Woods Reviv'd, or, a Short Defence of the
Proceedings
in Bristol, London,
&c.
&c.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v09
An Answer to Bickerstaff. Some Reflections upon Mr Bickerstaff's Pre-
dictions for the Year MDCCVIII. By a Person of Quality. [1708. ]
Squire Bickerstaff Detected; or, the Astrological Impostor Convicted, by
John Partridge, Student in Physick and Astrology. (1708. ]
A Trip to Dunkirk: Or, A Hue and Cry After the Pretended Prince of
Wales. 1708.
Bickerstaff's Almanack: or, a Vindication of the Stars, From all the False
Imputations, and Erroneous Assertions, of the late John Partridge, and
all other Mistaken Astrologers whatever. By Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq.
1710.
A Complete Key to the Tale of a Tub; With some Account of the Authors.
1710.
A True Narrative of what pass'd at the Examination of the Marquis De
Guiscard, at the Cock-pit, The 8th of March, 1710/11. 1711. [Revised
by Swift. ]
The British Visions : or, Isaac Bickerstaff's Twelve Prophecies for the Year
1711. [n. p. , 1711. )
The Reasons Which induc'd Her Majesty To Create the Right Honourable
Robert Harley, Esq. a Peer of Great Britain. 1711.
The D. of M— h's Vindication: In Answer to a Pamphlet Lately Publish'd,
call'd Bouchain, or a Dialogue between the Medley and the Examiner.
1711. [Revised by Swift. )
Cursory but Curious Observations of Mr Ab[e]l R[op]er, Upon a late Famous
Pamphlet, entituled, Remarks on the Preliminary Articles . . . General
Peace. 1711.
A True Relation of the several Facts and Circumstances of the intended
Riot and Tumult on Queen Elizabeth's Birth-day. 1711. [Revised by
Swift. ]
Predictions For the Year, 1712. By Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq. in a Letter to
the Author of the Oxford Almanack. 1712.
The Dutch Barrier Ours. 1712.
The Story of the St Alb-ns Ghost, or the Apparition of Mother Haggy.
1712. [Revised by Swift. ]
A Fable of the Widow and her Cat. Printed in the Year 1712. [Attributed
to Prior. ]
## p. 462 (#486) ############################################
462
Bibliography
The New Way of Selling Places at Court. In a Letter from a Small
Courtier to a Great Stock-Jobber. 1712. (Revised by Swift. ]
An Essay on National Rewards; Being a Proposal for bestowing them on a
Plan more durable and respectable. Guardian, No. XCVI. Wednesday,
1 July 1713.
The Character of Richard St-le, Esq; With some Remarks. By Toby,
Abel's Kinsman. 1713.
A Modest Enquiry into the Reasons of the Joy Expressed by a Certain Sett
of People, upon the Spreading of a Report of Her Majesty's Death.
1714. [By Mrs Manley. ]
A Letter From the Facetious Doctor Andrew Tripe, at Bath, To the Vener-
able Nestor Ironside. 1714.
The Conduct of the Purse of Ireland : in a Letter to a Member of the Late
Oxford Convocation. 1714.
An Inquiry into the Miscarriages of the Four Last Years Reign. 1714.
[Attributed to C. Povey. ]
Essays Divine, Moral, and Political. . . . By the Author of the Tale of a Tab,
sometime the Writer of the Examiner, and the Original Inventor of the
Band-Box-Plot. 1714.
The Dignity, Use and Abuse of Glass-Bottles. Set forth in A Sermon
Preach'd to an Illustrious Assembly. By the Author of the Tale of a
Tub. 1715.
Saint Patrick's Purgatory: or, Dr S-t's Expostulation With his Dis-
tressed Friends in the Tower and elsewhere. 1716.
The Narrative of Dr Robert Norris, Concerning the strange and deplorable
Frenzy of Mr John Denn-An Officer of the Custom-house. 1716. [By
Pope. ]
God's Revenge against Punning. Shewing the miserable Fates of Persons
addicted to this Crying Sin, in Court and Town. 1716. [By Pope. ]
Doctor Sw-t's Circular Letter to the Clergy of the Diocese of Dublin; Ex-
horting them, in the conduct of their lives, to regulate themselves always
according to the present Humours of the Times. 1716.
A Full and True Account of a Horrid and Barbarous Revenge by Poison,
On the Body of Mr Edmund Curll, Bookseller; With a faithful Copy of
his Last Will and Testament. [1716. ) [Attributed to Pope. ]
A further Account of the most Deplorable Condition of Mr Edmund Curll,
Bookseller, since his being poison'd on March 28. 1716. [Attributed to
Pope. ]
A Strange but True Relation how Edmund Curll, of Fleet-street, Stationer,
. . . Was circumcis'd. [Attributed to Pope. ]
A Dedication to a Great Man, Concerning Dedications. 1718. [Attributed
to Thomas Gordon. ]
Ars Pun-ica, sive Flos Linguarum: The Art of Punning; or, the Flower of
Languages; In Seventy-Nine Rules: By the Labour and Industry of
Tom Pun-Sibi, (i. e. ) Jonathan Swift, D. D. 1719.
A Letter From the Facetious Dr Andrew Tripe at Bath, To his Loving
Brother The Profound Greshamite, Shewing, That the Scribendi Caco-
ethes is a Distemper. [1719. ]
The Invitation. In imitation of Horace's Epistle to Torquatus. Written
by Mr T-S- to D-nS-, Dublin, 1720.
D -n S-t's Prologue to Hyppolitus, Spoken by a Boy of Six Years Old.
(1720. ]
Duke upon Duke, &c. [1720. ]
A Defence of English Commodities. Being an Answer to the Proposal For
the Universal Use of Irish Manufactures, and Utterly rejecting and
a
## p. 463 (#487) ############################################
Chapter IV
463
-kܬܐ܂
:
a les
& Ra}
:
Mp3
TE
7#
renouncing every Thing that is Wearable that comes from England. . . .
Written by Dean Swift. 1720.
The Wonderfull Wonder of Wonders; Being an Accurate Description of
the Birth, Education, Manner of Living, Religion, Politicks, Learning,
&c. of mine A- -se. By Dr Sw-ft. With a Preface. London: Printed
from the Original Copy from Dublin. 1721. Another edn: London:
Printed in the Year 1722.
The Blunderful Blunder of Blunders. Being an Answer to the Wonderful
Wonder of Wonders. [1721. ] Another edn: By Dr Sw-ft. . . . London:
Printed from the Original Copies from Dublin. 1721.
Subscribers to the Bank Placd according to Their Order and Quality. With
Notes and Queries. Dublin, (1721).
A Letter from a Lady in Town to her Friend in the Country, concerning the
Bank; or, The List of the Subscribers farther Explained. Dated Dublin,
Dec. 1, 1721. [In Scott's edn of Swift, vol. 1, 1814. ]
1
A Supplement to Dean Sw—t's Miscellanies: By the Author. Containing,
I. A Letter to the Students of both Universities, . . . II. An Essay upon
an Apothecary. III. An Account of a surprizing Apparition. 1723.
Memoirs of the Life of Scriblerus. . . . By D. S-t. Printed from the
Original Copy from Dublin. 1723.
To the King's Most Excellent Majesty, The Humble Address of the Knights,
Citizens and Burgesses, in Parliament assembled. Dublin, 1723.
A Poem address'd to the Quidnunc's, at St James's Coffee-House London.
Occasion'd by the Death of the Duke of Orleans. 1724.
A New Poem Ascrib'd To the Honble the Gentlemen of the Late Grand-Jury.
Dublin, (1724).
The Fifth and Last Letter to the People of Ireland In Reference to Wood
and his Brass. Dublin, 1724.
A full and true Account of the solemn Procession to the Gallows, at the
Execution of William Wood, Esquire, and Hard-ware-man. 1724.
The Sixth Letter to the Whole People of Ireland. By an Ancient Patriot.
Dublin, 1724.
The Drapier Anatomized: A Song. A New Song Sung at the Club at Mr
Taplin's The Sign of the Drapier's Head in Truck-Street. Dublin, 1724.
A Defence of the Conduct of the People of Ireland In their unanimous
Refusal of Mr Wood's Copper-Money, Dublin, (1724).
The True State of the Case, Between the Kingdom of Ireland of the one
Part, and Mr William Wood of the other Part. By a Protestant of
Ireland. Dublin, (1724].
Some Considerations on the Attempts Made to Pass Mr Wood's Brass-
Money in Ireland. By a Lover of his Country. Dublin, 1724.
Some Reasons Shewing the Necessity the People of Ireland are under, for
continuing to refuse Mr Wood's Coinage. By the Author of the Con-
siderations. Dublin, 1724. (Dedication signed ‘D. B. ']
Tom Punsibi's Dream. Dublin, 1724-5.
Woods Reviv'd, or, a Short Defence of the Proceedings in Bristol, London,
&c. in Reference to the Kingdom of Ireland. (Dublin), 1725.
An Elegy On the Universelly [sic] Lamented Death of the Right Honour-
able Robert Lord Vis. Molesworth, . . . By M. B. 1725.
Enquiries into the principal Causes of the general Poverty of the Common
People of Ireland. Dublin, 1725.
Advice to a Son at the University, Design'd for Holy Orders. By a Clergy-
man. 1725. [Attributed to Rev. T. Curteis. ]
The Widows Address To the Rt. Hon. the Lady Carteret. By M. B. Dublin,
Franti
Fans
-
F
1725.
## p. 464 (#488) ############################################
464
Bibliography
.
A Letter from D. S—t to D. 8-y. [1725. ]
A History of Poetry, In a Letter to a Friend, By the Revd. D-S-t.
Dublin, 1726.
It cannot Rain but it Pours: or, London strow'd with Rarities. 1726.
It cannot Rain but it Pours: Or, The First Part of London strowd with
Rarities. . . . N. B. The Second Part of this Book by Mistake of the Printer
was published first. 1726.
The Manifesto of Lord Peter. 1726.
The Most Wonderful Wonder That ever appeard to the Wonder of the
British Nation. Being, An Account of the Travels of Mynheer Vete-
ranus, thro' the Woods of Germany: With an Account. . . Written by
the Copper-Farthing Dean. 1726.
Travels into several Remote Nations of the World. By Capt. Lemuel
Gulliver. Vol. ii. 1727.
Memoirs Of the Court of Lilliput. Written by Captain Gulliver. Contain-
ing an Account of the Intrigues, and some other particular Transactions
of that Nation, omitted in the two Volumes of his Travels. 1727.
Dean Jonathan's Parody on the 4th Chap. of Genesis. 1729.
The Drapier's Advice to the Freemen and Freeholders of the City of Dublin.
[Dublin, 1729. ]
P[o]em By D- S- On the Scheme Propos'd to the People of Ireland.
Humbly Address'd to the Skilfull and Ingenious Mr Maculla, A Lover of
his Country, and of the Publick Good, &c. . . . Dublin, [1729].
Letters upon the Use of Irish Coal. To the Publisher of the Dublin Weekly
Journal. [Printed in the issues for 9 and 16 August and 25 October,
1729. Signed S. D. H. , M. B. ]
A Letter to the People of Ireland. By M. B. Draper [sic]. . . . Dublin, 1729.
The Present State of Ireland Consider'd. . . . Dublin; rptd, London, 1730.
Some Seasonable Advice to Doctor D-n-y. 1730.
The Colcannen Match: or, the Belly Duel. A Poem. In three Canto's.
1730.
A Brief Account of Mr John Ginglicutt's Treatise Concerning the Alter-
cation or Scolding of the Ancients. By the Author, Printed for
J. Roberts in Warwick-Lane. 1731. [By Arbuthnot. ]
An Infallible Scheme To pay the Publick Debt of this Nation In Six Months.
Humbly offered to the Consideration of the present P-to 1731. [At-
tributed to the Rev. M. Pilkington. ]
A Scheme Humbly offer'd, for making R[eligio]n and the C[lerg]y useful.
1731.
A New Simile for the Ladies, with Useful Annotations. Dublin, 1732.
[Attributed to Sheridan. ]
Chloe Surpriz'd: or, The Second Part of the Lady's Dressing-Room. To
which are added, Thoughts upon Reading the Lady's Dressing-Room,
and the Gentleman's Study. The former wrote by D-n S-t, the latter
by Miss W- 1732.
An Enquiry whether the Christian Religion is of any Benefit, or only An
Useless Commodity to a Trading Nation. 1732.
A Proposal humbly offered to the P-t for the more effectual preventing the
further growth of Popery. . . . By Dr S-t. 1732.
Human Ordure, Botanically considered. The First Essay, of the Kind, Ever
Published in the World. By Dr S-t. 1733. [Attributed to Dr Cham-
berlayne. ]
Ub-Bub-A-Boo:
: or, the Irish-Howl in Heroic Verse. By Dean Swift. 1735.
Bounce to Fop. An Heroick Epistle from a Dog at Twickenham to a Dog
at Court By Dr S-t. 1736.
## p. 465 (#489) ############################################
Chapter IV
465
A Proposal for erecting a Protestant Nunnery in the City of Dublin. 1736.
Some Proposals for the Revival of Christianity. [Attributed to Rev. P.
Skelton. ] (Dublin? , 1736. )
A New Proposal For the better Regulation and Improvement of Quadrille.
Dublin, 1736. (By Bp Hort. ]
Some Thoughts on the Tillage of Ireland: Humbly Dedicated to the Parlia-
ment. . . . To which is Prefixed, A Letter to the Printer, from the Reverend
Doctor Swift. Dublin, 1737.
The Humours of the Age: or, Dean Swift's New Evening-Post. . . . Numb. I.
(To be continued Weekly. ) [15 October to 21 October 1738. ]
Good Queen Anne Vindicated, and The Ingratitude, Insolence, &c. of her
Whig Ministry and the Allies Detected and Exposed. (By that worthy
Patriot Dean Swift. ) 1748.
A New Project For the Destruction of Printing and Bookselling; for the
Benefit of the Learned World. Dublin, 1750.
The Mishap. A Poem. Written by the late Rev. J. S. D. D. D. S. P. D.
[1750. )
Some Account of the Irish. By the late J. S. D. D. D. S. P. D. 1753.
IV. VARIOUS (CONTEMPORARY)
a
A Defence of the Reflections upon Ancient and Modern Learning. . . . With
Observations upon the Tale of a Tub. By William Wotton, B. D. 1705.
Reflections on Dr Swift's Letter to the Earl of Oxford, about the English
Tongue. [1712.