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Letters, written by the Late Jonathan Swift, D.D. dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin; and several of his friends. From the year 1710 to 1742
Published from the originals; collected and revised by Deane Swift, Esq. of Goodrich, in Herefordshire. Volume III -
Miscellanies in prose and verse. The first volume
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Miscellanies. The last volume
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A modest proposal for preventing the children of poor people from being a burthen to their parents or the country, and for making them beneficial to the publick
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A modest proposal for preventing the children of poor people from being a burthen to their parents or the country, and for making them beneficial to the publick
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A proposal for correcting, improving and ascertaining the English tongue
In a letter to the Most Honourable Robert Earl of Oxford and Mortimer, Lord high treasurer of Great Britain -
The new way of selling places at Court. In a letter from a small courtier to a great stock-jobber
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A project for the advancement of religion, and the reformation of manners. By a person of Quality
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Good Queen Anne vindicated, and the ingratitude, insolence, &c. of her whig ministry and the allies detected and exposed, in the beginning and conducting of the war
The Englishman's memorial: containing a short history of the land wars we have been engaged in, with unanswerable arguments, proving 'tis not the interest of England to be concerned, as a principal, in a land war, upon any pretence whatsoever;-mind the sea. With remarks on the new ways of raising money, &c. (unknown to our ancestors, and which our posterity will curse us for;) also many important matters relative to the British affairs, worthy of the attention of the publick at this juncture. By the author of the dissertation on parties -
A Letter of advice to a young poet
Together with a proposal for the encouragement of poetry in this kingdom. By J. Swift -
A Letter in answer to a paper, intitled, an appeal to the Reverend Dean Swift. By the Author of Considerations on two papers, &c
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Directions to servants in general
And in particular to the butler, cook, footman, coachman, groom, house-steward, and land-steward, porter, dairy-maid, chamber-maid, nurse, laundress, house-keeper, tutoress, or governess. By the Reverend Dr. Swift, D.S.P.D -
Esquire Bickerstaff's most strange and wonderful predictions for the year, 1708. Wherein the month and the day of the month are set down, when several most surprizing accidents shall certainly come to pass, as particularly that the present French King shall die on the 29th of July. The pope to die the 11th of September. The Dauphin the French King's son to dye on the 7th of May. That partridge the famous astrologer is to dye on the 29th of March. On the 23rd of May a famous actor of the play-house will die a ridiculous death, suitable to his vocation. Upon the 26th of August, will arrive from Flanders such a welcome express of victory, that a thousand bonfires will be made in London for joy of the news, and in the same month a noble admiral will gain immortal honour, by obtaining a signal victory at sea. On the 6th of June the city of Paris will be burnt down to the ground. Towards the end of August will be great mischief done in Bartholomew-fair, by the rumbling down of a booth: with several other strange things too tedious here to be related
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A dialogue between Captain Tom, and Sir H-y D-n C-t
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Volume XV
Containing letters to and from Dr. Jonathan Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin from the year 1703, to 1743. With notes explanatory and historical by the Rev. Thomas Birch, D.D. F.R.S. John Hawkesworth, L.L.D. and the editor, Mr. Thomas Wilkes -
Volume XIV
Containing letters to and from Dr. Jonathan Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's Dublin, from the year 1703, to 1743. With notes explanatory and historical by the Rev. Thomas Birch, D.D. F.R.S. John Hawkesworth, L.L.D. and the editor, Mr. Thomas Wilkes -
A second collection of miscellanies. Written by Jonathan Swift, D.D
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Miscellanies by Dr. Jonathan Swift
Viz. I. A meditation upon a broom-stick, according to the style and manner of the Honourable Robert Boyle's meditations. II. Baucis and philemon, imitated from the VIII. Book of Ovid. III. To their excellencies the Lord Justices of Ireland, -the humble petition of frances Harris, who must starve and die a maid if it miscarries. IV. To Mrs. Biddy Floyd. V. The history of vanbrugh's house. To which is prefix'd, a complete key to the tale of tub -
Good advice to beaus and batchelours, in answer to good advice to the the ladies
By the author of, A tale of a tub -
Verses on the death of Dr. Swift, D.S.P.D
occasioned by reading a maxim in Rochefoulcault. Written by himself, November 1731 -
Jonathan Swift
in Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten -
The present miserable state of Ireland
In a letter from a gentleman in Dublin, to his friend S.R.W. in London. Wherein is briefly stated, the causes and heads of all our woes -
Predictions for the year 1708
Being an account of all the remarkable events that shall happen in Europe this year; as battles, sieges, &c. The month, day and hour of the death of John Partridge, astrologer, Cardinal Noailles, Archibishop of Paris, the dauphine, young Prince of Asturias, the Pope, French King and other Princes, also the untimely and natural ends of persons in London, accidents to some generals, and the death of others in battle, with the confutation of common almanack-makers in general. By Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq -
The lady's dressing-room. A poem. By ***********
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The travels and adventures of Capt. Lemuel Gulliver
Shewing how he was cast up an unknown land, where the inhabitants were but six inches high; the customs of the country, court, King, &c. and the author's exploits, and surprizing retu[r]n