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AULAY, Dr., a physician, husband of Mrs. Macaulay the historian, i. 242, n. 4; iii. 402. MACAULAY, Mrs. Catherine, the historian, Boswell wishes to pit her against Johnson, iii. 185; Johnson and her footman, i. 447; iii. 77; had not read her _History_, iii. 46, n. 2; 'match' with her, ii. 336; political and moral principles, wonders at, ii. 219; toast, i. 487; maiden name and marriage, i. 242, n. 4; 'reddening her cheeks,' iii. 46; ridiculous, making her, ii. 336; Shakespeare's plays and her daughter, i. 447, n. 1; mentioned, ii. 46, n. 1. MACAULAY, Dr. James, _Bibliography of Rasselas_, ii. 208, n. 3. MACAULAY, Rev. John, Lord Macaulay's grandfather, v. 355, n. 1, 360, n. 1; a man of good sense, v. 360; on principles and practice, v. 359. MACAULAY, Rev. Kenneth (Lord Macaulay's great-uncle), colds caught at St. Kilda, on, ii. 51, 150; v. 278; _History of St. Kilda_, ii. 150; Johnson visits him, v. 118; disbelieves his having written the _History_, v. 119; calls him 'a bigot to laxness,' v. 120; praises his magnanimity, ii. 51, 150; v. 278. MACAULAY, Mrs. Kenneth, Johnson offers to get a servitorship for her son, ii, 380; v. 122; mentioned, v. 119. MACAULAY, Thomas Babington (Lord Macaulay), ancestors, ii. 51, n. 2; v. 118, n. 1, 355, n. 1; _Addison, Essay on_, iv. 53, n. 3; _anfractuosity_, iv. 4, n. 1; Bentley and Boyle, v. 238, n. 1; 'brilliant flashes of silence,' v. 360, n. 1; Boswell as a biographer, i. 30, n. 3; Burke's first speech, ii. 16, n. 2; Campbell's, Dr., _Diary_, ii. 338, n. 2; Chesterfield, Earl of, eminence of the, ii. 329, n. 3; Crisp, Mr., account of, iv. 239, n. 3; Croker's 'blunders,' ii. 338, n. 2; criticism on _Ad Lauram Epigramma_, i. 157, n. 5; Greek, v. 234, n. 1; Latin, iv. 144, n. 2; and the Marquis of Montrose, v. 298, n. 1; and _Prince Titi_, ii. 391, n. 4; feeling and dining, on, ii. 94, n. 2; Gibbon's reported Mahometanism, ii. 448, n. 2; Hastings's answer to Johnson's letter, iv. 70, n. 2; Hastings and the study of Persian, iv. 68, n. 2; House of Ormond, i. 281, n. 1; imagination, described, iii. 455; Johnson's blank verse, iv. 42, n. 7; and Boswell on the non-jurors, iv. 286, n. 3, 287, n. 2; _called_, iv. 94, n. 4; and _Cecilia_, iv. 223, n. 5, 389, n. 4; contempt of histories, iv. 312, n. 1; etymologies, i. 186, n. 5;
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