623 W Wit Wits. WOD 316 5 479 26 364 Which over, bacon flitch, in Statfordshire, who cobiid Whom she helped to some tansy, in the eye of all the A custom to punish uncbaste onez in Berkshire and De 100 / William and Betty, & short account of their amour, No. 598 Valetudinarians in society, not to be admitted into company 195 but on conditions, 195 Vanity, the paradise of fools, A vision of her and her attendants, 195 Vapours in women, to what to be ascribed, 1 221 Variety of men's actions proceeds from the passiers 627 Varilas, his cheerfulness and good-humour mate hin gere rally acceptable, 502 Ubiquity of the Godhead considered, Further considerations about it, 504k Venice Preserved,' a tragedy founded on a wrong with 454 Venus, the charming figure she makes in the first Em !! 80 An attendant on the spring, Verses by a despairing lover, 42, 44,51 On Phoebe ang Colin, 602 Translation of verses pedantic out of Italien, The Royal Progress, 311 To Mrs. on her grotto, 164 Vertumnus, an attendant on the spring, 464 Ugliness, some speculations upon it, 432 Vice as laborious as virtue, 211 Villacerfe (Madame de), an account of her death, and the manner of it, 522 Vinci (Leonardo), his many accomplishments, and remat able circumstance at his death, Viner (Sir Robert), his familiarity with King Charles II. 36 Virgil, his beautiful allegories foundeil on the Phloeie plata sophy, 447 His fable examined in relation to Halicarnassus' liar 93 of Æneas, 93 His genius, Compared with Homer, 304 When he is best pleased, 480 Virtue, the exercise of it recommended, Its influence, 122 Its near relation to decency, The most reasonable and genuine source of, honel. 91 Of a beautiful nature, 91 The great ornaments of it, 49 When the sincerity of it may reasonably be suspected The ust of it in our afflictions, 493 Vision of human misery, Visit: a visit to a travelled lady, which she received is bet 614 bed, described, 418 tleman, 560 Volumes: the advantage an author receives from pobliskia? his works in volumes, rather than in single picts , 174 Understanding, the abuse of it is a great evil, 283 Reasons for it, 237 Should master the passions, 39 Uranius, his great composure of his soul, 39 39 Wall, the prodigious one of China, 40 Wasps and doves, in public, who, 211 Wealth, the father of love, stances, 408 Wedlock, the state of it ridiculed by the town withers 1:48 Weed (Ephraim), bis letter to the Spectator about his Pin riage and estates, What Lord Coke said of the widows' tenure there, 474 to it, 414 Whispering place, Dionysius the tyrant's, 445 White (Moll), a notorious witch, 329 Widow (le), her manner of captivating Sir Roger de ce 2.35 verley, 63 Her behaviour at the trial of her cause, 352 Too desperate a scholar for a country gentlemaa, 352 Her reception of Sir Roger, 507 country, 562 Has been at the death of several fores, 616 marry or she does not, 626 Widows, the great game of fortune-hunters , 633 Widows' club, an account of it, 509 508 her suitors, Duty of widows in old times, 454 ronshire, Instances of their riding the black ram there, 395 Wig, long one, the eloquence of the bar, 69 343 45 82 59 588 No. 516 108 154 38 510 59 No. 15 Their 33 Not to be considered merely as objects of sight, 33 108 Women (the English), excel all other nations in beauty, 81 Signs of their improvement under the Spectator's hand, 92 The real commendation of a woman, what, 95, 104 Their pains in all ages to adorn the ontside of their heads, 98 128 477 Not pleased with modesty in men, 225 Their ambition, 477 Deluding women, their practices exposed, 23 Women great orators, 433 486 Reproved for their neglect of dress after they are mar. ried, 506 6 Their wonderful influence upon the other sex, The pleasures proceeding to the imagination from the ideas raised by them, 416 606 62 World (the), considered both as useful and entertaining, 387 The present world a nursery for the next, 111 220 World of matter, and life, considered by the Spectator, 519 522 Who among the ancient poets had this faculty, 416 Writing, the difficulty of it to avoid censure, 419 Writing unintelligibly, the art of it much improved, 379 Wits ought not to pretend to be rich, XENOPHON, his school of equity, 337 His account of Cyrus's trying the virtue of a young lord, 664 265 320 Yawning, a Christmas gambol, Youth, instructions to them to avoid harlots, 69 156 156 ZEAL, intemperate, criminal, Zemroude (Queen, her story out of the Persian Tales' 10 Zoilus, the pretended critic, had a very long beard, 63 417 504 11 mates, 399 |