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约翰逊4-6-137

作者:鲍斯威尔 字数:15333 更新:2023-10-09 10:37:21

GARRICK, David, Abel Drugger, iii. 35;Adelphi, house in the, iv. 96, 99;airs of a great man, iii. 263;appealed to by a drunken physician, iii. 389;Archer in _The Beaux Stratagem_, iii. 52;attacks helped his reputation, v. 273;avarice, reputation for, iii. 71;Baretti's trial, gives evidence at, ii. 97, n. 1, 98;Bickerstaff, I., letter from, ii. 82, n. 3;_Bonduca_, epilogue to, ii. 325, n. 2;_Bon Ton_, ii. 325, n. 1;book of praise and abuse, kept a, v. 273;Boswell, correspondence with: see BOSWELL, correspondence;Boswell's _Corsica_, praises, ii. 46, n. 1;Boswell slyly introduces his name, iii. 263;British Coffee-house Club, iv. 179, n. 1;Brown, Dr. John, said to have assisted, ii. 131;brought out his tragedies, ib., n. 2;Budgell's _Epilogue_, anecdote of, iii. 46, n. 3;Burke's epitaph on him, ii. 234, n. 6;Camden, Lord, intimacy with, iii. 3;_Chances, The_, ii. 233;characters, acted a great variety of, iii. 35; iv. 243;was not 'transformed' into them, iv. 244;Chatham, Lord, correspondence with, ii. 227;cheerfullest man of his age, iii. 387;Chesterfield, in wit compared with, iii. 69;Christmas dinner at his house, ii. 155, n. 2;Clive, Mrs., compared with, iv. 243;clutching the dagger, v. 46;Colson's academy, at, i. 103;_concoction_ of a play, iii. 259;Congreve and Shakespeare, compares, ii. 85;conversation, sprightly, i. 398;no solid meat in it, ii. 464;Court, at, i. 333, n. 3;Cumberland's _dishclout face_, iv. 384, n. 2;Cumberland's _Odes_, iii. 43, n. 3; iv 432;Dane, letter from a, v. 46, n. 2;Davies, letter from, iii. 223, n. 2;_Davy_, called, v. 348;death, his, iii. 371;'eclipsed the gaiety of nations,' i. 82; iii. 387;decayed actor, will soon be a, ii. 439;decent liver, a, iii. 387;declaimer, no, iv. 243;Dodsley, quarrels with, i. 325;_Douglas_, rejects, v. 362, n. 1;Drury-lane theatre, manager of, i. 181, 196;Elphinston's _Martial_, his opinion of, iii. 258;emphasis, wrong, i. 168; v. 127;epigrammatist, an, iii. 258;excellence shown by his getting L100,000, iii. 184;face, wear and tear of his, ii. 410;_False Delicacy_, ii. 48, n. 2;father and family, his, iii. 387;fine-bred gentleman, fails as a, v. 126;first appearance in London, i. 168, n. 3;Fitzherbert, affection for, iii. 148, n. l;_Florizel and Perdita_, ii. 78;Foote, compared with, iii. 69, 183; v. 391;'ghost of a halfpenny,' iii. 264;witticism about his bust, iv. 224;_fortunam reverenter habet_, iii. 263;French, sameness of the, iv. 15, n. 3;friends, but no friend, had, iii. 386;funeral, iv. 208;account of its pomp, iv. 208;Bishop Horne's lines, ib. n. 1;the Club called the Literary Club at it, i. 477;Johnson at his grave, iii. 371, n. 1;generous treatment of authors, ii. 349, n. 6;Gentleman, F., letter from, i. 384, n. 2;Gibbon, letter from, iii. 128, n. 4;Goldsmith's dress, ii. 83;_Good Natured Man_, refuses the, ii. 48, n. 2; iii. 320;Gray's _Odes_, i. 403, n. 1;great, courted by the, ii. 227; iii. 263;_Hamlet_ rescued from rubbish, ii. 85, n. 7, 204, n. 3;Hamlet's soliloquy, iii. 184;Hawkesworth and Lord Sandwich, ii. 247, n. 5;Hawkins's _Siege of Aleppo_, iii. 259;_High Life Below Stairs_, iv. 7;Hill, Sir John, epigrams on, ii. 38, n. 2;Hogarth's account of his acting, iii. 35, n. 1;humour, varying, iii. 264;illness, sufferings from, iii. 387, n. 1;inaccurate in delineating absurdities, iv. 17;Ireland, visits, iii. 388, n. 1;Johnson affected by his success, i. 167, 216, n. 2; ii. 69;attacked by Garrick's correspondents, ii. 69, n. 1;attacks on him, accounts for, iii. 184, n. 5;awe of, i. 99, n. 1;and Chesterfield, i. 260, n. 1;designs to write his epitaph, iv. 394, n. 2;_Dictionary_, cited in, iv. 4;epigram on it, i. 300;as a dramatist, i. 198, I99, n. 2;epigram on George II and Cibber, i. 149; v. 350;epitaph on Philips, i. 148;in the Green Room, i. 201;hard on him, v. 244;Imitations of Juvenal_, i. 194;intercourse with him, iv. 7;_Irene_, acts, i. 196-8;suggests the strangling scene in it, 197, n. 2;travels with him to London, i. 101;looked upon him as his property, iii. 312;let nobody attack him, i. 27, n. 2, 393, n. 1; iii. 70, 312, n. 1;in the Lichfield play-house, ii. 299;low opinion of his acting, ii. 92, n. 4; iii. 184; iv. 7; v. 38;and of his mimicry, ii. 326, n. 3;mimicks, ii. 326, 464;mow of hay, ii. 79;offers to write his _Life_, iii. 371, n. 1; iv. 99, n. 2;'played round,' ii. 82;praises his prologues, ii. 325;parody of Percy's _Hermit_, ii. 136, n. 4;writes him a _Prologue_, i. 181; iv. 25;pupil; i. 97:into good spirits, puts, iii. 260, n. 5;_Rambler_, i. 209, n. 1;reflection on him in his _Shakespeare_, ii. 192; iv. 371, n. 2;and the Roundhouse, i. 249, 251;sends his love to, v. 350;_Shakespeare_, not mentioned in, ii. 92; v. 244;sorrow for his death, iii. 371; iv. 99;taste in theatrical merit, ii. 465;thinking which side he should take, iii. 24;tribute to him, i. 81; iv. 96, n. 6;use of orange-peel, ii. 330;want of taste for the highest poetry, iii. 151;wife, account of, i. 95, 98, 99;wit, ii. 231; Kenrick's libel, i. 498, n. 1;Kitely, ii. 92, n. 3;Latin, has not enough, ii. 377;lawyer, intends to become a, i. 101;Lear, ii. 182, n. 3: _Lethe_, i. 228;liberality, gave more money than any man, iii. 70, 264, 387;instances of his, iii. 264, n. 3;Lichfield grocer, scorned by a, iii. 35, n. 1;Lichfield School, at, i. 45, n. 4;life with great uniformity, saw, iii. 386;Literary Club, election to the, i. 479-481;name given at his funeral, i. 477; v. 109, n. 5;low characters, ashamed of his, iii. 35;Mallet, fooled by, v. 175, n. 2;manner, his significant smart, v. 249;Marplot, i. 325, n. 3;_Memoirs_ by T. Davies, iii. 434, n. 5;Mickle, quarrels with, ii. 182, n. 3; v. 349, n. 1;Milton's granddaughter's benefit, i. 227;money, great hunger for, iii. 387;money exhausted, his, i. 102, n. 2;Montagu's, Mrs., _Essay_, praises, ii. 88;praised by her, v. 245;More, Hannah, flatters him, iii. 293;his kindness to her, ib. n. 4;calls her _Nine_, iv. 96, n. 3;Murphy, controversy with, i. 327, n. 1;sarcasm against him, ii. 349;praise of his liberality, iii. 264, n. 3;nation to admire him, has a, iv. 7;Necker, Mme., on his acting, v. 38, n. 2;niece, his, Miss Doxy, iii. 417-8:_Ode on Pelham's death_, i. 269;ostentation, i. 216, n. 2;parsimony, Foote's ghost of a halfpenny, iii. 264;Peg Woffington's tea, ib.;refuses an order to Mrs. Williams, i. 392;Partridge in _Tom Jones_, v. 38;pious reverence, i. 269;poor at first, iii. 70, 387;portraits at Streatham, iv. 158, n. 1;in Mrs. Garrick's house, iv. 96;Beauclerk's inscription on one, ib.;profession, advanced the dignity of his, ii. 234, n. 6; iii. 263;'his profession made him rich, and he made it respectable,'iii. 371, n. 2;professor in the imaginary college, v. 108;Prospero, i. 216;provincial accents, ii. 464, n. 2;Queen, compliments the, ii. 233;retiring from the stage, ii. 438; iii. 388;Reynolds's defence of him, ii. 234;Riccoboni, Mme.,letters from, ii. 50, n. 3; in. 149, n. 2; v. 106, n. 4, 330, n. 3;Richard III, his, seen by Hogarth, in. 35, n. 1Johnson's sarcasm on, iii. 184;was not 'transformed into,' iv. 244;_Romeo and Juliet_, alters, v. 244, n. 2:_Sallad_, proposes, as a name for _The World_, i. 202, n. 4;scholarship, ii. 377, n. 2;Scotch, nationality of the, ii. 325;Scotland, never in, iii. 388;'Scrub, will play,' iii. 70;sensibility as a writer, ii. 79;sentiment, his, ii. 464;Shakespeare Jubilee, ii. 68, n. 2, 69;Shakespeare, scarceeditions of, ii. 192;intends to read, v. 244, n. 2;Sheridan, Thomas, engages, i. 358, n. 3;describes the vanity of, ii. 87;Smith's, Adam, conversation, iv. 24, n. 2;splendour, too much, iii. 71;spoilt, not, iii. 263, n. 3, 264;Steevens, letters from, ii. 274, n. 7; 284, n. 2;slandered by, iii. 281, n. 3;table, at the head of a, iv. 243;talking from books, v. 378, n. 4;Thrales, introduction to the, i. 493, n. 2;universality in acting, ii. 37; iv. 243; v. 126;unkindness, accused by Davies of, iii. 223, n. 2;vanity, ii. 227; iii. 263, 264;variety his excellence, iii. 35;Walpole, H., on his acting, iv. 243, n. 6;wealth, iii. 184, 263;Whitehead, W., compliments him in verse, i. 402;engaged as his 'reader,' ib. n. 3;proposed to Goldsmith as arbitrator, iii. 320, n. 2;wife, love for his, iv. 96, n. 7; v. 349, n. 2;_Winter's Tale_, new version of the, ii. 78, n. 4;witness, examined as a, v. 243;woman's riding-hood, in a, iv. 7;_Wonder, The_, in, iv. 8;writer, sprightly, iii. 263;Woffington, Peg, iii. 264;mentioned, i. 243, 268, n. 4; ii. 59, n. 3, 110, 255, 362, n. 2;iii. 256.GARRICK, Mrs., dinners at her house, iv. 96-9; 220, n. 3;grief for her husband, iv. 96;leaves Garrick's funeral expenses, unpaid, iv. 208, n. 1;neglects Johnson's proposal to write Garrick's Life, iii. 371, n. 1;iv. 99, n. 2;survived Garrick forty-three years, iv. 96, n. 7, 275, n. 3;mentioned, iv. 84, n. 3.GARRICK, George, Johnson's pupil, i. 97;calls him 'a tremendous companion,' i. 496, n. 1; iii. 139.GARRICK, Peter, anecdotes of _Irene_, i. 100, 111;resemblance to his brother, ii. 311, 462, 466;mentioned, ii. 467; iii. 35, n. 1, 412; iv. 57, n. 3.GARTH, Sir Samuel, M.D., lines on dying, ii. 107, n. 1;Johnson's praise of physicians, iv. 263.GASTRELL, Bishop, v. 323.GASTRELL, Rev. Mr.,cut down Shakespeare's mulberry-tree, i. 83, n. 4; ii. 470.GASTRELL, Mrs., i. 83, n. 4; ii. 470; iii. 412.GATAKER, Thomas, v. 302.GATES, General, iii. 355, n. 3.GAUBIUS, Professor, i. 65._Gaudium_, ii. 371.GAUDY, College, i. 60, n. 4, 273, n. 2; ii. 445, n. 1.GAY, John, advised to buy an annuity, v. 60, n. 4;_Beggar's Opera_, 'As men should serve a cucumber,' v. 289;Boswell's delight in it, ii. 368; iii. 198;projected work on it, v. 91, n. 2;Burke thinks it has no merit, iii. 321;Cibber, refused by, iii. 321, n. 3;Hockley in the Hole, iii. 134, n. 1;Johnson's opinion of it, iii. 321;Johnson turns Captain Macheath, IV. 95;morality, its, ii. 367;'labefactation,' ib.;'practical philosophers,' ii. 442;Rich made _gay_ and Gay _rich_, iii. 321, n. 3;run of 63 nights, iii. 116, n. 1;children, writing for, ii. 408, n. 3;_Letters_, iv. 36, n. 4;_Life_ by Johnson, ii. 367;Orpheus of highwaymen, ii. 367, n. 1;Queensberry, Duke of, ii. 368._Gazetteer, The_, v. 245, n. 2.GELALEDDIN, iv. 195, n. 1.'GELIDUS, the philosopher,' i. 101, n. 3.GELL, Mr. and Mrs., v. 430-1.GELL, Sir William, ii. 408, n. 3; v. 431, n. 4._General Advertiser_, i. 227.GENERAL ASSEMBLY. See under SCOTLAND.GENERAL CENSURE, iv. 313.GENERAL COMPLAINTS, Johnson's dislike of, ii. 357.GENERAL WARRANTS, ii. 72.GENERALS, great, ii. 234.GENIUS, ii. 436-7; iii. 385, n. 1; v. 34-5;made feminine, iii. 374.GENOA, Corsican revolt, ii. 59, n. 2, 71, n. 1;the Doge at Versailles, iv. 270, n. 2.GENTEEL PEOPLE, swear less than formerly, ii. 166, n. 1.GENTILITY, not inseparable from morality, ii. 340;new system, i. 491-2;women more genteel than men, iii. 53._Gentle Shepherd_, ii. 220; v. 374, n. 3.GENTLEMAN, Francis, i. 384.GENTLEMAN, English merchant a new species, i. 491, n. 3.GENTLEMAN, a, of eminence in the literary world, iv. 274;one whose house was frequented by low company, iv. 312;a penurious one, iv. 176;one recommending his brother, iv. 21;one who was rich, but without conversation, iv. 83.GENTLEMAN FARMER, at Ashbourne, iii. 188, 197._Gentleman's Magazine_, account of it, i. III;effect on it of rebellion of 1745-6, i. 176, n. 2;Hanoverian in 1745-6, i. 176, n. 2;indecency in earlier numbers, i. 112, n. 2;Johnson, _Ad Urbanum_, i. 113;becomes a regular contributor, i. 115;writes _Addresses, Letters, and Prefaces_, i. 139-40, 147, 149,153,157, 161: (for his other contributions See under their several titles);school advertised in it, i. 97;verses wrongly assigned to, i. 178, n. 1;Nichols, edited by, iv. 437;described by Southey, ib.;numbers sold, i. 112, n. i, 152, n. 1; iii. 322;obituaries, i. 237, n. I;prize poems, i. 91;published at the end of the month, i. 340, n. 3;'Sciolus,' iii. 341, n. 1;value of, in 1754, i. 256, n. 1.See under CAVE and DEBATES._Gentleman's Religion_, iv. 311._Gentlewoman, the born_, ii. 130.GENTLEWOMAN, a, in liquor, ii. 434._Geographical Grammar_, iv. 311._Geography, Dictionary of Ancient_.See MACBEAN, Alexander.GEOLOGY, of Etna, ii. 468, n. 1;Johnson's ignorance of it, v. 290, n. 4.GEOMETRY, principles soon comprehended, v. 138, n. 2.GEORGE I, Brett, Miss, i. 174, n. 2;burnt two wills made in favour of his son, ii. 342, n. 1;death, his, ii. 342, n. 1;knew nothing, ii. 342;Oxford, sends a troop of horse to, i. 281, n. i;Shebbeare, satirised by, iii. 15, n. 3;will, his, destroyed by George II, ii. 342; iv. 107, n. 1;wish to restore the crown, ii. 342.GEORGE II, Augustus, not an, i. 209;barbarity, his, i. 147;challenged by Elwall, ii. 164, 251;clemency, his, i. 146;English weary of him, i. 363;fast day of Jan. 30, observed the, ii. 152, n. 1;George I's will, destroys, ii. 342;quarrels with Frederick the Great about it, iv. 107;Johnson's epigram on him, i. 149; v. 348, 350, 404;roars against him, ii. 342;would tell the truth of him, v. 255;Pelham's death, i. 269, n. 1.Pretender's visit to London, v. 201, n. 4;quiet times under the Whigs, iv. 100;mentioned, i. 149, n. 3, 311, n. 2.GEORGE III, Addresses in 1784, iv. 265;authority partly reestablished, iv. 264;baronetcies, ii. 354, n. 2;Beattie, interview with, v. 90, n. 1;Beckford's speech, iii. 201, n. 3;birthday, iv. 128;'born a Briton', i. 129, n. 3, 353; v. 204;Boswell's relation, v. 379;_Capability_ Brown, intimacy with, iii. 400, n. 2;carelessness in sentences of death, iii. 121, n. 1;Chatham's and Garrick's funerals, iv. 208, n. 1;city address in 1781, iv. 139, n. 4;concessions to the people, ii. 353;contempt of Irish peerages, iii. 407, n. 4;coronation, iii. 9, n. 2;Corsica offered to him, ii. 71, n. 1;Dalrymple, Sir John, ii. 210, n. 2;Dodd's case, iii. 121;fast of Jan. 30, ii. 152, n. 1;Fox, the King's competitor, iv. 279;divides the kingdom with him, iv. 292;Gordon Riots, iii. 429, 431;Great Personage, i. 219;Gustavus III, death of, iii. 134, n. 1;_Heroic Epistle_, reads the, iv. 113, n. 4;hopes formed of him, i. 363;Hume on the weakness of his government, iii. 46, n. 5;Hutton the Moravian, iv. 410, n. 6;indecency, treated with, iv. 261;_Irene_, has the sketch of, i. 108;Johnson, asks, to write a _Life of Spenser_, iv. 410;compliments him in _The False Alarm_, ii. 112;_Dedications_, ii. 44; iii. 113;for the King against Fox, iv. 292;gives him his _Western Islands_, ii. 290;four volumes of the _Lives_, iii. 372, n. 3;interview with, ii. 33;account of it, ii. 42; iii. 32; v. 125, n. 1;second interview, ii. 42, n. 2;pension, i. 372; v. 379;proposed addition to it, iv. 350, n. 1;projected works, has the list of, iv. 381, n. 1;madness, iv. 165, n. 3;manners, his, described by Adams, Johnson and Wraxall, ii. 40-1;militia camps, visits the, iii. 365;minister, his own, i. 424, n. 1; ii. 355, n. 1;ministers his tools, iii. 408, n. 4;oppressed by them, iv. 170;Norton's speech to him as Speaker, ii. 472, n. 2;

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