3; ii. 371.
MAN,
composite animal, iv. 91;
defined, iii. 245; v. 32, n. 3;
not a machine, v. 117;
not good by nature, v. 211;
pourtrayed by Shakespeare and Milton, iv. 72.
See MANKIND.
_Man of Feeling_, i. 360.
_Man of the World_, i. 360, n. 2; v. 277.
_Managed_ horse, v. 253, n. 2.
MANAGERS OF THEATRES, i. 196, n. 2.
MANCHESTER, iii. 123, 127, 135, n. 1;
Whitaker's _History_, iii. 333.
MANDEVILLE, Bernard,
Johnson influenced by him, iii. 56, n. 2, 292, n. 3;
'private vices public benefits,' iii. 56, n. 2, 291-3;
mentioned, i. 359, n. 3.
MANDOA, ii. 176.
_Manege_ for Oxford, ii. 424.
MANILLA RANSOM, ii. 135.
MANKIND,
Burke thinks better of them, iii. 236;
Johnson finds them less just and more beneficent, ib.;
opinions of Bolingbroke, Oxford, and Pitt, ib., n. 3;
of Savage, iii. 237, n. l;
characterless for the most part, iii. 280, n. 3;
hostility one to the other, iii. 236, n. 4;
kindness, wonderful, iii. 236, 237, n. 1.
See MAN and WORLD.
MANLEY, Mrs., iv. 199, 200, n. 1.
MANN, Sir Horace, i. 279, n. 5.
MANNERS,
change in them, v. 59-61, 230;
elegance acquired imperceptibly, iii. 53;
great, of the, iii. 353;
history of them, v. 79;
words describing them soon require notes, ii. 212.
_Manners_, a poem, i. 125.
MANNING, Owen, ii. 17.
MANNING, Mr., a compositor, iv. 321.
MANNINGHAM, Dr., iii. 161.
MANOR, a, co-extensive with the parish, ii.
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