135, 148 No. Englishman, the peculiar blessing of being born 135 | Euphrates river contamed in one pasin tongue Englishmen not naturally talkative Exchange, (Royal) described 135 Exercise, the great benefit and necessity of bo- 454 dily exercise 116 The most effectual physic 191 Enmity, the good fruits of it 399 Expenses, oftener proportioned to our expecta- Enthusiasm, the misery of it 201 tions than possessions 191 Eyes, a dissertation on them 250 His relief 19 Abhorrence of envy a certain note of a great mind Epaminondas, his honourable death Ephesian matron, the story of her 11 Of Jupiter and the countryman 25 Ephraim, the Quaker, the Spectator's fellow The antiquity of fables 183 132 Fable of Pleasure and Pain 183 Handkerchief, the great machine for moving Handsome people generally fantastical The Spectator's list of some handsome ladies Harlot, a description of one out of the Proverbs 144 His application to rich widows 311 144 His dissertation on the usefulness of looking- 15 glasses 325 600 600 His observation on the corruption of the age 352 359 45 His adventure with Sukey 410 Head-dress, the most variable thing in nature 98 Honour to be described only by negatives 35 that age Heads never the wiser for being bald cive to it than those of the understanding Hope, passion of, treated 471 Heathen philosopher 150 Folly of it when misemployed on temporal Heaven, its glory 580 objects 535 Described by Mr. Cowley 590 Instanced in the fable of Alnaschar, the Per- Hopes and fears, necessary passions 224 Heaven and hell, the notions of, conformable Horace, takes fire at every hint of the Iliad and Odyssey 417 His recommendatory letter to Claudius Nero, 493 Heirs and elder brothers spoiled in their educa- Hotspur, (Jeffry,) Esq. his petition from the 429 Hudibras, a description of his beard 334 Heraclitus, a remarkable saying of his 487 Hermit, his saying to a lewd young fellow 575 Human nature, the same in all reasonable crea- 408 171 Humanity not regarded by the fine gentlemen Herodotus, wherein condemned by the Spec- of the age 520 tator 483 Humour, (good) the best companion in the coun- On the glones of heaven and earth Hypocrisy, the honour and justice done by it The various kinds of hypocrisy To be preferred to open impiety LAMBIC verse, the most proper for Greek tra- James, how polished by love lapsis's cure of Eneas, a translation of Virgil by Ichneumon, a great destroyer of crocodiles' eggs Idiots in great request in most of the German 453 455 243 Where it falls short of the understanding As able to pain as pleasure: how MRCÈ The power of the Almighty over is Imma. the daughter of Charles the Great, story Immortality of the soul, arguments in proof of 416 447 courts 47 Idle and innocent, few know how to be so 411 Idle world 624 Idleness, a great distemper 316 Idol: coffee-house idols 18 Idolatry, the offspring of mistaken devotion 211 Idols, who of the fair sex so called Jealousy described How to be allayed An exquisite torment 178 Jest, how it should be uttered 616 |