Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/396

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384
INDEX.

proceedings with our ministers, acted with the utmost candour and integrity, ibid.

Tories. Chiefly brought about the revolution, though the whigs afterward claimed the merit of it, iii. 6. 191. The bulk of the landed men in England generally of them, 96. Did not put their resentments in balance with the safety of the nation, when the whig party was at the helm, 98. What passive obedience, as professed and practised by them, 166. Whether they or the whigs, considered as a party, are most to be feared by a prince, 179. Their principles with respect to government, 183. With respect to the church sufficiently known, ibid. The topicks of reproach which they and the whigs liberally bestow on each other, 207. The original and application of the cant words whig and tory, 236-242. Were the greatest opposers of the proceedings of king James the Second, iv. 389. Charged with being ready to leap into popery, 395. All supposed to be jacobites, and consequently papists in their hearts, viii. 270. Their principles, opposed to those of the whigs, iv. 24. Tories and whigs born with a natural antipathy to each other, and engage, when they meet, as naturally as the elephant and the rhinoceros, v. 203. Many of them, discontented at the peace, xv. 388. Act parts contrary to their own imagined interests, xi. 271. View of their conduct before they came into power, xviii. 126. See Ministry, Whigs.
Torturing boots. When and how used, x. 384.
Toulon. The design of taking it, scandalously revealed, iii. 369. Not disclosed by the clerk of a certain great man, as affirmed, 428.

Townshend (lord viscount). Ambassador extraordinary to settle the barrier treaty, iii. 431. Which afterward sat heavy on his spirits, iv. 49. Declared by the commons an enemy to his queen and country, 126. 145. Causes of his disgrace in the beginning of king George the First's reign, xi. 461.
Traerbach. Delivered up to the imperialists by the Dutch without consulting the queen, iii. 313.
Tragedies. Why more frequented by the ladies than comedies, xvii. 386. Human life is at best but a tragedy, xii. 252. 270.
Transformation of Sexes. The happy effects of it, xvii. 91.
Transubstantiation. The doctrine of it ridiculed, ii. 122. One principal occasion of the reformation, 125.
Trapp (Dr. Joseph). Account of, xviii. 191. Remarks on his translation of Virgil, ibid. 422. His character of the present set of whigs, xv. 46. His poem on the duke of Ormond, 115.
Travels. The advantage of reading modern ones, xi. 36.
Travellers. Often tedious and trifling, vi. 98. A young traveller just returned home often the worst bred person in company, x. 221.
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Traulus