Blackstone, Sir William, ii. 237 Blackwell, Professor, i. 129, 173 Blount, Miss, ii. 389 Boccace, i. 64, 183, 332; 1, 17, 222 Bocchini, Bartholomeo, i. 202 Buffon, i. 148 Boileau, i. 62, 65: 95, 100, 148, 150, 154, 160, 189, 197, 203, 231, 236, 240, 263; . 54, 139, 150, 211, 222, 257, 286, 310, 392 Bolingbroke, Lord, i. 112, 116, 256, 321; ii. 19, 58, 115, 141, 184, 223, 265, 288, 305, 33, 357, 383, 400 Bonnecorse, M. de, i. 209 Bononcini, i. 77 Bos Du, i. 100 Bossu, i. 109, 115 Bossuet, i. 148 Bracciolini, Francesco, i. 201 Bridgewater, Lady, ii. 385 Browne, Hawkins, ii. 49, 55 Bruneleschi, i. 183 Bruni, Antonio, i. 294 Bruyere, La, i. 109, 162; ii. 122 Buckingham, Sheffield, Duke of, i. 69, 191, 329 Budgell, Eustace, ii. 234 Burlington, Earl of, ii. 172, 194 Burman, i. 169 Burnet, of the Charterhouse, i. 115, 266
Burnet, Bishop, ii. 225
Busby, Dr. n. 126
Cataline, ii. 127
"Cato, tragedy of,” i. 256 Catullus, i. 308; ii. 22 Caylus, Count de, i. 364 Cervantes, i. 127, 242; ii. 398 Chandos, Duke of, ii. 185 Chapelain, M. i. 88; ii. 216 Charles II. age of, i. 153; ii. 47 Charles V. of France's library,
Charlemagne, i. 177 Charron, ii. 122, 128 Chateaubrun, i. 259 Chaucer, i. 253, 332, 338, 394, 395; ii. 7 Chesterfield, Earl of, ii. 357 Chrysoloras, Emanuel, i. 64; ii. 230 Cibber, Colley, ii. 370 Cicero, i. 115, 116, 385 Clarendon, Lord, ii. 330 Clarke, Dr. Samuel, ii. 125, 184, 231 Claudian, ii. 20
Clergy, ignorance of, in early ages, i. 174 Clifford, Mat. ii. 41 Cobb, Mr. i. 69 Collins, William, i. 67 Colman, George, ii. 327 Commentators, remarks on, ii. 230 Congreve, i. 101, 118; ii. 223 Cornbury, Lord, ii. 331 Corneille, i. 88, 100, 111, 119, 152, 157, 258; ii. 344, 390 Correctness, remarks on, i. 196
Butler, Samuel, ii. 240, 363, Cowley, i. 76, 80; ii. 7, 8, 39, 349
Craggs, Mr. Secretary, ii. 204,
Cambridge, R. O. "Scribleriad," Crebillon, i. 148, 259; ii. 130,
"Carmina Quadragesimalia, "i. 48 Carrache, Annibal, i. 83 Caryl, Mr. i. 214
Fielding, Henry, ii. 122, 398 Flatman, Thomas, i. 85, 87 Fleury, Cardinal, ii. 134
Cumberland, William, Duke of, Fontaine, La, i. 118, 144; .
Dandilly, M. i. 88
Dante, i. 77, 182, 250, 333;
ii. 221, 371 Davila, the historian, ii. 130 Death, the prevalence of the ruling passion at, ii. 135 Demosthenes, i. 385 Denham, i. 30, 34 Desbillons, J. ii. 393. Des Cartes, i. 115; . 391 Dialogues, remarks on, ii. 197 Dionysius, i. 110, 166 Domenichino, i. 83 Donatus, i. 88
Donne, Dr. ii. 348
Dorset, Earl of, ii. 48 Drayton, i. 25, 292 Dryden, i. 10, 50, 60, 80, 90, 101, 109, 111, 143, 149, 192, 253, 255, 284, 340, ii. 7, 8, 11, 16, 132, 362;
220, 241, 377 Durer, Albert, i. 130 Dyer, i. 34;. 55
Gay, John, i. 92, 243; ii. 244 Genius, early, instances of, i. 76;
when at the highest, instanced in Virgil, Horace, Racine, Corneille, Boileau, Moliere, Congreve, Raphael, Shake- spear, Milton, Spenser, and Dryden, 100; true genius rare, 108; list of geniuses who have at once enjoyed in full vigour, a sublime and splendid imagination, a solid and pro- found understanding, and an exact and tenacious memory, 115; list of real poetical ge- niuses who succeeded Pope, 134; influence of government upon genius, 172; five ages the world in which the human mind has exerted itself in a won. derful manner, 180; geniuses apparently most original borrow from each other, ii. 51; in- stances of singularities in men of genius, 125; list of men of wit who had extensive learning, 398 Gerbert,
Gerbert, i. 176 Gildon, i. 152 Giotto, the disciple of Cimabue, i. 183. Glover's "Leonidas," i. 134; ii. 395
Godeau, M. i. 88 Godstow Nunnery, lines on the ruins of, i. 20 Gravina, J. Vincentius, i. 129, 369 "Grandison, Sir Charles," i. 271 Gray, i. 30, 134, 355, 371;
11. 55, 174, 224, 349, 405 Greek language, introduction of into Europe, i. 64 Grocyn, William, i. 64 Guido, i. 83
Guy of Arezzo, i. 183
Horace, i. 26, 98, 100, 162,
163, 168, 282, 377; ii. 22, 108, 266, 290, 305, 335 Hume, David, ii. 31, 66, 122, 158 Hurd, Dr. i. 98, 109; ii. 32
Jervas, the painter, ii. 385 Johnson, Dr. Samuel, i. 120, 146, 192, 195; ii. 113 Jonson, Ben, i. 90, 93; ii. 349 Juvenal, ii. 213
Hegemon, the author of Parodies, Lansdown, Lord, ii. 223
Lee, Nat. ii. 45
Legacy-hunters, ii. 321
Leibnitz' " Theodicée," ii. 58 Leo X. intimation of T. Warton's History of, i. 182 Lippi, Lorenzo, i. 202 Livy, i. 115
Locke, i. 113, 160; ii. 125, 271 Longinus, i. 110, 170 Loris, William de, i. 337 Lowth, Bishop, i. 13 Lucan, ii. 20
Lucretius, i. 50; ii. 22, 98, 100, 112, 162, 328 Lully, the musician, i. 61
Melancthon, ii. 126, 263
Meleager, ii. 397
Painters seldom good poets, i. 150
Melisoni, the assumed name of Painting, progress of, in England,
Meun, John de, i. 297 Middleton, Dr. ii. 253, 315 Milton, i. 6, 25, 26, 35, 90, 101, 115, 149, 153, 173, 176, 193, 253, 272, 274, 349; ii, 43, 110, 151, 166, 178, 202, 250, 347, 349 Minturnus, i. 187 Moliere, i. 100, 145, 209; ii. 124 Monarchy, its effects on genius,
i. 173 Montague, Lady Mary Wortley, ii. 250, 292
Parnell, Dr. i. 143; ii. 383
Parodies, remarks on, ii. 373 Pafcal, M. ii. 122 Patru, i. 189; ii. 393 Perizonius, i. 169 Perrault, i. 125 Perrier, Du, i. 156 Peterborough, Lord, ii. 176, 290 Petrarch, i. 64, 183, 332; ii. 222. Petre, Lord, i. 214 Petronius, i. 168 Phædrus, ii. 28
Phalereus, Demetrius, ii. 335 Philips, Edward, i. 193- Philips, Ambrose, ii. 234
Phillips, John, ii. 54
Pindar, i. 125, 370
Pitt, Christopher, i. 143, 186; ii. 326
Plagiarism, remarks on, i. 86 Plato, i. 115 Pliny, i. 110
Poetry, pastoral, i. 3; what dis- criminates poetry from history, 47; descriptive, 49; the ode, 62; resemblances not thefts, 86; scarcity of great poets, 108; epic poetry, 120; rhymes, 142; alexandrine verses, 143; an "Art of Poetry" a com- mon subject, 187; Boileau's the best, 189; the English lan- guage the least poetic of any, 197; origin of heroi-comic poetry, 200; use of parodies, 231; poets ever enemies to su- perstition and slavery, 239; epic poems, 274; translations of Latin and Greek poets, 285; epistles, 292; history of poetry, 331; list of Roman poets un- exceptionably excellent, ii. 28; didactic and descriptive poetry, 54; remarks on antithesis, 145; rhyme and blank verse, 149; independent spirit of poets, 206; remarks on the persons of vari- ous poets, 221; list of poets who wrote elegantly in Latin, 349
Poggius, ii. 5
Politian, ii. 54
POPE. Works criticised in this
Essay Pastorals, i. 2
Messiah, 10
Windsor Forest, 19 Lyric Pieces, 50 Ode on Solitude, 76 The Dying Christian to his Soul, 84
Essay on Man, 54 Moral Essays in Five E- pistles, 122 Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot, 208
Satires and Epistles of Ho- race, 265
Donne's Satires, 348 One Thousand Seven Hundred and Thirty- Eight, 351 Dunciad, 365
Imitations of Horace. and Miscellanies, 379 Epitaphs, 396
Prose Works, 397 POPE. His first poetical efforts, i. 77; Alcander, 80; profits of the Iliad and Odyssey, 105; preface to the Iliad, 111; at- tachment to painting, 149; his genius unfit for the epic, 274; his translation of Homer, 400; general character as a poet, 491
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