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1650 and 1663 respectively. They were apparently written in 1641 and 1658 respectively. Pepys Wheatley, ii, p. 155) records in 1661 that he went 'after dinner to the Opera, where there was a new play ("Cutter of Coleman Street"), made in the year 1658, with reflections much upon the late times, and it being the first time, the pay was doubled, and so to save money, my wife and I went up into the gallery, and there saw very well; and a very good play it is.'

The Proposition For the Advancement Of Experimental Philosophy was printed in 1661. I am indebted to Mr W. Aldis Wright for the loan of a copy of that year for the purpose of reproduction. The essay was included in the prose miscellanies of the folio of 1668 referred to above, but the important Preface was omitted. The tract is given here, therefore, as it was published

in 1661.

The Discourse By way of Vision, Concerning the Government of Oliver Cromwell, published also in 1661, has been printed from the folio of 1668 and so have the Several Discourses by way of Essays, in Verse and Prose.

At the end of these (see p. 462) I have added a poem which was printed in the ninth edition of Cowley's works (folio, 1700, Printed for Henry Herringman, etc.). Attention is drawn to this poem on the title page of the ninth edition by the words 'To which are added, some Verses by the AUTHOR | Never before Printed.' And I have ventured to add, also as part of the text, the unfinished poem on the Civil War first printed in 1679 (see Cowley's reference to this in the first volume of the present edition, p. 9).

I have not included The Four Ages of England, or The Iron Age, 1648, as it was specifically disavowed by Cowley in the Preface to the folio edition of his works

referred to above (see the first volume of the present edition, p. 4): I have not been able to find any reason why his statement should be doubted. Nor have

I included A Satyre against Separatists, 1642, also attributed to Cowley.

A few verses attributed to Cowley are printed in the appendix and notes: of these, the lines Upon the Happie Birth of the Duke may be regarded as certainly his, although he never included them in his works; and probably the verses beginning 'Come, Poetry, and with you bring along' (p. 489) are his also: the edition in which they are to be found appeared during the lifetime of his literary executor (Bishop Thomas Sprat, 1635-1713).

As previously announced it is not intended to print Cowley's Latin poems as part of the present edition.

Material for a Supplement of Notes, biographical, bibliographical and critical, is being collected and will be published, it is hoped, at no very distant date.

A. R. WALLER.

UNIVERSITY PRESS,

CAMBRIDGE.

12 September, 1906.

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Printed by E. P. for HENRY SEILE, and are to bee sold at his shop at the signe of the Tygers-head in Fleet-street

between the Bridge and

the Conduit

ΤΟ

THE RIGHT HONOURABLE

AND RIGHT REVEREND FATHER

IN GOD, JOHN LORD BISHOP

OF LINCOLNE AND DEANE

OF WESTMINSTER

MY LORD,

I might well feare, least these my rude and unpolisht lines, should offend your Honourable survay; but that I hope your Noblenesse will rather smile at the faults committed by a Child, then censure them. Howsoever I desire your Lordships pardon, for presenting things so unworthy to your view, and to accept the good will of him, who in all dutie is bound to be

Your Lordships

most humble servant.

Abraham Cowley.

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