Page images
PDF
EPUB

formation of Pafquin, Mr. Dennis, Mr. Curll, and Concanen, ibid. Poverty, never to be mentioned in Satire, in the opi-, nion 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, Letter, p. vi. Whenever mentioned by our Author, it is only as an Extenuation 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 abuses on our Author, by Mr. Dennis, Gildon, &c. ibid.-By Mr. Theobald, Teft.-By Mr. Ralph, iii. 165.-By Mr. Welfted, ii. 207.-By Mr. Cooke, ii. 138.-By Mr. Concanen, ii. 299.-By Sir Richard Blackmore, ii. 268.-By Edw. Ward, iii. 34-and their Brethren, paffim.

Perfonal abufes 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 Richard Blackmore for Impiety, ii. 268. Dr. Smedley, of Mr. Concanen, ii. 299. Mr. Oldmixon's of Mr. Eufden, i. IC4. 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 poft of refpect, in the opinion of Mr. Curll,

iii. 34.

-and of Mr. Ward, ibid.

Plagiary described, ii. 47, &c.

Priori, Argument 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 Shakespeare, i. 50.

Party-Writers, their three Qualifications, ii. 276.

Proteus (the fable of), what to be understood by it, i. 31.

Palmers,

Palmers, Pilgrims, iii. 113.

Pindars and Miltons, of the modern fort, iii. 164.

е

QUERNO, his Refemblance to Mr. Cibber, ii. 15. Wept for joy, ibid. So did Mr. C. i. 243.

R

Refemblance of the Hero to several great Authors,
To Querno, ut fupra. To Settle, iii. 37.
To Banks and Broome, i. 146.
Round-houfe, ii. prope fin.

RALPH (James), iii. 165. See Sawney.
ROOME and HORNECK, iii. 152.

S

Shakspeare, to be fpelled always with an e at the end, I. 1. but not with an e in the middle, ibid. An edition of him in Marble, ibid. mangled, altered, and cut by the Players and Critics, i. 133. Very fore ftill of Tibbald, ibid.

Sepulchral Lies on Church-Walls, i. 43.

SETTLE (Elkanah), Mr. Dennis's Account of him, iii. 37. And Mr. Welfted's, ibid. Once preferred to Dryden, iii. 37. A Party-writer of Pamphlets, ib. and iii. 283. A writer of Farces and Drolis, and employed at last in Bartholomew-Fair, iii. 283. Sawney, a Poem: the Author's great ignorance in Claffical Learning, i. 1.

In languages, iii. 165.

His Praises on himself above Mr. Addison, ibid. Swifs of Heaven, who they are, ii. 358.

A flipfhod Sibyl, iii. 15.

Silenus defcribed, iv. 492.

Scholiafts, iii. 191. iv. 211. 232.

Supperlefs, a miftake concerning this word fet right with refpect to Poets and other temperate Students,

i. 115.

Sevenfold Face, who mafter of it, i.

224.

Soul (the vulgar Soul) its office, iv. 441.

Schools, their homage paid to Dulnefs, and in what, iv. 150, &c.

ཝཱ *ཝཱ

TIBBALD,

T

TIBBALD, not Hero of this Poem, i. init. Published
an edition of Shakespeare, i. 133. Author, fecretly
an abettor of Scurrilities against Mr. P. Vide Tefti.
monies, and Lift of Books.

Thule, a very Northern Poem, puts out a Fire, i. 258.
Taylors, a good word for them, against Poets and ill
Paymafters, ii. 118.

Thunder, how to make it by Mr. Dennis's Receipt,
ii. 226.

Travelling defcribed, and its advantages, iv. 293, &c.

Verbal Critics.

them, ii. I.

V

Two Points always to be granted

Venice, the city of, for what famous, iv. 308.
University, how to pass through it, iv. 255. 289.

W

WARD (Edw.) a Poet and Alehoufe-keeper in Moor-
fields, i. 233. What became of his Works, ibid.

-His high opinion of his Namefake, and his re-
spect for the Pillory, iii. 34.

WELSTED (Leonard), one of the Authors of the
Weekly Journals, abufed our author, &c. many
years fince, ii. 207. Taken by Dennis for a Di-
dapper, ibid. The Character of his Poetry, iii. 170.
Weekly Journals, by whom written, ii. 280.

Whirligiggs, iii. 57.

Wizard, his Cup, and the strange Effects of it, iv. 517,
&c.

CON-

« PreviousContinue »