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.
  painter to the King, iv. 366, n. 2, 368, n. 3;
  paralytic attack, iv. 161, n. 5;
  Parr’s defence of Johnson, iv. 422;
  persuaded, easily, v. 286;
  pictures, runs to, ii. 365;
  placidity, i. 1;
  planet, always under some, iii. 261;
  players, defends, ii. 234-5;
  Pope’s hand, touches, i. 377, n. 1;
  portrait of himself holding his ear in his hand, iii. 273, n. 1;
    at Streatham, iv. 158, n. 1;
  price of portraits and income, i. 326, 363, 370, 382;
  professor in the imaginary college, v. 109;
  prosperity, not to be spoilt by, v. 102, n. 3;
  Reviews, wonders to find so much good writing in the, iii. 44;
  Richardson’s talk, iv. 28;
  ‘rival, without a,’ i. 363;
  round of pleasures, in a, ii. 274, n. 3;
  Round Robin, signs the, iii. 83;
    carries it to Johnson, iii. 84;
  Royal Academy, intends to resign the presidency of the, iv. 366, n. 2;
  same all the year round, iii. 5, 192;
  Savage, The Life of, reads, i. 165, 245;
  Shelburne, Lord, portrait of, iv. 174, n. 5;
  Siddons, Mrs., portrait of, iv. 242, n. 2;
  sister, dislikes the paintings by his, i. 326, n. 7; iv. 229, n. 4;
  Smith’s, Adam, talk, iv. 24, n. 2;
  St. Paul’s, proposes monuments in, iv. 423, n. 2;
  Streatham library, pictures by him in, iv. 158, n. 1;
  Suard visits him, iv. 20, n. 1;
  Sunday painting, iv. 414;
  taste, taking the altitude of a man’s, iv. 316;
    how acquired, ii. 191, n. 1;
  Thurlow, letter from, iv. 350, n. 1;
  titles, in addressing people did not use, i. 245, n. 3;
  truthfulness of his stories, ii. 433, n. 2;
  understanding, judging a man’s, iv. 316;
  Vanburgh, defends, iv. 55;
  Vesey’s, Mr., at, iii. 425;
  virtue in itself preferable to vice, iii. 342, 349;
  Voltaire, supposed attack on, v. 273, n. 4;
  weather, ridicules the influence of, i. 332, n. 2;
  wine, defends the use of, iii. 41;
    his fondness for it, ii. 292; iii. 329-30;
    reproached by Johnson with being far gone, iii. 329;
  mentioned, ii. 82, 83, n. 2, 232, 265, n. 4, 347; iii. 43, 301,
305, 386, 390, 434; iv. 1, n. 1, 32, 76, 84, 88, 159, 178,
219, n. 3, 224, n. 2, 334, 341, 344, 355, n. 4; v. 215.
Rhedi de generations insectarum, iii. 229, n. 4. 
RHEES, David ap, Welsh Grammar, v. 443. 
RHEUMATISM, medicine for it, ii. 361.
Rhodochia, i. 223. 
RHONE, iv. 277. 
RHOPALIC VERSES, v. 269, n. 3. 
RHYME, essential to English poetry, iii. 257. 
  See BLANK-VERSE. 
RICCOBONI, Mme.,
  credulity of the English, v. 330, n. 3;
  French and English stage in point of decency, ii. 50, n. 3;
  sentimentalists of Paris, iii. 149, n. 2;
  want of respect to nobility on the English stage, v. 106, n. 4. 
RICH, the manager of Covent Garden Theatre,
  brings out the Beggar’s Opera, iii. 321, n. 3;
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Life of Johnson, Volume 6 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.