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约翰逊4-6-145

作者:鲍斯威尔 字数:14860 更新:2023-10-09 10:37:30

labours when he says a good thing, v. 77;'literature in it, very little,' v. 307;'music to hear him speak,' v. 246;old man in it, nothing of the, iii. 336;originality, iv. 421, n. 1;point and imagery, teemed with, iii. 260;rule to talk his best, i. 204;'runts, would learn to talk of,' iii. 337;seldom started a subject, iii. 307, n. 2; iv. 304, n. 4;stunned people, v. 288;too strong for the great, iv. 117;witnesses, without, iii. 81, n. 1;conviviality in the Hebrides, v. 261;convulsions in his breast, iii. 397, n. 1;convulsive starts: see Peculiarities;cookery, judge of, i. 469; iii. 285;projected book on it, iii. 285;copper coins bearing his head, iv. 421, n. 2;cottage in Boswell's park, would like a, iv. 226;country life, knowledge of, iii. 450;mental imprisonment, iv. 338;pleasure in it, v. 439, n. 2;courage, anecdotes of his, ii. 298-9;Court of Justice, in a, ii. 96, 97, n. 1, 98;_Cowley_, projected edition of, iii. 29;credulity, iii. 331; iv. 426; v. 17;critic upon characters and manners, iii. 48;croaker, no, iv. 381, n. 1;Cromwell, projected _Life_ of, iv. 235;curiosity, his, i. 89; iii. 450, 453-8;about the middle ages, iv. 133;dance, at a Highland, v. 166;dancing, iv. 79, 80, n. 2;dating letters, i. 122, n. 2;day, mode of spending his, i. 398; ii. 118;death, dread of, ii. 106; iii. 153, 295; iv. 253, n. 4, 259, 278, 280,289, 299-300, 366, 394-5. 399-400; v. 380;no dread of what might occasion, ii. 298;dying with a grace,' iv. 300, n. 1;horror of the last, i. 331, n. 7; iii. 153, n. 2;keeping away the thoughts of, ii. 93; iii. 157;news of deaths fills him with melancholy, iv. 154;resigned at the end, iv. 414, n. 2, 416-9;death, his, Dec. 13, 1784, iv. 417-9;agitated the public mind, i. 26, n. 2;produced a chasm, iv. 420;a kind of era, iv. 421, n. 1;described by Boswell, iv. 399-419;David Boswell, iv. 417;Dr. Burney, iv. 410, n. 1;Miss Burney, iv. 377, n. 1, 438-9;Hoole, iv. 399, n. 1, 406, 410, n. 2;Langton, iv. 407, 418, n. 1;Nichols, iv. 407-10;Reynolds, iv. 414, n. 2;Windham's servant, iv. 418;spirit of the grammarian, iv. 401;characteristical manner shows itself, iv. 411;lines on a spendthrift, iv. 413;three requests of Reynolds, ib.;refuses opiates and sustenance, iv. 415;operates on himself, iv. 399, 415. n. 1, 418, n. 1;debate, chose the wrong side in a, i. 441;debts in 1751, i. 238, n. 2, 350, n. 3;in 1759 and 1760, i. 350, n. 3;under arrest, i. 303, n. 1;dedications, skill in, ii. 1; 224-5;never used them himself, i. 257, n. 2; ii. i, n. 2;to him, iv. 421, n. 2;defending a man, mode of, ii. 87;deference, required, iii. 24, n. 2;delicacy about his letter to Chesterfield, i. 260, n. 3;about Beauclerk, iv. 180;towards a dependent, ii. 155;depression of mind, i. 297, 358, n. 5;deserted, very much, iv. 140;'_deterre_,' i. 129;dexterity in retort, iv. 185;Diaries, _Annales_, i. 74, 89, n. 3;_Diary_, burnt, i. 25, 35, n. 1, 251; iv. 405;fragments preserved, i. 27, 35. n. 1, 74; iv. 405, n. 2;v. 53, 427, n. 1;Boswell, seen by, i. 251, n. 3; iv. 405;left in his house, v. 53;'Dictionary Johnson,' i. 385;_Dictionary_, cites himself in his, iv. 4, n. 3:see also under _Dictionary_;_Dies irae_, reciting the, iii. 358, n. 3;diffidence, i. 153;Dignity, 'a blunt dignity about him,' i. 461, n. 4;of character, i. 131, 264, n. 1; ii. 118; v. 103;of literature, iii. 310;dinners, 'dinner to ask a man to,' i. 470;house, at his own, ii. 215, 360, 375, 427, n. 1; iii. 241;iv. 92, 210;to members of the Ivy Lane Club, iv. 436;'huffed his wife' about, i. 239, n. 2;on the way to Oxford, iv. 284;one in Devonshire, i. 379, n. 2;at the Pine Apple, i. 103;talked about them more than he thought, i. 469, n. 2;thought on them with earnestness, i. 467, n. 2; v. 342, n. 2:see under DINNERS, and JOHNSON, eating;discrimination, fond of, ii. 306; iii. 282;disorderly habits, i. 482, n. 2; iv. 110;dissenters and snails, ii. 268, n, 2;distilling, iv. 9;distressed by poverty, i. 73, 77, 121, 123, n. 2, 133, 137, 163,238, n. 2, 303, 350, 488;Doctor of Laws of Dublin, i. 488;Oxford, ii. 318, n. 1, 331-3;did not use the title, i. 488, n. 3; ii. 332, n. 1; iv. 79, n. 3,268; v. 37, n. 2;dogs, separated two: see JOHNSON, fear;_Domine_, title of, i. 488, n. 3;'an auld dominie,' v. 382, n. 2;dramatic power, i. 506: see JOHNSON, tragedy-writer;draughts, played at, i. 317; ii. 444;dress, described by Beauclerk, ii. 406;Boswell, i. 396; v. 18;Colman, iii. 54, n. 2;Cumberland, iii. 325, n. 3;Foote, ii. 403;Langton, i. 247;Miss Reynolds, i. 246, n. 2, 328, n. 1;improved, iii. 325;on his tour in Scotland, v. 19;Boswell suggests for him velvet and embroidery, ii. 475;Court mourning, at a, iv. 325;dramatic author, as a, i. 200; v. 364;when visiting Goldsmith, i. 366, n. 1;in Paris, ii. 403, n. 5;dropsy, sudden relief from, iv. 271-2;operated on himself for it: see above, under death;Easter meetings with Boswell, iv. 148, n. 2;Easter-day, his placidity on it, iii. 25;resolutions on it, i. 483, 487; ii. 189, n. 3; iii. 99;East-Indian affairs, had never considered, ii. 294;eating, dislikes being asked twice to eat anything, v. 264;love of good eating, i. 467; iii. 69;at Monboddo's table, v. 81;mode, i. 267, 468, 470, n. 2; v. 206;unaffected by kinds of food, iii. 305;voracious, iv. 72, 330; v. 20;enemies, wonders why he has, iv. 168;envy, candid avowal of, iii 271, n. 2;possible envy of Burke, iii. 310, n. 4;epitaphs, his, iv. 424, ib., n. 2, 443-5;on his wife, i. 241, n. 2; iv. 351-2;on his parents and brothers, iv. 393;Essex Head Club, founds the, iv. 253-5, 275, 436-8;etymologist, a bad, i. 186, n. 5;evidence, a sifter of, i. 406; v. 388;evil spirit, the, affects Johnson politically, v. 36, n. 3;exaggeration, hatred of: see EXAGGERATION;excellence described by Mrs. Piozzi, ii. 263, n. 6;executor, Porter's, i. 95, n. 3;Thrale's, iv. 86;exhibited, refused to be, ii. 120;expedition, eager for an, iii. 131, 134;experiments, minute, iii. 398, n. 3;eyes: see Sight;fable, sketch of a, ii. 232;'Faith in some proportion to fear,' iv. 299, n. 3;fancy, fecundity of, iii. 317;Fasting, ii. 214, n. 1, 352, 435, 476; iii. 24, 300; iv. 203, 397;fasted two days, i. 469; iii. 306; v. 284;fear, a stranger to, ii. 298, n. 4;separated two dogs, ii. 299; v. 329;never afraid of any man, iv. 327, n. 4;afraid to walk on the roof of the Observatory, ii. 389;feared at College, iii. 303;at Brighton, iv. 159, n. 3;by Langton, iv. 295: see above, JOHNSON, awe;Fearing in _Pilgrim's Progress_, like, ii. 298, n. 4; iv. 417, n. 2;female charms, sensible to, i. 92;female dress, critical of, i. 41;feudal notions, iii. 177;fictions, projected work on, iv. 236;fields, wishes to see the, iii. 435, n. 3, 441-2;flattery, somewhat susceptible of, iv. 427; v. 17, 440, n. 2;_foenum habet in cornu_, ii. 79;Foote describes him in Paris, ii. 403;foreigners, prejudice against, i. 129; iv. 15;described by Baretti and Reynolds, ib. n. 3, 169, n. 1;Boswell, v. 20:forgiving disposition, ii. 270; iv. 349, n. 2;shown to one who exceeded in wine, ii. 436; iv. 110; v. 259, n. 1;fortitude, iv. 240, 3 4;fox-hunting, i. 446, n. 1; v. 253;France, tour to, ii. 384-404;diary, ii. 389-401;would not publish it, iii. 301;French, knowledge of, i. 115; ii. 81-2, 208, n. 2, 385, 404;writes a French letter, ii. 404;fretful, iv. 170, 173, 283;friends, list of, in 1752, i. 241;friend, a most active, iv. 344;_frisk_, his, i. 250;frolic, his bitterness mistaken for, i. 73; iv. 304;fruit, love of, iv. 353; v. 455, n. 3;funeral, iv. 419, 439;Garagantua, iii. 255;garret in Gough Square, i. 328;Garrick's success, moved by, i. 167, 216, n. 2; ii. 69;gay and good-humoured, iii. 440, n. 1; iv. 101, n. 1;'infinitely agreeable,' iv. 305, n. 1;bland and gay, v. 398;gay circles of life, pleased at mixing in the, ii. 321, 349;_Gelaleddin_, describes himself in, iv. 195, n. 1;general censure, dislikes, iv. 313;_genius_, always in extremes, i. 468, n. 4; iii. 307, n. 2;_Gentleman's Magazine_: see _Gentleman's Magazine_;gentleness, iv. 101, n. 1, 183, n. 2;want of it, v. 288;gentlewoman in liquor, helps a, ii. 434;gesticulating, averse to, iv. 322;gestures, see JOHNSON, peculiarities;ghost, like a, i. 6, n. 2; iii. 307; v. 73;ghosts: see GHOSTS;'Giant in his den,' i. 396;gloomy cast of thought, i. 180;God, love predominated over by fear of, iii. 339;'saw God in clouds,' iii. 98;Goldsmith, contests with, ii. 231;envy, i. 414, n. 4;_Haunch of Venison_, mentioned in, iii. 225, n. 2;proposal to review a work by, v. 274:see GOLDSMITH;Good Friday, would not look at a proof on, iii. 313:see JOHNSON, fasting;good-humour, iv. 245, n. 2; v. 132, 139;'good-humoured fellow,' ii. 362; iii. 78;goodnatured, but not good-humoured, ii. 362;good in others seen by him, i. 161, n. 2;good things of this life, loved the, iii. 310, n. 4;good sayings, forgets his, iv. 179;Gordon Riots, iii. 428-30;gout due to abstinence, i. 103, n. 3:see JOHNSON, health;gown, Master of Arts, i. 347;graces, valued the, iii. 54;grandfather, could hardly tell who was his, ii. 261;gratitude, i. 487;grave, request about it, iv. 393, n. 3;in Westminster Abbey, iv. 419;close to Macpherson's, ii. 298, n. 2;great, never courted the, iii. 189; iv. 116;not courted by them, iv. 117, 326;'greatest man in England next to Lord Mansfield,' ii. 336; v. 96;Greek, knowledge of, i. 57, 70; iii. 90; iv. 8, n. 3, 384-5;v. 458, n. 5;_Greek Testament_, his large folio, ii. 189;Green Room, in the, i. 201; iv. 7;grief, bearing, iii. 136, n. 2, 137, n. 1;Grosvenor Square, apartment in, iv. 72, n. 1;gun, rashness in firing a, ii. 299;habitations, list of his, i. 111; iii. 405-6;Hampton Court, applies for a residence in, iii. 34, n. 4;happier in his later years, i. 299; iv. 1, n. 1;happiness not found in this world, iv. 162, n. 2:see HAPPINESS;hasty, iii. 80-1;health, consults Scotch physicians, iv. 261-4;seldom a single day of ease, iv. 147;1729, hypochondria, i. 63;1755, sickness, i. 305;1765-6, severe attack of hypochondria, i. 483, 487, 520-2;which left a weakness in his knee, v. 318, 446;1767, hypochondria, relieved by abstinence, ii. 44, n. 2;1768, hypochondria, ii. 45;severe illness at Oxford, ii. 46, n. 3;1770, rheumatism and spasms, ii. 115, n. 2;1771, better, ii. 142, n. 2;1773, fever, ii. 263;mention of a dreadful illness, ii. 281;better in Scotland, v. 45, n. 3, 405, n. 1;1774, illness, ii. 272;1776, gout, iii. 82, 89;1777, hypochondria, iii. 98;illness, iii. 210;1779, better, iii. 397;1780, better, iii. 435, 442; iv. 1, n. 1;1781, better, iv. 101, n. 1;1782, illness, iv. 141, 142, 144, 149;1783, illness, iv. 163;palsy, iv. 227, 401, n. 2;threatened with an operation, iv. 239;gout, 241;1783-4, asthma and dropsy, iv. 255, 256, n. 1, 259;sudden relief, 261, 271-2;confined 129 days, iv. 270, n. 1;projected wintering in Italy, iv. 326;his letters about his last illness, iv. 353-69;_Aegri Ephemeris_, iv. 381: see JOHNSON, melancholy;_heard_, pronunciation of, iii. 197;hearth-broom, his, iv. 134;Hebrides, first talk of visiting the, i. 450; ii. 291; v. 286;proposed tour, ii. 51, 201, 232, 264; v. 13-4;leaves London, ii. 265; v. 21;returns, ii. 268;account of the tour, ii. 266-7; v. 1-425;described in a letter to Taylor, v. 405, n. 1;acquisition of ideas, iv. 199;and of images, v. 405;hardships and dangers, v. 127, 283, n. 1, 313, n. 1, 392;uncommon spirit shown, v. 368;pleasantest journey he ever made, iii. 93; v. 405;pleasure in talking it over, iii. 131, 196;a 'frolic,' iv. 136;no wish to go again, iv. 199;received like princes, v. 317;'roving among the Hebrides at sixty,' v. 278;box of curiosities from them, ii. 269-70:see _Journey to the Hebrides_, and SCOTLAND;Hercules, compared by Boswell to, ii. 260;Hervey, story of his ingratitude to, iii. 195, 209-11;_high_, his use of, iii. 118, n. 3;Highlander, shows the spirit of a, v. 324;hilarity, i. 73, 191, n. 5, 255, n. 1; ii. 261-2, 378;history, little regard for: see HISTORY;holds up his head as high as he can, iv. 256;home uncomfortable by jarrings, iii. 368:see JOHNSON, household;honest man, v. 264, 309;house at Lichfield: see LICHFIELD;for his habitations, see JOHNSON, habitations;household, account of it, i. 232, n. 1; iii. 461-2; iv. 169, n. 3;'much malignity' in it, iii. 417, 461;losses by death, iv. 140;melancholy, iv. 142;more peace, iv. 233, n. 1;solitude, i. 232, n. 1; iv. 235, n. 1, 239, 241, 249, 253, n. 4,255, 270;housekeeping, left off, i. 326, 350, n. 3;resumed it, ii. 4;hug, gives one a forcible, ii. 231;humility, iii. 380, n. 3; iv. 410, 427;humour, ii. 262, n. 2; iii. 244, n. 2; iv. 428; v. 17, 20;hungry only once in his life, i. 469;hypochondria: see JOHNSON, health;hypocrisy, not suspicious of, i. 418, n. 3; iii. 444;Iceland, projected voyage to, i. 242; iv. 358, n. 2;idleness in boyhood, i. 48;at College, i. 70;'Desidiae valedixi,' i. 74;in writing the _Plan_, i. 183;'_Idle Apprentice_ i. 250;in Inner Temple lane, i. 350, n. 3;'idle fellow all my life,' i. 465;idleness in 1760, i. 353;in 1761, i. 358;in 1763, i. 398;in 1764, i. 482;in 1767, ii. 44;in his latter years, i. 372, n. 1;claim upon him for more writings, i. 398; ii. 15, 35, 441;idleness exaggerated by himself, i. 446; ii. 263, 271:see JOHNSON, indolence;ignorance, covered his, v. 124, n. 4;illness: see JOHNSON, health;imitations of him often caricatures, ii. 326, n. 5;'Imlac,' iii. 6;_Impransus_, i. 137;incredulity as to particular extraordinary facts, ii. 247; iii. 188;v. 331;'_incredulus odi_,' iii. 229;independence, always asserted his, i. 443;indolence, his,described by Hawkins, iii. 98, n. 1;by Murphy, i. 307, n. 2;'inclination to do nothing,' i. 463;justification of it, ii. 15, n. 2;time of danger, i. 268, n. 4;influence, loves, v. 136;inheritance from his father, i. 80;intoxicated, i. 94, 103, n. 3, 379, n. 2;used to slink home, iii. 389;'_invictum animum Catonis_,' iv. 374;_Irene_: see _Irene_;_Island Isa_, v. 250;Islington, for change of air, goes to, iv. 271;Italian, knowledge of, i. 115, 156;mentions _Ariosto_, i. 278; v. 368, n. 1;_Dante_, ii. 238;purposes vigorous study, iii. 90; iv. 135;reads Casa and Castiglione, v. 276;_Il Palmerino d'Inghilterra_, iii. 2;Petrarch, iv. 374, n. 5;Tasso, iii. 330;Italy, projected book on, iii. 19;projected tour to, ii. 423, 424, 428;tour given up, iii. 6, 18, 27;eagerness to go, iii. 19, 28, 36, 456-8; v. 229;projected wintering there, iv. 326-8, 336, 338, 348-50;Jacobite tendencies, i. 43, 176; ii. 27, 220; iii. 162; iv. 314;never ardent in the cause, i. 176, n. 2, 429;never in a nonjuring meeting-house, iv. 288;James's _Medicinal Dictionary_, i. 159;_Jean Bull philosophe_, i. 467;

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