Life of Johnson, Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 720 pages of information about Life of Johnson, Volume 6.

Life of Johnson, Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 720 pages of information about Life of Johnson, Volume 6.
i. 103, n. 3;
    drank it at all hours, i. 313; v. 23;
    takes it always with Miss Williams, i. 42l;
      teachers, his, Dame Oliver, i. 43;
      Tom Brown, ib.;
      Hawkins, ib.;
      Hunter, i. 44;
      Wentworth, i. 49;
  teaching men, pleasure in, ii. 101;
  temper, easily offended, iii. 345; iv. 426; v. 17;
    violent, iii. 81, 290, 300, 337, 384; iv. 65, n. 1;
    ‘terrible severe humour,’ iv. 159, n. 3;
    violent passion, iv. 171;
      on Rattakin, v. 145-7;
  tenderness of heart, shown about Dr. Brocklesby’s offer, iv. 338;
    friendship with Hoole, iv. 360;
    his friends’ efforts for an increase in his pension, iv. 337;
    pious books, iv. 88, n. 1;
    on hearing Dr. Hodges’s story, ii. 341, n. 3;
    kissing Streatham church, iv. 159;
    and the old willow-tree at Lichfield, iv. 372, n. 1;
    in reciting Beattie’s Hermit, iv. 186;
      Dies Irae, iii. 358, n. 3;
      Goldsmith’s Traveller, v. 344;
      lines on Levett, iv. 165, n. 4;
      Vanity of Human Wishes, iv. 45, n. 3;
  terror, an object of, i. 450, n. 1;
  theatres, left off going to the, ii. 14;
  thinking, excelled in the art of, iv. 428;
    thought more than he read, ii. 36;
    thoughts, loses command over his, ii. 190; 202, n. 2;
  Thrales,
    his ‘coalition’ with the, i. 493, n. 3;
    his intimacy not without restraint, iii. 7;
    gross supposition about it, iii. 7;
    supposed wish to marry Mrs. Thrale, iv. 387, n. 1: 
    see THRALES, and under JOHNSON, Streatham;
  toleration, views on, ii. 249-254;
  Tory, a, ‘not in the party sense,’ ii. 117;
  his Toryism abates, v. 386;
    might have written a Tory History of England, iv. 39;
  ‘tossed and gored,’ ii. 66;
  tossed Boswell, iii. 338;
  town, the, his element, iv. 358:  see.  LONDON;
  ‘tragedy-writer, a,’ i. 102;
    reason of his failure, i. 198, 199, n. 2;
  translates for booksellers, i. 133;
  travelling, love of, Appendix B., iii. 449-459;
  ‘tremendous companion,’ i. 496, n. 1;
  ‘true-born Englishman,’ i. 129; ii. 300; iv. 15, n. 3, 191;
v. 1, n. 1, 20;
  truthfulness, exact precision in conversation, ii. 434; iii. 228;
    Rousseau, compared with, ii. 434, n. 2;
    truth held sacred by him, ii. 433, n. 2; iv. 305, n. 3;
    all of his ‘school’ distinguished for it, i. 7, n. 1; iii. 230;
    scrupulously inquisitive to discover it, ii. 247;
    talked as if on oath, ii. 434, n. 2;
  tutor to Mr. Whitby, i. 84, n. 2;
  ‘un politique aux choux et aux raves,’ iii. 324;
  uncle, account of an, v. 316;
  unobservant, iii. 423, n. 1;
  unsocial shyness, free from, iv. 255;
  Ursa Major, v. 384;
  utterance, slow deliberate, ii. 326; iv. 429; v. 18;
  verse-making, ii. 15;
    made verses and forgot them,
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Life of Johnson, Volume 6 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.