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Essay(s) by Isaac Disraeli
A Narrative Of ExtraordinaryTransactions Respecting Publication Of Pope's Letters
Isaac Disraeli
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       JOHNSON observes, that "one of the passages of POPE'S life which seems to deserve some inquiry, was the publication of his letters by CURLL, the rapacious bookseller."[1] Our great literary biographer has expended more research on this occasion than his usual penury of literary history allowed; and yet has only told the close of the strange transaction--the previous parts are more curious, and the whole cannot be separated. Joseph Warton has only transcribed Johnson's narrative. It is a piece of literary history of an uncommon complexion; and it is worth the pains of telling, if Pope, as I consider him to be, was the subtile weaver of a plot, whose texture had been close enough for any political conspiracy. It throws a strong light on the portrait I have touched of him. He conducted all his literary transactions with the arts of a Minister of State; and the genius which he wasted on this literary stratagem, in which he so completely succeeded, might have been perhaps sufficient to have organised rebellion.
       It is well known that the origin of Pope's first letters given to the public, arose from the distresses of a cast-off mistress of one of his old friends (H. Cromwell),[2] who had given her the letters of Pope, which she knew how to value: these she afterwards sold to Curll, who preserved the originals in his shop, so that no suspicions could arise of their authenticity. This very collection is now deposited among Rawlinson's MSS. at the Bodleian.[3]
       This single volume was successful; and when Pope, to do justice to the memory of Wycherley, which had been injured by a posthumous volume, printed some of their letters, Curll, who seemed now to consider that all he could touch was his own property, and that his little volume might serve as a foundation-stone, immediately announced a new edition of it, with Additions, meaning to include the letters of Pope and Wycherley. Curll now became so fond of Pope's Letters, that he advertised for any: "no questions to be asked." Curll was willing to be credulous: having proved to the world he had some originals, he imagined these would sanction even spurious one. A man who, for a particular purpose, sought to be imposed on, easily obtained his wish: they translated letters of Voiture to Mademoiselle Rambouillet, and despatched them to the eager Bibliopolist to print, as Pope's to Miss Blount. He went on increasing his collection; and, skilful in catering for the literary taste of the town, now inflamed their appetite by dignifying it with "Mr. Pope's Literary Correspondence!"
       But what were the feelings of Pope during these successive surreptitious editions? He had discovered that his genuine letters were liked; the grand experiment with the public had been made for him, while he was deprived of the profits; yet for he himself to publish his own letters, which I shall prove he had prepared, was a thing unheard of in the nation. All this was vexatious; and to stop the book-jobber and open the market for himself, was a point to be obtained.
       While Curll was proceeding, wind and tide in his favour, a new and magnificent prospect burst upon him. A certain person, masked by the initials P. T., understanding Curll was preparing a Life of Pope, offered him "divers Memoirs gratuitously;" hinted that he was well known to Pope; but the poet had lately "treated him as a stranger." P. T. desires an answer from E. C. by the Daily Advertiser, which was complied with. There are passages in this letter which, I think, prove Pope to be the projector of it: his family is here said to be allied to Lord Downe's; his father is called a merchant. Pope could not bear the reproach of Lady Mary's line:--
       Hard as thy heart, and as thy birth obscure.
       He always hinted at noble relatives; but Tyers tells us, from the information of a relative, that "his father turns out, at last, to have been a linen-draper in the Strand:" therefore P. T. was at least telling a story which Pope had no objection should be repeated.
       The second letter of P. T., for the first was designed only to break the ice, offers Curll "a large Collection of Letters from the early days of Pope to the year 1727." He gives an excellent notion of their value: "They will open very many scenes new to the world, and make the most authentic Life and Memoirs that could be." He desires they may be announced to the world immediately, in Curll's precious style, that he "might not appear himself to have set the whole thing a-foot, and afterwards he might plead he had only sent some letters to complete the Collection." He asks nothing, and the originals were offered to be deposited with Curll.
       Curll, secure of this promised addition, but still craving for more and more, composed a magnificent announcement, which, with P. T.'s entire correspondence, he enclosed in a letter to Pope himself. The letters were now declared to be a "Critical, Philological, and Historical Correspondence."--His own letter is no bad specimen of his keen sense; but after what had so often passed, his impudence was equal to the better quality.
       "SIR,--To convince you of my readiness to oblige you, the inclosed is a demonstration. You have, as he says, disobliged a gentleman, the initial letters of whose name are P. T. I have some other papers in the same hand, relating to your family, which I will show, if you desire a sight of them. Your letters to Mr. Cromwell are out of print; and I intend to print them very beautifully, in an octavo volume. I have more to say than is proper to write; and if you will give me a meeting, I will wait on you with pleasure, and close all differences between you and yours,
       "E. CURLL
."
       Pope, surprised, as he pretends, at this address, consulted with his friends; everything evil was suggested against Curll. They conceived that his real design was "to get Pope to look over the former edition of his 'Letters to Cromwell,' and then to print it, as revised by Mr. Pope; as he sent an obscene book to a Bishop, and then advertised it as corrected and revised by him;" or perhaps to extort money from Pope for suppressing the MS. of P. T., and then publish it, saying P. T. had kept another copy. Pope thought proper to answer only by this public advertisement:--
       "Whereas A. P. hath received a letter from E. C., bookseller, pretending that a person, the initials of whose name are P. T., hath offered the said E. C. to print a large Collection of Mr. P.'s letters, to which E. C. required an answer: A. P. having never had, nor intending to have, any private correspondence with the said E. C., gives it him in this manner. That he knows no such person as P. T.; that he believes he hath no such collection; and that he thinks the whole a forgery, and shall not trouble himself at all about it."
       Curll replied, denying he had endeavoured to correspond with Mr. Pope, and affirms that he had written to him by direction.
       It is now the plot thickens. P. T. suddenly takes umbrage, accuses Curll of having "betrayed him to 'Squire Pope,' but you and he both shall soon be convinced it was no forgery. Since you would not comply with my proposal to advertise, I have printed them at my own expense." He offers the books to Curll for sale.
       Curll on this has written a letter, which takes a full view of the entire transaction. He seems to have grown tired of what he calls "such jealous, groundless, and dark negotiations." P. T. now found it necessary to produce something more than a shadow--an agent appears, whom Curll considered to be a clergyman, who assumed the name of R. Smith. The first proposal was, that P. T.'s letters should be returned, that he might feel secure from all possibility of detection; so that P. T. terminates his part in this literary freemasonry as a nonentity.
       Here Johnson's account begins.--"Curll said, that one evening a man in a clergyman's gown, but with a lawyer's band, brought and offered to sale a number of printed volumes, which he found to be Pope's Epistolary Correspondence; that he asked no name, and was told none, but gave the price demanded, and thought himself authorised to use his purchase to his own advantage." Smith, the clergyman, left him some copies, and promised more.
       Curll now, in all the elation of possession, rolled his thunder in an advertisement still higher than ever.--"Mr. Pope's Literary Correspondence regularly digested, from 1704 to 1734:" to lords, earls, baronets, doctors, ladies, &c., with their respective answers, and whose names glittered in the advertisement. The original MSS. were also announced to be seen at his house.
       But at this moment Curll had not received many books, and no MSS. The advertisement produced the effect designed; it roused public notice, and it alarmed several in the House of Lords. Pope doubtless instigated his friends there. The Earl of Jersey moved, that to publish letters of Lords was a breach of privilege; and Curll was brought before the House.
       This was an unexpected incident; and P. T. once more throws his dark shadow across the path of Curll to hearten him, had he wanted courage to face all the lords. P. T. writes to instruct him in his answers to their examination; but to take the utmost care to conceal P. T.; he assures him that the lords could not touch a hair of his head if he behaved firmly; that he should only answer their interrogatories by declaring he received the letters from different persons; that some were given, and some were bought. P. T. reminds one, on this occasion, of Junius's correspondence on a like threat with his publisher.
       "Curll appeared at the bar," says Johnson, "and knowing himself in no great danger, spoke of Pope with very little reverence. 'He has,' said Curll, 'a knack at versifying; but in prose I think myself a match for him.' When the Orders of the House were examined, none of them appeared to have been infringed: Curll went away triumphant, and Pope was left to seek some other remedy." The fact, not mentioned by Johnson, is, that though Curll's flourishing advertisement had announced letters written by lords, when the volumes were examined not one written by a lord appeared.
       The letter Curll wrote on the occasion to one of these dark familiars, the pretended clergyman, marks his spirit and sagacity. It contains a remarkable passage. Some readers will be curious to have the productions of so celebrated a personage, who appears to have exercised considerable talents.
       15th May, 1735.
       "DEAR SIR,--I am just again going to the Lords to finish Pope. I desire you to send me the sheets to perfect the first fifty books, and likewise the remaining three hundred books; and pray be at the Standard Tavern this evening, and I will pay you twenty pounds more. My defence is right; I only told the lords I did not know from whence the books came, and that my wife received them. This was strict truth, and prevented all further inquiry. The lords declared they had been made Pope's tools. I put myself on this single point, and insisted, as there was not any Peer's letter in the book, I had not been guilty of any breach of privilege. I depend that the books and the imperfections will be sent; and believe of P. T. what I hope he believes of me.
       "For the Rev. Mr. SMITH
."
       The reader observes that Curll talks of a great number of books not received, and of the few which he has received, as imperfect. The fact is, the whole bubble is on the point of breaking. He, masked in the initial letters, and he, who wore the masquerade dress of a clergyman's gown with a lawyer's band, suddenly picked a quarrel with the duped bibliopolist: they now accuse him of a design he had of betraying them to the Lords!
       The tantalized and provoked Curll then addressed the following letter to "The Rev. Mr. Smith," which, both as a specimen of this celebrated personage's "prose," in which he thought himself "a match for Pope," and exhibiting some traits of his character, will entertain the curious reader.
       Friday, 16 May, 1735.
       "SIR,--1st, I am falsely accused. 2. I value not any man's change of temper; I will never change my VERACITY for falsehood, in owning a fact of which I am innocent. 3. I did not own the books came from across the water, nor ever named you; all I said was, that the books came by water. 4. When the books were seized, I sent my son to convey a letter to you; and as you told me everybody knew you in Southwark, I bid him make a strict inquiry, as I am sure you would have done in such an exigency. 5. Sir, I have acted justly in this affair, and that is what I shall always think wisely. 6. I will be kept no longer in the dark; P. T. is Will o' the Wisp; all the books I have had are imperfect; the first fifty had no titles nor prefaces; the last five bundles seized by the Lords contained but thirty-eight in each bundle, which amounts to one hundred and ninety, and fifty, is in all but two hundred and forty books. 7. As to the loss of a future copy, I despise it, nor will I be concerned with any more such dark suspicious dealers. But now, sir, I'll tell you what I will do: when I have the books perfected which I have already received, and the rest of the impression, I will pay you for them. But what do you call this usage? First take a note for a month, and then want it to be changed for one of Sir Richard Hoare's. My note is as good, for any sum I give it, as the Bank, and shall be as punctually paid. I always say, gold is better than paper. But if this dark converse goes on, I will instantly reprint the whole book; and, as a supplement to it, all the letters P. T. ever sent me, of which I have exact copies, together with all your originals, and give them in upon oath to my Lord Chancellor. You talk of trust--P. T. has not reposed any in me, for he has my money and notes for imperfect books. Let me see, sir, either P. T. or yourself, or you'll find the Scots proverb verified, Nemo me impune lacessit.
       "Your abused humble servant,
       "E. CURLL.
       "P.S. Lord ---- I attend this day. LORD DELAWAR I SUP WITH TO-NIGHT. Where Pope has one lord, I have twenty."
       After this, Curll announced "Mr. Pope's Literary Correspondence, with the initial correspondence of P. T., R. S. &c." But the shadowy correspondents now publicly declared that they could give no title whatever to Mr. Pope's letters, with which they had furnished CURLL, and never pretended any; that therefore any bookseller had the same right of printing them: and, in respect to money matters between them, he had given them notes not negotiable, and had never paid them fully for the copies, perfect and imperfect, which he had sold.
       Thus terminated this dark transaction between Curll and his initial correspondents. He still persisted in printing several editions of the letters of Pope, which furnished the poet with a modest pretext to publish an authentic edition--the very point to which the whole of this dark and intricate plot seems to have been really directed.[4]
       Were Pope not concerned in this mysterious transaction, how happened it that the letters which P. T. actually printed were genuine? To account for this, Pope promulgated a new fact. Since the first publication of his letters to his friend Cromwell, wrenched from the distressed female who possessed them, our poet had been advised to collect his letters; and these he had preserved by inserting them in two books; either the originals or the copies. For this purpose an amanuensis or two were employed by Pope when these books were in the country, and by the Earl of Oxford when they were in town. Pope pretended that Curll's letters had been extracted from these two books, but sometimes imperfectly transcribed, and sometimes interpolated. Pope, indeed, offered a reward of twenty pounds to "P. T." and "R. Smith, who passed for a clergyman," if they would come forward and discover the whole of this affair; or "if they had acted, as it was reported, by the direction of any other person." They never appeared. Lintot, the son of the great rival of Curll, told Dr. Johnson, that his father had been offered the same parcel of printed books, and that Pope knew better than anybody else how Curll obtained the copies.
       Dr. Johnson, although he appears not to have been aware of the subtle intricacy of this extraordinary plot, has justly drawn this inference: "To make the copies perfect was the only purpose of Pope, because the numbers offered for sale by the private messengers, showed that hope of gain could not have been the motive of the impression. It seems that Pope, being desirous of printing his letters, and not knowing how to do, without imputation of vanity, what has in this country been done very rarely, contrived an appearance of compulsion; when he could complain that his letters were surreptitiously printed, he might decently and defensively publish them himself."
       I have observed, how the first letter of P. T. pretending to be written by one who owed no kindness to Pope, bears the evident impression of his own hand; for it contains matters not exactly true, but exactly what Pope wished should appear in his own life. That he had prepared his letters for publication, appears by the story of the two MS. books--that the printed ones came by water, would look as if they had been sent from his house at Twickenham; and, were it not absurd to pretend to decipher initials, P. T. might be imagined to indicate the name of the owner, as well as his place of abode.
       Worsdale, an indifferent painter, was a man of some humour in personating a character, for he performed Old Lady Scandal in one of his own farces. He was also a literary adventurer, for, according to Mrs. Pilkington's Memoirs, wishing to be a poet as well as a mimic, he got her and her husband to write all the verses which passed with his name; such a man was well adapted to be this clergyman with the lawyer's band, and Worsdale has asserted that he was really employed by his friend Pope on this occasion.
       Such is the intricate narrative of this involved transaction. Pope completely succeeded, by the most subtile manœuvres imaginable; the incident which perhaps was not originally expected, of having his letters brought before the examination at the House of Lords, most amply gratified his pride, and awakened public curiosity. "He made the House of Lords," says Curll, "his tools." Greater ingenuity, perplexity, and secrecy have scarcely been thrown into the conduct of the writer, or writers, of the Letters of Junius.
       FOOTNOTES:
       [1] Curll was a bookseller, from whose shop issued many works of an immoral class, yet he chose for his sign "The Bible and Dial," which were displayed over his shop in Fleet-street. The satire of Pope's Dunciad seems fairly to have been earned, as we may judge from the class of books still seen in the libraries of curious collectors, and which are certainly unfitted for more general circulation. For these publications he was fined by the Court of King's Bench, and on one occasion stood in the pillory as a punishment. Yet himself and Lintot were the chief booksellers of the era, until Tonson arose, and by taking a more enlarged view of the trade, laid the foundation of the great publishing houses of modern times.--ED.
       [2] Cromwell was one of the gay young men who frequented coffee-houses and clubs when Pope, also a young man, did the same, and corresponded freely with him for a few years, when the intimacy almost entirely ceased. The lady was a Mrs. Thomas, who became a sort of literary hack to Curll, and is celebrated in the Dunciad under the name of Corinna. Roscoe, in his edition of Pope, says, "Of Henry Cromwell little is known, further than what is learnt from this correspondence, from which he appears to have been a man of respectable connections, talents, and education, and to have intermingled pretty freely in the gallantries of fashionable life." He seems to have been somewhat eccentric, and the correspondence of Pope only lasted from 1708 to 1711.--ED.
       [3] Pope, in his conversations with Spence, says, "My letters to Cromwell were written with a design that does not generally appear: they were not written in sober sadness."--ED.
       [4] Pope's victory over Curll is represented by Hogarth in a print ostentatiously hung in the garret of his "Distressed Poet."--ED.
       [The end]
       Isaac Disraeli's essay: Narrative Of The Extraordinary Transactions Respecting The Publication Of Pope's Letters.
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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?