318; moves that Nowell's sermon be burnt, iv. 296, n. 1. TOWNSON, Rev. Dr., ii. 258, n. 3; iv. 300, n. 2. TRADE, difficulty, has not much, iii. 382, n. 2; gaming, like, v. 232; injury done to the body, ii. 218; leisure of those engaged, v. 59; military spirit injured by it, ii. 218; opportunity of rising in the world, ii. 98; produces no capital accession of wealth, ii. 98; but intermediate good, ii. 176; profit in pleasure, ii. 98; rapid rise of traders, i. 490; writers on it, ii. 430. Trade, The (the booksellers of London), i. 438; ii. 345; iii. 285. TRADESMEN, Chatham's description of the honest tradesman, v. 327, n. 4; excite anger by their opulence, v. 327; fires in the parlour, v. 6; funeral-sermon for a tradesman's daughter, ii. 122; retired from business, ii. 120; one attacked by the stone, iii. 176, n. 1; wives, their, iii. 353. TRADITION, untrustworthy, v. 224; of the Church, v. 71. TRAGEDIANS, ridiculed in The Idler, v. 38, n. 1. TRAGEDY, a ludicrous one, iii. 238; passions purged by it, iii. 39; worse for being acted, ii. 92, n. 4; v. 38: See PLAYERS. TRANSLATIONS, how to judge of their merit, iii. 256; Sir John Hill's contract for one, ii. 39; n. 2; what books can and what cannot be translated, iii. 36, 257. Transpire, iii. 343. TRANSPORT, Rational, iii. 338. TRANSUBSTANTIATION, v. 71, 88. TRANSYLVANIA, ii. 7, n. 3. TRAPAUD, General Cyrus, v. 135. TRAPAUD, Governor, v. 134, 142. TRAPP, Dr. i. 140, n. 5; iv. 381, n. 1. TRAVELLERS, ancient, guessed; modern travellers measure, iii. 356; mean to tell the truth, iii. 235; modern mostly laughed at, iii. 300; strange turn to be displeased, iii. 236; unsatisfactory unless trustworthy, ii. 333. TRAVELLING, advice about it, i. 431; Cowper, Gibbon, Goldsmith and Locke on the age for travelling, iii. 458-9; human life great object of remark, iii. 301, n. 2; idle habits broken off, i. 409; Johnson's love of it, iii. 449-459; Rasselas, described in, i. 340, n. 1; rates of travelling London to St. Andrews, i. 359, n. 3; to Edinburgh, v. 21, n. 1; to Harwich, i. 466, n. 2; to Lichfield, i. 340, n. 1; ii. 45; iii. 411; to Milan, i. 370, n. 4; to Salisbury, iv. 234, n. 3; supplies little to the conversation, iii. 352; time ill spent on it in early manhood, iii. 352, 458. TRAVELS, books of, writers very defective, ii. 377; should start with full minds, iii. 301; writing under a feigned character, iv. 320. TREASON, constructive, iv. 87. Treatise on Painting, i. 128, n. 2. TRECOTHICK, Alderman, account of him, iii. 76, n. 2; his English, iii. 76, 201; Lord Mayor, iii. 459. TREE, given a jerk by Divines, iv. 226. TREES, their propagation, ii. 168. See under SCOTLAND, trees. TRENTHAM, i. 36, n. 2. TREVELYAN, Sir G. O., Johnson and the Rev. John Macaulay, v. 360. n. 1; Rev. Kenneth Macaulay's History of St. Kilda, v. 119, n. 3. TRIAL BY DUEL, v. 24. TRICKS, either knavish or childish, iii. 396. TRIFLES, life composed of them, i. 433, n. 4; ii. 359, n. 2; contentment with them, iii. 241-2; their importance, i. 317; iii. 355. TRIMLESTOWN, Lord, iii. 227-8. TRINITY, doctrine of the, ii. 254-5; v. 88. Tristram Shandy. See STERNE. TRONCHIN, M., iii. 301, n. 1. TROTTER, Beatrix, iii. 359. TROTTER, ----, an engraver, iv. 421, n. 2. TROTZ, Professor, i. 475. TROUGHTON, Lieutenant, a loquacious wanderer, v. 448. TRUTH, children to be strictly trained in it, iii. 228; comfort of life, essential to the, iv. 305; consolation drawn from it, i. 339; contests concerning moral truth, iii. 17; deviations from it very frequent, iii. 403-4; human experience its test, i. 454; 'I'd tell truth and shame the devil,' ii. 222; moral and physical, iv. 6; 'not at home,' i. 436; obligatory, how far, iii. 320, 377; iv. 305-6; painful to be forced to defend it, iii. 11; perpetual vigilance needed, iii. 230; iv. 361; publishing it against oneself, iv. 396; v. 211; religious truth established by martyrdom, ii. 250; rights to utter it and knock down for uttering it, iv. 12; sick, should be told to the, iv. 306; society held together by it, iii. 293; story, essential to a, ii. 433: See under JOHNSON, truthfulness. TUAM, Archbishop of, ii. 265, n. 4; iv. 198, n. 2. TULL, Jethro, v. 324. TUNBRIDGE SCHOOL, iv. 330. TUNBRIDGE WELLS, Mrs. Montagu writes from it in 1760, ii. 64. n. 2; print of the company there in 1748, i. 190, n. 1; mentioned, iii. 45, n. 1. TURGOT, existence of matter, i. 471, n. 2. TURKEY and the Turks, Boswell wishes to visit it, iv. 199; opium in common use, iv. 171; sweep Greece, ii. 194; want of Stirpes, ii. 421; mentioned, v. 74. TURKISH LADY, a, i. 343. Turkish Spy, iv. 199; v. 341. TURNER, John, a fencing-master, v. 103, n, 2. TURNPIKES, v. 56, n. 2. TURSELLINUS, i. 77. TURTON, Dr., iii. 164. TWALMLEY THE GREAT, iv. 193. TWELLS, Leonard, Life of Dr. E. Pocock, iv. 185. TWICKENHAM, Boswell and Johnson's drive to it, ii.