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PORTRAIT OF POPE'S MOTHER. From a drawing by RICHARDSON, in the possession of EDWARD CHENEY, Esq.
SEVERAL HUNDRED UNPUBLISHED LETTERS, AND OTHER NEW MATERIALS,
An asterisk is prefixed to the letters which, either in whole or in part, are not in the edition of Roscoe.
3. He is still absorbed in his translation. Their
friendship will be lasting .
4. Jervas to Pope. Addison undertakes to be-
friend Pope. Homer's head.
5. Pope to Jervas. Regrets at Oxford for the
queen's death. His regard for Addison.
Attempt of Philips to set them at variance.
Pope declines the proffered kindness till Addi-
son has a juster opinion of him. His obliga-
tions to Swift. His detestation of party.
*6. Jervas to Pope. Engraving of Homer's head.
Subscriptions to Tickell's Lucan
7. Pope's Farewell to London.
Subscribers to the Iliad.
of the first book
[1714]
3
July 28, 1714
5
His old sword.
Tickell's translation
*8. Subscribers to the Iliad. The report of the
committee to enquire into the conduct of the
late ministry. Bolingbroke the hero of Pope's
preface to the Iliad
LETTER.
9. Pope to Jervas. Replies to the charge that
Bolingbroke is his hero. Progress of his trans-
lation. Enquires what is said of Tickell's first
book
*10. Jervas to Pope. Project for a journey on horse-
back to Bath. Vertue's engraving of Kneller's
portrait of George I. Fans for the Miss
Blounts
.
11. The projected journey.
Ormond
Flight of the Duke of
12. Arrangements for the journey to Bath. Pope's
bridle. Illness of Louis XIV.
13. Message to Pope from Lady M. W. Montagu
14. Pope to Jervas. The low state of poetry in
England. Begs Jervas to come back from
Ireland. Lord Burlington
15. Gay's verses on Blackmore
16. Pope visits Dr. George Clarke at Oxford. Cen-
sure of portrait painting
July 9, 1716
Nov. 14, 1716
*17. Directions to Jervas for distributing copies of
the Iliad, Vol. 3.
18. Pope's removal to Twickenham.
Longs for the return of Jervas.
Parnell, Rowe, and Garth
*1. Pope to Broome. Apologises for his letters to
the Miss Marriots.
Enquires what subscrip-
tions Broome has received for the Iliad. He
despises the world
*2. Asks Broome to get some of the colleges at
Cambridge to subscribe to the Iliad, and
requests him to translate notes from Eusta-
thius
*3. The plan to be followed in translating the notes
from Eustathius. Sends Vol. 1 of Eustathius Nov. 29, 1714
*4. Fears that Eustathius may have miscarried. He
is in want of the notes.
5. Approves the plan Broome has pursued in the digest of Eustathius. Philip's Miscellany. The new Spectator not by the former hands. Feb. 10, 1714[-15] 35