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LETTERS to and from Mr. WALSH. From 1705 to 1707. P. 57

LETTER

I. Mr. Walsh to Mr. Wycherley.

II. Mr. Walsh to Mr. Pope. Concerning paftoral and paftoral comedy.

III. The answer. Of correcting, and the extreme of it. Of paftoral comedy, and its character. Of the liberty of borrowing from the ancients.

IV. From Mr. Walsh. On the fame fubjects. V. From Mr. Walsh. Of mechanical critics; of wit and conceit, a request concerning one of his paftorals.

VI. Some critical obfervations in English Verfification.

LETTERS to and from Mr. CROMWELL. From 1708 to 1711.

LETTER

I. To Mr. Cromwell,

II. To the fame.

III. To the fame.

P. 74

IV. Concerning the first publication of the au

thor's poems.

V. Of his tranflation of the first book of Statius. VI. Of his Juvenile Poems.

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LETTER

VII. Criticisms on Statius.

VIII. Of Mr. Wycherley's coldness.
IX. Of the general conduct and inequality
of men's lives.

X. The ufe of poetical ftudies. A panegy-
rick upon dogs.

XI. Of the taste of country gentlemen.
XII.

XIII. After an illness. The obfcurity of a

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Speech to Pyrrhus in Virgil.

XVI. Anfwer to the fame.

XVII. Criticisms about an elegy of Ovid. XVIII. On fickness and disappointment.

XIX.

XX. Of Philips's paftorals.

XXI. From Mr. Cromwell. On a passage

in Lucan.

XXII. Answer to the former, with another

criticism on Lucan.

XXIII. From Mr. Cromwell.

XXIV.

XXV. From Mr. Cromwell.

XXVI. Obfervations on Crafhaw's poems.

XXVII. Concerning laughter.

XXVIII.

LETTER

XXVIII. From Mr. Cromwell.

XXIX. Of the study of poetry; Mr. Wycherley, &c.

XXX. From Mr. Cromwell. XXXI.

LETTERS to Several LADIES. p.153

LETTER

I.

II.

III.

IV.

V.

VI.

VII. To a lady from Bath.

VIII. To the fame.

IX.

X.

XI. To Mrs. on the Earl of Oxford's Behaviour, apprehenfions of commotions, army in Hyde-Park.

XII. Praise of a country life. Concern for the feparation of friends. The comforts of integrity and independency.

XIII.

XIV.

XV. Defcription of a journey to Oxford, and

manner of life there.

C 4

XVI. Of

LETTER

XVI. Of a lady's fickness.

XVII. Witty letters undervalued in comparison

of fincere ones.

XVIII. On the fame subject, to the hon. Mrs. H. XIX. To an unfortunate lady.

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I. From Sir William Trumbull. On occafion of Milton's Juvenilia, encouraging the author to publish his.

II. From Sir William Trumbull. Of his firft tranflation of Homer.

III. From Sir William Trumbull. On the Rape of the Lock.

IV. Againft compliment, and vanity; the praise of fincerity and friendship.

V. Concerning the Tragedy of Cato.

VI. From Sir William Trumbull.

VII. Against

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