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house burnt, iii. 429, n. 1; _Old Man's Wish_, iv. 19, n. 1; _pamphlets_, iii. 319, n. 1; Paris Foundling Hospital, ii. 398, n. 5; population, rule of increase of, ii. 314; Priestly and Price, iv. 434; Pringle, Sir John, iii. 65, n. 1; Quakers of Philadelphia, iv. 212, n. 1; Ralph, James, i. 169, n. 2; riots in London in 1768, ii. 60, n. 2; iii. 46, n. 5; rise of himself and Strahan, ii. 226, n. 2; Shipley, Bishop, friendship with, iv. 246, n. 4; Wilcox, the bookseller, i. 102, n. 2; Strahan, letter to, iii. 364, n. 1; Whitefield's oratory, ii. 79, n. 4; 'Wilkes and liberty,' ii. 60, n. 2. FRANKLIN, Thomas, iii. 83. n. 3. FRASER, Dr., v. 108. FRASER, General, iii. 2. FRASER, Mr., of Balnain, v. 133. FRASER, Mr., the engineer, iii. 326. FRASER, Mr., of Strichen, v. 107. FRAUDS, none innocent, ii. 434, n. 2. FREDERICK, Prince of Wales. See under PRINCE OF WALES. FREDERICK THE GREAT, difficulties of his youth, i. 442, n. 1; dressed plainly, ii. 475; George II, quarrel with, iv. 107; Johnson _downs_ Robertson with him, iii. 334-5; opinion of his poetry, i. 434; writes his _Memoirs_, i. 308; Maupertuis, lines to, ii. 54, n. 3; overawes Hanover, v. 201, n. 4; power as a despotic prince, ii. 158; prose and poetry, i. 434-5; social, i. 442; taken by the nose, risk of being, ii. 229; torture, forbade use of, i. 467, n. 1; Voltaire, contends with, i. 434; v. 103, n. 2. FREDERICK-WILLIAM the First, i. 308. FREE AGENT, iv. 123. FREE WILL, Boswell introduces discussion, ii. 82, 104; iii. 290; consults Johnson by letter, iv. 71; 'we know our will is free,' ii. 82; iv. 329; 'all theory against it,' iii. 291; best for mankind, v. 117. _Freeholder_, ii. 61, n. 4; 319, n. 1. FREEPORT, Sir Andrew, ii. 212. FREIND, Dr., i. 177, n. 2. FRENCH, Mrs., iv. 48. FRENCH COOK, a nobleman's, i. 469. FRERON, father and son, ii. 392, 406. FRESCATI, v. 153, n. 1. FRIEND, Sir John, ii. 183. FRIENDS, comparing minds, iii. 387; example of good set by them, ii. 478; few houses to be nursed at, iv. 181; future state, in a, ii. 162; iii. 312, 438; iv. 279-80; Goldsmith and the story of Bluebeard, ii. 181; 'he that has friends has no friend,' i. 207; iii. 149, 289, 386; natural, iv. 147, 198, n. 4; v. 105; pleasure in talking over past scenes, iii. 217; survivor, the, iii. 312. FRIENDSHIP, Christian virtue, how far a, iii. 289; formed, how,
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