the year after he returns to Cambridge, and takes a degree in Civil Law; during that interval he cor- responds with Mr. West. 240.-Letter i. From Mr. WEST. His spirits not as yet improved by country air. Has begun to read Tacitus, but not to relish him. 242.-Letter ii. To Mr. WEST. Earnest hopes for his friend's better health, as the warm weather comes on. Defence of Tacitus, and his character. Of the new Dunciad. Sends him a speech from the first scene of his Agrippina. 243.-The Plan, Dramatis Personæ, and all the speeches which Mr. Gray wrote of that Tragedy inserted. 244.-Letter iii. From Mr. WEST. Criticisms on his friend's tragick style. Latin Hexameters on his own cough. an English Ode on the approach of May. 264.--- Letter viii. To Mr. WEST. Criticises his Ode. Of his own classical studies. 266.-Letter ix. From Mr. WEST. Answer to the foregoing. 268.-Letter x. To Mr. WEST. Of his own peculiar species of Heroick Epistle from Sophonisba to Massinissa. 268. SECTION IV. Prefatory narrative. Mr. Gray takes his degree Letter vi. To Mr. WALPOLE. Ludicrous compliment of condolence on the death of his favourite Cat, enclosing an Ode on that subject. 301.-Letter vii. To Dr. WHARTON. Loss by fire of a house in Cornhill. On Diodorus Siculus. M. Gresset's Poems. Thomson's Castle of Indolence. Ode to a Water Nymph, with a character of its Author. 302.-Letter viii. To Dr. WHARTON. More on M. Gresset. Account of his own projected Poem on the alliance between government and education. 304.-Fragment of that Poem, with a commentary, notes, and detached sentiments relative to it. 305.-Letter ix. To Dr. WHARTON. Character of M. de Montesquieu's L'Esprit des Loix. 314.-Letter x. To Dr. WHARTON. Account of Books continued. Crebillon's Catalina. Birch's State Papers. Of his own studies, and a Table of Greek Chronology which he was then forming. 316.-Letter xi. To Dr. WHARTON. Ludicrous account of the Duke of Newcastle's Installation at Cambridge. On the Ode then performed, and more concerning the Author of it. 318.--Letter xii. To his MOTHER. Consolatory on the death of her sister. 319.-Letter xiii. To Dr. WHARTON. Wishes to be able to pay him a visit at Durham. On Dr. Middleton's death. Some account of the first volumes of Buffon's Histoire Naturelle. 320.Narrative of the incident which led Mr. Gray to write his Long Story. That Poem inserted, with Notes by the Editor (Mr. Mason), and prefaced those lyrical pieces inserted. 343.-Letter xxi. To Mr. STONHEWER. Of Monsignor Baiardi's book concerning Herculaneum. A Poem of Voltaire. Incloses a part of his Ode entitled the Bard. 349.Letter xxii. To Dr. WHARTON. On his removing from Peter-House to Pembroke-Hall. His notion of a London Hospital. Of Sully's Memoirs. Mr. Mason's four Odes. 350.-Letter xxiii. To Dr. WHARTON. Of his own indolence. Memoirs of M. de la Porte and of Madame Stael. Intention of coming to town. 352.-Letter xxiv. To Mr. MASON. Of his Reviewers. Offers to send him Druidical anecdotes for his projected drama of Caractacus. 354.-Letter xxv. To Mr. MASON. On hearing Parry play on the Welsh Harp, and finishing his Ode after it. Account of the Old Ballad on which the Tragedy of Douglas was founded. 356.-Letter xxvi. To Mr. HURD. On the ill reception his two Pindarick Odes met with on their publication. 357. -Letter xxvii. To Mr.MASON. His opinion of the dramatick part of Caractacus. 359.-Letter xxviii. To Mr. MASON. Dissuading him from retirement. Advice concerning Caractacus. Criticisms on his Elegy written in the garden of a friend. Refusal of the office of Poet Laureat. 363.—Letter xxix. To Dr. WHARTON. Account of his present employment in making out a list of places in England worth seeing. 366.-Letter xxx. To Dr. WHARTON. On the |