what owing Mortality, the lover's bill of Mothers justly reproved for not nursing their Motion of the gods, wherein it differs from that Motto, the effects of a handsome one Mourning: the signs of true mourning generally The method of mourning considered Mouse Alley Doctor - Much cry but little wool, to whom applied Muly Moluch, Emperor of Morocco, his great Music, banished by Plato out of his common- An excellent actor Night, a clear one described Whimsically described by William Ramsay Nightingale, its music highly delightful to a ma Nigranilla, a party lady, forced to patch on the 26 No, a word of great use to women in love mat- 355 ters 505 Novels, great inflamers to women's blood 465 November, (month of) described 349 . Nurses: the frequent inconveniences of hired ones Nutmeg of delight, one of the Persian Empe ror's titles 377 160 246 369 OATES, (Dr.) a favourite with some party ladies 57 of all government Obsequiousness in behaviour considered 95 Ode (Laplander's) to his mistress 64 Economy, wherein compared to good breeding 444 Old maids generally superstitious 251 Old Testament in a periwig Omniamante, her character 349 Opera, as it is the present entertainment ef The progress it has made in our theatre Opinion (popular) described Opportunities to be carefully avoided by the fir sex Orator, what requisite to form one Order, necessary to be kept up in the world 437 Ostentation, an inhabitant of the paradise of fools 460 451 Nature, a man's best guide 404 The most useful object of human reason 408 414 Yet more pleasant the more they resemble them - 414 More grand and august than those of art 414 is great, new, and beautiful 413 Needle-work recommended to ladies 606 A letter from Cleora against it 609 Neighbourhoods, of whom consisting 49 Nemesis, an old maid, a discoverer of judgments 483 411 objects 412 Too sparing in their encouragement to masters Parnassus, the vision of it Particles, (English) the honour done to them in Parties crept much into the conversation of the An instance of the malice of parties The dismal effects of a furious party spirit Pharamond, memoirs of his private life His great wisdom His pastorals recommended by the Spectator 528 125 125 Said to be brought by Socrates down from 7 126 10 Party patches 81 Party scribblers reproved 125 The authors of the new philosophy gratify and 420 Party not to be followed with innocence 399 The boast of pagan philosophers that they exalt human nature 634 Passion relieved by itself 520 Passionate people their faults Nat. Lee's description of it 438 His sayings of a vain promiser 448 Passions, the conquest of them a difficult task 71 Physic, the substitute of exercise or temperance 195 The strange disorders bred by our passions 215 ment The physicians, a formidable body of men Physiognomy every man in some degree master of that art Picts, what women so called No faith to be kept with them statue 16 21 21 25 86 41 41 416 sions 564 What pleases most in one 418 Pictures, witty, what pieces so called Passions of the fan, a treatise for the use of the Piety an ornament to human nature 201 x luckantave Opinions M Each other, forly of p. 553. Pleaders, few of them tolerable company No. 197 462 Pleasantry, in conversation, the faults it covers 462 151 Procuress, her trade . 25 Pliny, the necessary qualifications of a fine 483 The chief things to be considered in epic poem 267 Promises, (neglect of) through frivolous false hood Pronunciation necessary to an orator Wide ones pleasing to the fancy Prosperity, to what compared by Seneca Prudence, the influence it has on our good er Psalm 114th translated 411 556 Psalmist against hypocrisy 568 Of Providence. * Politicians, the mischief they do port of the French king's death Of Giles's Of Jenny Man s Of Will's 403 Of the temple 403 403 ages In what age the pun chiefly flourished A famous university much infested with it Why banished at present out of the learned The definition of a pun Whose privilege A pun of thought By whom punning is affected Punsters, their talents Quir, (Peter de) his letter to the Spectator about 38, 467 A generous mind the most sensible of it 238 349 551 391 The folly and extravagance of our prayers in 391 Precipice, distant, why its prospect pleases - 418 Quixotte, (Don) patron of the Sighers Club 505 412 Ridicule, the talent of ungenerous tempers 245 The different degrees of sense in the several 519 445 Ridicule, the two great branches of, in writing 249 Sentry, (Captain) a member of the Spectator's club, his character 2 Riding, a healthy exercise 115 His account of a soldier's life 152 Riding-dress of ladies, the extravagance of it |