D. O., Sir, iv. 181, n. 3.
DACIER, Madame, in. 333, n. 2.
Dacier’s Horace, in. 74, n. 1.
Demonology, King James’s, iii. 382.
DAGGE, ——, keeper of the Bristol
Newgate, iii. 433, n. 1.
DAILLE, on the Fathers, v. 294.
Daily Advertiser, i. 256, n. 1; ii. 209, n.
2.
Daily Gazetteer, ii. 33, n. 1.
Daily Post, i. 503.
DALE, Mrs., v. 431.
D’ALEMBERT, ii. 54, n. 3.
DALIN, Olaf von, ii. 156.
DALLAS, Miss, v. 87.
DALLAS, Stuart, v. 87.
DALRYMPLE, Colonel, v. 399.
DALRYMPLE, Sir David. See HAILES, Lord.
DALRYMPLE, Sir John,
attacks the London booksellers, v. 402,
n. 1;
Burnet, criticises, ii. 213, n. 3;
complains of attacks on his Memoirs,
v. 400;
foppery, his, ii. 237;
Johnson, invites to his house, v. 401;
rails at, v. 402;
arrives late, v. 404;
Memoirs of Great Britain
and Ireland, ii. 210-1;
parodied by Johnson, v. 403;
style, ‘mere bouncing,’
ii. 210;
praised by Boswell, ii. 211;
mentioned, ii. 291.
DALZEL, Professor, iv. 385.
DANCALA, i. 88.
DANCING, iv. 79.
DANES, colony at Leuchars, v. 70;
in Wales, v. 130.
DANTE, Boswell’s ignorance of him, iii. 229,
n. 4;
Purgatory, quoted, iv. 373, n.
1;
resemblance between Pilgrim’s
Progress and Dante, ii. 238.
DANUBE, ii. 133, n. 1.
D’ARBLAY, General, iv. 223, n. 4.
D’ARBLAY, Mme. See BURNEY, Miss.
DARBY, Rev. Mr., v. 453, n. 2.
DARIPPE, Captain, v. 135.
DARIUS’S shade, iv. 16.
DARLINGTON, i. 35, n. 1.
DARTINEUF, Charles, ii. 447.
DARTMOUTH, Lord, i. 407, n. 1.
DARWIN, Charles, v. 428, n. 3.
DARWIN, Dr. Erasmus, v. 428, n. 3.
DASHWOOD, Sir Francis, ii. 135, n. 2.
DASHWOOD, Sir Henry, iii. 407, n. 5.
DATES to letters, i. 122, n. 2; iii. 421, n. 3, 428,
n. 4.
D’AUTEROCHE, Count, iii. 8, n. 3.
DAVENANT, Sir William, ii. 168, n. 2.
DAVENPORT, William, Strahan’s apprentice, ii.
324, n. 1.
DAVIES, Thomas, account of him, i. 390;
author, success as an, iii. 434;
bankruptcy, iii. 223, 434;
Baretti’s trial, exaggerated feelings
about, ii. 94;
quarrels with him, ii. 205;
benefit at Drury Lane, iii. 249;
bookseller, his taste as a, iii. 223,
n. 1;
Boswell to Johnson, introduces, i. 390;
iv. 231;
Churchill’s lines on him, i. 391,
n. 2, 483; iii. 223;
sees in the pit, iii. 223,
n. 2:
Cibber’s genteel ladies, ii. 340;
‘clapped on the back by Tom Davies,’
ii. 344;
Conduct of the Allies, ii. 65;
dinners at his house, ii. 340; iii. 38;
Garrick, Memoirs of. iii. 434,
n. 5;
Garrick, letter to, iii. 223, n. 2;
complains of his unkindness,
ib.;
Goldsmith’s dislike of Baretti,
ii. 205, n. 3;
‘Goldy’s’ play, talks
of, ii. 258; v. 308;