Thirty years later, Hazlitt,
William, the younger, began an elaborate edition which reached only three
volumes.
William, the younger, began an elaborate edition which reached only three
volumes.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v09
, 1681, with a new title, An Account of the Growth of Knavery, under the
Pretended Fears of Arbitrary Government, and Popery. With A Parallel
## p. 417 (#441) ############################################
Chapter 1
417
1.
fein
.
ཨ་ བ *
betwixt the Reformers of 1677 and those of 1641, etc. (46) Tyranny and
Popery Lording it Over the Consciences, Lives, Liberties and Estates both of
King and People. 1678. (47) The History of the Plot: Or a Brief and
Historical Account of the Charge and Defence of Edward Coleman, Esq.
[and 16 others]. . . By Authority. 1679. (48) An Answer to the Appeal [by
Charles Blount] from the Country to the City. 1679. (49) The Case Put,
Concerning the Succession of his Royal Highness the Duke of York. With
Some Observations upon The Political Catechism, And Two or Three Other
Seditious Libels. 1679. (50) The Reformed Catholique: or, the_True
Protestant. 1679. (51) The Free-born Subject: or, the Englishman's Birth-
right, etc. 1679. (52) Citt and Bumpkin. In a Dialogue over A Pot of
Ale, concerning Matters of Religion and Government. 1680. (53) Citt and
Bumpkin. The Second Part. Or, a Learned Discourse upon Swearing And
Lying, and other Laudable Qualities tending to a Thorow Reformation.
1680. (54) A Seasonable Memorial in some Historical Notes upon the
Liberties of the Presse and Pulpit, etc. 1680. (55) A Further Discovery
of the Plot, etc. 1680. (56) L'Estrange’s Narrative of the Plot. Set
Forth for the Edification Of His Majesties Liege People. 1680. (57) The
Casnist Uncas'd in a Dialogue Betwixt Richard and Baxter, With a
Moderator Between Them For Quietnesse Sake. 1680. (58) Discovery
upon Discovery, In Defence of Dr Oates against B. W's Libellous
Vindication of him, in his Additional Discovery; and in Justification of
L'Estrange against the same Libell. In a Letter to Doctor Titus Oates.
1680. (59) A Letter to Miles Prance. 1680. (60) L'Estrange's Case In a
Civil Dialogue Betwixt ’Zekiel and Ephraim. 1680. (61) A Short Answer to
a whole Litter of Libels. 1680. [Some copies read ‘Libellers. '] (62) To
the Rev. Dr Thomas Ken. February 1, 1680. (63) The Character of a
Papist in Masquerade; Supported by Authority and Experience. In Answer
to the Character of a Popish Successor. 1681. (64) A Reply To the Second
Part of the Character of a Popish Successor. 1681. (65) L'Estrange his
Appeal Humbly Submitted to the Kings most Excellent Majesty And the
Three Estates Assembled in Parliament. 1681. (66) L'Estrange No Papist :
In Answer to a Libel Entituled L'Estrange a Papist, etc. In a Letter to a
Friend. With Notes and Animadversions upon Miles Prance, Silver-smith,
etc. 1681. (67) The Observator, etc. April 13, 1681, to Mar. 19, 1686–87.
(68) The Dissenter's Sayings, In Requital for L'Estrange's Sayings. Pub-
lished in Their Own Words, for the Information of the People. 1681.
(69) Dissenters Sayings. The Second Part. . . Dedicated to the Grand-Jury
of London, August 29, 1681. 1681. (70) Notes upon Stephen College.
Grounded Principally upon his own Declarations and Confessions, etc. 1681.
(71) The Reformation Reformed; or a Short History of New-fashioned
Christians, etc. 1681. (72) A Word concerning Libels and Libellers,
Humbly Presented To the Right Hon. Sir John Moor, Lord-Mayor of
London, etc. 1681. (73) The Shammer Shamm’d: In a Plain Discovery,
Under Young Tong's Own Hand, of a Designe to Trepann L'Estrange Into
a Pretended Subornation against the Popish Plot. 1681. (74) The Accompt
cleard: In Answer to a Libel Intituled A True Account from Chichester, etc.
1682. (75) The Apostate Protestant. A Letter to a Friend, occasioned By
the late Reprinting of a Jesuites Book. About Succession to the Crown of
England. Pretended to have been written by R. Doleman. July, 1682.
(76) Remarks on the Growth and Progress of Non-Conformity, etc. 1682.
(77) Considerations upon a Printed Sheet Entituled the Speech Of the Late
Lord Russel to the Sheriffs: together With the Paper delivered by Him to
Them . . . on July 21, 1683. [Rptd by Clarendon Historical Soc. , 1882. ]
(78) The Observator Defended. By the Author of the Observators, etc.
E, L. IX,
27
Day
. . ; :
i bren
## p. 418 (#442) ############################################
418
Bibliography
1685. (79) An Answer to a Letter to a Dissenter (Halifax's], Upon Occasion
of His Majesties Late Gracious Declaration of Indulgence. 1687. (80-82) A
Brief History of the Times, etc. 3 parts. 1687-8. (83) A Reply to the Beasons
of the Oxford Clergy against Addressing. 168–. [Rptd in Scott's Somers
Tracts, vol. 1x, 1809. ) (84) Two Cases submitted to Consideration, etc. 1687.
L'Estrange wrote the Notice to the Reader in an edition of Fairfax's
Godfrey of Bulloigne, 1687; and, in 1715, A Key to Hudibras, attributed to
him, was printed in Butler's Posthumous Works.
[L'Estrange has been frequently credited with works which he, probably
or certainly, did not write. ]
See, also, Le Breton, A. , Le Roman au dix-huitième Siècle, Paris, 1898;
Texte, Joseph, Rousseau et les origines du Cosmopolitisme Littéraire, Paris,
1895; Warner, G. F. , An Unpublished Political Paper by Daniel De Foe,
Engl. Hist. Rev. , January, 1907.
B. Translations
(1) The Visions of Quevedo. 1667. (2) Five Love Letters from a [Portu-
guese] Nun to a Cavalier, from the French. 1678. (3) The Gentleman
'Pothecary; a true Story done out of the French. 1678. (4) Tully's Offices.
1680. (5) Cardinal J. Bona's 'A Guide to Eternity'(from the Latin). 2nd ed.
1680. (6) Seneca's Morals by way of Abstract. 5th ed. 1693. (7) Twenty
Select Colloquies of Erasmus, etc. 1680. With two additional colloquies, 1689.
(8) An Apology for the Protestants; Being A full Justification of their
Departure from The Church of Rome. . . . Done out of French into English.
1681. (9) The Fables of Aesop and other Eminent Mythologists; with Morals
and Reflexions. 1692. (10) Five Love Letters written by a Cavalier in Answer
(to No. (2) above). 1694. (11) Terence's Comedies made English, etc. [revised
by J. Eachard and L'Estrange). 2nd ed. 1698. (12) Fables and Storyes
Moralized. Being a Second Part of the Fables of Aesop and other Eminent
Mythologists. 1699. (13) The Works of Flavius Josephus. 1702. (14) The
Spanish Pole-Cat: or, the Adventures of Seniora Rufina, etc. [from the
Spanish of A. del Castillo Solorzano, begun by L'Estrange and finished by
Ozell]. 1717. Reissued in 1727 as Spanish Amusements, etc.
II. DANIEL DEFOE
The chief biographies of Defoe are those by Chalmers, George (1790), which
marks the beginning of serious study of the man and his works; Wilson, W.
(3 vols. 1830), still valuable, particularly as a history of Defoe's times; Lee, W. ,
in vol. 1 of Life and Newly Discovered Writings of Daniel Defoe (1869), which
contains much new material badly handled and fixes Defoe's bibliography at
the point at which it has stood almost to the present time; Minto, W. , in
English Men of Letters (1879), still valuable for the critical acumen dis-
played; Wright, T. (1894), which contains new material, but occasionally
indulges in extravagant theories. Other biographers on a larger or a smaller
scale, such as Towers, Dr, Hazlitt, William, the younger, Forster, John,
Morley, Henry, and Whitten, W. (1900), deserve to be mentioned, as well as
Stephen, Sir Leslie, and, for a good essay, Rannie, D. W. (Oxford, 1890). Cf.
also, Lamb, Charles, Works, I, Miscellaneous Prose, ed. Lucas, E. , 1903;
Dennis, John, Studies in English Literature, 1883; York Powell, F.
Occasional Writings, ed. Elton, O. , 1906. The most important recent student
of Defoe is Aitken, George A. , in his contributions to periodicals and his
introductions to his edition of Defoe's novels. Cf. four articles, chiefly
bibliographical, contributed by the present writer to The Nation (New York,
1907-8).
## p. 419 (#443) ############################################
Chapter 1
419
No edition of Defoe's writings has yet been worthy of the name. In 1703
and 1705, he collected some of his tracts and poems, but soon his pen outran the
capacity of his contemporaries to identify his work, and there was compara-
tively little interest in him as a writer from his death to the end of the
eighteenth century. In 1810, the edition of the novels with which the name
of Scott is connected appeared in 12 vols.
Thirty years later, Hazlitt,
William, the younger, began an elaborate edition which reached only three
volumes. Simultaneously, an edition in 20 vols. was printed at Oxford. This,
despite serious defects, remains the only edition giving access to some of the
more important miscellaneous books. It is, however, utterly inadequate on
the side of Defoe's political writings. There is also an edition in 6 vols. in
Bohn's British Classics (1854-5); but the novels and shorter narratives and
a few tracts may now be read in the excellent edition of the Romances and
Narratives in 16 vols. (1895-6) due to the care of Aitken, G. A. An edition but
slightly differing from this in contents was prepared for American readers in
1903 by Maynadier, G. H. (16 vols. New York).
علا
stere
A. Writings
[In chronological order, except where otherwise indicated. When ascertain-
able, the actual date of publication is always given, not the date on the
title-page. ]
A New Discovery of an Old Intreague: A Satyr, etc. 1691.
Ode to the Athenian Society. In Gildon's History of the Athenian Society.
1692.
An Essay upon Projects. 1697. Reissued, 1702.
The Character of the late Dr. Samuel Annesley, by Way of Elegy. 1697.
Some Reflections On a Pamphlet lately Publish'd, Entituled, An Argument
Shewing that A Standing Army, etc. 1697.
An Argument Shewing, That a Standing Army, With Consent of Parlia-
ment, Is not Inconsistent with a Free Government, etc. 1698.
An Enquiry into the Occasional Conformity of Dissenters in Cases of Prefer-
ment. With a Preface to the Lord Mayor. 1698.
An Enquiry into the Occasional Conformity of Dissenters. With a Pre-
face to Mr. How. 1700. 2nd ed. of the above, with another preface.
A Brief Reply to the History of Standing Armies in England, etc. 1698.
The Poor Man's Plea. . . for a Reformation of Manners, etc. 1698.
Lex Talionis: or, an Enquiry into The Most Proper Ways to Prevent the
Persecution of the Protestants in France. 1698.
The Pacificator. A Poem. 1700.
The Two Great Questions Consider'd, etc. 1700.
The Two Great Questions Further Considered, etc. 1700.
The Six distinguishing Characters of a Parliament man, etc. 1701.
The Danger of the Protestant Religion Considered from the Present Prospect
of a Religious War in Europe. 1701.
The Free-Holders Plea against Stock-Jobbing Elections of Parliament Men.
1701.
The True-Born Englishman. A Satyr. 1701. First ed. dated 1700.
Tutchin, John. The Foreigners. A Poem. 1700.
A Letter to Mr. How, etc. 1701.
Considerations upon Corrupt Elections of Members To Serve in Parliament.
1701.
The Villainy of Stock-Jobbers Detected, etc. 1701.
The Succession to the Crown of England, Considered. 1701.
Legion's Address. 1701.
*
st
27-2
## p. 420 (#444) ############################################
420
Bibliography
The History of the Kentish Petition. 1701.
The Present State of Jacobitism Considered, etc. 1701.
Reasons against a War with France, etc. 1701.
The Original Power of the Collective Body of the People of England,
Examined and Asserted. 1701.
Legion's New Paper, etc. 1702.
The Mock Mourners. A Satyr, By Way of Elegy on King William. 1702.
Reformation of Manners, A Satyr. 1702.
A New Test of the Church of England's Loyalty, etc. 1702.
Good Advice to the Ladies, etc. 1702. (Verse. ] Reissued as A Timely
Caution; or Good Advice, etc. 1728.
The Spanish Descent. A Poem. 1702.
An Enquiry into Occasional Conformity. Shewing that the Dissenters Are
no Way Concern'd in it. 1702. Reissued as An Enquiry into the
Occasional Conformity Bill. 1704.
The Shortest Way with the Dissenters: or, Proposals for the Establishment
of the Church. 1702.
A Brief Explanation of A late Pamphlet, entituld, The shortest Way with
the Dissenters. 1703.
Tutchin, J. A Dialogue between A Dissenter and the Observator.
1703.
King William's Affection to the Church of England, Examin'd. 1703.
More Reformation. A Satyr upon Himself By the Author of the True Born
English-Man. 1703.
A true Collection of the Writings of the Author of the True-Born English-
Man. 1703. [This was preceded by a spurious collection. ]
The Shortest Way to Peace and Union. 1703.
A Hymn to the Pillory. 1703.
The Case of Dissenters As Affected by the Late Bill Proposed in Parliament,
For Preventing Occasional Conformity. 1703.
The Sincerity of the Dissenters Vindicated, From the Scandal of Occasional
Conformity, with Some Considerations on a late Book, Entituļd, Modera-
tion a Vertue. 1703.
An Enquiry into the Case of Mr. Asgil's General Translation, etc. 1703.
A Challenge of Peace, Address’d to the Whole Nation, etc. 1703.
The Liberty of Episcopal Dissenters in Scotland, as it stands by the Laws
there, truly Represented. 1703.
Some Remarks the First Chapter in Dr. Davenant's Essays. 1703. Re-
issued as Original Right. . . Being an Answer to the first Chapter, etc.
1704.
Peace without Union. By way of Reply to Sir Humphrey] M[ackworthi's
Peace at Home. 1703.
The Dissenters Answer to the High-Church Challenge. 1704.
An Essay on the Regulation of the Press. 1704.
A Serious Inquiry into this Grand Question: Whether a Law to prevent the
Occasional Conformity of Dissenters would not be Inconsistent with the
Act of Toleration, etc. 1704.
The Parallel: or, Persecution of Protestants the Shortest Way to prevent
the Growth of Popery in Ireland. 1704.
Royal Religion; Being some Enquiry after the Piety of Princes, etc. 1704.
Moderation Maintain’d, in Defence of a Compassionate Enquiry Into the
Causes of the Civil War, etc. In a Sermon Preached. . . by White
Kennet, etc. 1704.
The Christianity of the High-Church Consider'd, etc. 1704.
More Short-Ways with the Dissenters. 1704.
.
à
## p. 421 (#445) ############################################
Chapter 1
421
***
-
2.
S2
28
:
The Dissenters Misrepresented and Represented. 1704.
A New Test of the Church of England's Honesty. 1704.
The Storm: or, a Collection of the most Remarkable Casualties and Disasters
which happen'd in the Late Dreadful Tempest, both by Sea and Land. 1704.
An Elegy on the Author of the True-Born-English-Man. With an Essay On
the late Storm. 1704.
A Hymn to Victory. 1704.
The Protestant Jesuite Unmask'd, etc. 1704.
Giving Alms no Charity, and Employing the Poor A Grievance to the
Nation, etc. 1704.
Queries upon the Bill against Occasional Conformity. 1704.
The Double Welcome. A Poem to the Duke of Marlbro. 1705.
Persecution Anatomiz'd: or, An Answer [to 4 questions). 1705.
The Consolidator: or, Memoirs of Sundry Transactions from the World in
the Moon, etc. 1705.
Pretended Fears of Arbitrary Government, and Popery. With A Parallel
## p. 417 (#441) ############################################
Chapter 1
417
1.
fein
.
ཨ་ བ *
betwixt the Reformers of 1677 and those of 1641, etc. (46) Tyranny and
Popery Lording it Over the Consciences, Lives, Liberties and Estates both of
King and People. 1678. (47) The History of the Plot: Or a Brief and
Historical Account of the Charge and Defence of Edward Coleman, Esq.
[and 16 others]. . . By Authority. 1679. (48) An Answer to the Appeal [by
Charles Blount] from the Country to the City. 1679. (49) The Case Put,
Concerning the Succession of his Royal Highness the Duke of York. With
Some Observations upon The Political Catechism, And Two or Three Other
Seditious Libels. 1679. (50) The Reformed Catholique: or, the_True
Protestant. 1679. (51) The Free-born Subject: or, the Englishman's Birth-
right, etc. 1679. (52) Citt and Bumpkin. In a Dialogue over A Pot of
Ale, concerning Matters of Religion and Government. 1680. (53) Citt and
Bumpkin. The Second Part. Or, a Learned Discourse upon Swearing And
Lying, and other Laudable Qualities tending to a Thorow Reformation.
1680. (54) A Seasonable Memorial in some Historical Notes upon the
Liberties of the Presse and Pulpit, etc. 1680. (55) A Further Discovery
of the Plot, etc. 1680. (56) L'Estrange’s Narrative of the Plot. Set
Forth for the Edification Of His Majesties Liege People. 1680. (57) The
Casnist Uncas'd in a Dialogue Betwixt Richard and Baxter, With a
Moderator Between Them For Quietnesse Sake. 1680. (58) Discovery
upon Discovery, In Defence of Dr Oates against B. W's Libellous
Vindication of him, in his Additional Discovery; and in Justification of
L'Estrange against the same Libell. In a Letter to Doctor Titus Oates.
1680. (59) A Letter to Miles Prance. 1680. (60) L'Estrange's Case In a
Civil Dialogue Betwixt ’Zekiel and Ephraim. 1680. (61) A Short Answer to
a whole Litter of Libels. 1680. [Some copies read ‘Libellers. '] (62) To
the Rev. Dr Thomas Ken. February 1, 1680. (63) The Character of a
Papist in Masquerade; Supported by Authority and Experience. In Answer
to the Character of a Popish Successor. 1681. (64) A Reply To the Second
Part of the Character of a Popish Successor. 1681. (65) L'Estrange his
Appeal Humbly Submitted to the Kings most Excellent Majesty And the
Three Estates Assembled in Parliament. 1681. (66) L'Estrange No Papist :
In Answer to a Libel Entituled L'Estrange a Papist, etc. In a Letter to a
Friend. With Notes and Animadversions upon Miles Prance, Silver-smith,
etc. 1681. (67) The Observator, etc. April 13, 1681, to Mar. 19, 1686–87.
(68) The Dissenter's Sayings, In Requital for L'Estrange's Sayings. Pub-
lished in Their Own Words, for the Information of the People. 1681.
(69) Dissenters Sayings. The Second Part. . . Dedicated to the Grand-Jury
of London, August 29, 1681. 1681. (70) Notes upon Stephen College.
Grounded Principally upon his own Declarations and Confessions, etc. 1681.
(71) The Reformation Reformed; or a Short History of New-fashioned
Christians, etc. 1681. (72) A Word concerning Libels and Libellers,
Humbly Presented To the Right Hon. Sir John Moor, Lord-Mayor of
London, etc. 1681. (73) The Shammer Shamm’d: In a Plain Discovery,
Under Young Tong's Own Hand, of a Designe to Trepann L'Estrange Into
a Pretended Subornation against the Popish Plot. 1681. (74) The Accompt
cleard: In Answer to a Libel Intituled A True Account from Chichester, etc.
1682. (75) The Apostate Protestant. A Letter to a Friend, occasioned By
the late Reprinting of a Jesuites Book. About Succession to the Crown of
England. Pretended to have been written by R. Doleman. July, 1682.
(76) Remarks on the Growth and Progress of Non-Conformity, etc. 1682.
(77) Considerations upon a Printed Sheet Entituled the Speech Of the Late
Lord Russel to the Sheriffs: together With the Paper delivered by Him to
Them . . . on July 21, 1683. [Rptd by Clarendon Historical Soc. , 1882. ]
(78) The Observator Defended. By the Author of the Observators, etc.
E, L. IX,
27
Day
. . ; :
i bren
## p. 418 (#442) ############################################
418
Bibliography
1685. (79) An Answer to a Letter to a Dissenter (Halifax's], Upon Occasion
of His Majesties Late Gracious Declaration of Indulgence. 1687. (80-82) A
Brief History of the Times, etc. 3 parts. 1687-8. (83) A Reply to the Beasons
of the Oxford Clergy against Addressing. 168–. [Rptd in Scott's Somers
Tracts, vol. 1x, 1809. ) (84) Two Cases submitted to Consideration, etc. 1687.
L'Estrange wrote the Notice to the Reader in an edition of Fairfax's
Godfrey of Bulloigne, 1687; and, in 1715, A Key to Hudibras, attributed to
him, was printed in Butler's Posthumous Works.
[L'Estrange has been frequently credited with works which he, probably
or certainly, did not write. ]
See, also, Le Breton, A. , Le Roman au dix-huitième Siècle, Paris, 1898;
Texte, Joseph, Rousseau et les origines du Cosmopolitisme Littéraire, Paris,
1895; Warner, G. F. , An Unpublished Political Paper by Daniel De Foe,
Engl. Hist. Rev. , January, 1907.
B. Translations
(1) The Visions of Quevedo. 1667. (2) Five Love Letters from a [Portu-
guese] Nun to a Cavalier, from the French. 1678. (3) The Gentleman
'Pothecary; a true Story done out of the French. 1678. (4) Tully's Offices.
1680. (5) Cardinal J. Bona's 'A Guide to Eternity'(from the Latin). 2nd ed.
1680. (6) Seneca's Morals by way of Abstract. 5th ed. 1693. (7) Twenty
Select Colloquies of Erasmus, etc. 1680. With two additional colloquies, 1689.
(8) An Apology for the Protestants; Being A full Justification of their
Departure from The Church of Rome. . . . Done out of French into English.
1681. (9) The Fables of Aesop and other Eminent Mythologists; with Morals
and Reflexions. 1692. (10) Five Love Letters written by a Cavalier in Answer
(to No. (2) above). 1694. (11) Terence's Comedies made English, etc. [revised
by J. Eachard and L'Estrange). 2nd ed. 1698. (12) Fables and Storyes
Moralized. Being a Second Part of the Fables of Aesop and other Eminent
Mythologists. 1699. (13) The Works of Flavius Josephus. 1702. (14) The
Spanish Pole-Cat: or, the Adventures of Seniora Rufina, etc. [from the
Spanish of A. del Castillo Solorzano, begun by L'Estrange and finished by
Ozell]. 1717. Reissued in 1727 as Spanish Amusements, etc.
II. DANIEL DEFOE
The chief biographies of Defoe are those by Chalmers, George (1790), which
marks the beginning of serious study of the man and his works; Wilson, W.
(3 vols. 1830), still valuable, particularly as a history of Defoe's times; Lee, W. ,
in vol. 1 of Life and Newly Discovered Writings of Daniel Defoe (1869), which
contains much new material badly handled and fixes Defoe's bibliography at
the point at which it has stood almost to the present time; Minto, W. , in
English Men of Letters (1879), still valuable for the critical acumen dis-
played; Wright, T. (1894), which contains new material, but occasionally
indulges in extravagant theories. Other biographers on a larger or a smaller
scale, such as Towers, Dr, Hazlitt, William, the younger, Forster, John,
Morley, Henry, and Whitten, W. (1900), deserve to be mentioned, as well as
Stephen, Sir Leslie, and, for a good essay, Rannie, D. W. (Oxford, 1890). Cf.
also, Lamb, Charles, Works, I, Miscellaneous Prose, ed. Lucas, E. , 1903;
Dennis, John, Studies in English Literature, 1883; York Powell, F.
Occasional Writings, ed. Elton, O. , 1906. The most important recent student
of Defoe is Aitken, George A. , in his contributions to periodicals and his
introductions to his edition of Defoe's novels. Cf. four articles, chiefly
bibliographical, contributed by the present writer to The Nation (New York,
1907-8).
## p. 419 (#443) ############################################
Chapter 1
419
No edition of Defoe's writings has yet been worthy of the name. In 1703
and 1705, he collected some of his tracts and poems, but soon his pen outran the
capacity of his contemporaries to identify his work, and there was compara-
tively little interest in him as a writer from his death to the end of the
eighteenth century. In 1810, the edition of the novels with which the name
of Scott is connected appeared in 12 vols.
Thirty years later, Hazlitt,
William, the younger, began an elaborate edition which reached only three
volumes. Simultaneously, an edition in 20 vols. was printed at Oxford. This,
despite serious defects, remains the only edition giving access to some of the
more important miscellaneous books. It is, however, utterly inadequate on
the side of Defoe's political writings. There is also an edition in 6 vols. in
Bohn's British Classics (1854-5); but the novels and shorter narratives and
a few tracts may now be read in the excellent edition of the Romances and
Narratives in 16 vols. (1895-6) due to the care of Aitken, G. A. An edition but
slightly differing from this in contents was prepared for American readers in
1903 by Maynadier, G. H. (16 vols. New York).
علا
stere
A. Writings
[In chronological order, except where otherwise indicated. When ascertain-
able, the actual date of publication is always given, not the date on the
title-page. ]
A New Discovery of an Old Intreague: A Satyr, etc. 1691.
Ode to the Athenian Society. In Gildon's History of the Athenian Society.
1692.
An Essay upon Projects. 1697. Reissued, 1702.
The Character of the late Dr. Samuel Annesley, by Way of Elegy. 1697.
Some Reflections On a Pamphlet lately Publish'd, Entituled, An Argument
Shewing that A Standing Army, etc. 1697.
An Argument Shewing, That a Standing Army, With Consent of Parlia-
ment, Is not Inconsistent with a Free Government, etc. 1698.
An Enquiry into the Occasional Conformity of Dissenters in Cases of Prefer-
ment. With a Preface to the Lord Mayor. 1698.
An Enquiry into the Occasional Conformity of Dissenters. With a Pre-
face to Mr. How. 1700. 2nd ed. of the above, with another preface.
A Brief Reply to the History of Standing Armies in England, etc. 1698.
The Poor Man's Plea. . . for a Reformation of Manners, etc. 1698.
Lex Talionis: or, an Enquiry into The Most Proper Ways to Prevent the
Persecution of the Protestants in France. 1698.
The Pacificator. A Poem. 1700.
The Two Great Questions Consider'd, etc. 1700.
The Two Great Questions Further Considered, etc. 1700.
The Six distinguishing Characters of a Parliament man, etc. 1701.
The Danger of the Protestant Religion Considered from the Present Prospect
of a Religious War in Europe. 1701.
The Free-Holders Plea against Stock-Jobbing Elections of Parliament Men.
1701.
The True-Born Englishman. A Satyr. 1701. First ed. dated 1700.
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A Letter to Mr. How, etc. 1701.
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The Succession to the Crown of England, Considered. 1701.
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*
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à
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Chapter 1
421
***
-
2.
S2
28
:
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