Hermit, his saying to a lewd young fellow, Heroism, an essay upon it, Hilpa, the Chinese anteduluvian princess, her story, History, secret, an odd way of writing one, Hobbe's notions debase human nature, Humour, the two extremes, Burlesque, Hunting reproved, Husbands, rules for marrying them by the Widows club, I IAPIS's cure of Æneas, a translation of Virgil, by Mr. NO. 575 601 584 585 619 588 617 616 617 583 561 607 Initial letters, the use party-writers make of them, Integrity, great care to be taken of it, Intrepidity of a just good man taken from Horace, John a Nokes and John a Stiles, their petition, Isades the Spartan, his valour, Julian the emperor, an excellent passage out of his 572 624 616 567 -567 568 557 615 577 561 564 684 Jupiter, his first proclamation about griefs and calamities, 558 His just distribution of them, Justice, the Spartans famous for it, L LADIES, not to mind party, Laughter indecent in any religious assembly, Lesbia's letter to the Spectator, giving an account how Letter from the Bantam ambassador to his master about Letter from Will Warley, about military education, NO. 566 566 566 Against Quacks, 572 From the President of the Widows club, 573 From a man taken to be mad for reading of poetry aloud, 577 A second letter about the ubiquity of the Godhead, 580 Several answered at once, 581 From Constantio Spec, 581 From Amanda Lovelength, 581 From Shalum the Chinese to the princess. Hilpa, before the flood, 584 About the vanity of some clergymen wearing scarves, 609 From a pedant in his pedantic way on the same From the love-casuist about the widow's tenure, Letter about church music, About the Rattling Club's getting into church, NO. 630 630 Life, eternal, what we ought to be most solicitous about, 575 Man's not worth his care, Valuable only as it prepares for another, Love-casuist, some instructions of his, Lover, an account of the life of one, A crossed one retires, M MAHOMETANs, their cleanliness, Marcia's prayer in Cato, - Memoirs of a private country gentleman's life, Man, the two views he is to be considered in, An active being, His ultimate end, Merry part of the world amiable, 575 575 591, 607 596 627 631 593 622 588 624 624 598 Messiah, the Jews' mistaken notion of his worldly grandeur, 610 Newton, (Sir Isaac) his noble way of considering infinite space, Night, a clear one described, Whimsically described by William Ramsay, Ovid, his verses on making love at the theatre, translated PASSIONS, the work of a philosopher to subdue them, Instances of their power, 595 595 566 564 562 562 630 570 606 609 625 564 565 582 625 626 622 633 602 618 564 Person, the word defined by Mr. Locke, Petition of John a Nokes and John a Stiles, No. 559 617 606 578 577 603 Petition from a cavalier for a place, with his pretences to it, 629 ture, Pittacus, a wise saying of his about riches, 634 574 Pity, the reasonableness of it, 588 Places, the unreasonableness of party-pretences to them, Some at the Royal Exchange, 568 Puss, speculations on an old and a young one, 626 Pythagoras, his advice to his scholars about examining at 586 Q QUERIES in love answered, 625 Question, a curious one started by a schoolman about the news, Quacks, an essay against them by Dr. Z. Pearce, RAKE, a character of one, R Rattling club gat into the church, Ramsay, (William) the astrologer, his whimsical descrip- Revelation, what light it gives into the joys of heaven, Satire, Whole Duty of Man turned into one, Scarfs, the vanity of some clergymen's wearing them, Scribblers, the most offensive, Self-love, the narrowness and danger of it, 625 572 576 630 582 600 611 574 620 633 568 609 582 588 Seneca, Seneca, his saying of drunkenness, Shakespeare, his excellence, Shalum, the Chinese, his letter to the princess Hilpa be- Sight, second, in Scotland, fore the flood, Singularity, when a virtue, NO. 569 592 584 604 576 An instance of it in a north-country gentleman, 576 Socrates, his saying of misfortunes, - Space, infinite, Sir Isaac Newton's noble way of consider- 558 564 564 Spectator breaks a fifty years silence, 556 556 556 Loquacity, 556 Of no party, 556 A calamity of his, 558 Critics upon him, 568 He sleeps as well as wakes for the public, 599 599 Why the eighth volume published, 632 Spleen, its effects, 558 Stars, a contemplation of them, 565 Sublime in writing, what it is, 592 Syncopists, modern ones, 567 Syracusian, prince, jealous of his wife, how he served her, 579 Townly, Frank, his letter to the Spectator, 560 Tully praises himself, 562 What he said of the immortality of the soul, |