XIV. To the Hon. Mrs XV. Excufe for not writing. Of Mr Fenton's death. XVII. From Mr Gay in the country. Thoughts of buy XVIII. To Mr Gay in the country. Wishes to ferve XIX. Complaints of his abfence, and fome envy at his XX. The author more and more inclined to retirement. XXII. Defiring him to return to town and refume the XXIII. Of the fame fubject. The death of Wilks the XXV. From Mr Cleland to Mr Gay. XXVI. Mr Pope to the Earl of Burlington. XXVII. The author's bad health, complaints of abfence, XXVIII. On the death of Mr Gay, his mother's illness XXIX. To Hugh Bethel, Efq; praife of humanity and Ship. XXX. To the fame. On the death of the Earl of C- XXXII. On the publishing his Letters. The fituation of XXXIII. To the Earl of Peterborow. His love of gar- XXXV. Answer to the former. XXXVI. From the Earl of Peterborow. His dislike of XXXVII. From the Earl of Peterborow from his gar- ingness to come to town. XXXVIII. From the fame. Defire to fee Dr Swift. XXXIX. From Dr Swift to the Earl of Peterborow. XLI. To Mr C-expoftulatory on the hardships done XLII. To Mr Richardfon. XLIII. XLIV. To the fame; after Mrs Pope's death. XLVII. From Dr Arbuthnot in his laft fickness. His XLVIII. The answer. The character of Katharine late Duchefs of Buckingham- p 86. P.91. LETTERS to and from Dr SWIFT and others. I. To Dr Swift. Retired from Court fome months II. From Dr Swift, at Dublin. How little he cares to think of England: Concern at the violence of party. Of the first Volume of Mr Pope's tran- flation of Homer. His circumstances in Ireland. III. Mr Pope's love and memory of Dr Swift. The Calumnies and Slanders upon him on account of Religion, turned into raillery. IV. Dr Swift's anfwer. His inquiry concerning Mr P.'s principles. Poets generally follow the Court. Raillery on the fubject of his enemies, and his Re- ligion. A Quaker-paftoral, and a Newgate-paf toral, propofed as fubjects for Mr Gay. V. Dr Swift to Mr Pope: An apology for his con- VII Mr Pope to Dr Swift, occafioned by the former: X. From Mr Pope to Dr Swift. An invitation te XI. From Dr Swift: Of Gulliver's Travels and his XII. To Dr Swift. Character of fome of his friends in XIII. Dr Swift's anfwer. Death of Lord Oxford's fon: XIV. Expectations of Dr Swift's journey to England. poftfcript on the fame occafion. -Lord B's XV. From Dr. Swift, preparing to leave England XVI. Anfwer from Mr Pope. The regret of his de- parture, remembrance of the fatisfaction past, XVII. Defires for his return, and fettlement in Eng. land: the various schemes of his other friends, XVIII. From Mr Gay and Mr Pope. An account of XX. From Dr Swift. About Gulliver and of a fe XXI. From the fame. Concerning party, and depen dency: And of the project of a joint volume of XXII. The answer. On the fame fubjects. XXIII. On Dr Swift's fecond departure for Ireland. XXIV. From Dr Swift: His reafons for departing. XXV. From Dr Swift. His remembrance of Mr XXVII. Dr Swift to Mr Gay. On the refufal of that employment, and his quitting the Court. Of XXVIII. From Lord Bolingbroke and Mr Pope. Of the ner of Montaigne.Of courtiers, and of the XXIX. Of a true Jonathan Gulliver in New England: XXX. From Dr Swift. fituation in Ireland. Answer to the former: His the Dunciad: Concerning Lord B. and Mr XXXIV. From Bath The pleasure of being abused in XXXV. From Dr Swift. His manner of living with XXXVI. Dr Swift to Lord Bolingbroke. |