137; Burney's Travels in Johnson's view as he wrote, iv. 186; composed from very meagre materials, v. 405; copy sent to the King, ii, 290; to Warren Hastings, iv. 69; to various other people, ii. 278, 285, 288, 290, 309, 310; iii. 94, 102; criticised by Dempster, ii. 303; iii. 301; v. 405, 407-9; Dick, iii. 103; Hailes, v. 405-7; Hermes Harris, ii. 265; Knox, ii. 304; Tytler, ii. 305; Highlanders like it more than Lowlanders, ii. 308; Iona, description of, iii. 173; v. 334; Johnson anxious to know how it was received, ii. 290, 292, 294; goes where nobody goes, v. 157, n. 3; had much of it in his mind before starting, iii. 301. letters to Mrs. Thrale, ii. 303, 305; v. 145, n. 2; saw a different system of life, iv. 199; v. 112, 405; shows gratitude and delicacy, ii. 303; Macaulay, quoted by, iii. 449; new, contains much that is, iii. 326; Orme, described by, ii. 300; v. 408, n. 4; route, choice of a, v. 120; talked of in the Literary Club and London generally, ii. 318. JOWETT, Rev. Professor Benjamin, Master of Balliol College, ii. 338, n. 2. JUBILEE. See SHAKESPEARE. JUDGE, an eminent noble, iv. 178. JUDGES, afraid of the people, v. 57; engaging in trade, ii. 343; farming, ii. 344; in private life, v. 396; partial to the populace, ii. 353; places held for life, ii. 353. JUDGMENT, compared with admiration, ii. 360; source of erroneous judgments, ii. 131. Julia or the Italian Lover, i. 262, n. 1. Julia Mandeville, ii. 402, n. 1. JULIEN, the Treasurer of the Clergy, ii. 391. JULIEN, of the Gobelins, v. 107. JULIUS CAESAR, iii. 171. JUNIUS, Francis, i. 186. Junius, Burke, not, iii. 376; Burke, Hamilton and Wilkes most suspected, ib., n. 4; Samuel Dyer, iv. 11, n. 1; concealment of the author, iii. 376; duty of authors who are questioned about the authorship, iv. 305-6; impudence, his, ii. 164; Johnson attacks him, ii. 135; Norton, Sir Fletcher, attacks, ii. 472, n. 2. JURIES, guards afraid of them, iii. 46; judges of law, iii. 16, n. 1. JUSTICE, a picture of, iv. 321. JUSTICE HALL, ii. 98. JUSTICES OF THE PEACE. See MAGISTRATES. JUSTITIA HULK, iii. 268. JUVENAL, Third Satire, Johnson's imitation, i. 118 (see London); Boileau's, ib.; Oldham's, ib.; Tenth Satire, Johnson's imitation, i. 192 (see Vanity of Human Wishes); intention to translate other Satires, i. 193; quotations, Sat. i. 29, iv. 179, n. 4; Sat. i. 79, v. 277, n. 4; Sat. iii. 1, i. 325, n. 1; Sat. iii. 2, ii. 133; Sat. iii. 149, i. 77, n. 1; Sat. iii. 164, i. 77, n. 3; Sat. iii. 230 (unius lacertae), iii. 255; Sat. viii. 73, iv. 114, n. 1; Sat. x. 8, iv. 354, n. 2; Sat. x. 180, ii. 227; Sat. x. 217, iv. 357, n. 2; Sat. x. 356, iv. 401, n. 1; Sat. x. 365, iv. 180, n. 1; Sat. xiv. 139, iii. 415, n. 3.

K.

KAMES, Lord (Henry Home), coarse language in Court, ii. 200, n. 1; Elements of Criticism, i. 393; ii. 89-90; Eton boys, on, i. 224, n. 1; Hereditary Indefeasible Right, v. 272; Johnson, attacks, ii. 317, n. 1; prejudiced against, i. 148; 'keep him,' ii. 53; Sketches of the History of Man Charles V celebrating his funeral obsequies, iii. 247; Clarendon's account of Villiers's ghost, iii. 351; interest of money, iii. 340; Irish export duties, ii. 131, n. 1; Lapouchin, Madame, iii. 340; Paris Foundling Hospital, mortality in the, ii. 398, n. 5; schools not needed for the poor, iii. 352, n. 1; virtue natural to man, iii. 352; Smollett's monument, v. 366; 'vicious Intromission,' ii. 198, 200; mentioned, iii. 126. KAUFFMANN, Angelica, iv. 277, n. 1. KEARNEY, Michael, i. 489. KEARSLEY, the bookseller, letter from Johnson, i. 214; publishes a Life of Johnson, iv. 421, n. 2. KEDDLESTONE, iii. 160-2; v. 431-2. KEEN, Sir Benjamin, v. 310, n. 3. KEENE, ----, ii. 397. KEITH, Admiral Lord, v. 427, n. 1. KEITH, Mrs., v. 130. KEITH, Robert, Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops, i. 309. KEITH, ----, a collector of excise, v. 128-31. KELLY, sixth Earl of, v. 387. KELLY, Hugh, account of him, iii. 113, n. 3; displays his spurs, iv. 407, n. 4; False Delicacy, ii. 48; Johnson's Prologue, iii. 113, 118. KEMBLE, John, visits Johnson, iv. 242-4; anecdote of Johnson and Garrick, i. 216, n. 3; affected by Mrs. Siddons' acting, iv. 244, n. 1. KEMPIS, Thomas a, editions and translations, iii. 226; iv. 279; Johnson quotes him, iii. 227, n. 1; reads him in Low Dutch, iv. 21. KEN, Bishop, connected by marriage with Isaac Walton, ii. 364, n. 1; a nonjuror, iv. 286, n. 3; rule about sleep, iii. 169, n. 1. KENNEDY, Rev. Dr., Complete System of Astronomical Chronology, i. 366. KENNEDY, Dr., author of a foolish tragedy, iii. 238. KENNEDY, House of, v. 374. KENNICOTT, Dr. Benjamin, Collations, ii. 128; edition of the Hebrew Bible, v. 42; meets Johnson, iv. 151, n. 2. KENNICOTT, Mrs., iv. 151, n. 2, 285, 288, 298, n.

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