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XXV.

On came these wights, and many more beside,
Thick as the grains of sand upon the shore,
Thick as a swarm of flies in summer tide,
That on a dunghill hive and hover o'er;

Most had their hides all scall'd, their trousers tore;
Many sans breeches, shameless trudg'd along,
And many a noble knave and titled w--e,
With Irish bog-trotters would crowd and throng,
Carolling catches base, and filthy French chanson.

XXVI.

Like roaring waves they cover'd all the plain;
And tho' equality they still requir'd,

Each cudgell'd sore his breast with might and main,

Each to get foremost ardently desir'd."

Some fell into the dirt, and foul were inir'd,

The rest rode over them and took no heed.

Their yells, with patriotic ardour fired,

So made my flesh to quake with very dread,

That Morpheus left my couch, and all the vision fled.

The insertion of the foregoing poem (which was never printed) into your entertaining and useful publication, will much oblige,

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INDEX TO THE ANTI-JACOBIN.

4th Edition, 1799; 2 vols., 8vo.

A.

Abuse, a new and approved method of conveying, vol. i., p. 502.
Acme and Septimius, or the Happy Union, vol. i., p. 452.

Advertisements: Government strenuously advised to withdraw them from the
Jacobin Papers, vol. ii., p. 119.

Advertisements, Government, withdrawn from the Jacobin Papers, vol. ii., pp.
308, 490.

Address of City of Londonderry to Lord Camden, vol. i., p. 356; His Lordship's
Reply, 358.

Ad-r, Mr. Robert, tries to imitate Mr. Burke's style, vol. i., p. 377-fails egre-
giously-mistakes a coffin for a corpse-transmutes the head of the house
of Russell into lead, p. 378-writes half a letter to Mr. Fox-and puts the
world in high good humour, p. 422.

Agricola: his letter on the advantages of a well-regulated economy, vol. i., p. 583.
Anecdotes respecting Lord Duncan's victory, vol. i., pp. 38, 107.
Appropriate Speech-See Lord William Russell.

Assessed Taxes: benefits arising from trebling them, vol. i., p. 16-horrible effects
of, vol. i., pp. 347, 503.

Assessed Taxes evaded by the Duke of Bedford-See Bedford, Duke of.

B.

Bachelor: his letter, vol. i., p. 258-his definition of a patriot, vol. i., p. 261.
Bacchus: a life of him forged by the Morning Chronicle for the diabolical purpose
of burlesquing the life and death, and resurrection and ascension of "Our
BLESSED SAVIOUR, vol. i., p. 220, &c.

Ballynahinch, a loyal town of Lord Moira's-a meeting of rebel delegates held
there, vol. i., p. 83.

Ballynahinch, a new song, vol. ii., p. 603.

Ballynahinchers: loyal countenances of, read by Lord Moira, vol. ii., p. 507-
loyal professions of, heard by ditto-rob the king's stores-debauch his
troops-attack them, and are cut to pieces, vol. ii., p. 519.

Bedford, Duke of his Surcharge of 25 Servants and 17 Horses, vol i., pp. 230, 254.
Bedford, Duke of: justified for evading the Assessed Taxes, by the Morning
Post, vol. i., p. 255-and by the Morning Chronicle, p. 297-proved to have
gained much honour by evading the Assessed Taxes, by the Morning Post,
vol. i., p. 256-cleared from any attempt to evade the Assessed Taxes, by a
note of admiration, by the Courier, p. 350.

Beresford, Mr., character of him, vol. ii., p. 556.
Bit of an Ode to Mr. Fox, vol. i., p. 422.
Blockade of the Seine, vol. i., pp. 571, 616.

326

Blasphemy attempted without success by the Morning Post, vol. i., p. 505-and
by the Courier-fully succeeded in by the Morning Chronicle, vol. i., p. 325,
&c.

Bosville, Mr., Banker to the Corresponding Society, vol. i., p. 409.

Brownrigg, Mrs. Inscription for the Door of her Cell in Newgate, vol. i., p. 35.
British Merchant, his Letter on the misrepresentations of the Party, with respect
to the continuance of the War, vol. i., p. 593.

Brissot's Ghost, vol. ii., p. 236.

Burdett, Sir Something: his affectionate mention of Mr. Paine at the Shake-
speare Tavern, vol. i., p. 136.

Burdett, Sir Francis, runner to the Corresponding Society, vol. i., p. 408.
Buonaparte: his health given by Mr. Macfungus, vol. i., p. 35-his Letter to the
Commandant at Zanté, vol. ii., p. 535.

C.

Camille Jordan, asserts that one of our Jacobin Newspapers is in the pay of
France, vol. i., pp. 507, 622; vol. ii., pp. 17, 51, 86, 488.

Cambridge Intelligencer, detected and exposed, vol. ii., pp. 263, 296.

Chevy Chase; a Ballad to the Tune of, vol. ii., p. 21.

Choice, The: an Ode, vol. i., p. 263.

Clare, The Earl of, Character of, vol. ii., p. 544.

Clare, Earl of: proposes a question respecting the extent of Lord Moira's
DUPERY, vol. ii., p. 518.

Clever: See Mr Robert Ad-r, vol. i., p. 422.

Coughing and laughing: See Mr. John Nicholls, vol. i., p. 186.

Courtney, Mr., fully convicted of kidnapping-rhymes, vol. i., p. 376.

Coalition, The New: an Ode, vol. i., p. 599.

Coalition of Kings, vol. ii., p. 546.

Constant Reader: his Letter on the Designs of our foreign and domestic Enemies,
vol. i., pp. 544, 597.

Courier, The; a mad-and foolish-and odious-and contemptible paper, passim.
Picked up by a Gentleman in the streets, for the sake of its superior infor-
mation!!! vol. ii., p. 230.

D.

Detector: his Letter on the pretended Treaty of Pavia, vol. i., p. 474-On the
Treaty of Pilnitz, vol. ii., p. 37-On the Coalition of Kings, vol. ii., p. 546.
Description of a very extraordinary Plant now growing at Paris, vol. ii, p. 573.
Description of Mr. Fox's Radical Reform, vol. i., p. 396.

Description of a Scribbler for the Jacobin Papers, vol. i., p. 613.

Description of the Jacobin Prints, vol. ii., p. 119.

Decius Mus: his account of the Secessions in the Roman Common Wealth, vol.
i., p. 261.

Dismissal of the Duke of Norfolk, vol. i., p. 429.

Duncan, Lord: Anecdotes relative to his Victory, vol. i., pp. 38, 107.

Duke, The, and the Taxing Man, vol. i., p. 265.

Dupery of Lord Moira, vol. ii., pp. 36, 518, &c., &c.

E.

Edwards, Mr. Bryan: offers to pay for Mr. Nicholls's dinner at the Crown and
Anchor-finds his pockets pick'd-his exclamation thereat, vol. i., p. 410.
Elegy on the Death of Jean Bon Saint André, vol. ii., p. 314.

Epigram on the Loan upon England, vol. i., p. 267.

Epistle, Poetical, to the Editors of the Anti-Jacobin, vol. i., p. 371. Reply to
ditto, vol. i., p. 371.

Epistle, Poetical, to the Author of the Anti-Jacobin, vol. i., p. 486.

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Erskine, Mr.: his definition of Himself at the Meeting of the Friends of Freedom
-clothed with the infirmities of man's nature-in many respects a finite
being-disclaims all pretensions to superhuman powers-has been both a
soldier and a sailor-has a son at Winchester school-has been called by
special retainers into many parts of the country, travelling chiefly in post-
chaises-is of Noble, perhaps, Royal Blood-has a house at Hampstead-
faints between the subdivisions of his discourse-is conveyed to his car-
riage-tricked by the chairmen who were hired to draw it-and finally
taken home by his own horses, vol. i., p. 125, &c.

Expedition against Ostend, vol. ii., pp. 367, 377, 442, 486, 596.

E.

Finance, vol. i., pp. 16, 44, 85, 143, 212, 244, 313, 391, 607; vol. ii., p. 224.
Foreign Intelligence, vol. i., pp. 41, 73, 105, 138, 170, 206, 238, 267, 305, 339, 382, 424,
453, 491, 528, 560, 600, 629; vol. ii., 23, 57, 101, 136, 174, 206, 239, 280, 318, 346,
389, 430, 461, 499, 540, 577, 608.

Foreign Intelligence Extraordinary, vol. ii., p. 535.

Fox, Mr: his Speech at the Meeting of the Friends of Freedom, vol. i., p. 92—
his Radical Reform described, 396-Celebration of his Nativity at the Crown
and Anchor, 408-his Speech, 412-his Song, 413-A Bit of an Ode to, 422—
Lines written under a Bust of him, 489—his dismissal from the Privy Council,
vol. ii., p. 293.

French Revolution, origin and progress of, vol. i., p. 22.

French Revolution, not to be defended or illustrated by a comparison with the
civil wars of this country, vol. ii., p. 17.

Friend of Humanity and the Knife-Grinder, vol. i., p. 71.

Friends of Freedom, Meeting of the, vol. i., pp. 91, 125.

Freemason's observations on the Duke of Norfolk's toast, vol. i., p. 587.

Francis, Mr. his Novel of a Pamphlet grievously abused by the Morning
Chronicle, vol. ii., p. 338.

G.

German Stage: see the "Rovers'

Government Advertisements: see Advertisements.

Guillotine, la Sainte: a new Song attempted from the French, vol. i., p. 136.

H.

Head of the Russells, transmuted into lead, vol. i., p. 377.

Higgins, Mr., of Saint Mary Axe-see "Progress of Man," "Loves of the Tri-

angles," the "Rovers," &c.

How to praise one's friends, vol. i., p. 397.

Horrible Effects of the Assessed Taxes, vol. i., pp. 347, 503.

Hoche, General: his Instructions to Colonel Tate, vol. i., pp. 480, 498.

I.

Imitation of Horace, lib. iii. carm. xxv., vol. i., p. 627.

Instructions for Colonel Tate, vol. i., pp. 480, 498.

Introduction, The, vol. i., p. 11.

Introduction to the Poetry, vol. i., p. 31.

Invasion, The; or, The British War Song, vol. i., p. 103.

Ingratitude, the characteristic vice of Jacobinism, vol. i., p. 579.

Italicus: his letter on the plunder of the French in Italy, vol. i., p. 367.

J.

Jacobin, The, vol. ii., p. 133.

Jacobin Papers, an epidemic malady among them, vol. ii., p. 120.

L.

Latin Verses, De Navali Laude Britanniæ, vol. ii., p. 604.

Lead-see Head of the Russells.

Letter to Earl Moira on the state of Ireland, vol. i., p. 77, 109, 161.
Letter from Letitia Sourby, vol. i., p. 195–from a Bachelor, p. 258-from Decius
Mus, p. 261-from an Irishman, 299-from Italicus, 367-from Monitor, 370
-from Adolphus Hicks, 380-from a Constant Reader, 534-from Agricola,
583-from Speculator, 586-from a Freemason, 587-from a Symposiast, 589
-from a British Merchant, 593-from a Constant Reader, 597-from Mucius,
623-from Historicus, vol. ii., p. 17-from an Irishman, 35-from a Sucking
Whig, 53-from a British Seaman, 93-from an Anti-Catiline, 128-from
Samuel Shallow-from a Friend to the Landed Interest, 269-from Histo-
ricus, 491-from A. Z., on Original Principles with respect to the French
Revolution, 499-from a Calm Observer, 525-from Hibernicus, 554-from
Perseus, 558-from a Church of England Man, 561-from Cato, 564-from
Hortensius, 573.

Letter from General Buonaparte to the Governor of Zanté, vol. ii., p. 535.
Lies, vol. i., pp. 46, 115, 156, 178, 217, 248, 322, 346, 395, 453, 460, 499, 538, 573, 612;
vol. ii., pp. 2, 4, 43, 78, 116, 151, 193, 227, 304, 330, 377, 440, 481, 512.

Lille, translation of a letter from, vol. i., p. 26.

Lines written at the close of the year 1797, vol. i., p. 330.

Lines written under the Bust of Charles Fox at the Crown and Anchor, vol. i.,
p. 489.

Lines written under the Bust of a certain Orator, not at the Crown and Anchor,
vol. i., p. 490.

List of ships and vessels belonging to France, Spain, and Holland, taken, &c.,
since the commencement of the war, vol. ii., p. 120.

Loves of the Triangles: a Mathematical and Philosophical Poem, vol. ii., pp. 162,
200, 274.

M.

Manners and Character of the Age, vol. ii., p. 564.

Marten, Henry: inscription for his apartment in Chepstow Castle, vol. i., p. 35.
Macfungus, Mr.: his speech at the meeting of the Friends of Freedom, vol. i.,
p. 131.

Meeting of the Friends of Freedom, vol. i., pp. 91, 125.

Misrepresentations, vol. i., pp. 19, 47, 117, 157, 180, 218, 252, 293, 324, 347, 396, 436,
470, 501, 541, 577, 615; vol. ii., pp. 8, 46, 79, 121, 154, 195, 231, 307, 333, 441, 484,
515, 597.

Mistakes, vol. i., pp. 56, 124, 159, 188, 221, 257, 851, 397, 439, 473, 504, 543, 581, 620;
vol. ii., pp. 12, 48, 84, 126, 154, 199, 235, 308, 338, 385, 443, 484, 519.
Misapprehension on the subject of the proposed Increase of the Assessed Taxes,
vol. i., p. 190.
Moira, Lord: the singularity of his conduct, vol. i, p. 58-his story of the Child
and the Rush Light contradicted, p. 188-his weakness, p. 252-lays it down
as a general principle, that the liberty of the press is destroyed in Ireland,
p. 274-is referred to the Press and the Dublin Evening Post, p. 275
-famous for acting a bull, vol. ii., p. 14-duped to an extraordinary degree,
p. 86-a great physiognomist, p. 517-a great dupe, p. 518, &c., &c., &c.
Moira, Lord: Letter to, on the State of Ireland, vol. i., pp. 77, 109, 161.
Moira, Lord: Ode to, vol. i., p. 380.

Moira, the late Earl of: his account of the celebrated enchantress, Moll Coggin,
vol. i., p. 299.

Moll Coggin: the late Earl of Moira's account of her, vol. i., p. 299.
Morning Chronicle, calls the Thanksgiving for Lord Duncan's Victory a Frenchi-
fied Farce, vol. i., p. 157-insults the King-maligns the Parliament-belies
the Resources-ridicules and reviles the spirit of the Nation-advises uncon-
ditional submission to France-declares that our arms are without energy,
our hearts without courage, and our sword at the service of every puny
whipster, vol. ii., p. 85, &c.

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