Chapter 4

NEW BOOKSpublished byJ. NICHOLS,Printerto theSocietyofAntiquaries,atCicero’s Head, Red-Lion-Passage, Fleet-Street;and sold byALLthe Booksellers inGreat BritainandIreland.In a handsome Quarto, adorned with a Variety of elegant Plates.BIBLIOTHECA TOPOGRAPHICA BRITANNICA.NoI. containing, 1.Queriesfor illustrating the Antiquities and Natural History ofGreat BritainandIreland: 2. The History ofTunstallinKent, by the late Rev.Edward-Rowe Mores. Price 5s. sewed.NoII. Part I. containingReliquiæ Galeanæ, or, Miscellaneous Pieces by the late learned BrothersRogerandSamuel Gale; with Biographical Memoirs, and a Pedigree of their Family. Price 2s. 6d. stitched.NoII. Part II. A Continuation of theReliquiæ Galeanæ; containing the Epistolary Correspondence of theGaleswith their learned Contemporaries. Price 5s. sewed.—To the Third Part, which will contain a Continuation of their Correspondence, will be prefixed an Account of theLiterary SocietyatSpalding.NoIII. A Description of the Chanonry inOld Aberdeen, in the Years 1724 and 1725, together with many curious, entertaining, and pleasant Remarks on the said Town, &c. byWilliam Orem, Town Clerk of Aberdeen. Illustrated by a large and accurate Survey of Old and New Aberdeen, with the adjacent Country between the Rivers Dee and Don. Price 5s. sewed.⁂ TheSurveymay be had separately, Price 1s.NoIV. Memoirs of SirJohn Hawkwood, Price 2s. stitched.⁂ The Histories ofHinckleyin Leicestershire, ofCroydonin Surrey, of the Hospital of St.Katharineby the Tower, and many other Articles, are getting forward, and will soon be published as subsequent Numbers of theBibliotheca.V. Biographical Anecdotes of WILLIAM HOGARTH; and a Catalogue of his Works chronologically arranged; with occasional Remarks. ByJ. Nichols. Octavo, Price 3s. sewed.VI. A Select Collection of Poems; with Notes Biographical and Historical, byJ. Nichols. In Four Volumes, small Octavo, Price 10s. 6d. in Boards.-->The Four concluding Volumes, which will contain many original Poems, and a General Poetical Index, are nearly finished, and will very soon be published.VII. LETTERS on several Subjects;Genius, Wit, Taste, Delicacy, London, Music, Shakspeare, The French, Foreign Travel, &c. &c. By the Rev.Martin Sherlock, M.A. Domestic Chaplain to the Earl ofBristol, and Vicar of Castleconnor and Killglass in Ireland. In Two Volumes, small Octavo, Price 5s. sewed.—Either Volume may be had separately.VIII. Letters of anEnglish Traveller[Martin Sherlock, M.A.] In Two Volumes, Crown Octavo, Price 5s. sewed; or either Volume, singly, 2s. 6d.IX. Four New Editions of the Supplement toSwift’sWorks; with explanatory Notes on All the former Volumes, and a complete General Index, byJ. Nichols.1. In One Volume, Quarto, Price One Guinea, sewed.2. In Two Volumes, large Octavo, Price Twelve Shillings, sewed.3. In Three Volumes, small Octavo, Price Twelve Shillings, sewed.4. In Three Volumes XVIIIo. Price Six Shillings, sewed.⁂ The latter Volumes ofEITHEREdition may be had separately, to complete Sets.X.Swift’sWorks,COMPLETE, in XXVII Volumes, in a small Pocket Size, PriceTwo Guineassewed; the cheapest Edition ofSwifthitherto published.XI.PropertiiΜΟΝΟΒΙΒΛΟΣ: or that Book of the Elegies ofPropertiusintituledCynthia; translated into English Verse; with Classical Notes. Pr. 2s. 6d.XII.HARDYKNUTE, AN HEROIC BALLAD. Now first published complete; with the other more approvedScottishBallads, and some not hitherto made Public, in theTragic Style.To which are prefixed,Two Dissertations, I. On the Oral Tradition of Poetry. II. On the Tragic Ballad.⁂ This Volume is printed in the same Size as DeanPercy’s “Reliques,” Price 2s. 6d. sewed.XIII. A Repertory of the Endowments of Vicarages in the Dioceses of Canterbury and Rochester. By Dr.Ducarel, F.R. and A.S.S. Commissary of the City and Diocese of Canterbury. Octavo, Price 3s. 6d.XIV. Biographical Memoirs ofWilliam Ged; including a particular Account of his Progress in the Art of Block-Printing. Printed for the Benefit of his Daughter. Octavo. Price 1s.XV.In the Press, and speedily to be published in Two Volumes, Octavo,TheCorrespondence(LiteraryandPolitical) of Dr.Atterbury, Bishop ofRochester; in which will be included many Original Letters.

NoI. containing, 1.Queriesfor illustrating the Antiquities and Natural History ofGreat BritainandIreland: 2. The History ofTunstallinKent, by the late Rev.Edward-Rowe Mores. Price 5s. sewed.

NoII. Part I. containingReliquiæ Galeanæ, or, Miscellaneous Pieces by the late learned BrothersRogerandSamuel Gale; with Biographical Memoirs, and a Pedigree of their Family. Price 2s. 6d. stitched.

NoII. Part II. A Continuation of theReliquiæ Galeanæ; containing the Epistolary Correspondence of theGaleswith their learned Contemporaries. Price 5s. sewed.—To the Third Part, which will contain a Continuation of their Correspondence, will be prefixed an Account of theLiterary SocietyatSpalding.

NoIII. A Description of the Chanonry inOld Aberdeen, in the Years 1724 and 1725, together with many curious, entertaining, and pleasant Remarks on the said Town, &c. byWilliam Orem, Town Clerk of Aberdeen. Illustrated by a large and accurate Survey of Old and New Aberdeen, with the adjacent Country between the Rivers Dee and Don. Price 5s. sewed.

⁂ TheSurveymay be had separately, Price 1s.

NoIV. Memoirs of SirJohn Hawkwood, Price 2s. stitched.

⁂ The Histories ofHinckleyin Leicestershire, ofCroydonin Surrey, of the Hospital of St.Katharineby the Tower, and many other Articles, are getting forward, and will soon be published as subsequent Numbers of theBibliotheca.

V. Biographical Anecdotes of WILLIAM HOGARTH; and a Catalogue of his Works chronologically arranged; with occasional Remarks. ByJ. Nichols. Octavo, Price 3s. sewed.

VI. A Select Collection of Poems; with Notes Biographical and Historical, byJ. Nichols. In Four Volumes, small Octavo, Price 10s. 6d. in Boards.

-->The Four concluding Volumes, which will contain many original Poems, and a General Poetical Index, are nearly finished, and will very soon be published.

VII. LETTERS on several Subjects;Genius, Wit, Taste, Delicacy, London, Music, Shakspeare, The French, Foreign Travel, &c. &c. By the Rev.Martin Sherlock, M.A. Domestic Chaplain to the Earl ofBristol, and Vicar of Castleconnor and Killglass in Ireland. In Two Volumes, small Octavo, Price 5s. sewed.—Either Volume may be had separately.

VIII. Letters of anEnglish Traveller[Martin Sherlock, M.A.] In Two Volumes, Crown Octavo, Price 5s. sewed; or either Volume, singly, 2s. 6d.

IX. Four New Editions of the Supplement toSwift’sWorks; with explanatory Notes on All the former Volumes, and a complete General Index, byJ. Nichols.

1. In One Volume, Quarto, Price One Guinea, sewed.

2. In Two Volumes, large Octavo, Price Twelve Shillings, sewed.

3. In Three Volumes, small Octavo, Price Twelve Shillings, sewed.

4. In Three Volumes XVIIIo. Price Six Shillings, sewed.

⁂ The latter Volumes ofEITHEREdition may be had separately, to complete Sets.

X.Swift’sWorks,COMPLETE, in XXVII Volumes, in a small Pocket Size, PriceTwo Guineassewed; the cheapest Edition ofSwifthitherto published.

XI.PropertiiΜΟΝΟΒΙΒΛΟΣ: or that Book of the Elegies ofPropertiusintituledCynthia; translated into English Verse; with Classical Notes. Pr. 2s. 6d.

XII.HARDYKNUTE, AN HEROIC BALLAD. Now first published complete; with the other more approvedScottishBallads, and some not hitherto made Public, in theTragic Style.

To which are prefixed,

Two Dissertations, I. On the Oral Tradition of Poetry. II. On the Tragic Ballad.

⁂ This Volume is printed in the same Size as DeanPercy’s “Reliques,” Price 2s. 6d. sewed.

XIII. A Repertory of the Endowments of Vicarages in the Dioceses of Canterbury and Rochester. By Dr.Ducarel, F.R. and A.S.S. Commissary of the City and Diocese of Canterbury. Octavo, Price 3s. 6d.

XIV. Biographical Memoirs ofWilliam Ged; including a particular Account of his Progress in the Art of Block-Printing. Printed for the Benefit of his Daughter. Octavo. Price 1s.

XV.In the Press, and speedily to be published in Two Volumes, Octavo,

TheCorrespondence(LiteraryandPolitical) of Dr.Atterbury, Bishop ofRochester; in which will be included many Original Letters.

WILLIAM ANDREWS CLARKMEMORIAL LIBRARYUniversity of California, Los AngelesThe Augustan Reprint SocietyPublications in PrintThe Augustan Reprint SocietyWILLIAM ANDREWS CLARK MEMORIAL LIBRARYUniversity of California, Los AngelesPublications in PrintWhen available, Project Gutenberg e-text numbers are included as links.1948-194915.John Oldmixon,Reflections on Dr. Swift’s Letter to Harley(1712), and Arthur Mainwaring,The British Academy(1712).16.Henry Nevil Payne,The Fatal Jealousie(1673).17.Nicholas Rowe,Some Account of the Life of Mr. William Shakespear(1709).18.Anonymous, “Of Genius,” inThe Occasional Paper, Vol. III, No. 10 (1719), and Aaron Hill, Preface toThe Creation(1720).1949-195019.Susanna Centlivre,The Busie Body(1709).20.Lewis Theobald,Preface to the Works of Shakespeare(1734).22.Samuel Johnson,The Vanity of Human Wishes(1749), and twoRamblerpapers (1750).23.John Dryden,His Majesties Declaration Defended(1681).1950-195126.Charles Macklin,The Man of the World(1792).1951-195231.Thomas Gray,An Elegy Wrote in a Country Churchyard(1751), andThe Eton College Manuscript.1952-195341.Bernard Mandeville,A Letter to Dion(1732).1958-195977-78. David Hartley,Various Conjectures on the Perception, Motion, and Generation of Ideas(1746).1959-196079.William Herbert, Third Earl of Pembroke,Poems(1660).81.Two Burlesques of Lord Chesterfield’s Letters:The Graces(1774), andThe Fine Gentleman’s Etiquette(1776).1960-196185-86.Essays on the Theatre from Eighteenth Century Periodicals.1961-196293. John Norris,Cursory Reflections Upon a Book Call’d, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding(1690).94.An. Collins,Divine Songs and Meditacions(1653).96.Ballads and Songs Loyal to the Hanoverian Succession(1703-1761).1962-196397. Myles Davies, [Selections from]Athenæ Britannicaæ(1716-1719).98.Select Hymns Taken Out of Mr. Herbert’s Temple(1697).99. Thomas Augustine Arne,Artaxerxes(1761).100. Simon Patrick,A Brief Account of the New Sect of Latitude-Men(1662).101-102. Richard Hurd,Letters on Chivalry and Romance(1762).1963-1964103.Samuel Richardson,Clarissa: Preface, Hints of Prefaces, and Postscript.104. Thomas D’Urfey,Wonders in the Sun: or, The Kingdom of the Birds(1706).105.Bernard Mandeville,An Enquiry into the Causes of the Frequent Executions at Tyburn(1725).106. Daniel Defoe,A Brief History of the Poor Palatine Refugees(1709).107-108.John Oldmixon,An Essay on Criticism(1728).1964-1965109. Sir William Temple,An Essay Upon the Original and Nature of Government(1680).110.John Tutchin,Selected Poems(1685-1700).111. Anonymous,Political Justice(1736).112. Robert Dodsley,An Essay on Fable(1764).113. T. R.,An Essay Concerning Critical and Curious Learning(1698).114.Two Poems Against Pope: Leonard Welsted,One Epistle to Mr. A. Pope(1730), and Anonymous,The Blatant Beast(1742).1965-1966115. Daniel Defoe and others,Accounts of the Apparition of Mrs. Veal.116.Charles Macklin,The Covent Garden Theatre(1752).117.Sir Roger L’Estrange,Citt and Bumpkin(1680).118. Henry More,Enthusiasmus Triumphatus(1662).119. Thomas Traherne,Meditations on the Six Days of the Creation(1717).120.Bernard Mandeville,Aesop Dress’d or a Collection of Fables(1704).William Andrews Clark Memorial Library: University of California, Los AngelesThe Augustan Reprint SocietyGeneral Editors: George Robert Guffey, University of California, Los Angeles; Earl Miner, University of California, Los Angeles; Maximillian E. Novak, University of California, Los Angeles; Robert Vosper, William Andrews Clark Memorial LibraryCorresponding Secretary: Mrs. Edna C. Davis, William Andrews Clark Memorial LibraryThe Society’s purpose is to publish reprints (usually facsimile reproductions) of rare seventeenth and eighteenth century works. All income of the Society is devoted to defraying costs of publication and mailing.Correspondence concerning subscriptions in the United States and Canada should be addressed to the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, 2520 Cimarron St., Los Angeles, California. Correspondence concerning editorial matters may be addressed to any of the general editors. Manuscripts of introductions should conform to the recommendations of theMLA Style Sheet. The membership fee is $5.00 a year for subscribers in the United States and Canada and 30/- for subscribers in Great Britain and Europe. British and European subscribers should address B. H. Blackwell, Broad Street, Oxford, England. Copies of back issues in print may be obtained from the Corresponding Secretary.PUBLICATIONS FOR 1966-1967Henry Headley,Poems(1786). Introduction by Patricia Meyer Spacks.James Macpherson,Fragments of Ancient Poetry(1760). Introduction by John J. Dunn.e-text 8161Edmond Malone,Cursory Observations on the Poems Attributed to Thomas Rowley(1782). Introduction by James M. Kuist.Present TextAnonymous,The Female Wits(1704). Introduction by Lucyle Hook.In PreparationAnonymous,The Scribleriad(1742).Lord Hervey,The Difference Between Verbal and Practical Virtue(1742). Introduction by A. J. Sambrook.In PreparationLe Lutrin: an Heroick Poem, Written Originally in French by Monsieur Boileau: Made English by N. O.(1682). Introduction by Richard Morton.ANNOUNCEMENTS:The Society announces a series of special publications beginning with a reprint ofJohn Ogilby,The Fables of Aesop Paraphras’d in Verse(1668), with an Introduction by Earl Miner. Ogilby’s book is commonly thought one of the finest examples of seventeenth-century bookmaking and is illustrated with eighty-one plates. The next in this series will beJohn Gay’sFables(1728), with an Introduction by Vinton A. Dearing. Publication is assisted by funds from the Chancellor of the University of California, Los Angeles. Price to members of the Society, $2.50 for the first copy and $3.25 for additional copies. Price to non-members, $4.00.Seven back numbers of Augustan Reprints which have been listed as out-of-print now are available in limited supply: 15, 19, 41, 77-78, 79, 81. Price per copy, $0.90 each; $1.80 for the double-issue 77-78.THE AUGUSTAN REPRINT SOCIETYWilliam Andrews Clark Memorial Library2520 CIMARRON STREET AT WEST ADAMS BOULEVARD, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90018Make check or money order payable toThe Regents of the University of California.

When available, Project Gutenberg e-text numbers are included as links.

1948-194915.John Oldmixon,Reflections on Dr. Swift’s Letter to Harley(1712), and Arthur Mainwaring,The British Academy(1712).16.Henry Nevil Payne,The Fatal Jealousie(1673).17.Nicholas Rowe,Some Account of the Life of Mr. William Shakespear(1709).18.Anonymous, “Of Genius,” inThe Occasional Paper, Vol. III, No. 10 (1719), and Aaron Hill, Preface toThe Creation(1720).1949-195019.Susanna Centlivre,The Busie Body(1709).20.Lewis Theobald,Preface to the Works of Shakespeare(1734).22.Samuel Johnson,The Vanity of Human Wishes(1749), and twoRamblerpapers (1750).23.John Dryden,His Majesties Declaration Defended(1681).1950-195126.Charles Macklin,The Man of the World(1792).1951-195231.Thomas Gray,An Elegy Wrote in a Country Churchyard(1751), andThe Eton College Manuscript.1952-195341.Bernard Mandeville,A Letter to Dion(1732).1958-195977-78. David Hartley,Various Conjectures on the Perception, Motion, and Generation of Ideas(1746).1959-196079.William Herbert, Third Earl of Pembroke,Poems(1660).81.Two Burlesques of Lord Chesterfield’s Letters:The Graces(1774), andThe Fine Gentleman’s Etiquette(1776).1960-196185-86.Essays on the Theatre from Eighteenth Century Periodicals.1961-196293. John Norris,Cursory Reflections Upon a Book Call’d, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding(1690).94.An. Collins,Divine Songs and Meditacions(1653).96.Ballads and Songs Loyal to the Hanoverian Succession(1703-1761).1962-196397. Myles Davies, [Selections from]Athenæ Britannicaæ(1716-1719).98.Select Hymns Taken Out of Mr. Herbert’s Temple(1697).99. Thomas Augustine Arne,Artaxerxes(1761).100. Simon Patrick,A Brief Account of the New Sect of Latitude-Men(1662).101-102. Richard Hurd,Letters on Chivalry and Romance(1762).1963-1964103.Samuel Richardson,Clarissa: Preface, Hints of Prefaces, and Postscript.104. Thomas D’Urfey,Wonders in the Sun: or, The Kingdom of the Birds(1706).105.Bernard Mandeville,An Enquiry into the Causes of the Frequent Executions at Tyburn(1725).106. Daniel Defoe,A Brief History of the Poor Palatine Refugees(1709).107-108.John Oldmixon,An Essay on Criticism(1728).1964-1965109. Sir William Temple,An Essay Upon the Original and Nature of Government(1680).110.John Tutchin,Selected Poems(1685-1700).111. Anonymous,Political Justice(1736).112. Robert Dodsley,An Essay on Fable(1764).113. T. R.,An Essay Concerning Critical and Curious Learning(1698).114.Two Poems Against Pope: Leonard Welsted,One Epistle to Mr. A. Pope(1730), and Anonymous,The Blatant Beast(1742).1965-1966115. Daniel Defoe and others,Accounts of the Apparition of Mrs. Veal.116.Charles Macklin,The Covent Garden Theatre(1752).117.Sir Roger L’Estrange,Citt and Bumpkin(1680).118. Henry More,Enthusiasmus Triumphatus(1662).119. Thomas Traherne,Meditations on the Six Days of the Creation(1717).120.Bernard Mandeville,Aesop Dress’d or a Collection of Fables(1704).

15.John Oldmixon,Reflections on Dr. Swift’s Letter to Harley(1712), and Arthur Mainwaring,The British Academy(1712).

16.Henry Nevil Payne,The Fatal Jealousie(1673).

17.Nicholas Rowe,Some Account of the Life of Mr. William Shakespear(1709).

18.Anonymous, “Of Genius,” inThe Occasional Paper, Vol. III, No. 10 (1719), and Aaron Hill, Preface toThe Creation(1720).

19.Susanna Centlivre,The Busie Body(1709).

20.Lewis Theobald,Preface to the Works of Shakespeare(1734).

22.Samuel Johnson,The Vanity of Human Wishes(1749), and twoRamblerpapers (1750).

23.John Dryden,His Majesties Declaration Defended(1681).

26.Charles Macklin,The Man of the World(1792).

31.Thomas Gray,An Elegy Wrote in a Country Churchyard(1751), andThe Eton College Manuscript.

41.Bernard Mandeville,A Letter to Dion(1732).

77-78. David Hartley,Various Conjectures on the Perception, Motion, and Generation of Ideas(1746).

79.William Herbert, Third Earl of Pembroke,Poems(1660).

81.Two Burlesques of Lord Chesterfield’s Letters:The Graces(1774), andThe Fine Gentleman’s Etiquette(1776).

85-86.Essays on the Theatre from Eighteenth Century Periodicals.

93. John Norris,Cursory Reflections Upon a Book Call’d, An Essay Concerning Human Understanding(1690).

94.An. Collins,Divine Songs and Meditacions(1653).

96.Ballads and Songs Loyal to the Hanoverian Succession(1703-1761).

97. Myles Davies, [Selections from]Athenæ Britannicaæ(1716-1719).

98.Select Hymns Taken Out of Mr. Herbert’s Temple(1697).

99. Thomas Augustine Arne,Artaxerxes(1761).

100. Simon Patrick,A Brief Account of the New Sect of Latitude-Men(1662).

101-102. Richard Hurd,Letters on Chivalry and Romance(1762).

103.Samuel Richardson,Clarissa: Preface, Hints of Prefaces, and Postscript.

104. Thomas D’Urfey,Wonders in the Sun: or, The Kingdom of the Birds(1706).

105.Bernard Mandeville,An Enquiry into the Causes of the Frequent Executions at Tyburn(1725).

106. Daniel Defoe,A Brief History of the Poor Palatine Refugees(1709).

107-108.John Oldmixon,An Essay on Criticism(1728).

109. Sir William Temple,An Essay Upon the Original and Nature of Government(1680).

110.John Tutchin,Selected Poems(1685-1700).

111. Anonymous,Political Justice(1736).

112. Robert Dodsley,An Essay on Fable(1764).

113. T. R.,An Essay Concerning Critical and Curious Learning(1698).

114.Two Poems Against Pope: Leonard Welsted,One Epistle to Mr. A. Pope(1730), and Anonymous,The Blatant Beast(1742).

115. Daniel Defoe and others,Accounts of the Apparition of Mrs. Veal.

116.Charles Macklin,The Covent Garden Theatre(1752).

117.Sir Roger L’Estrange,Citt and Bumpkin(1680).

118. Henry More,Enthusiasmus Triumphatus(1662).

119. Thomas Traherne,Meditations on the Six Days of the Creation(1717).

120.Bernard Mandeville,Aesop Dress’d or a Collection of Fables(1704).

General Editors: George Robert Guffey, University of California, Los Angeles; Earl Miner, University of California, Los Angeles; Maximillian E. Novak, University of California, Los Angeles; Robert Vosper, William Andrews Clark Memorial LibraryCorresponding Secretary: Mrs. Edna C. Davis, William Andrews Clark Memorial Library

The Society’s purpose is to publish reprints (usually facsimile reproductions) of rare seventeenth and eighteenth century works. All income of the Society is devoted to defraying costs of publication and mailing.

Correspondence concerning subscriptions in the United States and Canada should be addressed to the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, 2520 Cimarron St., Los Angeles, California. Correspondence concerning editorial matters may be addressed to any of the general editors. Manuscripts of introductions should conform to the recommendations of theMLA Style Sheet. The membership fee is $5.00 a year for subscribers in the United States and Canada and 30/- for subscribers in Great Britain and Europe. British and European subscribers should address B. H. Blackwell, Broad Street, Oxford, England. Copies of back issues in print may be obtained from the Corresponding Secretary.

Henry Headley,Poems(1786). Introduction by Patricia Meyer Spacks.

James Macpherson,Fragments of Ancient Poetry(1760). Introduction by John J. Dunn.e-text 8161

Edmond Malone,Cursory Observations on the Poems Attributed to Thomas Rowley(1782). Introduction by James M. Kuist.Present Text

Anonymous,The Female Wits(1704). Introduction by Lucyle Hook.In Preparation

Anonymous,The Scribleriad(1742).Lord Hervey,The Difference Between Verbal and Practical Virtue(1742). Introduction by A. J. Sambrook.In Preparation

Le Lutrin: an Heroick Poem, Written Originally in French by Monsieur Boileau: Made English by N. O.(1682). Introduction by Richard Morton.

The Society announces a series of special publications beginning with a reprint ofJohn Ogilby,The Fables of Aesop Paraphras’d in Verse(1668), with an Introduction by Earl Miner. Ogilby’s book is commonly thought one of the finest examples of seventeenth-century bookmaking and is illustrated with eighty-one plates. The next in this series will beJohn Gay’sFables(1728), with an Introduction by Vinton A. Dearing. Publication is assisted by funds from the Chancellor of the University of California, Los Angeles. Price to members of the Society, $2.50 for the first copy and $3.25 for additional copies. Price to non-members, $4.00.

Seven back numbers of Augustan Reprints which have been listed as out-of-print now are available in limited supply: 15, 19, 41, 77-78, 79, 81. Price per copy, $0.90 each; $1.80 for the double-issue 77-78.

1.“And tears began to flow;”This line has been reformatted to match the rest of the text. Page as printed, with Dryden verse included to show normal arrangement of quoted poetry:page image

1.“And tears began to flow;”

This line has been reformatted to match the rest of the text. Page as printed, with Dryden verse included to show normal arrangement of quoted poetry:

page image


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