Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/402

390 , iii. 103-105. Their reason for admitting a medley herd of sectaries under their banner, 134. Never appeal to the people but when they have first poisoned their understandings, 152. The body of them an odd mixture of mankind, 163. Their charge of passive obedience what, 164. Whether they or the tories, considered as a party, are most to be feared by a prince, 179. Have no great veneration for crowned heads, 180. Preferring the monied to the landed interest an avowed maxim with them, 182. The crafty design of their address to the queen, not to consent to a peace without restitution of Spain, 205. The topicks of reproach bestowed by them and the tories on each other, 207. They and the dissenters have the same political faith, 212. Would have brought in king James again, when disobliged by king William, 213. Have a natural faculty of bringing in pretenders, 215. The rise and progress of the distinction of whig and tory, 236-242. Publick Spirit of the Whigs, 271. The printer of it brought before the house of lords, xi. 328. Encourage the writers in their defence, without regard to merit, iii. 273. Their three most eminent writers, 274. Some of them engage in a plot to restore king James, 284. Have, upon all occasions, affected to allow the legitimacy of the pretender, 303. Of every hundred atheists, deists, &c. ninety-nine are whigs, iv. 389. Find out popery and the pretender in every thing, 404. For what reason they have taken atheists or freethinkers into their body, 417. The complete political catechism of a whig, v. 284, 285. Hate the tories more than they do the papists, 296. The catholicks true whigs, in the best and more proper sense of the word, 334. The origin of the word, xvi. 258. Are joined by the dissenters in agreeing to a bill against occasional conformity, xi. 205. Great division among them, 461. Make their court to tories, ibid. Their plan of a procession on queen Elizabeth's birthday, xv. 190. xviii. 87. Reasons why that term of distinction should be dropped, xviii. 117. What the only cause of quarrels the whigs can have against the court, 130. The disappointment of that party, on losing a favourite vote, 133. Would transfer the virtue of nonresistance from the subject to the sovereign, xvi. 309. The Kitcat-club consisted of whigs, xviii. 141. Lord Somers's remark on whig bishops, 144. See Ministry, Tories.

Whitshed (lord chief justice). Verses on him, vii. 282, 283. On the motto on his coach, 272. His conduct very different from the dictate of his device or motto, ix. 139. 202. A short character of him, 217. His unjust proceedings against the author of