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Genius unveiling Nature.)

Published Aug1,1782 by IFielding Pater noster Row, I Sewell, Cornhill, & L.Debrett, Piccadilly.

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Simul et jucunda et idonea dicere vitæ.
BY THE

Philological Society of London.

VOL. II, for 1782.

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C23, Pater Noster Row, John Debrett, oppojite

Burlington House, Piccadilly; and John Sewell,N32, Cornbill.
To be continued Monthly Price 1 Shilling.

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We muf further intreat the indulgence of our Readers for the firft Number of the Paper, Anecdotes of the Living Artifls, till our next.

E. K.'s poetry will not do for the European Magazine.

We fhall be happy to be favoured with the further correfpondence of Rdus. Fufcus

Claudus.

Conftantia's Lines on Friendship are certainly very pretty for a mufe of fifteen, but we recommend to her not to fuffer her mufe to take her flight into the regions of Fame at fo early an age.

We affure Zeno that the pieces which he mentions never came to hand.

In answer to the question of H. A. we inform him, that we adopted the motto to the Review part, from the publication which formerly bore the fame title, and that without any reftoration of the reading, as neither the fenfe, nor the fabric of the verfe, was defective.

We fhall be happy to be frequently put in remembrance of the hand writing of J. D. S. His tranflation came too late for a competition with that which is inferted.

W. G. S. will fee that the volume is compleated in fix numbers.

Spanko's hint will be attended to.

The Infcription on the Tombstone of Margaret Scot is in Pennycuik's Poems,

Some of Clio's poetical pieces are intended for infertion.

There is nothing in the Infcriptions by the Author of Enoch sufficiently curious to recom» mend them to our readers.

Curio truly fays, that he is a juvenile poct.

The Man of the Town, No. V.-Sentimental Fragments-View of French Literature— Fatal Effects of Jealoufy-The Loft Daughter recovered, and S. A. in our next.

We fhould be guilty of more confidence than Cafca himself, if we were to obtrude his effay on the world. This is not the channel for the propagation of infidelity.

We admire the feelings of the amiable author of the Elegy on a Lap-dog. [What puppy would not die to be fo mourned!]

We participate in the forrows of Modeftus, on the death of the noble Marquis; and we cannot refufe fome fhare of lamentation to his poetry.

We fincerely thank F. G. for communicating the article of Biography, which, as he fays, is very curicus; and we requeft his further correfpondence in that line.

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