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Printed for the EDITOR, and fold by J. WENMAN, No. 144, Fleet-ftreet, and all other Bookfellers in Great Britain and Ireland.
MDCCLXXVIII,
CONTENTS of the FOURTH VOLUME.
LETTERS to and from several Perfons from the Year 1711 to 1714.
LET. 1. the Hon. J. C. Efq. Reflections on the Essay on Cri-
"T°
ticism
2. To the fame. On a Paffage of the fame Essay
3. To the fame, against Party Spirit.
4. To my Lord Lansdown
5. The Hon. J. C. to Mr. Pope, concerning Betterton's Remains, &c. 12
6. The Anfwer
9. To Gen. Anthony Hamilton, on his having translated the Essay on
.Criticifm into French Verfe
13
LETTERS to and from Mr. Steele, Mr. Addison, &c. from the Years
1712 to 1715.
LET. 1. Mr. Steele to Mr. Pope. Of Sir Charles Sedley's Death. The
Author's Eclogue on the Meffiah'
2. Concerning a public, private, or mixed Life
3. Of Sickness, and dying young
4. On the Emperor Adrian's Verfes on his Death-bed
5. From Mr. Steele
6.
7. Of the Emperor Adrian
8. From Mr. Steele
19
20
21
23
25
ib.
26
27
9.
10. On Dennis's Remarks on Cato
28
11. From Mr. Addison, concerning Mr. Pope's Tranflation of Homer 29
12. From Mr. Addison, on the fame
30
13. Against Party-fpirit
3x
14. Of the Freedom of a Friend. The Incongruity of Man, and the
Vanity of the World
20. To Mr. Jervas, of the fame
21 To the fame, on the equal and easy Terms of Friendship
22. Mr. Jervas to Mr. Pope concerning Mr. Addison
23. The Answer
26. Mr. Pope to the Earl of Halifax
37
concerning Mr. Addison, Philips's Calumny,
38
40
ΑΣ
43
44
46
47
48
25. Dr. Parnelle, Dr. Berkley, &c. concerning Mr. Pope's Homer
26. To the Hop, James Craggs, Efq; on the fame
28. To the fame. Of the Farce called the What-d'ye-call it
29. To the fame
30. From Mr. Congreve
4. To the fame
5. The Hon. Mr. Craggs to Mr. Pope
LETTERS to and from feveral Perfons from the Year 1714 to 1721.
LET. I. From the Rev. Dean Berkley to Mr. Pope. Of the Rape of the Lock; the State of Learning in Italy
2. Mr. Pope to Mr. Jervas
3. To the fame
60,
6&t
63%
644
66
6. To Mr. Fenton Concerning Mr. Secretary Craggs's Advice to him
to write; the Author's Manner of paffing his Time
67
7. From Dean Berkeley. A Defcription of the Island Inarime, &c.
8. Mr. Pope to ————, The Author building and planting. Death
of feveral Friends, and particularly of Dr. Garth
10 To the Earl of Burlington. An Account of a Journey to Oxford
with Bernard Lintot, a Bookfeller
To the D. of Buckingham, in Answer to his on Bukingham-house
12. From the Duke of Buckingham to Mr. Pope, on the Dispute in
France concerning Homer
74
78
83%
87
3. Answer to the former
14. From Dr. Arbuthnot, after the Queen's Death. Of the Papers of Scriblerus and Dr. Swift
90%
15. To Dr. Arbuthnot, on his Return from France, and on the Ca-
lumnics about the Odyssey
LETTERS to and from Edward Blount, Efq; from the Year 1714 to 1725.
LET. 1. Of the Geography of Homer, a Map done by the Author. The
State of the Times; the Siege of Barcelona, the Queen's Death;
the Condition of the English Roman Catholicks. &c.
2. From Mr. Blount. Anfwer to the former. His Temper in Religion
and Politics
94
3. From Mr. Blount. His Difpofition to Quiet; Reflections on the
Affair of Prefton: an Invitation into the Country
96
98
4. An Account of the Death of Mr. Wycherley
99
5. Contemplations on the Pleafures of feparate Spirits; on the narrow
Conceptions of Men, &c.
100
6. Confolations under Perfecution; the Duty of mutual Affiftance, &c. 102
7. From Mr. Blount
105
8. After the Affair of Preston; the Author's Removal, &c.
106
9. To Mr. Blount, after his Retirement into Flanders. On the Hiftory
of Jeffery of Monmouth, &c.
10. On the Death of the Author's Father
11. To Mr. Blount
107
109.
12. On Mr. Blount's Recovery from an Illnefs: Advice to fell his Eflate 111
13. Of his Manner of Life in the Country, and of the Author's near
town
14. A Description of a Grotto
113
-114
15. On the Approach of Winter, Hofpitality, and a cheerful Family 115
LETTERS to and from the Hon. Robert Digby from the Year 1717 to 1727.
LET. 1. After a Fit of Sickness. Of the Tragedy of Gorboduc. The
Author's Progrefs in tranflating Homer's Iliad
2. Excufe for writing carelessly. The Humour of the Town
3. From Mr. Digby, Anfwer to the former
4. On the finishing his Tranflation of the Iliad. His Situation at
Twickenham, &c. The Death of a Friend
118
119
121
122
124
125
126
127
10. Character of Dr. Arbuthnot, and his Brother. Death of a Friend 128
11. Character of the Digby Family
129
12. Lord Bathursts's Wood; the Camp in Hyde-park; the Bishop of
Rochefter's Converfation
137
17. On the Season of Christmas. Customs of Hofpitality, &c.
138
18. To the Hon. Edw. Digby on his Brother's Death
139
LETTERS to and from Dr. Atterbury, Bishop of Rochester, from the
Year 1716 to 1723.
LET. 1. From the Bishop of Rochester, concerning Mr. Pope's general
Preface to his Works
2. From the fame
3. From the Bishop of Rochester, on Occasion of the Death of Mr. Pope's Father
141
142
7. From the fame. On a Manufcript of Huetius, and the Epitaph on
Mr. Harcourt
149*
8. From the Lord Chancellor Harcourt, on the Epitaph of his Son
9. From the Bishop of Rochester. On his ill Health, Waller's Verfes
on Sickness. Mr. Prior's Funeral
150
151
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