必读网 - 人生必读的书

TXT下载此书 | 书籍信息


(双击鼠标开启屏幕滚动,鼠标上下控制速度) 返回首页
选择背景色:
浏览字体:[ ]  
字体颜色: 双击鼠标滚屏: (1最慢,10最快)

约翰逊4-6

_166 鲍斯威尔(苏格兰)
Militia, fear of giving Scotland a, in 1760, ii. 431, n. 1;
bill of 1776, ii. 431; iii. 1;
fear still remained, iii. 360, n. 3;
established in 1793, iii. 360, n. 3;
Scots as officers in English militia, iii. 399, n. 2;
_Mirror, The_, iv. 390;
mix with the English worse than the Irish, ii. 242;
Monboddo (Lord Monboddo's residence), v. 77;
Monimusk, iii. 103;
Montrose, v. 72-4;
muir-fowl, or grouse, v. 44;
_Muses' Welcome to King James_, v. 57, 80, 81;
nation, if we allow the Scotch to be a, iii. 387;
nationality, extreme, ii. 242, 307, 325; iv. 186; v. 20, 409
(See above, combination);
Newhailes, v. 407;
'noblest prospect,' i. 425; v. 387;
non-jurors, iv. 287; v. 66;
northern circuit, v. 120;
oatmeal, v. 133, n. 2, 308, 406;
oats defined, i. 294; iv. 168;
Old Deer, v. 107;
_old Scottish_ sentiments, v. 40;
enthusiasm, v. 374;
orchard, Johnson sees an, iv. 206, n. 1;
general want of them, v. 115;
_Ossian_, national pride in believing in, iv. 141
(See under MACPHERSON, James);
outer gate locked at dinner-time, v. 60, n. 5;
pains-taking, of all nations most, ii. 300, n. 5;
past so unlike the present, iii. 414;
patience in winning votes, iv. 11;
pay of English soldiers spent in it, ii. 431;
Peers, interference in elections, iv. 248, 250;
Perth, an execution at, v. 104;
Perthshire, Justices and Sheriff of, iii. 214, n. 1;
Peterhead Well, v. 101;
'petty national resentment,' v. 3;
piety, compared with English, v. 123, n. 2;
planting, era of, v. 406;
players, do not succeed as, ii. 242;
Poker Club, ii. 376, n. 1, 431, n. 1;
polished at Newcastle, v. 87;
postal service, v. 312, n. 3, 347, 369, n. 1, 385;
post-chaises, v. 56, n. 2;
poverty, escaped being robbed by their, iii. 410;
supposed poverty, iv. 102;
Presbyterian fanatics, v. 39;
prescription of murder, v. 24, 87;
Preston-Pans, v. 401, n. 3;
prisoners of 1745, treatment of, v. 200;
resentment at having the truth told, ii. 306; iii. 128;
revenue, contributions to the, ii. 432;
robbers, no danger from, v. 53, 177, n. 2;
Roman Catholics, penal legislation against, iii. 427, n. 1;
Roslin Castle, v. 402;
sacrament, preparation for the, v. 119, n. 1;
sailors, iii. 202, n. 1, 214, n. 1;
sands laying the fields waste, v. 291;
'savages,' iii. 77;
_scandal_ in Church law, ii. 172;
scholars incorrect in _quantity_, ii. 132;
schoolmaster, brutality of a, ii. 186, n. 1;
schools inferior to English in classics, ii. 171;
cannot prepare for English Universities, ii. 380;
Scone, v. 237;
Scotch oat-cakes and Scotch prejudices,' ii. 380;
'Scotchmen made necessarily,' v. 48;
_Scots Magazine_, i. 112; v. 171, 265;
serfs, iii. 202, n. 1, 214, n. 1; v. 401, n. 3;
Shakespeare of Scotland, the, iv. 186, n. 2;
Sheep's head, v. 342;
Shelburne, Lord, described by, ii. 296, n. 2;
Sheriff-muir, v. 290;
Sheughy Dikes, v. 70, n. 2;
shoes, want of, v. 84, n. 3;
short days in winter, ii. 189;
Slains Castle, Johnson visits it, ii. 311, n. 5; v. 97-107;
its situation, v. 99-100;
house, v. 102;
sloe, brought to perfection, ii. 78;
Society of Procurators or Solicitors, iv. 128;
Johnson's argument in their case, iv. l29-31;
Society for Propagating Christian Knowledge, ii. 27, 279; v. 370;
speldings, v. 55;
spinnet, a, v. 314;
St. Andrews, Boswell and Johnson visit it, v. 29, 57-70, 72;
castle, v. 63;
cathedral, v. 62-3;
Glass's Inn, v. 57;
grotto, v. 70;
inscriptions, v. 63;
'Knox's reformations,' v. 61;
Marline's _Reliquiae_, v. 61, n. 2;
Sharp's monument, v. 65;
Smollett's description of the town, v. 61, n. 5;
St. Rule's Chapel, v. 61;
story of an old woman, v. 408;
streets deserted, v. 65;
tree, large, v. 69;
University, professors, v. 65, n. 4, 66;
grace at dinner, v. 65;
St. Leonard's College, v. 58;
St. Salvador's College, v. 65;
library, v. 63;
session, v. 96, n. 1;
students, their number and fees, v. 65, n. 4;
windows broken by them, v. 63, n. 2;
mentioned, i. 359, n. 3;
Stirling, its corporation corrupt, ii. 373;
Stirling, county of, iii. 224;
stone and water, Scotland consists of, v. 340;
study of English, i. 439, n. 2;
succession of heirs general, ii. 418;
Swene's Stone, v. 116, n. 3;
tenures, ancient, ii. 202; iii. 414;
territorial titles, v. 77, n. 4;
tokens, v. 119, n. 1;
Tories generally, v. 272;
torture, use of, i. 467, n. 1;
trade leaving the east coast, v. 54;
Tranent, v. 401, n. 3;
trees, bareness of them, ii. 301, 304, 311; v. 69-70, 75;
those on the eastern coast younger than Johnson, ii. 311; v. 69, n. 3;
two large trees in one county, v. 69, 406;
old trees at Calder, v. 120;
at Inverary, v. 355;
elms of Balmerino, v. 406;
Jeffrey's comparison with England, ii. 301, n. 1;
Johnson's sarcasms caused love of planting, ii. 301, n. 1; iii. 103;
his stick 'a piece of timber,' v. 319;
Treesbank, v. 372;
truth, Scotchmen love Scotland better than, ii. 311; v. 389, n. 1;
disposition to tell lies in favour of each other, ii. 296;
turn-pike roads, v. 56, n. 2;
turrets, two, mark of an old baron's residence, v. 77;
tyrannical laws, iv. 125, n. 2;
Union, benefits to Scotland, v. 128, 248;
discussed in the _Laigh_, v. 40;
few printed books before it, ii. 216;
how it happened, ii. 91;
money brought by it into Scotland, v. 61;
'no longer _we_ and _you_,' ii. 431;
Universities, education given in them, ii. 363, n. 4;
no degree conferred on Johnson, ii. 267, n. 1;
professorships, iii. 14, n. 1
(See under ABERDEEN, EDINBURGH, GLASGOW, and ST. ANDREWS);
veal, v. 32;
waiters at the inns, v. 22, 72;
Walpole, Horace, described by, iii. 430, n. 6;
water, too much, v. 340;
Westport murderers, v. 227, n. 4;
whisky, the thing that makes a Scotchman happy, v. 346;
windows without pullies, v. 109, n. 6;
wine, the refuse of France, v. 248;
witchcraft, executions for, v. 46, n. i;
write English wonderfully well, iii. 109;
Writers to the Signet, v. 343, n. 3.
EDINBURGH, Academy for the deaf and dumb, v. 399;
Advocates' Library, ii. 216; v. 13, n. 3, 40;
Apollo Press, iii. 118;
Arthur's Seat, iii. 116; v. 142, n. 2;
beggars, v. 75, n. 1;
Boyd's Inn, ii. 266; v. 21;
Cadies or Cawdies, iv. 129;
Canongate, ii. 30; v. 21;
capital, a, yet small, ii. 473;
carrier to London, ii. 272;
Castle, v. 142, n. 2;
would make a good prison in England, v. 387;
Castle Hill, v. 54, 387;
Church of England Chapel, iv. 152, n. 3; v. 27;
College, v. 42;
College Wynd, v. 24, n. 4;
country round it, i. 425;
Cow-gate, v. 42;
'dangers of the night,' i. 119, n. i;
described by Cockburn, v. 21, n. I;
by R. Chambers, v. 39, n. 3, 43, n. 4;
dinners in 1742, i. 103, n. 2;
Enbru, v. 87;
fortifying against the Pretender, v. 49, n. 6;
General Assembly, Chamber of the, v. 41, n. 1;
Grey Friars churchyard, v. 50, n. 2;
Hanoverian faction, v. 21, n. 2;
High School, ii. 144, n. 2; v. 80;
High Street, v. 22;
Holyrood House, iv. 50, n. 2, 101; v. 43;
James's Court, v. 22;
Johnson arrives, v. 21;
starts on his tour, v. 51;
returns, v. 385;
describes the town, v. 23, n. 2;
his lemonade, v. 22;
his levee, v. 395;
_Laigh_, v. 40;
signatures of the Hanoverian Kings preserved in it, v. 41;
_laigh-_shops, v. 40, n. 2;
masquerades, ii. 205, n. i1
New Town designed by Craig, iii. 360;
described by Ruskin, v. 68, n. 1;
'obscure corner, an,' ii. 381, n. 1;
Papists persecuted in 1780, iii. 427,_ n._ 1;
Parliament-close, v. 42;
Parliament House, v. 39, 79, n. 1;
Post-housestairs, v. 42;
Royal Infirmary, v. 42, 43;
Select Society, v. 393;
streets, the smells and perils of the, v. 22-3;
St. David Street, v. 22, n. 2, 28, n. 2;
St. Giles, v. 41;
St. Giles's churchyard, v. 61, n. 4;
Sunday dinner hour, v. 32;
theatre, v. 362, n. I;
_Transactions of the Royal Society_, iv. 25, n. 4;
University, v. 301, n. 2:
See above, College;
Wesley visits it, iii. 394;
describes the streets, v. 23, n. 1;
White Horse Inn, v. 21, n. 2.
HEBRIDES AND THE HIGHLANDS, a M'Queen, v. 135,_ n._ 3;
Ainnit, v. 220;
ancestors, reciting a series of, v. 237, n. 2;
Anoch, v. 135, 185;
Ardnamurchan, v. 380, 341;
Argyll, Presbyterian Synod of, iii. 133;
Armidale, Johnson visits it, v. 147-56;
a second time, v. 275-9;
arms forbidden, v. 151, n. 1, 212;
Arran, v. 99;
Auchnasheal, v. 141-2;
bag-pipes, v. 315;
bards, v. 324, n. 5;
Barra, v. 236, 265, 297, n. 1;
beer brewed in Iona, v. 338;
Benbecula, v. 121;
Bernera, v. 145, 319;
boats without benches, v. 179, n. 2;
bones in the windows of churches, v. 169;
books in the houses, v. 136, 149, 158, 166, 181, 261, 265,
285, 287, 294, 302, 314, 323;
Borneo, as unknown as, v. 392, n. 6;
Bracadale, v. 224;
Breacacha, v. 291;
breakfast, cheese served up at, v. 167;
bridles, want of, v. 345;
Broadfoot, v. 156;
brogues, v. 162, n. 1;
Brolos, iii. 126;
_Buy_, v. 341;
Caithness, iv. 136;
Cameron, v. 365;
Campbell-town, v. 284;
Camuscross, v. 267;
chapels in ruins, v. 170, n, 1;
charms for milking the cows, v. 164;
chiefs, how addressed, v. 156, n. 3;
arbitrary sovereign needful to restrain them, v. 206;
attachment to them, v. 337-8;
authority destroyed, v. 177;
change of system, v. 231;
degenerating into rapacious landlords, i. 409, n. 2; v. 27, n. 3, 378;
displaced by landlords, iii. 127, 262, n. 2;
house should be like a Court, v. 275;
people, how they should treat their, v. 143, 250;
chieftainship, 'an ideal point of honour,' v. 410;
not to be sold, i. 254;
children compared with London children, ii. 101;
churches, v. 289, n. 1;
civility, v. 131, n. 3;
Clanranald, v. 121;
Clans, their order, ii. 269, 270;
claymores, v. 212, 229;
climate, v. 173, 377;
_cloth_, in the sense of _sail_, v. 283;
coin, scarcity of, v. 254;
Col, Isle of, Johnson visits it, v. 284-308;
castle, v. 292; church in ruins, v. 289;
Col's house, v. 291;
charter-room in it, v. 327;
complaints of trespasses, v. 301;
curious custom of the lairds, v. 329;
large stone, v. 290, 302;
lead mine, v. 302;
more boys born than girls, v. 209, n. 3;
people and productions, v. 300-1;
sandhills, v. 291; storm, v. 304;
student of Aberdeen University, v. 301;
superstitions, v. 306;
mentioned, ii. 275; iii. 246;
College of the Templars, v. 224;
Colvay, v. 309, n. l;
common land in Rasay, v. 171;
computation of distances, v. 183;
cordiality increased by Boswell's drinking, iii. 330;
_Corpach_, v. 227, n. 4;
Corrichatachin, Johnson visits it, v. 156-162;
a second time, v. 257-65;
mentioned, iv. 155;
costume of the gentlemen, v. 162, 184;
cottages in Sky, v. 256;
in Col, v. 293;
'country of saddles and bridles,' not a, v. 375;
Cuchillin's well, v. 254;
Cuillin, v. 236; Cullen, v. 110;
custom-houses, no, in the islands, v. 165, n. 2;
dancing, v. 166, 178, 277;
dangers of the tour, v. 13, 282, 283, n. 1;
deer, freedom to shoot, v. 140;
desolation and penury of the islands, v. 377, n. 3;
discomforts suffered by travellers, v. 377, n. 2;
disgust properly felt at the Hebrides, v. 317;
distinctness in narration, general want of, v. 294;
drinking in Sky, v. 258, 262;
Dun Can, v. 168, 170;
Duntulm, v. 148;
Dunvegan, description of the castle, v. 207, 223, 233;
Johnson visits it, v. 207-234;
stays with pleasure, v. 208, 221, 224;
mentioned, ii. 275; iii. 271; v. 150; 176, n. 2;
Durinish, v. 234;
education, want of it in Iona, v. 338, n. 1;
Egg, Isle of, ii. 309;
English spoken well, v. 136, n. 1;
emigration of Highlanders due to rapacious landlords, v. 27, n. 3,
136-7, 148, n. 1, 150, n. 3, 161, 205;
dance called _America_, v. 277;
early emigrants, v. 299;
emigrant ships, v. 180, 212, 236, 277-8;
leaves a lasting vacuity, v. 294, n. 1;
people getting hardened to it, v. 278;
episcopacy, inclined to, v. 162, n. 4;
Erse, Irish, similarity to, ii. 156, 347;
Nairne, first heard at, v. 117, n. 3;
scriptures in it, ii. 27-30, 156, 279, 479; v. 370;
other books, ii. 279, 285;
Shaw's _Erse Grammar_, iii. 106-7;
_Gaelick Dictionary_, iv. 252;
songs, v. 117, 162, 178;
never explained to Johnson v. 24l;
one interpreter found, v, 318, n. 1;
written language, not a, iii. 107;
written very lately, ii. 297, 309, 347, 383;
estates, size of, v. 165, n. 2, 176, n. 2, 412, n. 2;
fabulous tradition, v. 171;
Fladda, v. 172, 412, n. 2;
_forest_, v. 237;
Fort Augustus, Johnson visits it, v. 134-5;
has a good night there, iii. 99, n. 4, 369;
military road, ii. 305;
officers who had served in America, iii. 246; v. 135;
mentioned, v. 140, 142, 188;
Fort George, v. 123-7;
fowls, method of catching, v. 179;
foxes, price set on their heads, v. 173, n. 2;
funerals, v. 235;
spirits consumed at them, v. 332;
gardens very rare in Sky, v. 237, 261;
_gaul_, a plant, v. 174;
General's Hut, v. 134;
Glencroe, v. 183, n. 2, 341;
Glenelg, v. 141, 145-7;
Glenmorison, v. 135;
Glensheal, v. 140;
graddaned meal, v. 167;
greyhounds, v. 330, n, 1;
Gribon, v. 331;
Grishinish, v. 205;
Grissipol, v. 289;
Harris, v. 176, n. 2, 227, n. 4, 338, n. 1, 410;
_Halyin foam'eri_, v. 162, 290;
food, v. 133;
George III, faithful to, v. 202;
grain carried home on horses, v. 235;
hereditary occupations, v. 120;
heritable jurisdictions, v. 46, n. 1, 177, 343;
_Highland Laddie_, v. 184, n. 1;
houses of the gentry, small and crowded, v. 160, 262, 291, 321;
mire in a bedroom, ib.;
huts, v. 132, 136;
Icolmkill: See Iona; idleness, v. 218;
inaccuracy of their reports, v. 150, n. 2, 237, 324, n. 5, 336;
Inchkenneth, Johnson visits it, v. 322-331;
Scott's description of it, v. 322, n. 1;
Johnson's _Ode_, ii. 293; v. 325;
Boswell in the ruined chapel, v. 327;
mentioned, v. 310;
Indians, not so terrifying as, v. 142;
black and wild as savages, v. 143;
like wild Indians, v. 257;
infidelity in a gentleman, v. 168;
inns, v. 134, n. 1, 138, 145-6, 181, 309, 346-7;
want of one in Iona, v. 335;
interrogated, not used to be, ii. 310, n. 1;
Inverary, castle, built by Duke Archibald, v. 345;
the total defiance of expense, v. 355;
Johnson visits it, v. 346-362; and Wilkes, iii. 73;
mentioned, v. 312;
返回书籍页