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Chancery-suit. Has ruined a man, though decided for him with
costs, vi. 145. A suit for life, xvi. 155.
Chandos (duke of). See Brydges.

Character of The Earl of Abingdon, xviii. 227.
Mr. Addison, viii. 3.

Dr. Aglionby, xviii. 234.
Queen Anne, iii. 89. iv. 280.
Dr. Arbuthnot, xiv. 39.

Duke of Argyll, xiv. 39. xviii. 236.
Aristides, ii. 306.

Aristotle, v. 172. vi. 227. xviii. 257*
Earl of Arlington, xvi. 348.
Mr. Ashe, xvi. 245.

Bishop Atterbury, v. 159.

Lord Aylmer, xviii. 236.

Mrs. Barber, xiii. 301.

Dr. Bentley, ii. 240.

Earl of Berkeley, xviii. 228.

Sir Lambert Blackwell, xviii. 234.

Lord Bolingbroke, iii. 116. iv. 310. 334. xv. 176,

Duke of Bolton, xviii. 221.

Mr. Boyle, xviii. 230.

Duke of Buckingham, iii. 115. xviii. 220.

Bishop Burnet, iv. 19. x. 308. xviii. 232.

...

Lord Butler of Weston, xviii. 230.

Mons. Buys, iv. 49.

Admiral Byng, xviii. 236.
Mr. Carstairs, xviii. 238.
Lord Carteret, ix. 87. 220.
Lady Carteret, xii. 341.
Cato of Utica, v. 173. xvi. 332.
Lord Chandos, xviii. 229.
Earl of Chesterfield, xviii. 227.
Lord Cholmondeley, xviii. 229.
Jaques Clement, iii. 156.
Congreve, xiv. 87.

Lord chancellor Cowper, iv. 33.
Crassus, iii. 121.

Captain Creichton, x. 315.

Oliver Cromwell, ii. 284.

Lord Cutts, xviii. 2
.235.

General Dalziel, x. 361.

Earl of Dartmouth, iii. 116. xviii. 226.

Dr. Davenant, xviii. 231.

Dr. Delany, ix. 235. xiv. 118.

Earl of Derby, xviii. 224..

Duke of Devonshire, xviii. 220.
Earl of Dorset, xviii. 223.
Queen Elizabeth, ii. 280.
Earl of Feversham, xviii. 228.
Andrew Fletcher, xviii. 239.

Character

Character of Sir Thomas Frankland, xviii. 231.

Humphry French, lord mayor of Dublin, ix. 406.
Lord Gallway, xviii. 235.

Earl of Godolphin, iv. 30. 122. xvi. 345.

Duke of Grafton, xviii. 221.

Earl of Grantham, xviii. 228.

Gregg, iii. 157.

Lord Grey of Werk, xviii. 229.
Lord Griffin, xviii. 229.

Abbe Gualtier, iv. 65.

Lord Guilford, xviii. 229.

Guiscard, iii. 157. 161. xviii. 6.

Earl of Halifax, iv. 307 [Pericles]. vii. 2. xviii. 222.
Duke Hamilton, xviii. 236.

Lord keeper Harcourt, iii. 114.

Mr. Harley (afterward Rob. earl of Oxford), i. 166. iii. 115. 159. iv. 118. 311. 334. xiii. 131. xviii. 230. General sir Charles Haro, xviii. 236.

Marquis of Hartington, xviii. 222.

King Henry VIII, ii. 279. iv. 401. xvi. 239.
Mr. Hill, envoy to the duke Savoy, xviii. 234.
Mrs. Howard, x. 235.

King James I, ii. 281.

King James II, ii. 284.

Secretary Johnstoun, xviii. 238.

Earl of Kent, xviii. 227.

Archbishop King, iv. 422.

Robert and Henry Lesley, viii. 60.

Lord Lexington, xviii. 228.

Earl of Lindsay, xviii. 227.

Dr. Lloyd, v. 355.
Lord Lucas, xviii. 225.
General McCoy, x. 386.

Lord Mahon, xviii. 227.

Mr. Mansel, xviii. 2.30.

Duke of Marlborough, iv. 29. xvii. 143. xviii. 218.

His duchess, iv. 30. xviii. 288.

Earl of Marr, xviii. 239.

Primate Marsh, x. 239.

Mrs. Masham, iii. 54. iv. 336.
Mr. Methuen, xviii. 233.
Earl of Middleton, xviii. 239.
Duke of Montagu, xviii. 222.
Marquis of Montrose, xviii. 237.

Duke of Newcastle, xviii. 221.

Duke of Northumberland, xviii. 221.

Earl of Nottingham, iv. 34. 40. xi. 255. xviii. 220.

Edward earl of Orford, ii. 306 [Themistocles].

Duke of Ormond, iv. 201. 308. xviii. 219.

Earl of Orkney, xviii. 235.

Earl of Peterborow, vii. 35. xiv. 26. xviii. 224.

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Character

Character of Abbe de Polignac, iv. 235.

Mr. Pope, vii. 3.

Earl of Portland, ii. 309 [Phocion]. xviii. 223.
Lord Poulet of Hinton, xviii. 226.

Mr. Prior, xviii. 232.

Lord Raby, xviii. 233.

Earl of Ranelagh, xi. 210. xviii. 225.

Duke of Richmond, xviii. 221.

Earl Rivers, xviii. 223.

Earl of Rochester, iii. 114. 221. /

Earl of Romney, xviii. 220.

Mr. Rooke, x. 213.

> Earl of Sandwich, xviii. 225.

Lord chief justice Scroggs, viii. 137.

Dr. Sheridan, i. 367. ix. 232. xix. 238.

Duke of Shrewsbury, iii. 115. xi. 217. xviii. 219.

His duchess, xi. 210.

Mr. Shute, xi. 46.

Mr. Smith, xviii. 231.

Lord Somers, ii. 306 [Aristides]. iv. 26. xiv. 236.

xviii. 222.

Duke of Somerset, iv. 37. xviii. 219.

His duchess, iv. 353. xi. 173.

Earl of Stamford, xviii. 224.
Stella (Mrs. Johnson), x. 222.
Mr. George Stepney, xviii. 233.
Mr. Stopford, ix. 235.

Earl of Sunderland, iv. 31. xviii. 224.

Earl of Sutherland, xviii. 238.

Archbishop Tenison, xviii. 232.

Earl of Thanet, xviii. 225.

Marquis de Torcy, iv. 236.
Lord Townshend, xviii. 226.

Lord chief justice Tresilian, viii. 137.
Vanessa, i. 296. 320. See Vanhomrigh.
Sir Robert Walpole, iv. 107. x. 270.
Lord de la Warr, xviii. 228.

Earl of Weems, xviii. 240.

Earl of Wharton, iii. 14. iv. 32. v. 348. xviii. 226.
Earl of Winchelsea, xviii. 225.

Sir Charles Wogan, xii. 436.

...

Sir Nathan Wrighte, xviii. 222.

5.

Charity. Why publick charities are preferable to private, xiii. Charles the First (king of England). A great patron of learning, v. 69. In the former part of his reign, many of the bishops and clergy were puritans, 293. Origin of his misfortunes, xix. 105. Began to be ruined in a legal way, and why, xvi. 231. Conversation at the highest period of politeness in the peaceable part of his reign, v. 237. His attempting religious innovations in Scotland, a material cause of his subsequent troubles, ii. 281. 282. Sermon on his martyrdom, x. 67. The foundation of the

troubles

troubles in his reign, 68. By his own concessions, brings on his destruction, 71. The English parliament held his hands, while the Irish papists were cutting his friends throats, 73. The ill consequences of that rebellion in Ireland, ibid. The uses which the memory of January 30 suggests to us, 75; and the reasons why it should not be dropped, 78. When he appeared great, xvi. 331. When the contrary, 334. Charles the Second (king of England). His severity to the dissenting clergy, ii. 199. The Socinians began to spread in England toward the end of his reign, very absurdly reckoned our Augustan age, x. 243. When he made a contemptible figure, xvi. 333. A plot against him defeated, xviii. 96. His life saved at the battle of Worcester by colonel Wogan, xix. 99. Difficulties of his situation, 107.

Charles V, (emperor) said, if he were to speak to his horse, it should be in High Dutch, vi. 273. When he appeared contemptible, xvi. 333. His present to Aretine, v. 192.

Charles II (of Spain). His will in favour of a Bourbon prince, xvii. 135.

Charles (the archduke, titular king of Spain, by the style of Charles III, and afterward emperor). Visited the queen at Windsor, xi. 17.

Charles XII (king of Sweden). Much esteemed by Dr. Swift, xvi. 1.

Charondas. His law for restraining innovations, ii. 343.

Chartres (colonel). His character drawn in a play, xiii. 375. Chaucer. A Tale of his, lately found in an old MS. xvii. 394. Chedder. A chedder letter, what, xiii. 202.

Chesterfield (Philip Dormer, earl of). The dean applies to him in behalf of a friend, xii. 357. Swift's reply to his lordship's answer, 377. Points out an original poem of Dr. Swift's, viii. 201. Witticism of his respecting George II, xiii. 313. Supposed to have assisted in a Letter to the People of Ireland, in the name of the Drapier, xix. 196.

Chester (Ralph de Gernoniis, earl of). Struck to the ground by king Stephen, with a battle axe, xvi. 72. Injuriously imprisoned by that king, 81.

Chetwood (Knightly). Presented several memorials for a peerage, to which he had good pretensions, without success, xix. 34. Children. Modest Proposal for preventing them from being a Burden to the Poor of Ireland, ix. 287..

Chimney tax.

Taken off at the revolution, iv. 111. Chinese. Books in their language above two thousand years old, v. 69. Their singular method of rewarding national services, 467. Cholmondeley (earl of). At the general change in 1710, continued lord treasurer of the household, iv. 23. Which gave much displeasure to Mr. Harley's friends, 300. Removed from his em ployment for speaking against the peace at a council, xv. 417. Choqued. Remarks on the word, v. 450.

Christianity. Argument against the Abolishing of, in England, ii.

381.

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Christianity.

Christianity. Why the offering to restore it as used in primitive times would be a wild project, ii. 383. Objections made against the system of it stated and answered, 384. The errour of attempting to explain the mysteries of it, v. 104. Will de. cline in proportion as brotherly love doth, x. 59. Christ's divinity not at first proposed as an article of faith, x. 167. Christians. Whence the first dissensions between them, x. 55. Chronology. Precarious, xii. 419.

Church. Funerals the only method of carrying some people to it, xvii. 296. The meaning of the vote in parliament against those who should affirm that the church was in danger, iii. 22. The whigs, to show their zeal for it, made it a creature of the state, 78. Providence can make even a bad man instrumental to the service of it, 134. Remarks on the pious design of building fifty new churches in London and Westminster, 229. Which owed its origin to a hint of Dr. Swift, ii. 425. They should be repaired or rebuilt at the publick expense, not by charitable collections, iii. 235 Church of England the only body of Christians that disqualifies its teachers from sharing in the civil power farther than as senators, v. 321. Churches dormitories, as well as church yards, x. 242. Church of England no creature of the civil power, either as to its policy or doctrine, and why, xvi. 196. The church interests in the Irish house of lords materially hurt, by Mr. Harley's keeping four bishopricks a long time vacant, iv. 318. 343.

Church lands. Alienated by many popish bishops at the time of the reformation, and by protestant bishops since, v. 270. A law to prohibit letting them for a longer term than twenty-one years, ibid. Supposed in England a third of the whole kingdom, xvi. 241.

Church of England Man's Sentiments of Religion and Government, ii. 307.

Church of England. Characterised, xvii. 186.

Church of Scotland. xvii. 189. 191. See Jack.

Cibber (Mr. Colley). His success in birthday odes, viii. 175. In the low sublime, inferiour to Welsted, 178. His testimony of loyalty founded on politeness, 270.

Cicero. On what he laid the stress of his oratory, v. 93. Greatly excelled by Demosthenes as an orator, 94. His letters to Atticus give a better account of those times than is to be found in any other writer, xvi. 353. When he appeared great, xvi. 330. Abstract of his speech against Verres, iii. 38. Excellent maxim of his, xiii. 312.

Cincinnatus. When he appeared great, xvi. 331.

City Shower poetically described, vii. 58.

Civet, western, ii. 165, note.

Civility. The inconveniencies it lays us under, when not accompanied with common discretion, v. 185.

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