Page:The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 2.djvu/35

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GENERAL PREFACE.
xxix

11. "MS. Scheme to Mr. Pulteney, about proper Measures to be followed by the Court."

12. It appears by his letter to Mr. Windar in vol. XIX, p. 2, dated Jan. 12, 1698, that several of his very early sermons had been transcribed by that gentleman.

13. The rev. Mr. Harte, author of the Life of Gustavus Adolphus, &c. informed some of his friends, that he had read eleven sermons of the Dean's, which he had lent to Mr. Pope, who assured Mr. Harte, they were the best he ever had read; and Mr. Harte has said the same, who was very circumstantial in telling, 'they were not only stitched together, but in a black leather case; that they were among Mr. Pope's papers, when he died; and that he believed that Dr. Warburton, who had the revisal and publication of all Pope's writings after his death, might have seen them.'

14. An original letter of the Dean's (unprinted) is in the possession of lord Dartrey[1]. Mr. York of Erthig[2] has another, containing a criticism on Pope's Homer. Three more to miss Waryng of Belfast[3], to whom Swift seriously paid his addresses, are existing.

In the same year, 1779, Dr. Swift's poetry, as arranged by the present editor in the collection then published under the superintendance of Dr. Johnson, was thus noticed:

"The poetical writings of Swift have been long obscured by the mode in which they are scattered

  1. See the nineteenth volume of this collection, at the end of the year 1726.
  2. From the information of a gentleman of distinction.
  3. Two letters to this lady are already in this collection, vol. I, p. 278; and vol. XVIII, p. 243.
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