243;
foreign phrases dragged in, iii. 343, n. 3;
Hume and Mackintosh on English prose, iii. 257, n. 3;
Johnson's dislike of Gallicisms, i. 439;
metaphors, iii. 174; iv. 386, n. 1;
peculiar to every man, iii. 280;
seventeenth century style bad, iii. 243;
studiously formed, i. 225;
Temple gave cadence to prose, iii. 257;
unharmonious periods, iii. 248;
which is the best? ii. 191.
See under ADDISON and JOHNSON.
STYLE, Old and New, i. 236, n. 2, 251.
SUARD,
Johnson introduces him to Burke, iv. 20, n. 1;
Voltaire and Mrs. Montague, ii. 88, n. 3.
SUBORDINATION,
breaking the series of civil subordination, ii. 244;
broken down, iii. 262;
conducive to the happiness of society, i. 408, 442; ii. 219;
iii. 26; v. 353;
essential for order, iii. 383;
feudal, ii. 262; v. 106;
French happy in their subordination, v. 106;
grand scheme of it, i. 490;
high people the best, iii. 353;
Johnson's great merit in being zealous for it, ii. 261;
Mrs. Macaulay's footman, i. 447; iii. 77;
mean marriages to be punished, ii. 328-9;
men not naturally equal, ii. 13;
promoted by a Corsican hangman, i. 408, n. 1;
without it no intellectual improvement, ii. 219.
SUBSCRIPTION to the Thirty-nine Articles. See THIRTY-NINE ARTICLES.
SUCCESSION, male,
Boswell and the Barony of Auchinleck, ii. 413-423;
Johnson's advice to Boswell, ii. 415-423;
his zeal for it in Langton's case, ii.
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