Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/297

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INDEX.
285

ligious mysteries, v. 103. Are a little worse than the papists, and more dangerous to the church and state, iv. 408. Lord Bolingbroke's remarks on them, xii. 129.

Freethinking. Abstract of Mr. Collins's Discourse on it, x. 171. Some Thoughts on, xvi. 320. The inefficacy and imprudence of preaching against it, v. 105. What the principal ornament of it, viii. 253. By whom first introduced, 254. No complete body of atheology ever appeared before Mr. Collins's Discourse on Freethinking, x. 173. That discourse sufficiently exposed by an abstract of its contents, 176.
Freind (Dr). Recommended by Dr. Swift to be physician general, xv. 280.
French. A mixture of their tongue first introduced with the Saxon by Edward the Confessor, v. 66. The genius and temper of that nation, iii. 396. The oppressive practice of the government, of calling in their money when they have sunk it very low, and then coining it anew at a higher rate, ix. 23. Have the history of Lewis XIV, in a regular series of medals, v. 469. French memoirs, to what their success is owing, xvi. 346. Their conduct and evasions in settling the articles of commerce with England, xv. 377. An instance, in which the vanity of that nation contributes to their pleasure, xvi. 293.
Friendship. Acts of it create friends even among strangers, xi. 292. Lord Bolingbroke's reflections on it, xii. 12. 57. The folly of contracting too great and intimate a friendship, 190. Reflection on it, by the duchess of Queensberry, xiii. 34. The loss of friends a tax upon long life, 38. The medicine and comfort of life, 421. Not named in the New Testament, in the sense in which we understand it, x. 193.
Frog (Nicholas). A true character of him, xvii. 142.
Frogs. Whence propagated in Ireland, xvi. 263.

Funds. Mischiefs of them, iii. 6. xiv. 22. The use of them in England commenced at the revolution, iii. 6. iv. 110. Antiquity of the practice, iii. 7. Not such real wealth in the nation as imagined, 8. The cunning jargon of stockjobbers, ibid. 97. Reflections on the managers of publick funds, 196. An account of those raised from 1707 to 1710, iv. 115.
Funerals. The only method of carrying some people to church, xvii. 296.
Furnese (sir H.). Added or altered a letter of his name with every plum he acquired, iii. 221.


G.


Gallantry. The nations who have most of it for the young are severest upon the old, xi. 7.
Gallas,