Page:Johnson - Rambler 4.djvu/275
INDEX.
N. B. The Letters denote the Volume, the Figures, the Page.
A
ABOUZAID, the dying advice of Morad, his father, to him, iv. 162.
Acastus, an instance of the commanding influence of curiosity, iii. 266.
Action, dramatick, the laws of it stated, and remarked, iii. 301.
Action, necessary to the health of the body, and the vigour of the mind, ii. 176. 179. The source of cheerfulness and vivacity, 178.
Addison, Mr. his critical capacity remarked, ii. 183. 229. 232.
Admiration, and ignorance, their mutual and reciprocal operation, iii. 178.
Adversity, a season fitted to convey the most salutary and useful instruction to the mind iii. 265. The appointed instrument of promoting our virtue and happiness, 267.
Advice, good, too often disregarded, ii. 189. The causes of this assigned, 190. Vanity often the apparent motive of giving it, 191. When most offensive and ineffectual, iii. 295.
Affability, the extensive influence of this amiable quality, iii. 212.
Affectation, the vanity and folly of indulging it, i. 121-123. Wherein it properly differs from hypocrisy, 124. The great absurdity of it exposed in the character of Gelasimus, iv. 104.
Afflictions, proper methods of obtaining consolation under them, i. 104. 213. See Grief.
Agriculture, its extensive usefulness considered, iii. 237.