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 : Volume VII.. Containing The First of his Letters / Together With The Commentaries and Notes Of Mr. Warburton. London. 1751
Content
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 Front cover
PDF Bookplate
PDF Endsheet
PDF Title page
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 Endsheet
PDF Back cover
PDF Spine
PDF Being The Second of his Letters