Vandyke, his portrait of the Earl of Strafford, 454 Yausittart. Mr., Governor of Bengal, his position, 9 ; his fair intentions, feebleness, and inefficiency, 9 Varela's portrait of James II., 251 Vattel, 27 Vega, Garcilasso de la, a soldier as well as a poet, 81 VendÔme, Duke of, takes the command of the Bourbon forces in Spain (1710), iii 127 Venice, republic of, next in antiquity to tin- line of the Supreme Pontiff's, 300 Venus, the Roman term for the highest throw on the dice, 13 ; note. Verona, protest of Lord Holland against the course pursued by England at the Congress of, 413 Verres, extensive bribery at the trial of, 421 Verse, occasional, 350 ; blank, 300 ; reasoning in, 300 Versification, modern, in a dead language, 212 Veto, by Parliament, on the appointment of ministers, 487 ; by the Crown on aets of Parliament, 488 "Violet Crown, city of," a favorite epithet of Athens, 30 ; note. "Vicar of Wakefield" (the), 159 161 Vigo, capture of the Spanish galleons at. 170 108 "Village, Deserted" (the), Goldsmith's, 162 103 Villani, John, his account of the state of Florence in the 14th century, 276 Villn-Vieiosa, battle of, 171 128 Villiers, Sir Edward, 412 Virgil not so "correct" a poet as Homer, 337 ; skill with which Addison imitated him, 331 Dante's admiration of, 329 Vision of Judgment, Southev's, 145 Voltaire. the connecting link of the literary schools of Lewis XIV. and Lewis XVI., 355 Horace Walpole's opinion of him. 155 ; his partiality to England, 412 294 ; meditated a history of the conquest of Bengal, 214; his character, and that of his compeers, 294 ; his interview with Congreve, 407 ; his genius venerated by Frederic the Great, 100 ; his whimsical conferences with Frederic, 176 ; seq.; compared with Addison as a master of the art of ridicule, 370 377 ; his treatment by the French Academy, 23 ; failed to obtain the poetical prize,
|