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Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745. On the words Brother Protestant and fellow Christian which were used by the Presbiterians when they were endeavouring to get the Test taken off in the year 1733. By Dean Swift
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Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745. Advice to a Parson. An Epigram. By Dean Swift
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First line: Wou'd you rise in the Church, be stupid and dull, Manuscript.
143198-143259
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Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745. The grand Question debated, Whether Hamilton's-Bawn shal be turn'd into a malt-house or a barrack. By Dean Swift
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First line: Thus spoke to my Lady, the Knight full of cares, Manuscript.
143198-143259
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Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745. Prometheus, a poem
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Imprint: Dublin : printed in the year, 1724. First line: When first the 'Squire and Tinker Wood View the Huntington Online Catalog record. Printed. Anonymous. By Jonathan Swift. With handwritten annotation below title: "By Dean Swift."
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Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745. The first of April: a poem. Inscrib'd to Mrs. E. C
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Imprint: [Dublin, 1724?] First line: This morn the God of Wit and Joke, View the Huntington Online Catalog record. Printed. Anonymous. By Jonathan Swift.
143204
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Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745. An elegy on Dr. John Whalley, who departed the 17th. of this inst. Jan. 1724
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Imprint: [Dublin, 1724] First line: Well 'tis as learned Coats has guest, View the Huntington Online Catalog record. Printed. Attributed to Jonathan Swift (Teerink). An adaptation of Swift's 'Elegy on Mr. Patrige, the almanack-maker'.
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Broadsides by Jonathan Swift and others
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This bound volume contains 79 manuscript and printed broadsides chiefly from the 1720s and 1730s with satirical, humorous, and political ballads, poems, and prose by various Anglo-Irish writers, dramatists, and clerics including Jonathan Swift (1667-1745). Some of the unattributed manuscript poems and annotations are purported to be by Swift. The volume includes sixteen handwritten items and sixty-three printed texts. The printed items were primarily printed in Dublin, Ireland, with six printed by Dublin printers John Harding and Sarah Harding. The items are numbered and separated into two parts, each preceded by a contemporary handwritten table of contents. The volume has previously been referred to in print as the Dublin Broadsides. It is bound in a leather binding with the spine title "Broadsides by Swift and others : ms. and printed."
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