2, 20, 22, 58, 107, 139, 141, 144, 203, 269, 270, 278, 279, 283-4, 290, 293, 295, 308, 380, 386, 406, 410, 422; iii. 86, 89, 91, 101, 105, 106, 107, 116, 122, n. 2, 126, 129, 132, 209, 211, 215, 219-222, 277, 359, 371, 391, 395, 411, 415, 433, 438; iv. 259, 379, 380; three letters kept back, ii. 3, n. 1; iii. 118, 122; keeps his letters, ii. 2; life, would add ten of his years to, iii. 438; love for, iii. 105; iv. 226, 259, n. 2, 337; v. 19; love for him, i. 405, 434, n. 1, 450, 462; ii. 3, 70, iii. 145, 205, 266, 359, 375, n. 4, 377, n. i, 383-4, 411; iii. 80, 86, 105, 123, 135, 198, 210, 215, 216, 312, 362, 391, 413-4, 435, 439, 442; iv. 71, 81, n. 3, 166, 226, 337, 379, 380; v. 398; loved by him and Mrs. Thrale, ii. 427; monument, circular-letter about, iv. 423, n. 1; projected monument at Auchinleck, v. 380; mysterious veneration for, i. 384; necessity of a yearly interview with, iii. 118, 127; neglects to write to, iii. 394-7; iv. 380; offended and reconciled, ii. 107, 109; heated in a talk about America, iii. 205-7, 221; a second time, iii. 315; a week's separation, iii. 337; reconciliation, iii. 338; dispute about effects of vice on character, ii. 350; in a violent passion on Rattakin, v. 145; reconciliation, v. 147; offers to write a history of his family, iv. 198; pension, tries for an addition to, iv. 326-8, 336-9, 348; poems, projects an edition of, i. 16, n. 1; iv. 381, n. 1; praises him for vivacity, iii. 135, n. 2; good-humour, iii. 208, n. 1; as a travelling companion, iii. 294; v. 52; as one sure of a reception, v. 134, n. 2; proposes a meeting in 1780 with, iii. 424, 439, 441; proposes that they should meet one day every week, ii. 359; iii. 122, n. 2; proposes weekly correspondence with, iii. 399; publishes without leave a letter from, ii. 3, n. 2, 46, 58; may publish all after--death, 60; recommended to a lady client by, ii. 277; sadness in parting with, ii. 263; iii. 196; says that to lose him would be a limb amputated, iv. 81, n. 3; tries, by not writing, iii. 394-7; visits Harwich with, i. 464; the Hebrides, v. 1-416; Oxford, ii. 46; Oxford and the Midland Counties, ii. 438; Bath, iii. 45-51; Ashbourne, iii. 135-208; Southill, iv. 118-132; Oxford, 283-311; visits him ill in bed, iii. 391; and Wilkes together, brings, iii. 64-79; a successful negotiation, iii. 79; will, not in, iv. 402, n. 2; witty at his expense, i. 3; ii. 187; v. 216; yearly meeting with, need of a, iii. 439; Johnson's Court, veneration for, ii. 229; Journal, in his youth keeps a, i. 433; by the advice of Mr. Lowe, ii. 159, n, 4; accuracy, its, asserted, ii. 65, n. 2; 'exact transcript of conversations,' v. 414; justification for keeping it, ib.; entries in it made in company, i. 6, n. 2; iv. 318, n. 1, 343; method of keeping it, v. 272; kept with industry, i. 5-6; four nights in one week given to it, i. 461-2; neglected, i. 6, n. 2; ii. 47, n. 2, 71, 352, n. 1, 372; iii. 354, 375, 376; iv. 88, n. 1, l00, 110, 274, n. 5, 311; v. 360, 374, 394, 398; advised by Johnson to keep one, i. 433; Johnson pleased with it, iii. 260; helps to record a conversation, ib.; v. 307; reminded that it is kept, iii. 439; kept in quarto and octavo volumes, iv. 83; Journal of his visit to Ashbourne, iii. 208; Johnson's remark on it, iii. 209, n. 3; Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides, extensive circulation, ii. 267; in spite of ridicule, iii. 190; editions and translation, ii. 267, n. 3; v. 3, n. 1; corrections made in part of first edition, v. 245, n. 2; passages omitted in the later editions, v. 148, n. 1, 381, n. 4, 387, n. 4, 388, n. 2, 415, n. 4; 'an honest chronicler as Griffith,' i. 24, n. 1; attacks on it, v. 3; Johnson's life, exact picture of a portion of, v. 279; praised by him, i. 24, n. 1; motto, iii. 190, n. 1; read in MS. by Johnson, ii. 383, n. 2; v. 58, n. 2, 226, 245, n. 2, 262, 277, 307, 360, n. 4; by Mrs. Thrale, ii. 383; v. 245, n. 2; and Malone, v. 1; task of much labour, v. 227; juxtaposition of stories and names, iii. 40, n. 3; Knight-errant, feels like a, v. 355; knowledge at the age of twenty-five, ii. 9; Laird, seen as a, iv. 164; Lancaster Assizes, at, iii. 261, n. 2; Latin corrected by Johnson, ii. 20; defended, ii. 23; talked Latin in Highland houses, v. 321; law, ignorance of, ii. 21, n. 4; v. 108, n. 2; study of it, i. 400, 427; professor of it in the imaginary college, v. 108; lawyer, unwilling to become a, i. 400, 427; lay-patron, a, ii. 246; learning, praises his own, v. 52, n. 3; Letter to the People of Scotland on the Present State of the Nation (1783), iv. 258, 260-1; sent to Pitt, ib., n.