proven a flanderer in it, ibid.

abufed Mr. Eufden and my Lord Cham-
berlain, i. 104.

Odyffey, Falfchoods concerning Mr. P.'s Propo-
fals for that Work, Teft.

-Difproved by those very Proposals, ibid.
Owls and Opium, i. 271.

Oranges, and their use, i. 236.

Opera, her Advancement, iii. 301. iv. 45, &c.
Opiates, two very confiderable ones, ii. 370. Their
efficacy, 390, &c.

Ofborne, bookfeller, crowned with a Jordan, ii.
190.

Ofborne (Mother) turned to stone, ii. 312.
Owls, defired to answer Mr. Ralph, iii. 166.

P

Pope, Mr. his Life. Educated by Jefuits-by a
Parfon-by a Monk-at St. Omer's-at Ox-
ford-at home-no where at all. Teft. init.
His father a merchant, a husbandman, a farmer,
a hatter, the devil, ib.

-His death threatened by Dr. Smedley, ibid.
but afterwards advised to hang himself, or cut
his throat, ibid. To be hunted down like a
wild beast, by Mr. Theobald, ibid. unless hang-
ed for treafon, on information of Pasquin, Mr.
Dennis, Mr. Curll, and Concanen, ibid.
Poverty, never to be mentioned in fatire, in the
opinion of the Journalists and Hackney Writers
The poverty of Codrus, not touched upon by
Juvenal, ii. 143. When, and how far poverty
may be fatirized, Leter, p. vi. Whenever men-
tioned by our author, it is only as an extenua-
tion and excufe for bad writers, ii. 282.
Perfonal abuses not to be endured, in the opinion
of Mr. Dennis, Theobald, Curll, &c. ii. 142.
Perfonal abufes on our author, by Mr. Dennis,

-

Gildon, &c. ibid.-By Mr. Theobald, Test.-
By Mr. Ralph, iii. 165.-By Mr. Welsted, ii.
207.-By Mr. Cooke, ii. 138.- By Mr. Con-
canen, ii. 299.-By Sir Richard Blackmore,
ii. 268.-By Edw. Ward, iii. 34-and their
brethren, paffim.

Perfonal abuses of others. Mr. Theobald of Mr.
Dennis for his poverty, i. 106. Mr. Dennis of
Mr. Theobald for his livelihood by the Stage,
and the Law, i. 286. Mr. Dennis of Sir Rich-
ard Blackmore for impiety, ii. 268. Dr. Smed-
ley, of Mr. Concanen, ii, 299. Mr. Oldmix-
on's of Mr. Eufden, i. 104. Of Mr. Addison,
ii. 283. Mr. Cooke's of Mr. Eufden, 104.
Politics, very useful in criticism, Mr. Dennis's, i.
106. ii. 413.

Pillory, a pot of refpe&t, in the opinion of Mr.
Curll, iii. 34.

—and of Mr. Ward, ibid.
Plagiary defcribed, ii. 47, &c.

Priori, Arguments à priori not the best to prove a
God, iv. 471.

Poverty and poetry, their cave, i. 33.

Profaneness, not to be endured in our author, but
very allowable in Shakspeare, i. 50.

Oldmizen (John) abused Mr. Addison and Mr. Party-writers, their three qualifications, ii. 276.

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