Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 19.djvu/395

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INDEX.
383
Thornhill (Mr). Kills sir Cholmley Dering in a duel, xv. 42. Is afterward killed himself, by two assassins, 112.

Thoughts on various Subjects (by Swift), v. 453. x. 241. (by Pope), xvii. 373. What gave rise to these, v. 453.
Three Champions (a poem). Account of it, xviii. 31.
Tidcomb (colonel). A story of him, ix. 372.
Tillotson (archbishop). His observation respecting the Irish clergy, xi. 306.
Tim and the Fables. A poem, printed in one of the Intelligencers, vii. 410.
Time. Triumphed over, in these latter ages, by the Grub street writers, ii. 77. The only preacher listened to, v. 454. The Power of Time, a poem, viii. 92.
Tindal[1] (the supposed author of The Rights of the Christian Church, &c). Remarks on his book, xvi. 179. Account of him, ii. 396. xvi. 181.

Tisdall (Dr). Dr. Swift's letter to him, on the subject of his addresses to Mrs. Johnson, xi. 17. Dr. Swift very candidly assures him, that he never saw any person whose conversation he entirely valued, but Mrs. Johnson's, 18. And freely gives his consent to her marrying Dr. Tisdall, 19.
Tithes. Reasons against settling them by a Modus, x. 252. The misapplying them to secular persons an act of injustice, iv. 391. Paid with great disadvantage in Ireland, ix. 247. 249. x. 254. Impossible for the most ill minded clergyman to cheat in his tithe, though he is liable to be cheated by every cottager, v. 288. x. 256. Tithe of flax made very easy to the farmer by the clergy's indulgence, x. 259. 265. The clergy's right to them an older title than any man has to his estate, xvi. 212. A security to them, to let the laity have a share, xi. 167.
Titles of Honour. Means by which they are often procured, vi. 232.
Titus (colonel). Made a privy counsellor by king James II, for having asserted in parliament that he was a papist, iii. 173.
Toland. An Irish priest, ii. 396.
Toleration. Pressed for by the whigs and fanaticks, though denied by them to others, iii. 146.
Torcy (Mons. de). His negotiations in 1709 ineffectual, through the obstinacy of some of the allies, iv. 61. His opinion of the great consequence of the British troops, 218. On the obstinacy of the Dutch, would have persuaded the queen to join the French, in compelling them to a peace, ibid. Was the first who moved his master to apply for a peace, 236. In the whole of his
  1. "Who Virtue and the Church alike disowns;
    Thinks that but words, and this but bricks and stones."
    Pope, Imitation of Horace, Book I. Ep. vi.
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