XV. More concerning corrections of the poems. XVI. From Mr Wycherley, after his illness XVIII. From Mr Wycherley. Concerning the Mifcel- XIX. Concerning Mifcellanies, and the danger of XXIII. More about the poems XXIV. Corrections fent. XXV. From Mr Wycherley In answer to the account XXVI. The last advice about his papers, to turn them II. Mr Walk to Mr Pope. Concerning paftoral III. The answer. Of correcting, and the extreme of IV. From Mr Walsh. On the fame fubjects. LETTER V. From Mr Walsh. Of mechanical critics; of VI. Some critical observations in English Versifica- IV. Concerning the first publication of the author's V. Of his tranflation of the first book of Statius. VIII. Of Mr Wycherley's coldness. IX. Of the general conduct and inequality of men's XII. LETTER XXII. Answer to the former, with another criticifm on XXIII. XXIV. XXV. From Mr Cromwell. XXVIII. From Mr Cromwell. XXIX. Of the study of poetry; Mr Wycherley, &c. XXXI. LETTERS to SEVERAL LADIES. p. 125. LETTER I. II. III. IV. V. VI. LETTERS to and from Sir WILLIAM TRUMBULL. From 1705 to 1716. p. 171 Milton's Juvenilia, encouraging the author to II. From Sir William Trumbull. Of his firft III. From Sir William Trumbull. On the Rape of IV. Against compliment, and vanity; the praife of V. Concerning the Tragedy of Cato. VI. From Sir William Trumbull. VII. Against the violence of parties, and the praise I. To the Hon. J. G. Efq. Reflections on the Ef II. To the fame. On a paffage of the fame Ellay *LETTER IX. To General Anthony Hamilton, on his having LETTERS to and from Mr STEELE, Mr ADDISON, &c. LETTER A From 1712 to 1715. p. 204 I. Mr Steele to Mr Pope. Of Sir Charles Sed- ley's death. The author's Eclogue on the Mef- II. Concerning a public, private, or mixed life. III. Of fickness and dying young. |