Ayre, William, absurd misrepre- | Bible, presented by Atterbury,
sentations, 129, 293
Aytoun, Professor, 416
Bicknell, Mrs., celebrated as an
actress, 137, 200, 205
Bill of complaint, 311
Bilston, 121
Baillie, Grizel, subsequently Lady Binfield, Pope's father retires to,
Murray, 199, 203 Barber, Alderman, 348 Barrier Treaty, 108
Bath Abbey bells ring in Pope, 137; the amusements there de- scribed, 137, 138; Bath, 377 Bathurst, Lord, 304, 311, 348, 402 Battersea, Lord Bolingbroke's, 226, 381, 383, 386, 387, 396 Battle of the Frogs and Mice, translated by Parnell, 234 Bavius, of Grub-street Journal,
John Martyn, F.R.S., 272 Beach, Mary, Pope's nurse, 19, 337 Bead roll of Beauties, 68
Beddington, Hertfordshire, 219 Beggar's Opera, its transcendant success, 58, 242
Belinda, Mrs., i.e. Mrs. Arabella Fermor, 440
Bellenden, Margaret, maid of honour, 199, 204
Bellenden, Mary, maid of honour, 199, 204
Bentley's critical opinion of Pope's translation of Homer, 196; hence Pope's epithet, "Slashing Bent- ley," 241
Berkeley-row. See Berkeley-street Berkeley-street, 395, 402, 458, 464 Berkeley's letter from Shotover,
Berkshire magnates, fox-hunters,
Bethell, "Blameless" Hugh, 314,
403 note, 438 Bethell, Slingsby, 456
Betterton portrait, by Kneller, copied by Pope, 90 Bevan, druggist, Lombard-street,
Bevis Mount, Pope's visit to, 329-
14; the neighbourhood de- scribed, 18; exchanged for Chis- wick, 147
Birth of Pope, date controverted, 3 Black crayon hall decoration, 226 Blackmore, Sir Richard, 141, 242 Bladdery swell of management,
Blenheim, visited by Pope, 144,
Blount of Mapledurham family,
Blounts, Pope strongly attached to the Miss, 65; reside in Lon- don, 72
Blount, Maria Teresa, 76, 402, 465, 427
Blount, Martha, "a very little girl at twenty-one," 67; malign re- ports respecting, 229, 231, 337; Pope's anxieties respecting her, 385, 387, 388, 395
Blount, Edward, desirous Pope should leave England with him, 146
Blount of Sodington family, 466-
Blow unfelt, the tear he never shed, 269
Blue Ball, Great Wild-street, 37 Bolingbroke's character, 109, 110;
his literary merits examined, 225; return from exile, 224, 226; metaphysical propositions, 295; alarmed by landing of the Pre- tender, 383; ungallant to Mar- tha Blount, 386; affected by Pope's death, 388; reasons on actualities, 389; particulars re- lative to Atossa, 393; traduces Pope, 397
Booth, Barton, player, 201, 208 Borlase, Rev. William, 447
Castle-yard, Holborn, now Castle- street, 456
Catholic families, Pope's inti- macy with the most opulent,
Catholics prohibited within ten miles of London, 382 Caution and management illus- trated, 411
Cave of Spleen, 131
Chalmers, Alexander, notes on Pope's letters, 66 note Chandos, Duke of, 289, 290 Chapman's translation of Homer, consulted by Pope, 111 Characters of Women, 316 Charles-street, residence of Martha Blount, 149
Chaucer's robust intellect, 362 Cheney, or Cheyne, "huge of size," 201, 207
Cheselden, the surgeon, 385, 389 Chesterfield, Earl of, 390 note; 402, 409
Chiswick, Pope and his mother's residence, 147 Chloe, 316
Christina, wife of Samuel Cooper, Pope's mother's sister, 12 Chronology of Pope's writings, 469-
Church or cavalier, Pope no martyr for either, 145
Cibber, Colley, excites Pope's hos- tility, 157, 158; substituted for Theobald, in the Dunciad, 373; his Apology "one of the most delightful gossiping books," 375; poet laureate, 271; desig- nated" that feather of a wit," 369, 371; letter to Pope, 372; verses on Pope's death, 391 Cleland, Colonel, 260 Cleland," Pope Alexander's man William," 258, 263, 290 Cleland, John, fabricator of Lady M. W. Montagu's letters, 148,
Cloris, an unfortunate lady, Mrs. Weston, 79
Coach and six, Pope nearly
drowned in one, 238 Collected edition of Pope's Poems, 160
Congreve, William, rich in sine- cures, 35; inheritor of Dryden's fame, 2; his death, 4 Connexion of Pope with the Blounts examined, 78 Cooper, Samuel, "Vandyke in miniature," 12; his wife Chris- tiana, Pope's aunt, 12, 88, 89; Cooper monument in St. Pancras Church, 13
Cooper, Mrs. Mary, bookseller, 381 Cope, Mrs., 86
Corinna, Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas, Henry Cromwell's mistress, 373,
Court of Dulness, by Lady M. W. Montagu, 301
Court Poems, published by "shame- less" Curll, 150, 152 Cowley, in spite of his faults, a fine poet, 361
Cowper, Ashley, editor of Nor- folk Poetical Miscellany, 221
Cowper, Judith, subsequently Mrs.
Madan, 220, 222, 223, 247 Cowper, William, author of "The Task," 223
Cox, Bessy, Prior's Chloe, 205 Craggs, elder, repartee to Arthur Moore, 70 note; proffered pen- sion to Pope, 110 Croker, John Wilson, 393 note Cromwell, Henry, characterised by Gay, 36; a" slovenly beau," 40; Pope's letters to him, surrepti- tiously obtained and sold by his mistress, Mrs. Thomas, 318, 320, 326; his death, 45 Cross Inn, Oxford, 405 Crousaz's system not understood by Pope, 356 Curll, "dauntless," piratical pub- lications of Pope's letters, 149, 317, 363, 441, 443 Cypress-tree planted by Pope, 17
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Dean of St. Patrick's, a title made immortal by Swift, 100 Death-bed penitential fervour, 390 Death of Pope imperceptible to his attendants, 391 Delany, Dr., 256, 315 Descriptive poetry depreciated by Pope, 18
Desperately wild and wicked, 76 Dennis's abuse of Pope, 51; Pope satirises Dennis, 95; Dennis's character of Pope, 152; com- ments on Pope's Iliad, 197; his thunder amalgamated with Ros- coe's fear, 318
Devil Tavern, Fleet-street, 59 Dick Distich, Pope so charac- terised in the Guardian, 408 Didappers, authors long under water, 243
Digby, Hon. Robert, 223; his last
letter to Pope, 443
Dirty Patty Blount, 77 note Disney, Colonel "Duke," reaps
his opima spolia, 136; parti- culars respecting him, 202 note Dissimulation of Pope attributed to bodily weakness, 410 Dodsley, Robert, commenced book- seller by Pope's assistance, 409; prosecuted as a hint to Pope,
Coffee-house, 22; translation of Virgil, a perfect epic perform- ance, 131; sums paid to him as literary remuneration, 114; win- dow inscriptions, 186; death and funeral, 1 Dunciad suggested by Dryden's Mac Flecknoe, 265; first sketch of the Dunciad, 254, 264; mys- terious couplet elucidated, 192, 193, 196; Cibber substituted for Theobald, 267; Fourth Book commenced, 367, 369; Dunciad most finished of all Pope's writ- ings, 370; the various editions defined, 256, 258, 263, 265 D'Urfey of tolerable reputation, 42, 43
Eckershall, "Honest Jemmy," 136, 195, 209, 352
Egyptian feast, Pope among the guests, 390
Eloisa to Abelard, 413
Elton Hall, Huntingdonshire, 260 Elizabeth's accession, or Queen's day, anti-Papal processions, 55 note; 440
Englefield, of Whiteknights, 67 English Poetry, History of, medi- tated by Pope, 360, 361 Englishman, periodical paper, by Steele, 121
Epic writers, their incapacity, 43 Epistle to Jervas, 154; Epistles
and Moral Essays praised, 289 Equivocation no lie? 154 Erinna [Judith Cowper], "blush- ing in her bays," 217, 220, 222, 223, 247
Essay on Criticism, by Pope, 49,
50; criticised by Dennis, 51 Essay on Man, Pope's magnum opus, 291-299, 393 note; abused by Mallet, 293
Ethic Epistles, revised edition, 387 Euthanasia, 312
Evans, Abel, epigrammatist, 201, 208
Evasion, a lie guarded, 324 Every day another yesterday, 39 Exeter 'Change, Gay lay there in state, 300 note
Fanny, Lord, sobriquet of Lord Hervey, Vice-Chamberlain, 301, 306, 373
Faulkner, George, printer, Dublin,
Fenton, Elijah, Pope's co-transla-
tor in the Odyssey, 217, 233, 234 Fermor, Mrs. Arabella, 107, 108 Fielding, Henry, satire entitled Pasquin, 341; parodies of poets in Tom Thumb, ib.; his family relieved by Allen, 402, 453 Floyd, Biddy or Bridget, letter to Martha Blount, 430 Fontainebleau, 351
Ford, Charles, gazetteer, 201, 207 Fortescue, Pope's "unfee'd coun- sel," 136, 300, 325, 331, 332, 334, 388, 395
Fox, Henry, Lord Holland, desig- nates Pope as a licentious lam- pooner, 344
Garden at Twickenham, plan of, 445, 446
Garrick, David, 137
Garth's Dispensary, 34; extracts from Pope's copy, with correc- tions, 342; commends Pope's Homer, 117; advice as to pro- posed amendments, 125 Gay, John, amanuensis to Aaron Hill, 156; mock pastorals com- mended, 94; congratulatory poem to Pope, the Return from Troy, 197-202; epicurean ha- bits, 58; Beggar's Opera helps him to a luxurious home, 58; his writings indelicate, 59; Gay's death affects Pope, 300; pecuniary conditions of Gay and Goldsmith compared, 59
Gay, Joseph, a name assumed by Captain Breval, 156 Geneva described by Mallet, 436,
George I., coronation of, 71 George IL, satirised by Pope, 348; characterised as Solyman the Magnificent, 343; his opinion of the triumvirate, Bolingbroke, Chesterfield, and Carteret, 364
Gerard, Lady, 385 note Gildon's Life of Wycherley, 130; Pope depreciated in his Art of Poetry, 236
Gilliver, Lawton, Pope's publisher, 258, 273, 292
Glover, "Leonidas," 854, 425 Gower's, Lady, inscribed tree, 18 Grange, Lord, of infamous cele- brity, 193, 194 Granville, subsequently Lansdowne, 35
Gray, Thomas, approbation of Pope, 345, 370 Greene, Rev. Henry, 45 Green-room society agreeable to Pope, 137
Grey, Arthur, Lady Murray's footman, 203 Grotto described, 169 note, 171, 176, 190, 445-449, 457 ; en- graved plan, 175; Over-door in- scription, 445; names of donors of the materials, 445-449 Grub-street Journal, 271; the edi- tors named, 272; Grubiana, 274 Guardian, by Steele, why discon- tinued, 121
Gulliver's Travels, 237, 238, 239, 252, 253
Habits, troublesome, contracted by Pope, 38
Half-paid poets occasion unpaid tailors, 277
Halifax, Lord, proffers Pope a
the Whigs, 46; characterised as Bufo, 411
Hall-grove, near Bagshot, 459, 461 Hambleton's, Widow, coffee-house,
Hamilton, Anthony, 50 Hampton, translator of Polybius,
291 Handel's excellence questioned, 88 Hardbound brains, 444 Hat, indicative of principles, 45 Hatless, the phrase defined, 36 Haverstock-hill, Steele's residence,
Hearne's, Thomas, the Oxford an- tiquary, scurrility on Pope's Homer, 14 note
Henley, Orator, 350, 358 Hertford, Countess of, 425 Hervey, Lord, "the silken baron," 5, 301, 306, 373
Hesiod's maxim: half more than the whole, 195
Hewitt, John, rustic lover killed by lightning, 186
Hill, Aaron, characterised as a vain projector, 282; castigatory reply to Pope, 285 Hippocrene's water, 238 Homer translated by Pope, 111, 113, 114
Homeric window inscriptions, 186 Homer's bust, by Bernini, 451 Homer's trumpet in Pope's lips
dwindles to a Jew's trump, 197 Hooke, Nathaniel,Roman historian, 390, 440
Hooke, Miss Betty, 465 Horace, Pope's imitations whence suggested, 299
Horne, Old, Thames boatman, 382 Howard, Mrs., George II.'s mis-
tress, afterwards Duchess of Suffolk, 199, 203, 329, 412 Howe, Sophia, maid of honour, 199, 205
Hyde, Lady Jane, 144
pension, 46; cause of Swift's hostility to Lord Halifax and Ibbot, 218
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