Page:The Works of Samuel Johnson ... A journey to the Hebrides. The vision of Theodore, the hermit of Teneriffe. The fountains. Prayers and meditations. Sermons.v. 10-11. Parliamentary debates.pdf/586

 Idlers, the various employment of, iv. 198. cruel idlers reprobated, 199.

Jenyns, Soame, review of his Free Enquiry into the Nature and Origin of Evil, vi. 47.

Ignorance of ourselves, the source of most errours in human conduct, ii. 119. and admiration, their mutual and reciprocal operation, 352.

Images, how the same images strike the mind in a similar manner, as spring, night, grove, &c. iv. 100.

Imagination, the danger of indulging the excursions and amusements of it, i. 292. ii. 417.

Imitation of others, when attended with servility, highly censurable, iii. 277.

Imlac, the history of, i. 214.

Impatience of study, the mental disease of the present generation, iii. 229.

Imperia, her ambition and pride, iii. 48.

Improviso on a young heir's coming of age, i. 149.

Inch Keith, island of, account of, ix. 1.

Inch Kenneth, account of, ix. 141. account of a remarkable cave there, 143.

Inconsistency, distinguished from diversity, i. 216.

Incontinence, the effect of the magnet in the detection of, iii. 424. a scheme for the detection of it proposed, 426.

Independents and presbyterians, account of the disputes between them at Oxford, on the authority of ministers, vi. 421.

Indian, speech of an Indian on the European encroachments, iv. 388.

Indians of America, considerations on their granting their lands to foreign nations, vi. 119.

Indians on the coast of Brazil, their method of taking ostriches, vi. 345. account of them, ibid.

Indolence, the difficulty of being reformed from it, iii. 238.

Industry, necessary, as well as genius, to acquire an eminence in literary productions, ii. 124, 126.

Ingratitude, the peculiar baseness and infamy of it, iii. 206. the effect of great depravity of mind, ibid.

Injuries, the forgiveness of them necessary to happiness, iii. 363. when easiest to be practised, 364. the motives to encourage it, ibid.

Innocence, the great prerogative of, ii. 326.

Interest, the influence of it upon the resolutions and actions of life, iii. 355. a destroyer of friendship, iv. 217.

Intromission, vitious, case of, v. 470.

Inverary, account of, ix. 155.

Inverness, account of, ix. 22.

John, king, observations on Shakespeare's play of, v. 162.

Johnson, his tour to the Western islands. See Hebrides.

Johnson, Dr. life of, i. i.

Johnson, Michael, epitaph on, i. 150.

Johnson, Mrs. Samuel, i. 150.

Johnson, Mr. (of the Lay Monastery), his character, viii. 42.

Johnson, Mrs. See Stella.

Iona, account of, ix. 146.

Jonson, Ben, made his own plots, vii. 258. characterized as a writer of plays, i. 23.

Jortin, Mr. assists Pope in the notes to the Iliad, viii. 254.

Journal, of a senior fellow of a college, iv. 245. of a scholar, 346.

Journey into Devonshire, exaggeratingly related, iv. 294.

Ireland, may date its riches and prosperity from the patronage of dean Swift, viii. 219.

Irene, a tragedy, i. 31.

Iron, every where to be found, iv. 258. more valuable for the use of man than gold, ibid. necessaries of life plentiful as iron, superfluities scarce as gold, ibid.

Julian, Port, account of the inhabitants of, vi. 349.

Julius Cæsar, observations on Shakespeare's tragedy of, v. 169.