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13. On the fame, and further Proposals for correcting them
304
18. From Mr. Wycherley, concerning the Mifcellanies, and the Critics
311
19. Concerning Mifcellanies, and the Danger of young Poets
312
20. From Mr. Wycherley
314
21. From Mr. Wycherley
315
22. From Mr. Wycherley. His defire of his Company; and request to
proceed in correcting his Papers
23. More about the Poems
24. Corrections fent
316
318
319
25. From Mr. Wycherley. In Answer to the Account of the State of
his Papers
320
26. The last Advice about his Papers, to turn them into select Maxims
and Reflections, which Mr. Wycherley agreed to and begun
before his Death
322
LETTERS to and from W. WALSH, Efq; from the Year 1705
to 1707.
LET. 1. Mr. Walsh to Mr. Wycherley
323
2. Mr. Walsh to Mr. Pope, concerning pastoral and pastoral Comedy 324
3. The Answer. Of correcting, and the extreme of it. Of pastoral
Comedy, and its Character. Of the Liberty of borrowing from the
Ancients
4. From Mr. Walsh, on the fame Subjects
5. From Mr. Walsh. Of mechanical Critics of Wit and Conceit, a
Request concerning one of his Pastorals
6. Some critical Obfervations on English Verfification
325
327
326
330
LETTERS to and from H. CROMWELL, Efq; from the Year
LET. 1. To Mr. Cromwell
1708 to 1711.
2 To the fame
3. To the fame
5. Of his Tranflation of the first Book of Statius
6. Of his Juvenile Poems
7. Criticiims on Statius
8. Of Mr. Wycherley's Coldness
9. Of the general Conduct and Inequality of Men's Lives
10. The Ufe of poetical Studies. A Panegyrick upon Dogs
11. Of the Taste of Country Gentlemen
334
335
4. Concerning the first Publication of the Author's Poems
336
ibid.
338
341
343
345
348*
350
353
355
13. After
13. After an Illness. The Obfcurity of a Country Life
14. On the fame Subject. Concerning Rondeaus
356
358
15. From Mr. Cromwell. On Priam's Speech to Pyrrhus, in Virgil 360
16. Answer to the fame
17. Criticism about an Elegy of Ovid
18. On Sickness and Disappointment
19. To Mr. Cromwell
20. Of Philips's Paftorals
21. From Mr. Cromwell. On a Paffage in Lucan
361
362
363
365
367
22. Anfwer to the former, with another Criticism on Lucan
369
370
fions of Commotions; Army in Hyde-park
12. Praise of a Country Life. Concern for the Separation of Friends.
The Comforts of Integrity and Independency
on the Earl of Oxford's Behaviour; Apprehen-
395-396
398
400
13, 14,
15. Defcription of a Journey to Oxford, and Manner of Life there
16. Of a Lady's Sickness
4.02-403
495
LET. 1. From Sir William Trumbull, on Occafion of Milton's Juve- nilia, encouraging the Author to publish his
411
2. From Sir William Trumbull: of his firft Translation of Homer
3. From Sir William Trumbull. On the Rape of the Lock
422
424
4. Against Compliment and Vanity; the Praise of Sincerity and Friend-
Lhip
425
s. Concerning the Tragedy of Cato
6. From Sir William Trumbull
7. Against the Violence of Parties, and the Praise of general Benevolence
8. From Sir William Trumbull. Of an Epigram in Martial, on a happy old Age
426
427
428
430
LETTERS
IMITATIONS
O F
HORAC E.
VOL. III.
B