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Eudoxus and Leontine, their friendship, and education
of their children....

123

Exercise, the great benefit and necessity of bodily ex-

ercise

116

FALSEHOOD in man, a recommendation to the fair sex.. 156
Families: the ill measures taken by great families in
the education of their younger sons.

Fan, the exercise of it.......

Fashion: men of fashion, who..

Faustina, the empress, her notions of a pretty gentle-

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Flutter of the fan, the variety of motions in it...

Freeport (Sir Andrew) his moderation in point of po-
litics.....

108

102

151

128

81

91

102

126

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Genius, what properly a great one..

160

Gentry of England, generally speaking, in debt...

82

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Good-breeding, the great revolution that has happened

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Grandmother, Sir Roger de Coverley's great, great,

great, grandmother's receipt for an hasty-pud-
ding and a white pot............

109

No.

Great men, the tax paid by them to the public........ 101
Not truly known till some years after their deaths 101
HANDSOME people generally fantastical.........

144

The Spectator's list of some handsome ladies....... 144
Harry Tersett, and his lady; their way of living 100
Hate: why a man ought not to hate even his enemies 125
Head-dress, the most variable thing in nature.......
Extravagantly high in the 14th century..

With what success attacked by a monk of that

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98

98

98

150

Heirs and elder brothers frequently spoiled in their

education.....

123

Historian in conversation, who......

Honeycomb (Will) his knowledge of mankind.

His letter to the Spectator.....

His notion of a man of wit..

136

105

131

151

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ICHNEUMON, a great destroyer of crocodiles eggs...

Idol: coffee-house idols.....

Immortality of the soul, arguments in proof of it

Impertinents, several sorts of them described...148 and 168
Indigo, the merchant, a man of prodigious intelligence 136
Indisposition; a man under any, whether real or ima-

ginary, ought not to be admitted into company.. 143

Indolence, what..

Instinct, the power of it in brutes

Irresolution, from whence arising..

Irus's fear of poverty, and effects of it..

100

120

151

114

KENNET (Dr.) his account of the country wakes....... 161
Knowledge, the pursuits of it long, but not tedious..... 94
The only means to extend life beyond its natural
dimensions....

LABOUR: bodily labour of two kinds....

............

94,

115

Laertes, his character in distinction from that of Irus.. 114
Lancashire Witches, a comedy, censured.........

141

156

99

99

116

126

87

111

Language, the English, much adulterated during the

war..

Leontine and Eudoxus, their great friendship and ad-

vantages.........

Letters to the Spectator; from Rosalinda, with a de-
sire to be admitted into the Ugly Club

From T. T. complaining of the Idols in coffee-
houses...

From Philo-Britannicus, on the corruption of ser-

vants

From Sam. Hopewell........

From Leonora, reminding the Spectator of the
catalogue...

From B. D. concerning real sorrow....

From Annabella, recommending the bishop of
Cambray's Education of a Daughter.

From Tom Trusty, a servant, containing an ac-
count of his life and services

against the equestrian order of

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From the master of the fan exercise.

102

From

ladies....

104

From Will Wimble to Sir Roger de Coverley, with

a jack.....

108

To the Spectator from

complaining of

the new petticoat..

127

From a lawyer on the circuit, with an account of
the progress of the fashions in the country....
From Will Honeycomb..

....... 129

From George Trusty, thanking the Spectator
for the great benefit he has received from his
works ....

131

134

From William Wiseacre, who desires his daughter
may learn the exercise of the fan

134

From a professed liar...

136

From Ralph Valet, the faithful servant of a per-
verse master.

137

From Patience Giddy, the next thing to a lady's

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Letters, from Parthenope, who is angry with the Spec-
tator for meddling with the ladies petticoats..... 140
From
upon drinking.......
From Rachael Basto, concerning female game-

sters

From Parthenia.....

From
medy called The Lancashire Witches...

containing a reflection on a co-

140

140

140

141

From Andromache, complaining of the false no-
tion of gallantry in love, with some letters from
her husband to her......

142

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on the reading the common-prayer 147

From the Spectator to a dancing outlaw..
From the same to a dumb visitant..

148

148

To the Spectator from Silvia, a widow, desiring his
advice in the choice of a husband.......

149

The Spectator's answer....

149

To the Spectator from Simon Honeycomb, giving
an account of his modesty, impudence, and mar-
riage

154

From an Idol that keeps a coffee-house..
From a beautiful milliner, complaining of her cus-
tomers.....

155

155

From

From

From — with a reproof to the Spectator.... 158
concerning the ladies visitants..... 158
complaining of the behaviour of

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From Leonora, who had just lost her lover.
From a young officer to his father..

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From T. S. a school-boy at Richmond....
From
concerning impertinents...
From Isaac Hedgeditch, a poacher

168

168

168

No.

99

Lewis of France, compared with the czar of Muscovy 139
Lie given, a great violation of the point of honour.......
Life; in what manner our lives are spent, according to
Seneca.....

93

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Natural love in brutes more intense than in rea-
sonable creatures.....

120

The gallantry of it on a very ill foot...........
Love has nothing to do with state

142

149

MACBETH, the incantations in that play vindicated...... 141
Mahometans, a custom among them...
Males only among the birds have voices..

85

128

Man, variable in his temper......

162

without bloodshed......

Marlborough (John duke of) took the French lines

Marriage-life, always a vexatious or happy condition.. 149
Master, a good one, a prince in his family..

139

107

A complaint against some ill masters................ 137

Merab, her character........

144

Mirza, the visions of....

159

Mode: a standing mode of dress recommended...
Modesty in men no ways acceptable to ladies..........
Mourning the signs of true mourning generally mis-

129

154

95

:

understood...

NIGRANILLA, a party lady, forced to patch on the wrong
side..

81

Nutmeg of delight, one of the Persian emperor's titles 160

OBSCURITY, the only defence against reproach............ 101
Economy, wherein compared to good-breeding..
Omniamante, her character.......

PAMPHILIO, a good master..

Parties: an instance of the malice of parties
The dismal effects of a furious party-spirit
It corrupts both our morals and judgment..

.... 114

144

137

125

125

125

And reigns more in the country than town.......... 126

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