Excerpts from the index of the British literary and society journal Tatler, 1709-1711:
Age, if healthy, happy
Ancestors, their examples should excite to great and virtuous actions
Animals, a degree of gratitude owing to them that serve us
Atheist, behaviour of one in sickness
Barbers, inconveniences attending their being historians
Classics, absolutely necessary to study them
Climate, British, very inconstant
Cowards never forgive
Cunning opposed to wisdom
Duels, the danger of dying in one, represented
Earth, its inhabitants ranged under two general heads
Examination, self, advantages attending it
Fame, common, house of, described
Feet, pretty ones, a letter concerning them
Flies and free-thinkers compared
Gardens, the best not so fine as nature
Honour, temple of, can be entered only through that of Virtue
Horse, described by Homer, Virgil, Oppian, Lucan, and Pope
Janglings, matrimonial
Ladies, all women such
Laughter, the chorus of conversation
Master, how he should behave to his servants
Pedants, their veneration for Greek and Latin condemned
Peruke, a kind of index to the mind
Possession, true, consists in enjoyment
Reproof distinguished from reproach
Sloth more invincible than vice
Terrible Club, account of it
Time not to be squandered
Wisdom opposed to cunning
Women should have learning
Henry Wheatley said that the indexes “possess that admirable quality of making the consulter wish to read the book itself.” Leigh Hunt wrote, “As there is ‘a soul of goodness in things evil’ so there is a soul of humor in things dry … so an Index, like the Tatler’s, often gives us a taste of the quintessence of his humor.”






