The Works Of Alexander Pope Esq. : In Nine Volumes Complete. With His Last Corrections, Additions, And Improvements; As they were delivered to the Editor a little before his Death. Containing The First of his Letters / Together With The Commentaries and Notes Of Mr. Warburton. London : Knapton [u.a.], 1751 : Volume VII.(1751-). 1751
Inhalt
- PDF Being The Third of his Letters
- PDF Containing His Juvenile Poems
- PDF Containing His Translations And Imitations
- PDF Containing His Satires &c.
- PDF Containing His Moral Essays
- PDF Containing The Dunciad In Four Books
- PDF Containing His Miscellaneous Pieces In Verse and Prose
- PDF Containing The First of his Letters
- PDF Vorderdeckel
- PDF Exlibris
- PDF Vorsatz
- PDF Titelblatt
- PDF [I] Preface Of the Publisher of the Surreptitious Edition, 1735.
- PDF [IX] A Catalogue Of The Surreptitious and Incorrect Editions of Mr. Pope's Letters.
- PDF [XII] Preface Prefixed to the First Genuine Edition in quarto, 1737.
- PDF [XXI] Contents of the Seventh Volume.
- PDF Errata
- PDF [1] Letter Of Mr. Pope, And Several of his Friends.
- PDF [3] Letters to and from Mr. Wycherley. From the Year 1704 to 1710.
- PDF [3] Letter I. Of Mr. Dryden's death: his moral character: the poets who succeeded him: the temper of critics.
- PDF 6 II. From Mr. Wycherley.
- PDF 8 III. Mr. Wycherley's humanity; his encouragement of young writers; concerning the Author's Pastorals.
- PDF 9 IV. From Mr. Wycherley: Answer to the former.
- PDF 11 V. From the same.
- PDF 13 VI. Some reasons why friendships may be contracted between persons of unequal years, and the advantage of such friendships.
- PDF 15 VII. Against Compliment.
- PDF 17 VIII. An account of the duller fort of Country Gentlemen, and Country Life.
- PDF 20 IX. From Mr. Wycherley.
- PDF 22 X. From Mr. Wycherley. Of the correction of his Poem to Mr. Dryden, and other papers.
- PDF 24 Letter XI. Of the same, a plan for correcting and improving those poems.
- PDF 26 XII. From Mr. Wycherley.
- PDF 28 XIII. On the same, and further proposals for correcting them.
- PDF 31 XIV. From Mr. Wycherley.
- PDF 33 XV. More concerning corrections of the poems.
- PDF 35 XVI. From Mr. Wycherley, after his illness.
- PDF 37 XVII. From Mr. Wycherley.
- PDF 39 XVIII. From Mr. Wycherley. Concerning the Miscellanies, and the Critics.
- PDF 41 XIX. Concerning Miscellanies, and the danger of young poets.
- PDF 43 XX. From Mr. Wycherley.
- PDF 45 XXI. From Mr. Wycherley.
- PDF 46 XXII. From Mr. Wycherley. His desire of his company; and request to proceed in correcting his papers.
- PDF 49 XXIII. More about the poems.
- PDF 51 XXIV. Corrections sent.
- PDF 53 XXV. From Mr. Wycherley. In answer to the account of the state of his papers.
- PDF 55 XXVI. The last advice about his papers, to turn them into select Maxims and Reflections, which Mr. Wycherley agreed to and begun before his death.
- PDF [57] Letters to and from Mr. Walsh. From 1705 to 1707.
- PDF [57] Letter I. Mr. Walsh to Mr. Wycherley.
- PDF 58 II. Mr. Walsh to Mr. Pope. Concerning pastoral and pastoral comedy.
- PDF 60 III. The answer. Of correcting, and the extreme of it. Of pastoral comedy, and its character. Of the liberty of borrowing from the ancients.
- PDF 63 IV. From Mr. Walsh. On the same subjects.
- PDF 66 V. From Mr. Walsh. Of mechanical critics; of wit and conceit, a request concerning on of his pastorals.
- PDF 68 VI. Some critical observations in English Versification.
- PDF [74] Letters to and from Mr. Cromwell. From 1708 to 1711.
- PDF [74] Letter I. To Mr. Cromwell.
- PDF 76 II. To the same.
- PDF 77 III. To the same.
- PDF 78 IV. Concerning the first publication of the author's poems.
- PDF 81 V. Of his translation of the first book of Statius.
- PDF 85 VI. Of his Juvenile Poems.
- PDF 88 Letter VII. Criticisms on Statius.
- PDF 91 VIII. Of Mr. Wycherley's coldness.
- PDF 96 IX. Of the general conduct and inequality of men's lives.
- PDF 99 X. The use of poetical studies. A panegyrick upon dogs.
- PDF 105 XI. Of the taste of country gentlemen.
- PDF 107 XII.
- PDF 109 XIII. After an illness. The obscurity of a country life.
- PDF 112 XIV. On the same subject. Concerning Rondeaus.
- PDF 115 XV. From Mr. Cromwell. On Priam's speech to Pyrrhus in Virgil.
- PDF 119 XVI. Answer to the same.
- PDF 120 XVII. Criticisms about an elegy of Ovid.
- PDF 123 XIX.
- PDF 126 XX. Of Philips's pastoral.
- PDF 130 XXI. From Mr. Cromwell. On a passage in Lucan.
- PDF 131 XXII. Answer to the former, with another criticism on Lucan.
- PDF 134 XXIII. From Mr. Cromwell.
- PDF 135 XXIV.
- PDF 137 XXV. From Mr. Cromwell.
- PDF 139 XXVI. Observations on Crashaw's poems.
- PDF 142 XXVII. Concerning laughter.
- PDF 144 Letter XXVIII. From Mr. Cromwell.
- PDF 146 XXIX. Of the study of poetry; Mr. Wycherley, &c.
- PDF 148 XXX. From Mr. Cromwell.
- PDF 150 XXXI.
- PDF [153] Letters to Several Ladies
- PDF [153] Letter I.
- PDF 157 [i.e. 155] II.
- PDF 157 III. [To a Lady.]
- PDF 161 [i.e. 159] IV.
- PDF 161 V. [The Answer.]
- PDF 162 VI. [In the Style of a Lady.]
- PDF 164 VII. To a lady from Bath.
- PDF 166 VIII. To the same.
- PDF 168 IX. [To the same.]
- PDF 170 X.
- PDF 174 XI. To Mrs. --- on the Earl of Oxford's Behaviour, apprehensions of commotions, army in Hyde-Park.
- PDF 177 XII. Praise of country life. Concern for the separation of friends. The comforts of integrity and independency.
- PDF 180 XIII.
- PDF 182 XIV.
- PDF 185 XV. Description of a journey to Oxford, and manner of life there.
- PDF 187 Letter XVI. Of a lady's sickness.
- PDF 189 Letter XVII. Witty letters undervalued in comparison of sincere ones.
- PDF 191 XVIII. On the same subject, to the bon. Mrs. H.
- PDF 193 XIX. To an unfortunate lady.
- PDF 194 XX. To a lady abroad.
- PDF 199 XXI. To the same.
- PDF 203 XXII. To the same.
- PDF 207 XXIII. To Mrs. Arabella Fermor on her marriage.
- PDF [209] Letters to and from Sir William Trumbull. From 1705 to 1716.
- PDF [209] Letter I. From Sir William Trumbull. On occasion of Milton's Juvenilia, encouraging the author to publish his.
- PDF 210 II. From Sir William Trumbull. Of his first translation of Homer.
- PDF 213 III. From Sir William Trumbull. On the Rape of the Lock.
- PDF 214 IV. Against compliment, and vanity; the praise of sincerity and friendship.
- PDF 217 V. Concerning the Tragedy of Cato.
- PDF 219 VI. From Sir William Trumbull.
- PDF 220 Letter VII. Against the violence of parties, and the praise of general benevolence.
- PDF 222 VIII. From Sir William Trumbull. Of an epigram in Martial, on a happy old age.
- PDF [225] Letters to and from Several Persons. From 1711 to 1714.
- PDF [225] Letter I. To the Hon. J. C. Esq. Reflections on the Essay on Criticism.
- PDF 230 II. To the same. On a passage on the same Essay.
- PDF 233 III. To the same against party-spirit.
- PDF 238 IV. To my Lord Lansdown.
- PDF 239 V. The Hon. J. C. to Mr. Pope concerning Betterton's remains. Rape of the Lock, & c.
- PDF 241 VI. The answer.
- PDF 243 VII. To --- on returning his letters.
- PDF 246 VIII. From the Lord Lansdown.
- PDF 247 IX. To General Anthony Hamilton, on his having translated the Essay on Criticism into French verse.
- PDF [249] Letters to and from Mr. Steele, Mr. Addison, & c.
- PDF [249] Letter I. Mr. Steele to Mr. Pope. Of Sir Charles Sedley's death. The author's Eclogue on the Messiah.
- PDF 251 II. Concerning a public, private, or mixed life.
- PDF 253 III. Of sickness and dying young.
- PDF 256 IV. On the Emperor Adrian's verses on his death-bed.
- PDF 258 V. From Mr. Steele.
- PDF 258 VI. [The Answer.]
- PDF 260 VII. Of the Emperor Adrian.
- PDF 261 VIII. From Mr. Steele.
- PDF 262 IX.
- PDF 263 X. On Dennis`s remarks on Cato.
- PDF 265 XI. From Mr. Addison. Concerning Mr. Pope`s translation of Homer.
- PDF 266 XII. From Mr. Addison. On the same.
- PDF 267 XIII. Against party spirit.
- PDF 270 XIV. Of the freedom of a friend, The incongruity of Man, and the vanity of the Word.
- PDF 273 XV. Of the Version of Homer: Party animosity.
- PDF 277 XVI. Concerning some misunderstandings.
- PDF 279 XVII. To the Hon. --- concerning Mr. Addison, Philips's calumny, and Mr. Gay's pastorals.
- PDF 282 XVIII. The vanity of poctical fame, serious thoughts.
- PDF 284 XIX. Concerning the translation of Homer.
- PDF 287 XX. To Mr. Jervas, of the same.
- PDF 289 XXI. To the same, on the equal and easy terms of friendship.
- PDF 291 XXII. Mr. Jervas to Mr. Pope, concerning Mr. Addison.
- PDF 293 XXIII. The answer.
- PDF 295 XXIV. Mr. Pope to the Earl of Halifax.
- PDF 296 XXV. Dr. Parnelle, Dr. Berkley, Mr. Gay, and Dr. Arbuthnot; concerning Mr. Pope's Homer.
- PDF 300 XXVI. To the Hon. James Craggs, Esq. on the same.
- PDF 303 XXVII. To Mr. Congreve. Of sincerity; the scurrilities of abusive critics; what ought to be the temper of an author.
- PDF 305 XXVIII. To the same, of the Farce called the What-d'ye-call-it.
- PDF 307 XXIX. To the same.
- PDF 310 XXX. From Mr. Congreve.
- PDF [313] Letters to Several Persons. From the year 1714 to 1721.
- PDF [313] Letter I. From the Reverend Dean Berkley to Mr. Pope. Of the Rape of the Lock; the state of learning in Italy.
- PDF 315 II. Mr. Pope to Mr. Jervas.
- PDF 318 III. To the same.
- PDF 320 IV. To the same.
- PDF 323 V. The Hon. Mr. Craggs to Mr. Pope.
- PDF 325 VI. To Mr. Fenton. Concerning Mr. Secretary Craggs's advice to him to write. The author's manner of passing his time.
- PDF 327 VII. From Dean Berkley. A description of the island Inarime. Character of the Italians.
- PDF 331 VIII. Mr. Pope to --- the author building and planting: Death of several friends, and particularly of Dr. Garth.
- PDF 335 IX. To Mr. --- on the circuit.
- PDF 336 X. To the Earl of Burlington, an account of a journey to Oxford with Bernard Lintott, a bookseller.
- PDF 343 XI. To the Duke of Buckingham in answer to his Letter on Buckingham-house.
- PDF 351 XII. From the Duke of Buckingham to Mr. Pope, on the dispute in France concerning Homer.
- PDF 357 Letter XIII. Answer to the former.
- PDF 361 XIV. From Dr. Arbuthnot, after the Queen's death, of the papers of Scriblerus and Dr. Swift.
- PDF 362 XV. To Dr. Arbuthnot, on his return from France, and on the calumnies about the Odyssey.
- PDF 364 XVI. To Robert Earl of Oxford.
- PDF 366 XVII. The Earl of Oxford's answer.
- PDF Vorsatz
- PDF Rückdeckel
- PDF Rücken
- PDF Being The Second of his Letters
