351;
University of Oxford and his heirs, ii. 424.
CLARENDON PRESS, Johnson's letter on its management, ii. 424, 441.
CLARET, for boys, in. 381; iv. 79;
gives the dropsy before drunkenness, v. 248-9.
_Clarissa. See_ RICHARDSON, S.
CLARK, Alderman Richard, member of the Essex Head Club, iv. 258, 438;
Johnson, letter from, iv. 258.
CLARKE, Rev. Dr. Samuel, Christian evidences, i. 398;
free-will, ii. 104;
_Homer_, edition of, ii. 129;
Johnson's _Dictionary_, not quoted in, i. 189, n. 1; iv. 416, n. 2;
Leibnitz, controversy with, v. 287;
learning, iv. 21;
studied hard, i. 71;
literary character, i. 3, _n. _2;
orthodox, not, iii. 248; v. 288;
Queen Caroline wished to make him a bishop, iii. 248, n. 2;
_Sermons_, ii. 263, 476; iii. 248;
recommended by Johnson on his death-bed, iv. 416;
unbending himself, fond of, i. 3.
CLARKE, Sir T., i. 45, n. 4.
CLAUDIAN, ii. 315.
CLAVIUS, ii. 444.
CLAXTON, Mr., ii. 247.
CLEMENT, William, Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, i. 489.
CLENARDUS, iv. 20.
_Cleone. See _DODSLEY.
_Cleonice_, ii. 289,_ n._ 3.
CLERGYMAN, a,
at Bath, iv. 149;
Johnson's letter to him, iv. 150;
extraordinary character, an, iv. 296, n. 3;
hopeless ignorance of one, iv. 33, n. 3;
one rebuked by Johnson, iv. 19;
a young clergyman, Johnson's letter to, iii. 436.
CLERGYMEN, can be but half a beau, iv. 76;
_Court_-party, of the, v.
Pages:
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216