156, n. 3; arbitrary sovereign needful to restrain them, v. 206; attachment to them, v. 337-8; authority destroyed, v. 177; change of system, v. 231; degenerating into rapacious landlords, i. 409, n. 2; v. 27, n. 3, 378; displaced by landlords, iii. 127, 262, n. 2; house should be like a Court, v. 275; people, how they should treat their, v. 143, 250; chieftainship, 'an ideal point of honour,' v. 410; not to be sold, i. 254; children compared with London children, ii. 101; churches, v. 289, n. 1; civility, v. 131, n. 3; Clanranald, v. 121; Clans, their order, ii. 269, 270; claymores, v. 212, 229; climate, v. 173, 377; cloth, in the sense of sail, v. 283; coin, scarcity of, v. 254; Col, Isle of, Johnson visits it, v. 284-308; castle, v. 292; church in ruins, v. 289; Col's house, v. 291; charter-room in it, v. 327; complaints of trespasses, v. 301; curious custom of the lairds, v. 329; large stone, v. 290, 302; lead mine, v. 302; more boys born than girls, v. 209, n. 3; people and productions, v. 300-1; sandhills, v. 291; storm, v. 304; student of Aberdeen University, v. 301; superstitions, v. 306; mentioned, ii. 275; iii. 246; College of the Templars, v. 224; Colvay, v. 309, n. l; common land in Rasay, v. 171; computation of distances, v. 183; cordiality increased by Boswell's drinking, iii. 330; Corpach, v. 227, n. 4; Corrichatachin, Johnson visits it, v. 156-162; a second time, v. 257-65; mentioned, iv. 155; costume of the gentlemen, v. 162, 184; cottages in Sky, v. 256; in Col, v. 293; 'country of saddles and bridles,' not a, v. 375; Cuchillin's well, v. 254; Cuillin, v. 236; Cullen, v. 110; custom-houses, no, in the islands, v. 165, n. 2; dancing, v. 166, 178, 277; dangers of the tour, v. 13, 282, 283, n. 1; deer, freedom to shoot, v. 140; desolation and penury of the islands, v. 377, n. 3; discomforts suffered by travellers, v. 377, n. 2; disgust properly felt at the Hebrides, v. 317; distinctness in narration, general want of, v. 294; drinking in Sky, v. 258, 262; Dun Can, v. 168, 170; Duntulm, v. 148; Dunvegan, description of the castle, v. 207, 223, 233; Johnson visits it, v. 207-234; stays with pleasure, v. 208, 221, 224; mentioned, ii. 275; iii. 271; v. 150; 176, n. 2; Durinish, v. 234; education, want of it in Iona, v. 338, n. 1; Egg, Isle of, ii. 309; English spoken well, v. 136, n. 1; emigration of Highlanders due to rapacious landlords, v. 27, n. 3, 136-7, 148, n. 1, 150, n. 3, 161, 205; dance called America, v. 277; early emigrants, v. 299; emigrant ships, v. 180, 212, 236, 277-8; leaves a lasting vacuity, v. 294, n. 1; people getting hardened to it, v. 278; episcopacy, inclined to, v. 162, n. 4; Erse, Irish, similarity to, ii. 156, 347; Nairne, first heard at, v. 117, n. 3; scriptures in it, ii. 27-30, 156, 279, 479; v. 370; other books, ii. 279, 285; Shaw's Erse Grammar, iii. 106-7; Gaelick Dictionary, iv. 252; songs, v. 117, 162, 178; never explained to Johnson v. 24l; one interpreter found, v, 318, n. 1; written language, not a, iii. 107; written very lately, ii. 297, 309, 347, 383; estates, size of, v. 165, n. 2, 176, n. 2, 412, n. 2; fabulous tradition, v. 171; Fladda, v. 172, 412, n. 2; forest, v. 237; Fort Augustus, Johnson visits it, v. 134-5; has a good night there, iii. 99, n. 4, 369; military road, ii. 305; officers who had served in America, iii. 246; v. 135; mentioned, v. 140, 142, 188; Fort George, v. 123-7; fowls, method of catching, v. 179; foxes, price set on their heads, v. 173, n. 2; funerals, v. 235; spirits consumed at them, v. 332; gardens very rare in Sky, v. 237, 261; gaul, a plant, v. 174; General's Hut, v. 134; Glencroe, v. 183, n. 2, 341; Glenelg, v. 141, 145-7; Glenmorison, v. 135; Glensheal, v. 140; graddaned meal, v. 167; greyhounds, v. 330, n, 1; Gribon, v. 331; Grishinish, v. 205; Grissipol, v. 289; Harris, v. 176, n. 2, 227, n. 4, 338, n. 1, 410; Halyin foam'eri, v. 162, 290; food, v. 133; George III, faithful to, v. 202; grain carried home on horses, v. 235; hereditary occupations, v. 120; heritable jurisdictions, v. 46, n. 1, 177, 343; Highland Laddie, v. 184, n. 1; houses of the gentry, small and crowded, v. 160, 262, 291, 321; mire in a bedroom, ib.; huts, v. 132, 136; Icolmkill: See Iona; idleness, v. 218; inaccuracy of their reports, v. 150, n. 2, 237, 324, n. 5, 336; Inchkenneth, Johnson visits it, v. 322-331; Scott's description of it, v. 322, n. 1; Johnson's Ode, ii. 293; v. 325; Boswell in the ruined chapel, v. 327; mentioned, v. 310; Indians, not so terrifying as, v. 142; black and wild as savages, v. 143; like wild Indians, v. 257; infidelity in a gentleman, v.