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vi

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134 to 140

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Voyage from the Thames to Falmouth, Nov.
29, [1666,] to Feb. 21, [1667]
Admiral Kempthorne's general orders

141

Correspondence resumed [Feb. to June, 1667] 142 to 152
Dr. Browne's correspondence with Mr. E.
Browne during his travels, from Aug. 12,
1668, to Dec. 15, 1669

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Further correspondence, from June 8, [1670,]

to Oct. 3, 1682

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153 to 201

202 to 350

MISCELLANEOUS CORRESPONDENCE 351 to end.

Mr. Samuel Duncon to Dr. Browne

Mr. Henry Bates to Dr. Browne, Aug. 28,

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358

Dr. Henry Power to Dr. Browne, Feb. 10,
1648

Mr. Thomas Smith to Dr. Browne

359

Dr. Henry Power to Dr. Browne, Sep. 15,
1648; Aug. 28, 1649; Nov. 9, 1668 361 to 365
Mr. Merryweather to Dr. Browne, Oct. 1,

1649

Sir Hamon L'Estrange to Dr. Browne, Jan.
16, 1653

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Dr. Browne to [J. Hobart, Esq. ?] Aug.1654 371

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Dr. Browne to J. Hobart, Esq. Aug. 31, 1666 372
Dr. Browne's correspondence with Evelyn

in 1658

with Dugdale,

373 to 380

from Oct. 4, 1658, to Apl. 5, 1662 . 380 to 393

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rett from July 13, 1668, to [June ?] 1669 393 to 408 Sir Robert Paston to Dr. Browne, Sep. 19,

[1662,] Apl. 5, 1669

The Earl of Yarmouth to Sir Thomas Browne,
Sep. 10, 1674.

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Sir Thomas Browne to Elias Ashmole, Oct.

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Sir Thomas Browne to Mr. John Browne

[1667-8]

PREFACE.

NEARLY twelve years have elapsed since the present edition was undertaken; and it affords me no small gratification to have at length accomplished, however imperfectly, a task which has been attended by a degree of labour proportioned to the difficulty of the work, and the competency of the workman. The delay, though not my own, and incurred in the hope of securing a corresponding advantage to my readers, cannot, I fear, be justified :—and, when I consider how often plans have been defeated, assurances forfeited, and character thus sacrificed, by a spirit of procrastination, I cannot but rejoice that my own intentions have survived that which threatened their frustration, and that I have been permitted, though late, to redeem my pledge by the publication of these volumes.

Respecting the WORKS of Sir Thomas Browne, I need say the less here, because explanatory prefaces accompany the principal of them. Religio Medici, Pseudodoxia Epidemica, and the volume containing Hydriotaphia and the Garden of Cyrus,

were published by himself; after his decease, and in consonance no doubt with his understood intentions, appeared the Miscellany Tracts, Letter to a Friend, Posthumous Works, and Christian Morals. The last of these, we are informed by his daughter, was "a continuation of his Religio Medici, drawn up in his elder years," and seems to have been left in readiness for the press. Of his lesser pieces he had probably intended to make a complete collection, and either publish, or leave them for publication in a revised form; for he has informed us himself that he had "some miscellaneous tracts which might be published."2 The collection which was brought out by Abp. Tenison does not appear to me to have been so complete or so revised and arranged, as the author would have left it. Generally speaking, I have arranged the works according to the date of their publication; deviating only occasionally in order to place similar subjects together. On this principle I have placed the Miscellany Tracts last, because the hitherto unpublished works which follow are also miscellaneous.

It will be expected that I should say a few words respecting the LIFE and CORRESPONDENCE, which occupy the first volume. The only original and authentic biographical materials which exist re

1 See last page of Supplementary Memoir, and Archdeacon Jeffery's Preface to the Christian Morals.

2 Vol. i, p. 468.

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