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55. To Mr. BEATTIE. Thanks for a manuscript poem. Mr. Adam Fer-
guson's Essay on Civil Society. A compliment to Lord Gray
56. To Mr. BEATTIE. On the projected edition of our Author's Poems
in England and Scotland. Commendation of Mr. Beattie's Ode on
Lord Hay's birth-day

57. To Mr. BEATTIE. More concerning the Glasgow edition of his

Poems

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58. To the Duke of GRAFTON. Thanking him for his Professorship.
59. To Mr. NICHOLLS. ACCount of Mr. Brocket's death, and of his being
made his successor in the Professorship

60. To Mr. BEATTIE. On the same subject

Enumeration of such other literary pursuits of Mr. Gray as were not
sufficiently dilated upon in the preceding letters

1. To Mr. NICHOLLS. On the death of his uncle, Governor Floyer, and
advising him to take orders

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2. To Mr. NICHOLLS. Congratulating him upon his situation, and men-
tioning his own Ode on the Installation of the New Chancellor

3. To Mr. BEATTIE. His reason for writing that Ode
4. To Dr. WHARTON. A journal of his tour through Westmoreland,
Cumberland, and a part of Yorkshire

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5. To Dr. WHARTON. Description of Kirkstall-Abbey, and some other
places in Yorkshire

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6. To Mr. NICHOLLS. Of Nettley-Abbey and Southampton
7. To Mr. BEATTIE. On the first part of his Minstrel, and his Essay on
the Immutability of Truth. Stricture on Mr. D. Hume

8. To Mr. How. On receiving three of Count Algarotti's Treatises, and

hinting an error which that author had fallen into, with regard to

the English taste of gardening

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9. To Mr. How. After perusing the whole of Count Algarotti's works
in the Leghorn edition, and his sentiments concerning them

10. To Mr. NICHOLLS. On the affection due to a mother. Description

of that part of Kent from whence the letter was written

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391

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1. The little concern produced by public calamities. Some remarks upon
the character of Mr. Pope

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2. Description of true philosophy. Conduct of Mr. Ratcliffe at his exe-

cution

3. Elegy written in a Country Church-yard first forwarded.
specting a work in the press against Mr. Middleton

4. Observations upon a dramatic performance, entitled Elfrida, from the
pen of Mr. Mason

405

6. Mr. Lyttleton's Elegy and Mr. Walpole's Epistle from Florence con-
sidered-favourable views of the latter

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16. Means recommended to secure his restoration to health. Inquiries re-
lative to an old picture

17. Prevailing opinions respecting the work entitled Historic Doubts.

garotti's purchase of an excellent Holbein picture. Curious ta-

pestry

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MEMOIRS

OF THE

LIFE AND WRITINGS

OF

MR. GRAY.

SECTION I.

THE lives of men of letters seldom abound with incidents; and perhaps no life ever afforded fewer than that which I have undertaken to write. But I am far from mentioning this by way of previous apology, as is the trite custom of biographers. The respect which I owe to my deceased friend, to the public, and (let me add) to myself, prompts me to waive so impertinent a ceremonial. A reader of sense and taste never expects to find in the memoirs of a philosopher, or poet, the same species of entertainment, or information, which he would receive from those of a statesman or general: he expects, however, to be either informed or entertained; nor would he be disappointed, did the writer take care to dwell principally on such topics as characterize the man, and distinguish that peculiar part which he acted in the varied drama of society. But this rule, selfevidently right as it may seem, is seldom observed.

B

It was said, with almost as much truth as wit, of one of these writers, that, when he composed the Life of Lord Verulam, he forgot that he was a philosopher; and, therefore, it was to be feared, should he finish that of the Duke of Marlborough, he would forget that he was a general. I shall avoid a like fault. I will promise my I will promise my reader that he shall, in the following pages, seldom behold Mr. Gray in any other light than that of a scholar and a poet: and though I am more solicitous to shew that he was a virtuous, a friendly, and an amiable man, than either; yet this solicitude becomes unnecessary from the very papers which he has bequeathed me, and which I here arrange for the purpose: since in these the qualities of his head and heart so constantly appear together, and the fertility of his fancy so intimately unites with the sympathetic tenderness of his soul, that were it in my intention, I should find it impossible to disjoin them.

His parents were reputable citizens of London. His grandfather a considerable merchant: but his father, Mr. Philip Gray, though he also followed business, was of an indolent and reserved temper; and therefore rather diminished than increased his paternal fortune. He had many children, of whom Thomas, the subject of these Memoirs, was the fifth born. All of them, except him, died in their infancy; and I have been told that he narrowly escaped suffocation, (owing to too great a fulness of blood which destroyed the rest) and would certainly have been cut off as early, had not his mother, with a courage remarkable for one of her sex, and withal so very tender a parent, ventured

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