Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/287

Rh vice, both native and foreign, v. 206. Methods used by the Intelligencers to be informed of all occurrences in it, ibid. More infested with beggars after the establishment of the poorhouse than before, ix. 415. Shares more deeply in the increasing miseries of Ireland than the meanest village in it, 418. Infested with colonies of beggars sent thither from England, 421. The number of houses in that city, ix. 395. Number of families, x. 287. In money matters, that city may be reckoned about a fourth part of the whole kingdom, as London is judged to be a third of England, ibid. Contest about the choice of a mayor, xi. 153. University of Dublin wants to have professorships confined to the fellows, not left at large, xii. 272. Fellowships there obtained by great merit, xiii. 157. Dean and chapter of that cathedral possessed of 4000l. a year, xii. 280. Monuments there preserved or promoted by Dr. Swift, ibid. Law and rules observed there, in the election of their mayors and aldermen, xi. 153. Remark on the vanity and luxury of feasting there, xiii. 315. Statue of king William there how treated, xiv. 294. The players there, refusing to give the secretary three hundred a year, obliged to act as strollers, xviii. 428. See Hoadley, King.

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