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one failing, iv. 53, n. 4;_History of the Newcomes_ quoted, ii. 300, n. 3;subscribed to the annuity for Johnson's goddaughter, iv. 202, n. 1.THALES, i. 125, n. 4.THAMES,Budgell drowns himself in it, ii. 229; v. 54;convicts working on it, iii. 268, n. 4;Johnson and Boswell row to Greenwich, i. 458;to Blackfriars, ii. 432;returns on it from Rochester, iv. 233, n. 2;_London_, mentioned in, i. 460;New-England men at its mouth, v. 317;ribaldry of passers-by, iv. 26.THATCHING, v. 263._The one_, iv. 211, n. 2.THEATRES,French and English compared in point of decency, ii. 50, n. 3;orange-girls, v. 185, n. 1;proposal for a third one, iv. 113:See under LONDON, Covent Garden, Drury Lane, and Haymarket.THEBES, ii. 179.THEFT, allowed in Sparta, ii. 176; iii. 293.THELWALL, John, iv. 278, n. 3.THEOBALD, Lewis,_Double Falsehood_, iii. 395, n. 1;Pope, attacked by, ii. 334, n. 1;Shakespeare, edits, v. 244, n. 2;Warburton, compared with, i. 329;helped by him, v. 80.THEOCRITUS, iv. 2._Theodosius_, ii. 471._Theophilus Insulanus_, v. 225.THEOPHRASTUS, v. 378.THICKNESSE, Philip, criticises Smollett, iii. 235-6.THIEVES, all men naturally thieves, iii. 271._Thing_, not _the_, iv. 89.THINKING, liberty of, ii. 249, 252.THIRLBY, Dr. Styan, iv. 161, n. 4.THIRTY-NINE ARTICLES,articles of peace, ii. 104;meaning of subscription, ii. 151;petition for removing the subscription, ii. 150;motion to consider it, ii. 208, n. 4.THOMAS, Colonel, iv. 211, n. 4.THOMAS, Nathaniel, iii. 92, n. 2.THOMSON, James,blank verse of the _Seasons_, iv. 42, n. 7;Boswell's assistance to Johnson in his _Life_, ii. 63;iii. 116, 133, 359;character, his, not to be gathered from his works, iii. 117, n. 7;cloud of words, iii. 37;_Edward and Eleonora_ not licensed, i. 141, n. 1;family, account of his, iii. 359;Johnson inserts him among the _Lives_, iii. 109;letters to his sisters, ii. 64; iii. 117, 360;licentiousness, ii. 63; iii. 117;_Lives of Thomson_, iii. 116-7;'loathed much to write,' iii. 360;poetical eye, i. 453; ii. 63; iii. 37;'Queensberry, worthy,' ii. 368, n. 1;Quin's generosity to him, iii. 117;Scotland, never returned to, iii. 117;_Seasons_, quoted, i. 98, n. 1; iii. 151, n. 4;by Voltaire, i. 435, n. 2;sisters, generosity to his, ii. 64; iii. 360;wine, love of, i. 359.THOMSON, Rev. James,case of ecclesiastical censure, iii. 58-64, 91.THOMSON, Mr.,a schoolmaster (the poet's brother-in-law), ii. 64; iii. 116, 360.THORNTON, Bonnell,_Adventurer_, writes for the, i. 252, n. 2;Boswell enlivened by his witty sallies, i. 395;_Ode on St. Cecilia's Day_, i. 420;_Rambler_, parodies the, i. 218, n. 1;_Student_, writes for the, i. 209.THORP, Mr. Robert, of Macclesfield, iv. 393. n. 3.THORPE, iii. 359.THOUGHTS,command of one's, ii. 190, 202, n. 2;inquisitive and perplexing, iv. 370, n. 3;troublesome at night, ii. 440;vexing, iii. 5._Thoughts on Executive Justice_, iv. 328, n. 1._Thoughts on the late Transactions respecting Falkland's Islands_.See _Falkland's Islands_.THRALE FAMILY, account of the, i. 491, n. 1.THRALE, John, a London merchant, i. 491, n. 1.THRALE, 'Old,' the brewer, Henry Thrale's father, i. 490-1.THRALE, Henry,account of him, i. 490, 494;ambition of out-brewing Whitbread, iii. 363, n. 5;Baretti, present to, iii. 97;Bath, visits, in 1776, iii. 44;in 1780, iii. 421;Boswell's familiarity in speaking of him, i. 492, n. 1;hospitality to, iii. 45;writes to him, iii. 372;brewery,--profits, i. 491; iii. 210, 363, n. 5; iv. 87, n. 1;beer brewed, ii. 396; iii. 210, n. 5;L20,000 a year paid in excise, v. 130;first sale of it, i. 490;second sale, i. 491; iv. 86, n. 2, 132;Cator, John, one of his executors, iv. 313;champagne, his, iii. 119;churches, intends to beautify two Welsh, v. 450;death, iv. 84;false report of it, iii. 107;dinners and breakfasts at his house, ii. 77, 227, 246, 327,338, n. 2, 349, 378, n. 1, 427; iii. 27, 248, 344; iv. 80;dislikes the times, iii. 363;eating, immoderate in, iii. 422-3; iv. 84, n. 4;expenses, iii. 210;France, tour to, ii. 384-401;Goldsmith's _Haunch of Venison_, mentioned in, iii. 225, n. 2;questions a statement of his about horses, ii. 232;Gordon Riots, property in danger, iii. 435;flees from Bath, ib., n. 2;Grosvenor Square, house in, iv. 72;heir, desires a male, ii. 469; iii. 95, 363, n. 4;highwayman, robbed by a, iii. 239, n. 2;illness, dangerous, i. 322, n. 1; iii. 397, 423, n. 1;better, iii. 417, 420;withdrawn from business, iii. 434;very ill, iv. 72;Baretti's account of it, iv. 84, n. 4;Italy, projected tour to, ii. 423;given up, iii. 6, 18, 27;Johnson's affection for him, iii. 397, n. 2; iv. 84-5, 89, 100;wishes to hear '_The History of the Thrales_ v. 313;his feelings towards Johnson, ii. 77; iv. 84, 85, n. 1, 145, 340;'will go nowhere without him,' iii. 27, n. 3;and the Earl of Marchmont, iii. 345;epitaph on him, iv. 85, n. 1;his executor, iv. 85; receives a bequest of L200, iv. 86;guardian of his children, iv. 198, n. 4;illness in 1766, i. 521;intimacy not without restraint, iii. 7;introduction to his family, i. 490, 520; iii. 451;kitchen, inquires into, ii. 215, n. 4;loss by his death, iv. 85, 145, 157-9;prayer on it, i. 240, n. 5;suggests, as a member of parliament, ii. 137, n. 3;writes _The Patriot_ for him, ii. 286;Lade, Sir John, his nephew, iv. 412, n. 1;melancholy, suffers from, iii. 363, n. 5;'worried by the _dog_,' iii. 414, n, 1;money difficulties, iv. 85, n. 2;'My Master,' i. 494, n. 3; iii. 119;portrait, iv. 158, n. 1;prospects, loves, v. 439, n. 2;receives L14,000, iii. 134, n. 1, 455;Rome, will not die in peace without seeing, iii. 27, n. 3;silent at Oglethorpe's, v. 277;society in his house, i. 496;son, loses his only surviving, ii. 468, 470;grief, his, iii. 18, n. 1;_orbus et exspes_, iii. 24, n. 5;at the Assembly Rooms, Bath, iii. 45, n. 2;son, loses his younger, iii. 4, n. 3;Southwark,Member for, i. 490;receives 'instructions' from the electors, ii. 73, n. 2;election of 1774, ii. 286, 287;of 1780, Johnson writes his _Addresses_, iii. 422, n. 1, 439-440;defeated, iii. 442;house in the Borough, ii. 286, n. 1; iii. 6; iv. 72, n. 1;Wales, tour to, ii. 285; v. 427-460;wife's, his, jealousy, iii. 96, n. 1;will, afraid of making his, iv. 402, n. 1;account of it, iv. 86, n. 1;mentioned, i. 83, n. 3; ii. 136, 311, 411; iii. 22-4, 54, n. 1, 126,132, 158, n. 1, 190, n. 3, 222, 225, 240, 398, n. 3; v. 84, 102, n. 3.THRALE, Henry (son of Mr. and Mrs. Thrale),death, ii. 468, 471; iii. 4;Johnson's letter on it, i. 236, n. 3;his love of him, ii. 469; iii. 4.THRALE, Hester Lynch (Miss Salusbury, afterwards Mrs. Piozzi),account of her, i. 492-6;birth, i. 149, n. 5, 520;character by Johnson, i. 494;by Miss Burney, iv. 82, n. 4;dress and person, i. 494-5;accident to her eye, iii. 214;Argyll Street, house in, iv. 157, 164;Baretti, character of, ii. 57, n. 3;flatters her, iii. 49, n. 1;ignorance of the scriptures, v. 121, n. 4;knowledge of languages, i. 362, n. 1;quarrel with, ii. 205, n. 3; iii. 49, n. 1, 96;her account, ib., n. 1;Bath, visits, in 1776, iii. 6, 44;in 1780, iii. 421;an evening at Mrs. Montagu's, iii. 422;in 1783, iv. 166, 198, n. 4;Beattie, Dr., loves, ii. 148;Beauclerk's anecdote of the dogs, v. 329, n. 1;Beauclerk, hatred of, i. 249, n. 1; v. 329, n. 1;his truthfulness, ib.;birthplace, v. 449-51;Boswell,accuses, of spite, iv. 72, n. 1;of treachery, iv. 318, n. 1, 343;advises, not to publish the _Life of Sibbald_, iii. 228;alludes to her second marriage, iii. 49;argues with, on Shakespeare and Milton, iv. 72;brother David, iii. 434, n. 1;compliments, on his long head, iv. 166;controversy with, about Mrs. Montagu, v. 245;dines with her, iv. 166;hospitality to, iii. 45;introduced to her, ii. 77;'loves,' ii. 145, 206;MS. _Journal_, reads, ii. 383;proposes an epistle in her name, v. 139;_British Synonymy_, iv. 412;Burke's son, can make nothing of, iv. 219, n. 3;Burney, Miss, letters to, iv. 340, n. 3;calculating and declaiming, iii. 49;canvasses for Mr. Thrale, iii. 442, n. 1;character, influence of vice on, iii. 350;children, her,births, ii. 46, n. 3, 280; iii. 210, n. 4, 363, 393;deaths, ii. 281, n. 2; iii. 109;three living out of twelve, iv. 157, n. 3;unfriendly with her married daughter, v. 427, n. 1;Johnson's kindness to them, iv. 345;clerk, gives a crown to an old, v. 440;_clippers_, warned of, iii. 49;common-place book, iv. 343;conceit of parts, iii. 316;Congreve, quotes from, ii. 227;dates, neglects, i. 122, n. 2; iv. 88, n. 1;Demosthenes's 'action,' ii. 211;'despicable dread of living in the Borough,' iv. 72, n. 1;divorces, iii. 347-8;'dying with a grace,' iv. 300, n. 1;Errol, Lord, at the coronation, v. 103, n. 1;estate, prefers the owner to the, ii. 428;fall from her horse, ii. 287;Fermor's, Mrs., account of Pope, ii. 392, n. 8;flattery, coarse mode of, ii. 349;Johnson talks with her about it, v. 440;Foster's _Sermons_, quotes, iv. 9, n. 5;France, tour to, ii. 384-401;French, contentment of the, v. 106, n. 4;Convent, visits a, ii. 385;maxims, attacks, iii. 204, n. 1;Garrick's poetry, praises, ii. 78;good breeding, want of, iv. 83;Gordon Riots, alarmed at the, iii. 428, n. 4;Gray's _Odes_, admires, ii. 327;Grosvenor Square, removes to, iv. 72, n. 1;Hogarth's account of Johnson, i. 147, n. 2;illness, in 1779, iii. 397;inaccuracy,her extreme,in general, i. 416, n. 2; iii. 226, 229;no anxiety about truth, iii. 243, 404;her defence of it, iii. 228;instances of it--_Anecdotes_, iv. 340-7;anecdote about in _vino veritas_, ii. 188, n. 3;Barber's visit to Langton, i. 476, n. 1;Garrick's election to the Club, i. 481;Goldsmith and the _Vicar of Wakefield_, i. 415, 416, n. 2;Johnson's answer to Robertson, iii. 336, n. 2;and G. J. Cholmondeley, iv. 345;harshness, i. 410;lines on Lade, iv. 412, n. 1;mother calling _Sam_, iv. 94, n. 4;and small kindnesses, iv. 201, 343-4;_Verses to a Lady_, i. 92, n. 2;'natural history of the mouse,' ii. 194, n. 2;_sutile_ mistaken for _futile_, iii. 284, n. 4;indelicacy, iv. 84, n. 4;insolence of wealth, shows the, iii. 316;interpolation in one of Johnson's letters, suspected, ii. 383, n. 2;Italian, an, on clean shirts, v. 60, n. 4;jelly, her, compared with Mrs. Abington's, ii. 349;Johnson's account of French sentiments and meat, ii. 385, n. 5;advice about the brewery, iii. 382, n. 1;about sweet-meats, iii. 186; iv. 90;on Mr. Thrale's death, iii. 136, n. 2;anxiety not to offend, iii. 54, n. 1;appeals to her love and pity, iv. 229, n. 3;appearances of friendship kept up with, iv. 164, 166;apprehensive of evil, v. 232, n. 5;asperses, i. 28;wishes to depreciate him, i. 66, n. 2;belief, fantastical account of, i. 68, n. 3;biographers, i. 26, n. 1;blames her conduct, iv. 277;his friendly animadversions, iii. 48;change in her feeling towards, iv. 340, n. 3;on children's books, iv. 8, n. 3;conversation too strong for the great, iv. 117;copyist, iv--37;dislike of extravagant praise, iii. 225;of singularity, ii. 74, n. 3;doubts her friendship, iv. 145, n. 2;dress, iii. 325;drives her from his mind, iv. 339, n. 3;and the Earl of Marchmont, iii. 344;her 'enchantment over,' v. 14;epigram, translates, i. 83, n. 3;flatters, ii. 332, n. 1, 349;flatters her, iii. 34;household, asks about, iii. 461-2;illness in 1766, i. 521;introduction to her, i. 520;_Journey into North Wales_, v. 427, n. 1;her kindness to, i. 520;laugh, ii. 262, n. 2;lectures, iv. 65, n. 1;Letters,publishes them for L500, i. 124, n. 4; ii. 43, n. 1;arranged inaccurately, i. 122, n. 2;error in date, iii. 453;possible alterations and interpolations, ii. 383, n. 2;iii. 49, n. 1, 96, n. 1;read by Walpole, iv. 314;her own 'studied epistles,' iii. 421;his letters to her from Scotland, ii. 303, 305;about the Gordon Riots, iii. 428-30;her letters to him in Scotland, v. 84, n. 2(for other letters, See under JOHNSON, letters);love of her children, iv. 198, n. 4;'loved' by her and Boswell, ii. 427;mode of eating, i. 470, n. 2;and Mrs. Montagu, iv. 64, n. 1, 65, n. l;neglects, iv. 158-9;leaves him in sickness and solitude, iv. 249, n. 2;'one pleasant day since she left him,' iv. 436;nursed in her house, iv. 141, 181;_Ode_ to her, v. 157-8;parody on Burke, iv. 317;pleasure in her society, i. 493-6;severe to her, iv. 159, n. 3;stuns her, v. 288;style, iii. 19, n. 2;supposed wish to marry her, iv. 387, n. 1;takes leave of her in April, 1783, iv. 198, n. 4;talk, iv. 237, n. 1;tenderness to her mother, ii. 263, n. 6;urges economy, iv. 85, n. 2;wishes for her and Mr. Thrale in the Hebrides, iii. 455;would not toast her in whisky, v. 347;'yoke' put upon her, iv. 340;Lennox, Mrs., liked by nobody, iv. 275, n. 2;Lichfield, visits, v. 428, nn. 1 and 3;Long, Dudley, praises, iv. 81;Lyttelton's vision, iv. 298, n. 3;Malone's criticism on her _Anecdotes_, iv. 341;marriage, second, alluded to by Boswell, ii. 328;signs that it was coming on, iv. 158, n. 4;takes place, iv. 339;marrying inferiors in rank, ii. 328;middle class abroad, absence of a happy, ii. 402, n. 1;Montagu, Mrs., praises, iv. 275, n. 3;mother, death of her, ii. 263;Musgrave, Mr., ii. 343, n. 2; iv. 323, n. 1;'My Mistress,' or 'Madam,' i. 494;_officious_, iv. 137, n. 2;Paris, contradictions in, iii. 352, n. 2;_Piozzi Letters_:See above under MRS. THRALE, _Johnson's Letters_;Pope's _Universal Prayer_, iii. 346-7;portrait, iv. 158, n. 1;praise, blasts by, iv. 82;Presto, the dog, iv. 347;Prior's love verses, praises, ii. 78;purse, uneasiness at losing her, v. 442;_regale_, v. 347, n. 1;Richardson's love of praise, v. 396, n. 1;'severe and knowing,' iii. 318, n. 3;Siddons, Mrs., as Euphrasia, v. 103, n. 1;son, loses her only surviving, ii. 468, 470; iii. 6, 45, n. 2;Johnson's advice to her, iii, 136, n. 2;son, loses her younger, iii. 4, n. 3;Thrale family, describes the rise of the, i. 491, n. 1;Thrale's death, iv. 84;effect on her and Johnson, v. 157;describes his manners, i. 494, n. 1;jealous of him, iii. 96, n. 1;_Three Warnings_, ii. 26;tongue, could not restrain her, iv. 82;truth, indifference to: See above under inaccuracy;Wales, estate in it, ii. 281;tour there, ii. 285; v. 427-60;wit, iv. 103, n. 1;Young's, Dr., ignorance of rhopalick verses, v. 269, n. 3;mentioned, ii. 142, 364, n. 3, 379; i11. 29, 33, 95, 126, 132,248, 372; iv. 5, n. 1, 75, 80, 169, 242; v. 110.THRALE, Miss,Baretti's _Dialogues_ written for her, ii. 449, n. 2;Bath, at, in 1780, iii. 422;birth-day party, iii. 157, n. 3;harpsichord, playing on the, ii. 409;Johnson teaches her Latin, iv. 345, n. 2; v. 451, n. 2;is visited by her in his last illness, iv. 339, n. 3;

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    1金币
  • 南瓜喵
    10金币
  • 喵喵玩具
    50金币
  • 喵喵毛线
    88金币
  • 喵喵项圈
    100金币
  • 喵喵手纸
    200金币
  • 喵喵跑车
    520金币
  • 喵喵别墅
    1314金币
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