her husband's house, went on board a ship in the road, and is now landed in inconsolable despair at Plymouth. POSTSCRIPT. After the above melancholy narration, it may perhaps be a relief to the reader to peruse the following expostulation. ( 90 MR. SPECTATOR. "The just Remonstance of affronted THAT. " THOUGH I deny not the petition of Mr. Who, " and Which, yet you should not suffer them to be 6 rude and to call honest people names : for that bears ( very hard on some of those rules of decency, which " you are justly famous for establishing. They may find fault, and correct speeches in the senate and at " the bar : but let them try to get themselves so of ten, and with so much eloquence repeated in a senstence, as a great orator doth frequently introduce me. « My Lords !” says he, « with humble submission, That that I say is this: that, That, that that gentle66 man has advanced, is not That that he should have 66 proved to your Lordships." Let those two ques« tionary petitioners try to do thus with their Who's " and their Whiches. "What great advantages was I of to Mr. Dryden in his Indian Emperor. “ You force me still to answer you in That. to furnish out a rhyme to Morat? And what a poor figure would Mr. Bayes lave made without his Egad ( and all That? How can a judicious man distinguish one thing from another, without saying, This « here, or That there? And how can a sober man without using the expletives of oaths, in which in( deed the rakes and bullies have a great advantage ( over others, make a discourse of any tolerable length, 6 without That is; and if he be a very grave man in( deed, without That is to say? And how instructive ( as well as entertaining are those usual expressions, 6 in the mouths of great men, Such Things at That, and the like of That. "I am not against reforming the corruptions of O speech you mention, and own there are proper sea« sons for the introduction of other words besides That; but I scorn as much to supply the place of a Who or 6 a Which at every turn, as they are unequal always to fill mine; and I expect good language and civil • treatment, and hope to receive it for the future: • That, that I shall only add is, that I am, " Yours, THAT. ABIGAILS (male) in fashion among Ladies, No. 55. Honeycomb, No. 77. The occasion of this absence, ibid. pound, No. 60. James's coffee-house, 24. From a teacher of birds to speak, No. 33. it deforms beauty aad turns wit into absurdity, 38. comb, ib. The way to get clear of it, ib. nians, and respected by the Spartans, ibid. vision of one of their countrymen, ib. Man, in answer to the story of the Ephesian Matron, ibid. Aristotle: his observation upon the lambic verse, No. 31. Upon tragedies, 40, 42. At war with Luxury, ib. Its officers and adherents, ib. Cornes io an agreement with Luxury, ib. B. BACON (Sir Francis) his comparison of a book well writ- ten, No. 10. His observation ipon envy, 19. and paper, No. 3. tion, No. 51. improve beauty, 33. Then the most charining when heightened by virtue, ibid. a silly play, No. 44. |