Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/311

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INDEX.
299

284. Instance of his unjust conduct, x. 368. Very few royal grants bestowed in his reign, iv. 157. Gave commissions to several presbyterians to assist him against the prince of Orange, v. 300. When he made a contemptible figure, vi. 333. Conspiracy to seize him, xviii. 73.

Japan. Court and empire of it, representing the administration of George I, x. 267.
Idleness. What the greatest mark of it, xiii. 47.
Jesuits. Their constant practice toward us, ii. 396. Several of them came over to England in the character of prophets, v. 18.
Jews. A story of one condemned to be burnt at Madrid, ix. 128.
Ignorance. The greatest inventions produced in times when it prevailed, v. 455. Not mother of devotion, though perhaps of superstition, v. 109.
Imagination. Whether the creatures of it may not be as properly said to exist as those seated in the memory, ii. 170. The strong effects of it, v. 25.
Imitation. The use of it in poetry, xvii. 25.
Immortality. Two kinds of it, v. 166.
Impeachments. Instances of several in Greece at different times, ii. 305. Are perhaps the inherent right of a free people; but to what states were anciently peculiar, 328. When they commenced in the Roman, 329. In what cases only recourse to be had to them, ibid. Wherein the popular impeachments in Greece and Rome agreed, 331. Not allowed in Ireland, xi. 166.
Indefeasible. Hard to conceive how any right can be so, though queen Anne's was so as far as the law could make it, iii. 24.
Indemnity. The use and seasonableness of an act of indemnity, iii. 137. 203.
Independents. The rise and growth of them, v. 294. Mingled with the mass of presbyterians after the restoration, and sunk undistinguished into the herd of dissenters, 297.
Indians. Their religion and ours, ii. 260. Arts and sciences derived to us from them and the Egyptians, xvii. 72. Whence they acquired their knowledge, 74. An Indian king's description of London, v. 200.
Infidelity. An expedient to keep in countenance corruption of morals, v. 108.
Informers. State, law respecting them in Lilliput, vi. 53. Reckoned infamous, though an honest man may be called by that name, x. 284. Letter from one to the lord treasurer, xi. 321.
Ingratitude. A capital crime in Lilliput, vi. 56. The general complaint against it misplaced, xvii. 385. None but direct villains capable of it, ibid. Is two-fold, active and passive, iii.
29.