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Essay(s) by Isaac Disraeli
Ancient Cookery, And Cooks
Isaac Disraeli
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       The memorable grand dinner given by the classical doctor in Peregrine Pickle, has indisposed our tastes for the cookery of the ancients; but, since it is often "the cooks who spoil the broth," we cannot be sure but that even "the black Lacedaemonian," stirred by the spear of a Spartan, might have had a poignancy for him, which did not happen at the more recent classical banquet.
       The cookery of the ancients must have been superior to our humbler art, since they could find dainties in the tough membranous parts of the matrices of a sow, and the flesh of young hawks, and a young ass. The elder Pliny records, that one man had studied the art of fattening snails with paste so successfully, that the shells of some of his snails would contain many quarts.[1] The same monstrous taste fed up those prodigious goose livers; a taste still prevailing in Italy. Swine were fattened with whey and figs; and even fish in their ponds were increased by such artificial means. Our prize oxen might have astonished a Roman as much as one of their crammed peacocks would ourselves. Gluttony produces monsters, and turns away from nature to feed on unwholesome meats. The flesh of young foxes about autumn, when they fed on grapes, is praised by Galen; and Hippocrates equals the flesh of puppies to that of birds. The humorous Dr. King, who has touched on this subject, suspects that many of the Greek dishes appear charming from their mellifluous terminations, resounding with a _floios_ and _toios_. Dr. King's description of the Virtuoso Bentivoglio or Bentley, with his "Bill of Fare" out of Athenaeus, probably suggested to Smollett his celebrated scene.
       The numerous descriptions of ancient cookery which Athenaeus has preserved indicate an unrivalled dexterity and refinement: and the ancients, indeed, appear to have raised the culinary art into a science, and dignified cooks into professors. They had writers who exhausted their erudition and ingenuity in verse and prose; while some were proud to immortalise their names by the invention of a poignant sauce, or a popular _gateau_. Apicius, a name immortalised, and now synonymous with a gorger, was the inventor of cakes called Apicians; and one Aristoxenes, after many unsuccessful combinations, at length hit on a peculiar manner of seasoning hams, thence called Aristoxenians. The name of a late nobleman among ourselves is thus invoked every day.
       Of these _Eruditae gultae_ Archestratus, a culinary philosopher, composed an epic or didactic poem on good eating. His "Gastrology" became the creed of the epicures, and its pathos appears to have made what is so expressively called "their mouths water." The idea has been recently successfully imitated by a French poet.[2] Archestratus thus opens his subject:--
       I write these precepts for immortal Greece,
       That round a table delicately spread,
       Or three, or four, may sit in choice repast,
       Or five at most. Who otherwise shall dine,
       Are like a troop marauding for their prey.
       The elegant Romans declared that a repast should not consist of less in number than the Graces, nor of more than the Muses. They had, however, a quaint proverb, which Alexander ab Alexandro has preserved, not favourable even to so large a dinner-party as nine; it turns on a play of words:--
       Septem convivium, Novem convicium facere.[3]
       An elegant Roman, meeting a friend, regretted he could not invite him to dinner, "because my _number_ is complete."
       When Archestratus acknowledges that some things are for the winter, and some for the summer, he consoles himself, that though we cannot have them at the same time, yet, at least, we may talk about them at all times.
       This great genius seems to have travelled over land and seas that he might critically examine the things themselves, and improve, with new discoveries, the table-luxuries. He indicates the places for peculiar edibles and exquisite potables; and promulgates his precepts with the zeal of a sublime legislator, who is dictating a code designed to ameliorate the imperfect state of society.
       A philosopher worthy to bear the title of cook, or a cook worthy to be a philosopher, according to the numerous curious passages scattered in Athenaeus, was an extraordinary genius, endowed not merely with a natural aptitude, but with all acquired accomplishments. The philosophy, or the metaphysics, of cookery appears in the following passage:--
       "Know then, the COOK, a dinner that's bespoke,
       Aspiring to prepare, with prescient zeal
       Should know the tastes and humours of the guests;
       For if he drudges through the common work,
       Thoughtless of manner, careless what the place
       And seasons claim, and what the favouring hour
       Auspicious to his genius may present,
       Why, standing 'midst the multitude of men,
       Call we this plodding _fricasseer_ a Cook?
       Oh differing far! and one is not the other!
       We call indeed the _general_ of an army
       Him who is charged to lead it to the war;
       But the true general is the man whose mind,
       Mastering events, anticipates, combines;
       Else is he but a _leader_ to his men!
       With our profession thus: the first who comes
       May with a humble toil, or slice, or chop,
       Prepare the ingredients, and around the fire
       Obsequious, him I call a fricasseer!
       But ah! the cook a brighter glory crowns!
       Well skill'd is he to know the place, the hour,
       Him who invites, and him who is invited,
       What fish in season makes the market rich,
       A choice delicious rarity! I know
       That all, we always find; but always all,
       Charms not the palate, critically fine.
       Archestratus, in culinary lore
       Deep for his time, in this more learned age
       Is wanting; and full oft he surely talks
       Of what he never ate. Suspect his page,
       Nor load thy genius with a barren precept.
       Look not in books for what some idle sage
       So idly raved; for cookery is an art
       Comporting ill with rhetoric; 'tis an art
       Still changing, and of momentary triumph!
       Know on thyself thy genius must depend.
       All books of cookery, all helps of art,
       All critic learning, all commenting notes,
       Are vain, if, void of genius, thou wouldst cook!"
       The culinary sage thus spoke: his friend
       Demands, "Where is the ideal cook thou paint'st?"
       "Lo, I the man?" the savouring sage replied.
       "Now be thine eyes the witness of my art!
       This tunny drest, so odorous shall steam,
       The spicy sweetness so shall steal thy sense,
       That thou in a delicious reverie
       Shalt slumber heavenly o'er the Attic dish!"
       In another passage a Master-Cook conceives himself to be a pupil of Epicurus, whose favourite but ambiguous axiom, that "Voluptuousness is the sovereign good," was interpreted by the _bon-vivans_ of antiquity in the plain sense.
       MASTER COOK.
       Behold in me a pupil of the school
       Of the sage Epicurus.
       FRIEND.
       Thou a sage!
       MASTER COOK.
       Ay! Epicurus too was sure a cook,
       And knew the sovereign good. Nature his study,
       While practice perfected his theory.
       Divine philosophy alone can teach
       The difference which the fish _Glociscus_[4] shows
       In winter and in summer: how to learn
       Which fish to choose, when set the Pleiades,
       And at the solstice. 'Tis change of seasons
       Which threats mankind, and shakes their changeful frame.
       This dost thou comprehend? Know, what we use
       In season, is most seasonably good!
       FRIEND.
       Most learned cook, who can observe these canons
       MASTER COOK.
       And therefore phlegm and colics make a man
       A most indecent guest. The aliment
       Dress'd in my kitchen is true aliment;
       Light of digestion easily it passes;
       The chyle soft-blending from the juicy food
       Repairs the solids.
       FRIEND.
       Ah! the chyle! the solids!
       Thou new Democritus! thou sage of medicine!
       Versed in the mysteries of the Iatric art!
       MASTER COOK.
       Now mark the blunders of our vulgar cooks!
       See them prepare a dish of various fish,
       Showering profuse the pounded Indian grain,
       An overpowering vapour, gallimaufry
       A multitude confused of pothering odours!
       But, know, the genius of the art consists
       To make the nostrils feel each scent distinct;
       And not in washing plates to free from smoke.
       I never enter in my kitchen, I!
       But sit apart, and in the cool direct,
       Observant of what passes, scullions' toil.
       FRIEND.
       What dost thou there?
       MASTER COOK.
       I guide the mighty whole;
       Explore the causes, prophesy the dish.
       'Tis thus I speak: "Leave, leave that ponderous ham;
       Keep up the fire, and lively play the flame
       Beneath those lobster patties; patient here,
       Fix'd as a statue, skim, incessant skim.
       Steep well this small Glociscus in its sauce,
       And boil that sea-dog in a cullender;
       This eel requires more salt and marjoram;
       Roast well that piece of kid on either side
       Equal; that sweetbread boil not over much."
       'Tis thus, my friend, I make the concert play.
       FRIEND.
       O man of science! 'tis thy babble kills!
       MASTER COOK.
       And then no useless dish my table crowds;
       Harmonious ranged, and consonantly just.
       FRIEND.
       Ha! what means this?
       MASTER COOK.
       Divinest music all!
       As in a concert instruments resound,
       My ordered dishes in their courses chime.
       So Epicurus dictated the art
       Of sweet voluptuousness, and ate in order,
       Musing delighted o'er the sovereign good!
       Let raving Stoics in a labyrinth
       Run after virtue; they shall find no end.
       Thou, what is foreign to mankind, abjure.
       FRIEND.
       Right honest Cook! thou wak'st me from their dreams!
       Another cook informs us that he adapts his repasts to his personages.
       I like to see the faces of my guests,
       To feed them as their age and station claim.
       My kitchen changes, as my guests inspire
       The various spectacle; for lovers now,
       Philosophers, and now for financiers.
       If my young royster be a mettled spark,
       Who melts an acre in a savoury dish
       To charm his mistress, scuttle-fish and crabs,
       And all the shelly race, with mixture due
       Of cordials filtered, exquisitely rich.
       For such a host, my friend! expends much more
       In oil than cotton; solely studying love!
       To a philosopher, that animal,
       Voracious, solid ham and bulky feet;
       But to the financier, with costly niceness,
       Glociscus rare, or rarity more rare.
       Insensible the palate of old age,
       More difficult than the soft lips of youth,
       To move, I put much mustard in their dish;
       With quickening sauces make their stupor keen,
       And lash the lazy blood that creeps within.
       Another genius, in tracing the art of cookery, derives from it nothing less than the origin of society; and I think that some philosopher has defined man to be "a cooking animal."
       COOK.
       "The art of cookery drew us gently forth
       From that ferocious life, when void of faith
       The Anthropophaginian ate his brother!
       To cookery we owe well-ordered states,
       Assembling men in dear society.
       Wild was the earth, man feasting upon man,
       When one of nobler sense and milder heart
       First sacrificed an animal; the flesh
       Was sweet; and man then ceased to feed on man!
       And something of the rudeness of those times
       The priest commemorates; for to this day
       He roasts the victim's entrails without salt.
       In those dark times, beneath the earth lay hid
       The precious salt, that gold of cookery!
       But when its particles the palate thrill'd,
       The source of seasonings, charm of cookery! came.
       They served a paunch with rich ingredients stored;
       And tender kid, within two covering plates,
       Warm melted in the mouth. So art improved!
       At length a miracle not yet perform'd,
       They minced the meat, which roll'd in herbage soft,
       Nor meat nor herbage seem'd, but to the eye,
       And to the taste, the counterfeited dish
       Mimick'd some curious fish; invention rare!
       Then every dish was season'd more and more,
       Salted, or sour, or sweet, and mingled oft
       Oatmeal and honey. To enjoy the meal
       Men congregated in the populous towns,
       And cities flourish'd which we cooks adorn'd
       With all the pleasures of domestic life.
       An arch-cook insinuates that there remain only two "pillars of the state," besides himself, of the school of Sinon, one of the great masters of the condimenting art. Sinon, we are told, applied the elements of all the arts and sciences to this favourite one. Natural philosophy could produce a secret seasoning for a dish; and architecture the art of conducting the smoke out of a chimney: which, says he, if ungovernable, makes a great difference in the dressing. From the military science he derived a sublime idea of order; drilling the under cooks, marshalling the kitchen, hastening one, and making another a sentinel. We find, however, that a portion of this divine art, one of the professors acknowledges to be vapouring and bragging!--a seasoning in this art, as well as in others. A cook ought never to come unaccompanied by all the pomp and parade of the kitchen: with a scurvy appearance, he will be turned away at sight; for all have eyes, but few only understanding.[5]
       Another occult part of this profound mystery, besides vapouring, consisted, it seems, in filching. Such is the counsel of a patriarch to an apprentice! a precept which contains a truth for all ages of cookery.
       Carian! time well thy ambidextrous part,
       Nor always filch. It was but yesterday,
       Blundering, they nearly caught thee in the fact;
       None of thy balls had livers, and the guests,
       In horror, pierced their airy emptiness.
       Not even the brains were there, thou brainless hound!
       If thou art hired among the middling class,
       Who pay thee freely, be thou honourable!
       But for this day, where now we go to cook,
       E'en cut the master's throat for all I care;
       "A word to th' wise," and show thyself my scholar!
       There thou mayst filch and revel; all may yield
       Some secret profit to thy sharking hand.
       'Tis an old miser gives a sordid dinner,
       And weeps o'er every sparing dish at table;
       Then if I do not find thou dost devour
       All thou canst touch, e'en to the very coals,
       I will disown thee! Lo! old Skin-flint comes;
       In his dry eyes what parsimony stares!
       These cooks of the ancients, who appear to have been hired for a grand dinner, carried their art to the most whimsical perfection. They were so dexterous as to be able to serve up a whole pig boiled on one side, and roasted on the other. The cook who performed this feat defies his guests to detect the place where the knife had separated the animal, or how it was contrived to stuff the belly with an olio composed of thrushes and other birds, slices of the matrices of a sow, the yolks of eggs, the bellies of hens with their soft eggs flavoured with a rich juice, and minced meats highly spiced. When this cook is entreated to explain his secret art, he solemnly swears by the manes of those who braved all the dangers of the plain of Marathon, and combated at sea at Salamis, that he will not reveal the secret that year. But of an incident so triumphant in the annals of the gastric art, our philosopher would not deprive posterity of the knowledge. The animal had been bled to death by a wound under the shoulder, whence, after a copious effusion, the master-cook extracted the entrails, washed them with wine, and hanging the animal by the feet, he crammed down the throat the stuffings already prepared. Then covering the half of the pig with a paste of barley, thickened with wine and oil, he put it in a small oven, or on a heated table of brass, where it was gently roasted with all due care: when the skin was browned, he boiled the other side; and then, taking away the barley paste, the pig was served up, at once boiled and roasted. These cooks, with a vegetable, could counterfeit the shape and the taste of fish and flesh. The king of Bithynia, in some expedition against the Scythians, in the winter, and at a great distance from the sea, had a violent longing for a small fish called _aphy_--a pilchard, a herring, or an anchovy. His cook cut a turnip to the perfect imitation of its shape; then fried in oil, salted, and well powdered with the grains of a dozen black poppies, his majesty's taste was so exquisitely deceived, that he praised the root to his guests as an excellent fish. This transmutation of vegetables into meat or fish is a province of the culinary art which we appear to have lost; yet these are _cibi innocentes_, compared with the things themselves. No people are such gorgers of mere animal food as our own; the art of preparing vegetables, pulse, and roots, is scarcely known in this country. This cheaper and healthful food should be introduced among the common people, who neglect them from not knowing how to dress them. The peasant, for want of this skill, treads under foot the best meat in the world; and sometimes the best way of dressing it is least costly.
       The gastric art must have reached to its last perfection, when we find that it had its history; and that they knew how to ascertain the aera of a dish with a sort of chronological exactness. The philosophers of Athenaeus at table dissert on every dish, and tell us of one called _maati_, that there was a treatise composed on it; that it was first introduced at Athens, at the epocha of the Macedonian empire, but that it was undoubtedly a Thessalian invention; the most sumptuous people of all the Greeks. The _maati_ was a term at length applied to any dainty of excessive delicacy, always served the last.
       But as no art has ever attained perfection without numerous admirers, and as it is the public which only can make such exquisite cooks, our curiosity may be excited to inquire whether the patrons of the gastric art were as great enthusiasts as its professors.
       We see they had writers who exhausted their genius on these professional topics; and books of cookery were much read: for a comic poet, quoted by Athenaeus, exhibits a character exulting in having procured "The New Kitchen of Philoxenus, which," says he, "I keep for myself to read in my solitude." That these devotees to the culinary art undertook journeys to remote parts of the world, in quest of these discoveries, sufficient facts authenticate. England had the honour to furnish them with oysters, which they fetched from about Sandwich. Juvenal[6] records that Montanus was so well skilled in the science of good eating, that he could tell by the first bite whether they were English or not. The well-known Apicius poured into his stomach an immense fortune. He usually resided at Minturna, a town in Campania, where he ate shrimps at a high price: they were so large, that those of Smyrna, and the prawns of Alexandria, could not be compared with the shrimps of Minturna. However, this luckless epicure was informed that the shrimps in Africa were more monstrous; and he embarks without losing a day. He encounters a great storm, and through imminent danger arrives at the shores of Africa. The fishermen bring him the largest for size their nets could furnish. Apicius shakes his head: "Have you never any larger?" he inquires. The answer was not favourable to his hopes. Apicius rejects them, and fondly remembers the shrimps of his own Minturna. He orders his pilot to return to Italy, and leaves Africa with a look of contempt.
       A fraternal genius was Philoxenus: he whose higher wish was to possess a crane's neck, that he might be the longer in savouring his dainties; and who appears to have invented some expedients which might answer, in some degree, the purpose. This impudent epicure was so little attentive to the feelings of his brother guests, that in the hot bath he avowedly habituated himself to keep his hands in the scalding water; and even used to gargle his throat with it, that he might feel less impediment in swallowing the hottest dishes. He bribed the cooks to serve up the repast smoking hot, that he might gloriously devour what he chose before any one else could venture to touch the dish. It seemed as if he had used his fingers to handle fire. "He is an oven, not a man!" exclaimed a grumbling fellow-guest. Once having embarked for Ephesus, for the purpose of eating fish, his favourite food, he arrived at the market, and found all the stalls empty. There was a wedding in the town, and all the fish had been bespoken. He hastens to embrace the new-married couple, and singing an epithalamium, the dithyrambic epicure enchanted the company. The bridegroom was delighted by the honour of the presence of such a poet, and earnestly requested he would come on the morrow. "I will come, young friend, if there is no fish at the market!"--It was this Philoxenus, who, at the table of Dionysius, the tyrant of Sicily, having near him a small barbel, and observing a large one near the prince, took the little one, and held it to his ear. Dionysius inquired the reason. "At present," replied the ingenious epicure, "I am so occupied by my Galatea," (a poem in honour of the mistress of the tyrant,) "that I wished to inquire of this little fish, whether he could give me some information about Nereus; but he is silent, and I imagine they have taken him up too young: I have no doubt that old one, opposite to you, would perfectly satisfy me." Dionysius rewarded the pleasant conceit with the large barbel.
       [Footnote 1:
       Nat. Hist. lib. ix. 56. Snails are still a common dish in Vienna, and are eaten with eggs.]
       [Footnote 2:
       Dr. Lister published in the early part of the last century an amusing poem, "The Art of Cookery, in imitation of 'Horace's Art of Poetry.'"]
       [Footnote 3:
       Genial. Dierum, II. 283, Lug. 1673. The writer has collected in this chapter a variety of curious particulars on this subject.]
       [Footnote 4:
       The commentators have not been able always to assign known names to the great variety of fish, particularly sea-fish, the ancients used, many of which we should revolt at. One of their dainties was a shell-fish, prickly like a hedgehog, called _Echinus_. They ate the dog-fish, the star-fish, porpoises or sea-hogs, and even seals. In Dr. Moffet's "Regiment of Diet," an exceeding curious writer of the reign of Elizabeth, republished by Oldys, may be found an ample account of the "sea-fish" used by the ancients.--Whatever the _Glociscus_ was, it seems to have been of great size, and a shell-fish, as we may infer from the following curious passage in Athenaeus. A father, informed that his son is leading a dissolute life, enraged, remonstrates with his pedagogue:--"Knave! thou art the fault! hast thou ever known a philosopher yield himself so entirely to the pleasures thou tellest me of?" The pedagogue replies by a Yes! and that the sages of the Portico are great drunkards, and none know better than they _how to attack a Glociscus_.]
       [Footnote 5:
       Ben Jonson, in his "Staple of News," seems to have had these passages in view when he wrote:--
       A master cook! Why, he's the man of men
       For a professor, he designes, he drawes.
       He paints, he carves, he builds, he fortifies;
       Makes citadels of curious fowl and fish.
       Some he dry-dishes, some moats round with broths,
       Mounts marrow-bones, cuts fifty-angled custards,
       Bears bulwark pies, and for his outerworks
       He raiseth ramparts of immortal crust;
       And teacheth all the tactics at one dinner:
       What rankes, what files to put his dishes in;
       The whole art military. Then he knows
       The influence of the stars upon his meats,
       And all their seasons, tempers, qualities;
       And so to fit his relishes and sauces,
       He has Nature in a pot, 'bove all the chemists,
       Or airy brethren of the rosy-cross.
       He is an architect, an ingineer,
       A soldier, a physician, a philosopher,
       A general mathematician!
]
       [Footnote 6:
       Sat. iv. 140.]
       [The end]
       Isaac D\'Israeli's essay: Ancient Cookery, And Cooks
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"Critical Sagacity," And "Happy Conjecture;" Or, Bentley's Milton
"Political Religionism"
"Taxation No Tyranny!"
Abelard And Eloisa
Abridgers
The Absent Man
Acajou And Zirphile
Alchymy
Amusements Of The Learned
Ancient And Modern Saturnalia
Ancient Cookery, And Cooks
Anecdotes Of Abstraction Of Mind
Anecdotes Of Censured Authors
Anecdotes Of European Manners
Anecdotes Of Fashion
Anecdotes Of Prince Henry, The Son Of James I
Anecdotes Of The Fairfax Family
Angelo Politian
Anne Bullen
Apology For The Parisian Massacre
The Arabic Chronicle
Ariosto And Tasso
Aristotle And Plato
The Astrea
An Authentic Narrative Of The Last Hours Of Sir Walter Rawleigh
Authors By Profession: Guthrie And Amhurst--Drake--Smollett
Autographs
Bayle
Ben Jonson On Translation
Ben Jonson, Feltham, And Randolph
The Bible Prohibited And Improved
A Bibliognoste
The Bibliomania
Bolingbroke And Mallet's Posthumous Quarrel With Pope
Bonaventure De Periers
The Book Of Death
Boyle And Bentley
Buckingham's Political Coquetry With The Puritans
Buildings In The Metropolis, And Residence In The Country
Camden And Brooke
Cardinal Richelieu
The Case Of Authors Stated, Including The History Of Literary Property
Catholic And Protestant Dramas
A Catholic's Refutation
Cause And Pretext
Cervantes
Characteristics Of Bayle
Characters Described By Musical Notes
Charles The First
Charles The First's Love Of The Fine Arts
The Chinese Language
Cicero Viewed As A Collector
Cicero's Puns
The Comedy Of A Madman
Condemned Poets
Confusion Of Words
A Contrivance In Dramatic Dialogue
Cowley Of His Melancholy
Critical History Of Poverty
Critics
D'avenant And A Club Of Wits
Danger Incurred By Giving The Result Of Literary Inquiries
De La Rochefoucault
The Death Of Charles IX
Dedications
The Despair Of Young Poets
Destruction Of Books
Dethroned Monarchs
Diaries--Moral, Historical, And Critical
The Diary Of A Master Of The Ceremonies
The Dictionary Of Trevoux
Disappointed Genius Takes A Fatal Direction By Its Abuse
Discoveries Of Secluded Men
Domestic History Of Sir Edward Coke
The Domestic Life Of A Poet.--Shenstone Vindicated
Douglas
Dreams At The Dawn Of Philosophy
Drinking-Customs In England
Duke Of Buckingham
The Early Drama
Early Printing
Edward The Fourth
Elizabeth
Elizabeth And Her Parliament
An English Academy Of Literature
English Astrologers
Errata
Explanation Of The Fac-Simile
Expression Of Suppressed Opinion
Extemporal Comedies
Fame Contemned
Felton, The Political Assassin
Female Beauty And Ornaments
Feudal Customs
Fire, And The Origin Of Fireworks
Gaming
General Monk And His Wife
Genius And Erudition The Victims Of Immoderate Vanity
Genius The Dupe Of Its Passions
Geographical Style
A Glance Into The French Academy
The Good Advice Of An Old Literary Sinner
The Goths And Huns
Grotius
Hell
The History Of Gloves
History Of New Words
The History Of The Caracci
History Of The Skeleton Of Death
The History Of The Theatre During Its Suppression
The History Of Writing-Masters
Hobbes's Quarrels With Dr. Wallis The Mathematician
Hobbes, And His Quarrels; Including An Illustration Of His Character
The Illusions Of Writers In Verse
Imitators
Imprisonment Of The Learned
The Indiscretion Of An Historian Thomas Carte
Inequalities Of Genius
Influence Of A Bad Temper In Criticism
Influence Of A Name
The Inquisition
Introducers Of Exotic Flowers, Fruits, Etc
Introduction Of Tea, Coffee, And Chocolate
The Italian Historians
James The First
James The First As A Father And A Husband
A Jansenist Dictionary
The Jews Of York
Jocular Preachers
Johnson's Hints For The Life Of Pope
Jonson And Decker
Laborious Authors
Legends
Libraries
Licensers Of The Press
Life And Habits Of A Literary Antiquary.--Oldys And His Manuscripts
The Life Of An Authoress
Lintot's Account-Book
Literary Anecdotes
Literary Blunders
Literary Composition
Literary Controversy
Literary Disappointments Disordering The Intellect
Literary Dutch
Literary Fashions
Literary Follies
Literary Forgeries
Literary Friendships
Literary Hatred Exhibiting A Conspiracy Against An Author
Literary Impostures
Literary Journals
Literary Parallels
Literary Quarrels From Personal Motives
Literary Residences
Literary Ridicule Illustrated By Some Account Of A Literary Satire
Literary Scotchmen
Literary Unions
A Literary Wife
Little Books
Local Descriptions
Love And Folly, An Ancient Morality
The Lover's Heart
The Loves Of "The Lady Arabella"
Magliabechi
The Maladies Of Authors
The Man Of One Book
Manuscripts And Books
The Marriage Of The Arts
Martin Mar-Prelate
Masques
Massinger, Milton, And The Italian Theatre
Masterly Imitators
Medical Music
Medicine And Morals
Men Of Genius Deficient In Conversation
A Mendicant Author, And The Patrons Of Former Times
Metempsychosis
Milton
The Minister--Duke Of Buckingham, Lord Admiral, Lord General
The Minister--The Cardinal Duke Of Richelieu
Minute Writing
The Miseries Of Successful Authors
The Miseries Of The First English Commentator
Modern Literature--Bayle's Critical Dictionary
Modern Platonism
Modes Of Salutation, And Amicable Ceremonies, Observed In Various Nations
Monarchs
Mysteries, Moralities, Farces, And Sotties
Names Of Our Streets
A Narrative Of ExtraordinaryTransactions Respecting Publication Of Pope's Letters
A National Work Which Could Find No Patronage
Natural Productions Resembling Artificial Compositions
Nobility
Noblemen Turned Critics
Numerical Figures
Of A Biography Painted
Of A History Of Events Which Have Not Happened
Of Anagrams And Echo Verses
Of Coke's Style, And His Conduct
Of Des Maizeaux, And The Secret History Of Anthony Collins's Manuscripts
Of False Political Reports
Of Lenglet Du Fresnoy
Of Literary Filchers
Of Lord Bacon At Home
Of Palaces Built By Ministers
Of Suppressors And Dilapidators Of Manuscripts
Of The Titles Of Illustrious, Highness, And Excellence
On Puck The Commentator
On The Custom Of Kissing Hands
On The Custom Of Saluting After Sneezing
On The Hero Of Hudibras; Butler Vindicated
On The Ridiculous Titles Assumed By Italian Academies
The Origin Of Dante's Inferno
Origin Of Newspapers
Origin Of The Materials Of Writing
Orthography Of Proper Names
The Pains Of Fastidious Egotism
Pamphlets
The Pantomimical Characters
The Paper-Wars Of The Civil Wars
Parker And Marvell
Parodies
Pasquin And Marforio
Patrons
The Pearl Bibles And Six Thousand Errata
Perpetual Lamps Of The Ancients
The Persecuted Learned
Peter Corneille
Philip And Mary
Philosophical Descriptive Poems
The Philosophy Of Proverbs
Physiognomy
Poetical And Grammatical Deaths
The Poetical Garland Of Julia
Poetical Imitations And Similarities
Poets
Poets Laureat
Poets, Philosophers, And Artists, Made By Accident
Political Criticism On Literary Compositions
Political Forgeries And Fictions
Political Nicknames
Pope And Addison
Pope And Cibber; Containing A Vindication Of The Comic Writer
Pope's Earliest Satire
Pope, And His Miscellaneous Quarrels
Popes
The Port-Royal Society
Portraits Of Authors
Poverty Of The Learned
Prediction
Prefaces
Prior's Hans Carvel
The Productions Of The Mind Not Seizable By Creditors
Professors Of Plagiarism And Obscurity
The Progress Of Old Age In New Studies
Psalm-Singing
Quadrio's Account Of English Poetry
Quodlibets, Or Scholastic Disquisitions
Quotation
Rabbinical Stories
Recovery Of Manuscripts
Relics Of Saints
Religious Nouvellettes
Reliquiae Gethinianae
The Rewards Of Oriental Students
Richardson
The Rival Biographers Of Heylin
Robinson Crusoe
Romances
Royal Divinities
Royal Proclamations
Royal Promotions
The Royal Society
The Rump
Saint Evremond
Scarron
The Scuderies
Secret History Of An Elective Monarchy
Secret History Of Authors Who Have Ruined Their Booksellers
Secret History Of Charles The First And His First Parliaments
Secret History Of Charles The First, And His Queen Henrietta
Secret History Of Edward Vere, Earl Of Oxford
Secret History Of Sir Walter Rawleigh
Secret History Of The Building Of Blenheim
Secret History Of The Death Of Queen Elizabeth
A Senate Of Jesuits
Sentimental Biography
Shenstone's School-Mistress
Singularities Observed By Various Nations In Their Repasts
Sir Edward Coke's Exceptions Against The High Sheriff's Oath
Sir John Hill, With The Royal Society, Fielding, Smart, &c.
The Six Follies Of Science
Sketches Of Criticism
Solitude
Solomon And Sheba
Some Notices Of Lost Works
Songs Of Trades, Or Songs For The People
The Sovereignty Of The Seas
Spanish Etiquette
Spanish Poetry
Spenser, Jonson, And Shakspeare
The Student In The Metropolis
The Sufferings Of Authors
Supplement To Martin Mar-Prelate
The Talmud
Titles Of Books
Titles Of Sovereigns
Toleration
Tom O' Bedlams
Tragic Actors
Trials And Proofs Of Guilt In Superstitious Ages
True Sources Of Secret History
The Turkish Spy
Undue Severity Of Criticism
Usurers Of The Seventeenth Century
Vicars Of Bray
Vida
The View Of A Particular Period Of The State Of Religion In Our Civil Wars
Virginity
A Voluminous Author Without Judgment
Warburton, And His Quarrels; Including An Illustration Of his Literary Character
Wax-Work
Whether Allowable To Ruin Oneself?