choosing one for oneself, iii. 299;
College jokers its defenders, iv. 288;
differences of opinion not much thought of, iv. 291;
general ignorance, iii. 50;
hard, made to appear, v. 316;
ignorance of the first notion, iv. 216;
joy in it, iii. 339;
particular places for it, iv. 226;
people with none, iv. 215; perversions, ii. 129;
religious conversation banished, ii. 124;
State, to be regulated by the, ii. 14; iv. 12;
unfitness of poetry for it, iii. 358, n. 3; iv. 39.
RELIGIOUS ORDERS. See MONASTERY.
Remarks on Dr. Johnson’s Journey to the Hebrides, ii. 308, n. 1.
Remarks on Johnson’s Life of Milton, i. 231, n. 2.
Remarks on the characters of the Court of Queen Anne, iv. 333, n. 5.
Remarks on the Militia Bill, i. 307.
REMBRANDT, iii. 161.
REMEDIES, prescribing, ii. 260.
Remembering, distinguished from recollecting, iv. 126.
Remonstrance, The, ii. 113.
Renegade defined, i. 296.
RENTS, carried to a distance, iii. 177;
how they should be fixed, v. 293:
paid in kind, iv. 18; v. 254, n. 2.
See LANDLORDS.
REPENTANCE in dying, iv. 212.
Republic of Letters, v. 80, n. 4.
REPUBLICS, respect for authority wanting, ii. 153.
Republics. See Respublicae Elzevirianae.
REPUTATION injured by spurious publications, ii. 433.
RESENTMENT, iii. 39; iv. 367.
RESOLUTIONS, rarely efficacious, ii. 113, 360.
RESPECT, not to be paid to an adversary, ii. 442; v. 29.
Respectable, iii. 241, n. 2.
Respublica Hungarica, ii. 7.
Respublicae Elzevirianae, ii. 7, n. 2; iii. 52.
REST, man never at rest, iii. 252.
RESTORATION, ii. 369, 370; v. 406.
RESTRAINT, need of, iii. 53.
RESURRECTION OF THE BODY, iv. 93, 95.
Retirement, ii. 133, n. 1.
RETIREMENT, from the world, v. 62; its vices, ib., n. 5.
RETIRING FROM BUSINESS, ii. 337; iii. 176, n. 1.
RETREAT, cheap, few places left, ii. 124.
Retreat of the Ten Thousand, iv. 32.
REVELATION, attacks on it excite anger, iii. 11.
Revelation, Book of, ii. 163.
REVERENCE, for government impaired, iii. 3;
general relaxation of it, iii. 262.
REVIEWS AND REVIEWERS, acknowledgments to them improper, iv. 57;
defiance, to be set at, v. 274;
Monthly and Critical impartial, iii. 32;
attack each other, ib., n. 2;
payment for articles, iv. 214;
well-written, iii. 44.
See Critical and Monthly Reviews.
Revisal of Shakespeare’s Text, i. 263, n. 3.
Revolution, defined, i. 295, n. 1.
REVOLUTION OF 1688,
could not be avoided, ii. 341; iii. 3; iv. 170, 171, n. 1;
Lilliburlero, ii. 347;
reverence for government impaired by it, iii. 3; iv. 165; v. 202;
writing against it got Shebbeare the pillory
College jokers its defenders, iv. 288;
differences of opinion not much thought of, iv. 291;
general ignorance, iii. 50;
hard, made to appear, v. 316;
ignorance of the first notion, iv. 216;
joy in it, iii. 339;
particular places for it, iv. 226;
people with none, iv. 215; perversions, ii. 129;
religious conversation banished, ii. 124;
State, to be regulated by the, ii. 14; iv. 12;
unfitness of poetry for it, iii. 358, n. 3; iv. 39.
RELIGIOUS ORDERS. See MONASTERY.
Remarks on Dr. Johnson’s Journey to the Hebrides, ii. 308, n. 1.
Remarks on Johnson’s Life of Milton, i. 231, n. 2.
Remarks on the characters of the Court of Queen Anne, iv. 333, n. 5.
Remarks on the Militia Bill, i. 307.
REMBRANDT, iii. 161.
REMEDIES, prescribing, ii. 260.
Remembering, distinguished from recollecting, iv. 126.
Remonstrance, The, ii. 113.
Renegade defined, i. 296.
RENTS, carried to a distance, iii. 177;
how they should be fixed, v. 293:
paid in kind, iv. 18; v. 254, n. 2.
See LANDLORDS.
REPENTANCE in dying, iv. 212.
Republic of Letters, v. 80, n. 4.
REPUBLICS, respect for authority wanting, ii. 153.
Republics. See Respublicae Elzevirianae.
REPUTATION injured by spurious publications, ii. 433.
RESENTMENT, iii. 39; iv. 367.
RESOLUTIONS, rarely efficacious, ii. 113, 360.
RESPECT, not to be paid to an adversary, ii. 442; v. 29.
Respectable, iii. 241, n. 2.
Respublica Hungarica, ii. 7.
Respublicae Elzevirianae, ii. 7, n. 2; iii. 52.
REST, man never at rest, iii. 252.
RESTORATION, ii. 369, 370; v. 406.
RESTRAINT, need of, iii. 53.
RESURRECTION OF THE BODY, iv. 93, 95.
Retirement, ii. 133, n. 1.
RETIREMENT, from the world, v. 62; its vices, ib., n. 5.
RETIRING FROM BUSINESS, ii. 337; iii. 176, n. 1.
RETREAT, cheap, few places left, ii. 124.
Retreat of the Ten Thousand, iv. 32.
REVELATION, attacks on it excite anger, iii. 11.
Revelation, Book of, ii. 163.
REVERENCE, for government impaired, iii. 3;
general relaxation of it, iii. 262.
REVIEWS AND REVIEWERS, acknowledgments to them improper, iv. 57;
defiance, to be set at, v. 274;
Monthly and Critical impartial, iii. 32;
attack each other, ib., n. 2;
payment for articles, iv. 214;
well-written, iii. 44.
See Critical and Monthly Reviews.
Revisal of Shakespeare’s Text, i. 263, n. 3.
Revolution, defined, i. 295, n. 1.
REVOLUTION OF 1688,
could not be avoided, ii. 341; iii. 3; iv. 170, 171, n. 1;
Lilliburlero, ii. 347;
reverence for government impaired by it, iii. 3; iv. 165; v. 202;
writing against it got Shebbeare the pillory