199; and of images, v. 405; hardships and dangers, v. 127, 283, n. 1, 313, n. 1, 392; uncommon spirit shown, v. 368; pleasantest journey he ever made, iii. 93; v. 405; pleasure in talking it over, iii. 131, 196; a 'frolic,' iv. 136; no wish to go again, iv. 199; received like princes, v. 317; 'roving among the Hebrides at sixty,' v. 278; box of curiosities from them, ii. 269-70: see Journey to the Hebrides, and SCOTLAND; Hercules, compared by Boswell to, ii. 260; Hervey, story of his ingratitude to, iii. 195, 209-11; high, his use of, iii. 118, n. 3; Highlander, shows the spirit of a, v. 324; hilarity, i. 73, 191, n. 5, 255, n. 1; ii. 261-2, 378; history, little regard for: see HISTORY; holds up his head as high as he can, iv. 256; home uncomfortable by jarrings, iii. 368: see JOHNSON, household; honest man, v. 264, 309; house at Lichfield: see LICHFIELD; for his habitations, see JOHNSON, habitations; household, account of it, i. 232, n. 1; iii. 461-2; iv. 169, n. 3; 'much malignity' in it, iii. 417, 461; losses by death, iv. 140; melancholy, iv. 142; more peace, iv. 233, n. 1; solitude, i. 232, n. 1; iv. 235, n. 1, 239, 241, 249, 253, n. 4, 255, 270; housekeeping, left off, i. 326, 350, n. 3; resumed it, ii. 4; hug, gives one a forcible, ii. 231; humility, iii. 380, n. 3; iv. 410, 427; humour, ii. 262, n. 2; iii. 244, n. 2; iv. 428; v. 17, 20; hungry only once in his life, i. 469; hypochondria: see JOHNSON, health; hypocrisy, not suspicious of, i. 418, n. 3; iii. 444; Iceland, projected voyage to, i. 242; iv. 358, n. 2; idleness in boyhood, i. 48; at College, i. 70; 'Desidiae valedixi,' i. 74; in writing the Plan, i. 183; 'Idle Apprentice i. 250; in Inner Temple lane, i. 350, n. 3; 'idle fellow all my life,' i. 465; idleness in 1760, i. 353; in 1761, i. 358; in 1763, i. 398; in 1764, i. 482; in 1767, ii. 44; in his latter years, i. 372, n. 1; claim upon him for more writings, i. 398; ii. 15, 35, 441; idleness exaggerated by himself, i. 446; ii. 263, 271: see JOHNSON, indolence; ignorance, covered his, v. 124, n. 4; illness: see JOHNSON, health; imitations of him often caricatures, ii. 326, n. 5; 'Imlac,' iii. 6; Impransus, i. 137; incredulity as to particular extraordinary facts, ii. 247; iii. 188; v. 331; 'incredulus odi,' iii. 229; independence, always asserted his, i. 443; indolence, his, described by Hawkins, iii. 98, n. 1; by Murphy, i. 307, n. 2; 'inclination to do nothing,' i. 463; justification of it, ii. 15, n. 2; time of danger, i. 268, n. 4; influence, loves, v. 136; inheritance from his father, i. 80; intoxicated, i. 94, 103, n. 3, 379, n. 2; used to slink home, iii. 389; 'invictum animum Catonis,' iv. 374; Irene: see Irene; Island Isa, v. 250; Islington, for change of air, goes to, iv. 271; Italian, knowledge of, i. 115, 156; mentions Ariosto, i. 278; v. 368, n. 1; Dante, ii. 238; purposes vigorous study, iii. 90; iv. 135; reads Casa and Castiglione, v. 276; Il Palmerino d'Inghilterra, iii. 2; Petrarch, iv. 374, n. 5; Tasso, iii. 330; Italy, projected book on, iii. 19; projected tour to, ii. 423, 424, 428; tour given up, iii. 6, 18, 27; eagerness to go, iii. 19, 28, 36, 456-8; v. 229; projected wintering there, iv. 326-8, 336, 338, 348-50; Jacobite tendencies, i. 43, 176; ii. 27, 220; iii. 162; iv. 314; never ardent in the cause, i. 176, n. 2, 429; never in a nonjuring meeting-house, iv. 288; James's Medicinal Dictionary, i. 159; Jean Bull philosophe, i. 467; John Bull, a, v. 20; 'Johnson's grimly ghost,' iv. 229, n. 4; Johnson's Court, house in, ii. 5; furniture, ib. n. 1, 376; Johnston, often called in Scotland, iii. 106, n. 1; v. 341; journal, attempt to keep a, i. 433, n. 2; ii. 217; Journey to the Western Islands, see Journey to the Western Islands; killing sometimes no murder in a state of nature, v. 87-8; kindness, Boswell, to, i. 410; Burney's testimony, i. 410, n. 2; iii. 24, n, 2; Goldsmith's testimony, i. 417; features, shown in his, ii. 141, n. 2; poor schoolfellow, to his, ii. 463; servants, to, iv. 197; small matters, in, iv. 201, 344; unthankful, to the, i. 84; iii. 368, 462; King's evil, touched for the, i. 42; kings, ridicules, i. 333; kitchen, his, ii. 215, n. 4; iii. 461; knee, takes a young Methodist on his, ii. 120; a Highland beauty, v. 261; knotting, tried, iii. 242; iv. 284; knowledge, at the age of eighteen, i. 445; exact, iii. 319; varied, iii. 22; iv. 427; v. 215, 246, 263; 'laboured,' iii. 260, n. 3; v. 77; ladies, could be very agreeable to, iv. 73; Langton's devotion to him in his illness, iv. 266, n. 3; will, ridicules, ii. 261; language, delicate in it, iii. 303; iv. 442; suits his to a 'blackguard boy,' iv.