Page:Hudibras - Volume 2 (Butler, Nash, Bohn; 1859).djvu/324

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
460
INDEX.

principles, 310; left to his meditations in the dark, 314; is jeered by an unseen spirit, 315; his controversy with the spirit, 317; escapes by the spirit's assistance, 323; his flight, 324; discovers his champion to be Ralpho, 397; finds he has been out-witted, 400; re-assumes his courage, 401; harangues on the art of war, 407; ridicules, but adopts, Ralpho's advice, 413; repairs to counsel learned in the law, 415; his conference with the lawyer, 417; resolves to address a letter to the widow, 423; his epistle, 424; despatches it by his Squire, 435; the lady's answer to the Knight, 436.

Hue and cry, 161 and n. 3.

Huffer, meaning of the word, 255 and n. 3.

Hugger-mugger, 95 and n. 4; 156; 399 and n. 1.

Hugo, scout-master to Gondibert, 46, n. 1.

Human species, its original formation, 296 and n. 3.

Hums and hahs, 374 and n. 2.

Hutchinson, Dr, his Essay on Witchcraft, 215, n. 5; 216, n. 3.

Hypocrisy, the sin of, 310.

Ibrahim, the illustrious Bassa, 168, n. 3.

Ichneumon, or water-rat of the Nile, 34, n. 8.

Ideas, not in the soul, 25, n. 3.

Idus and Calendæ, 251 and n. 1.

Ignorance, asserted to be the mother of devotion, 98, n. 3.

Imps and Teats, 395 and n. 2.

Independents, sneer at the, 111, n. 1; alluded to, 120, n. 2; 121, n. 1; enemies to learning, 131, n. 2; their mental reservations, 174, n. 4; 175, n. 1; their dexterity in intrigue, 193, n. 6; treachery of the, 273, n. 3; doings of the, 319; have no power, 320 and n. 1; their enthusiasm, 321 and n. 1; charged with altering a text of Scripture, 326, n. 5; a kind of church dragoons. 331 and n. 2; their charges against the Presbyterians, 376, n. 3.

Indian lake, 158 and n. 5.

Indians, 362 and n. 5; sacrifice to their idols, 175 and n. 3: their actions, 362 and n. 5; their dames, 438 and n. 3.

Infants, exchange of, 302 and n. 2.

Insane, influenced at the change and full of the moon, 314 and n. 3.

Insect weed, 395 and n. 1.

Inward ears, 274 and n. 2.

Inward light, 285; 306.

Ion, his address to his mother Creusa, 50, n. 3.

Irish Soldiers, with Tails, 163, n. 3.

Iron, 86 and n. 1; burns with cold, 291 and n. 2.

Ironside, 306 and n. 2.

Island, with four seas, 289 and n. 2.

Isle of Wight, Treaty of, 377.

Issachar, the tribe of, 263, n. 1.

Jackson, a milliner, 46, n. 3.

Jacob's Staff, 245 and n. 2.

Jail, perpetual, 391 and n. 2.

James, King, his Dæmonology, 154, n. 2.

Jarre, Chevalier, died from fear, 143, n. 1.

Jealousies and Fears, use of the words, 3, n. 4.

Jefferies, Thomas, Esq., Life, iii.

Jefferys, Judge, anecdote of, 313, n. 4.

Jesuits, their equivocations, 171 and n. 4; evasions, 183 and n. 5.

Jesus Christ, his expected appearance, 337 and n. 1.

Jewish Tribes, 382 and n. 1.

Jezebel, .399, 410.

Jiggumbobs, 272 and n. 4.

Jimmers, Sarah, 257 and n. 3.

Joan of Arc, 56 and n. 6; 445; particulars respecting, 415, n. 2.

Joan, Pope, 198, n. 5; 128, n. 2.