How to Make an Index
d Satirica
; again perhaps in a preface; a third time in an analytical form through means of a table of contents; after all this skirmishing he brings up his h
successful in producing humorous indexes, and others have seen their way to make an author ridiculous by satir
nd indexes in general, we found them presenting us a variety of pleasant memories and contrasts. We thought of those to the Spectator, which we used to look at so often at school, for the sake of choosing a paper to abridge. We thought of the index to the Pantheon of Fabulous Histories of the Heathen Gods, which we used to look at oftener. W
the Indicator; the reprint (2
a man's being better pleased with other writers than with himself. Our index seemed the poorest and most second-hand in the world after theirs: but let any one read theirs, and then call an index a dry thing if he can. As there 'is a soul of goodness in things evil' so there is a soul of humour in things dry, and in things dry by profession. Lawyers know this, as well as index-makers, or they would
w entries cho
l.
scheme to go
prove
l.
adding words of their
men,
heard, judge
laid against th
e and after marriag
sift impertinences in
People die
l.
omen, its ill
onour, thei
Breakfast in Queen
nificant on m
tances
l.
pt to admire
posed for the Impro
merly in this Isla
ation made in the preface: "Notwithstanding the learning and care of the compilers of the first Indexes to these volumes, some slight inaccuracies have passed, and where observed they are altered. Few readers who desire to know Mr. Bic
ntry-Wife: (M
s are longer and more elaborate than those in the latter. The references are not made to the pages, as is
l.
and generally s
known till some years
h excel all other
mprovement under th
ages to adorn the ou
Dunton, each volume of which contained "An Alphabetical Table for the speedy finding of any que
came of it af
Crown and Scepter in Cheap
Glassenbury, wha
, whither wen
was he a ma
rected in Cheapsid
tury miscellany was made by Mr. J. Underhill,
e author, which he styled an index. He wrote: "I have added a ludicrous index purely to show (fools) that I am in jest." This was afterwards omitted, but D'Israeli reprint
ion of early Discipline, discovering the sur
country school, with a short sketch
, apron and a tremendous descr
ous nicety in the ceremo
her chair of state, conferring honours distri
ry London-Trivia. The poet added a few entries to the index in the quarto edition of h
their ar
at cries th
nsolence to b
ariots prejudi
sfortune of fal
n into a hol
is skill at
before the invention
ow stolen of
r the wall t
ischievous in
whom to
om to be
consequence of
to the inimitable Biglow Papers by the accomplished author, James Rus
st son of,
ably the fir
instilling certain o
s Veni, Vidi, Vici censu
h, comfortable a
it of, convenient
s swearing (Fuseli
yllable. Har
letter in bot
Borrows money. (For full part
tract, safe
are from the
a, Saint, happy
opular, the
See Neptune. [There is
t. See
osed for use of
accident t
make a poor fig
ity. Compared to an old
s, a primiti
the best guide in
l to alligators. Cul
ater combi
overing for out
ay,' a nota
the, See
s, its unha
angerous to
n example of the skilled controversialist spoken of by Hill Burton as letting fly "a few Parthian arrows from the Index." He wa
Boyle the clever volume with which they thought to annihilate the great D
sop examin'd (1698) has no index; but Dr. King's work was added to the second edition published
ry of the MS. prov'd fa
Benne
Gibso
King,
Bentley
s civil usage
vil lan
r. B
r W.
gular hu
r. B
dward Sh
y to Fo
Ingen
ng matter
ing au
ibing and
nd pref
r. B
izza
Nev
amer
or of H
alma
. Ben
eal to F
spiciou
false
decency in contra
from Plato t
in confident as
f Re
Judg
Sinc
und skill
begin
En
ly more vindict
," committed himself irretrievably to the wrong side in this way: "A captain whose name was B-ntl-y, in person the most deformed of all the moder
uit of armor which had been given him by all the gods immediate
some of our greatest writers, but all is to be traced to Bentley's de
s ever written down except by himself, and quotes what the historian wrote after perhaps his tenth perusal of Bishop Monk's life of the great critic:
m completely. Bentley's Dissertation upon the Epistles of Phalaris, with an answer to the objections of the Hon. C. Boyle, Esq., first appeared in 1699. De Quincey described it as one of the three mo
Sicilian towns, &c., were in those letters called by names that did not arise until that prince had been dead for centuries. Manufactures were mentioned that were of much later invention. As handle
ee-Masons (De Quincey's
ogy (De Quincey's Wo
uct. He wrote to Boyle: "In laying the design of the book, in writing above half of it, in reviewing [revising] a great part of the rest, in transcribing the whole and attending the press, half a year of my life went away. What I promised myself from hence was that some service would be done to your reputation, and that you would think so. In the first of these I was not mistaken-in the latter I am. When you were abroad, sir, the highest you could preva
ry, compiled by Folkestone Wi
reat Bentley. His Journey to London is a very ingenious parody of Dr. Martin Lister's Journe
he Transactioneer (1700) and Useful Transactions in Philosophy (1708-1709) were very galling to the distinguished naturalist, and annoyed the Royal Society, whose Philosophical Transactions were unmercifully laughed at. To both the tracts referred to were prefixed satirical tables
of the contents of
s Opinion of
nt of Sir H
Dr.
Mr. Ol
Dr.
losophical Transactions t
ellence of
rness and p
ius to
on Jamai
icks in
l in Bo
ontents of the "Voyage to Caj
of the
e bramble in
s intro
higher th
od for
because it had the effect of balking a distinguished political character
among the non-jurors. In 1692 he published "Remarks in the Grande Tour of France and Italy, lately performed by a Person of quality. London. Printed by E. H. for Tho. Basset at the George in Fleet Street,
epresent during the remainder of his life. In 1702 he published another volume of travels: "Several Years' Travels
Remarks, with the addition of a satirical index, as an electioneering squib. This reprint appeared as "Remarks in the Grand Tour ... performed by a Person of Quality in the year 1691. The second edition to which is added a table of the principa
s index was drawn up by Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford; but this was probably only a party rumour. Dr
to be Speaker of the House of Commons, in the Parliament, that met Oct. 25 1705. When notwithstanding the Whigs and Court joining to keep me out of the chair, and the greatest violence towards the Members, turning out some, and threatening others, to influence their votes, I had the honour (and I shall ever esteem it a
tions trifling or impertinent, an allowance was due for my being very young, when they were made. But the performances of others, not entitled to
t great value upon the book. He added a note
it to be sold after my death, and to become a subject of contemptuous gossip, or an instrument of party annoyance, I think it a proper act of respect and kindness for the Bromley family, for me to put it in possessio
.
ated. Even the family were little likely to mind the public seeing a political s
to his house was asked if he had seen Mr. Bromley's Travels; and when the answer was in the negative, Harley at once
r. Parr infers that the book is not misrepresented, but there can be little doubt t
he other side of Rochester bridge, though c
e clear, and contains the n
h is plain and decent, and the city appears well peopled. When I left it and passed th
some further entri
of them places of Strength
shore, lies on the coast, p. 2." [The
n the Roads in France pro
ere indexed i
, that from them alone an Englishman will be satisfied he is out
less room than sixteen o
nded on the
the Old Testament are in the uppermost reaching round the room and are sixteen. Those of the new are under them, but being only
oper to take a view of the
ersion of t
ost desirable and we chose it between Sienna and Floren
was grandmother to the present Duk
f the following perfec
stina grandmother of this Duke in the m
iece of information, because the Jews were obliged to wear these hats in other parts of Italy, and it was the knowledge o
is t
akespea
one consisted in bringing to light and insisting upon the author's political attitude when he referr
those of King Charles the Second and his Queen, King James t
en should occupy so important a public office as Speaker of the House of Common
nsequent on the trial of Sacheverell he was in 1710 chosen Speaker without opposition. T