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CONTENTS
OF THE
SEVENTH VOLUME.
[The Articles marked thus † were not inferted in Dr. WARBURTON'S
Edition.]
PREFACE of the Publisher of the Surreptitious
Edition, 1735
Page
xiii
Letter from Mr. Thomas to Mr. Cromwell
Mr. Cromwell to Mr. Pope
xiv
xvi
I. Of Mr. Dryden's death; his moral character;
the Poets who fucceeded him; the temper of
Critics
II. From Mr. Wycherley
a 2
3
6
III. Mr.
LETTER
III. Mr. Wycherley's humanity; his encourage-
ment of young writers; concerning the
Author's Paftorals
IV. From Mr. Wycherley: Answer to the former
V. From the Same
VI. Some reasons why friendships may be con-
tracted between perfons of unequal years,
and the advantage of fuch friendships
VII. Against compliment
VIII. An account of the duller fort of Country
Gentlemen, and Country Life
IX. From Mr. Wycherley
X. From Mr. Wycherley. Of the correction of
his Poem to Mr. Dryden, and other Papers
XI. Of the fame, a plan for correcting and im-
proving those Poems
XII. From Mr. Wycherley
XIII. On the fame, and further Proposals for cor-
recting them
XIV. From Mr. Wycherley
XV. More concerning corrections of the Poems
XVI. From Mr. Wycherley, after his illness.
8
9
II
12
14
17
19
21
22
25
26.
29
31
33
XXII. From Mr. Wycherley. His defire of his
XXV. From Mr. Wycherley. In answer to the ac-
count of the state of his Papers
XXVI. The laft advice about his Papers, to turn
them into felect Maxims and Reflections,
which Mr. Wycherley agreed to, and be-
gun before his death
LETTERS to and from Mr. WALSH.
From 1705 to 1707.
49
51
I. Mr. Walsh to Mr. Wycherley
53
II. Mr. Walsh to Mr. Pope. Concerning Pastoral
and Paftoral Comedy
54
III. The Answer. Of correcting and the extreme of
it. Of Paftoral Comedy, and its character.
Of the liberty of borrowing from the Ancients
On the same subjects
IV. From Mr. Walsh.
V. From Mr. Walsh.
Of Mechanical Critics; of
Wit and Conceit; a request concerning one
of his Paftorals
VI. Some critical obfervations on English Verfifica-
tion
56
60
63
66
84
VI. Of
IV. Concerning the first publication of the Author's
Poems
V. Of his Translation of the First Book of Statius
a 3
VIII. Of Mr. Wycherley's coldness
IX. Of the general conduct and inequality of
men's lives
X. The use of poetical ftudies. A panegyric
upon dogs
XI. Of the taste of country gentlemen
XII. On the severity of criticism
XIII. After an illness. The obfcurity of a
XVII. Criticisms about an Elegy of Ovid
XVIII. On ficknefs and difappointment
XIX. On the fame subject
88
91
94
98
102
107
109
III
114
119
120
122
124
126
XXIII. From Mr. Cromwell. On the fame fub-
XXIX. Of the study of poetry; Mr. Wycherley, etc. 149