Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/368

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356
INDEX.

Horace, 15. His remark on the rabble, 57. On Plato, 59. On riches, ibid. His censure of Cato, 60. Describes his improvements in his rural retreat, 62. Henry Guy's advice to him, 73. Moral and critical remarks on Seneca and his writings, ibid. Remarks respecting Mr. Prior, then lately deceased, 76. His sentiments of the Freethinkers, 129. What kind of free thinker he laboured to be, 130. His conduct at variance with his professions on this subject, 131. Talks of a bulky volume, to be called Noctes Gallicæ, 133. The manner in which he would wish to divide life, 229. His reflections on the too frequent consequences of a liberal education, 239. On chronological inquiries, 419. His description of the plan of Mr. Pope's Ethick Epistles, with some reflections on the subject of them, 422. Makes some proposals to Dr. Swift, respecting the exchange of his deanery of St. Patrick for the rectory of Burfield, in Berkshire, 476. His judgment of Berkeley's and Delany's treatises, 479. Reflections on some points of moral philosophy, xiii. 130. Character of the earl of Oxford, 131. His judgment of Mr. Pope's Moral Essays, 133. His first lady a descendant from the famous Jack of Newbury, xv. 103. His second lady's letter to Dr. Swift, on the subject of Gulliver's Travels, and other matters, xii. 219. xiii. 466. Succeeded Mr. Henry Boyle as secretary of state, iii. 116. After Mr. Harley was stabbed by Guiscard, takes to himself the merit of being the intended victim, iv. 305. 324. His great application to publick affairs, when secretary of state, iv. 151. Sent with a very extensive commission to France, iv. 220; which he executed with great honour, being received at court there with particular marks of distinction and respect, 221. In 1711, refused to sit in the council with the duke of Somerset, 38. His instructions to Mr. Prior at Paris, xi. 222. A union between him and Harley attempted in vain, 402. A congratulation to him on his being turned out of office, 420. Requested by Swift to write the History of the Four last Years of Queen Anne, xii. 19. A print of Aristippus, with a proper motto, in memory of him, 28. Final Answer written by him, 424. The disagrement between him and Harley, the ruin of the tory party, xiii. 344. Supposed to be writing in France the history of his own times, 362. 400. His character, iii. 116. iv. 310. 334. xv. 176. His second wife, xiv. 116. Extract from his will, xix. 160.

Salique Law. How applied by France to its own advantage, in the succession to other kingdoms, iv. 222. Observations on its probable consequences to the other European powers, ibid.
Salisbury (Roger, bishop of). His castle and treasures seized by king Stephen, xvi. 68. Originally a poor curate in Normandy, but advanced by Henry I to the highest rank, 69. One of the first who swore fealty to Maude, and among the first who revolted to Stephen, ibid. Fell a sacrifice in his old age to the riches he had amassed for its support, ibid.
Sancroft