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Farther account of those designs, with stanzas which Mr. Gray wrote to Mr. Bentley on that occasion

P. 96

Epitaph on Mr. Gray's Aunt and Mother in the church-yard of Stoke-Pogis

. p. 97

LETTER 18. To Mr. MASON.-On the death of his Father p. ib. LETTER 19. To Dr. WHARTON.-On Strawberry-Hill.-Occasional remarks on Gothic Architecture

p. 99 LETTER 20. To Dr. WHARTON.-Objection to publishing his Ode on the Progress of Poetry singly.-Hint of his having other lyrical ideas by him unfinished

p. 101

Explanation of that hint, and a fragment of one of those lyrical pieces inserted

P. 103

LETTER 21. To Mr. STONHEWER.-Of Monsignor Baiardi's book concerning Herculaneum.-A Poem of Voltaire.-Incloses a part of his Ode entitled the Bard. p. 111 LETTER 22. To Dr. WHARTON.-On his removing from PeterHouse to Pembroke-Hall.-His notion of a London Hospital.-Of Sully's Memoirs.—Mason's four Odes p. 113 LETTER 23. To Dr. WHARTON.-Of his own indolence.-Memoirs of M. de la Porte and of Madame Staal.-Intention of coming to town

P. 116 LETTER 24. To Mr. MASON.-Of his Reviewers.-Offers to send

him Druidical anecdotes for his projected drama of Carac

tacus

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p. 118

LETTER 25. To Mr. MASON.-On hearing Parry play on the Welch Harp, and finishing his Ode after it.-Account of the Old Ballad on which the Tragedy of Douglas was founded p. 121 LETTER 26. To Mr. HURD.-On the ill reception his two Pindaric Odes met with on their publication p. 123 LETTER 27. To Mr. MASON.-His opinion of the dramatic part of Caractacus.

p. 126 LETTER 28. To Mr. MASON.-Dissuading him from retirement. -Advice concerning Caractacus.-Criticisms on his Elegy written in the garden of a friend.-Refusal of the office of Poet Laureat.

P. 132 LETTER 29. To Dr. WHARTON.-Account of his present employment in making out a list of places in England worth seeing P. 136 LETTER 30. To Dr. WHARTON.-On the fore-mentioned list.Tragedy of Agis.-Various authors in the last volumes of Dodsley's Miscellany.-Dr. Swift's four last years of Queen. Ann

P. 138

LETTER 31. To Mr. STONHEWER.-On infidel writers and Lord Shaftesbury

P. 140

A paper of Mr. Gray inserted, relating to an impious position of Lord Bolingbroke

P. 142

LETTER 32. To Dr. WHARTON.-On the death of his son, and an excuse for not writing an epitaph p. 149 LETTER 33. To Mr. PALGRAVE.-Desiring him to communicate the remarks he should make in his tour through the North of England

P. 152

LETTER 34. To Mr. MASON.-Some remarks on a second manu

script copy of Caractacus

P. 154

LETTER 35. To Mr. PALGRAVE.-Description of Mr. Gray's present situation in town, and of his reading in the British Mu

seum

P. 156

LETTER 36. To Dr. WHARTON.-On employment.-Gardening. -Character of Froissart.-King of Prussia's Poems.-Tristram Shandy

p. 158

LETTER 37. To Mr. STONHEWER.-On the latter volumes of M. d'Alembert and the Erse Fragments. P. 162 LETTER 38. To Dr. CLARKE.-His amusements with a party on the banks of the Thames.-Death of a Cainbridge Doctor.More of the Erse Fragments p. 166 LETTER 39. To Mr. MASON.-On two Parodies of Mr. Gray's and Mr. Mason's Odes.-Extract of a letter from Mr. David Hume, concerning the authenticity of the Erse Poetry p. 168 LETTER 40. To Dr. WHARTON.-On his employments in the country.-Nouvelle Eloise.-Fingal.-Character of Mr. Stillingfleet.

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P. 172

LETTER 41. To Mr. MASON.-More concerning the Nouvelle Eloise. Of Signor Elisi, and other Opera singers. P. 175 LETTER 42. To Mr. MASON.-On his expectation of being made a Residentiary of York.-Recovery of Lord ** from a dangerous illness.-Reason for writing the Epitaph on Sir William Williams

p. 177 LETTER 43. To Dr. WHARTON.-Description of Hardwick.-Professor Turner's death.-And of the Peace P. 179 LETTER 44. To Mr. MASON.-On Count Algarotti's approbation of his and Mr. Mason's Poetry.-Gothic Architecture.Plagiary in Helvetius, from Elfrida . p. 181 LETTER 45. To Mr. BROWN.-Sending him a message to write to a Gentleman abroad relating to Count Algarotti, and recommending the Erse Poems. LETTER 46. Count ALGAROTTI to Mr. Gray.-Complimentary, and sending him some dissertations of his own

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p. 189

p. 191

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p. 195

p. 200

LETTER 47. To Dr. WHARTON.-On Rousseau's Emile p. 193 LETTER 48. To Mr. PALGRAVE.-What he particularly advises him to see when abroad LETTER 49. To Mr. BEATTIE.-Thanks for a letter received from him, and an invitation from Lord Strathmore to Glamis LETTER 50. To Dr. WHARTON.-Description of the old castle of Glamis, and part of the Highlands LETTER 51. To Mr. BEATTIE.-Apology for not accepting the degree of Doctor, offered him by the University of Aberdeen LETTER 52. To Dr. WHARTON.-Buffon's Natural History.Memoirs of Petrarch.-Mr. Walpole at Paris..-Description of a fine Lady

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p. 201

P. 213

p. 215 LETTER 53. To Dr. WHARTON.-Tour into Kent.-New Bath Guide.--Another volume of Buffon

p. 218

LETTER 54. To Mr. MASON.-On his Wife's death. p. 221 LETTER 55. To Mr. BEATTIE.-Thanks for a manuscript poem. -Mr. Adam Ferguson's Essay on Civil Society.-A compliment to Lord Gray

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p. 222 LETTER 56. To Mr. BEATTIE.-On the projected edition of our Author's poems in England and Scotland.-Commendation of Mr. Beattie's Ode on Lord Hay's birth-day p. 225 LETTER 57. To Mr. BEATTIE.-More concerning the Glasgow edition of his Poems p. 228 LETTER 58. To the Duke of GRAFTON.-Thanking him for his Professorship

p. 230 LETTER 59. To Mr. NICHOLLS.-Account of Mr. Brocket's death, and of his being made his successor in the Professorship

LETTER 60. To Mr. BEATTIE.-On the same subject

p. 231

p. 232

SECTION V.

Enumeration of such other literary pursuits of Mr. Gray as wete not sufficiently dilated upon in the preceding letters

p. 235

LETTER 1. To Mr. NICHOLLS.-On the death of his Uncle, Go vernor Floyer, and advising him to take orders P. 246 LETTER 2. To Mr. NICHOLLS-Congratulating him upon his situation, and mentioning his own Ode on the Installation of the new Chancellor

p. 249

LETTER 3. To Mr. BEATTIE.-His reason for writing that
Ode
LETTER 4. To Dr. WHARTON.A journal of his tour through
Westmoreland, Cumberland, and a part of Yorkshire
p. 255
LETTER 5. To Dr. WHARTON.-Description of Kirkstall-Abbey,
and some other places in Yorkshire
LETTER 6. To Mr. NICHOLLS.-Of Nettle-Abbey and Southamp-

p. 252

p. 291

ton

p. 293

LETTER 7. To Mr. BEATTIE.-On the first part of his Minstrel, and his Essay on the Immutability of Truth.--Stricture on Mr. D. Hume p. 296 LETTER 8. To Mr. How.-On receiving three of Count Algarotti's Treatises, and hinting an error which that author had fallen into, with regard to the English taste of gardening p. 300

The manner in which the Count rectified his mistake.

p. 302

LETTER 9. To Mr. How.-After perusing the whole of Count

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