[Life And Letters Of John Gay (1685-1732) by Lewis Melville]@TWC D-Link book
Life And Letters Of John Gay (1685-1732)

CHAPTER III
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The terms on which Gay was with the set is shown in Pope's letter to him, written from Binfield, May 4th, 1714: "Pray give, with the utmost fidelity and esteem, my hearty service to the Dean, Dr.
Arbuthnot, Mr.Ford, and to Mr.Fortescue.Let them also know at Button's that I am mindful of them."[6] Erasmus Lewis Gay knew now, and Caryll too, and the rest of the small literary set, who, with gusto, made him welcome among them.

Indeed, when the "Memoirs of Scriblerus" were in contemplation, and, indeed, begun in 1713, Gay, then comparatively unknown, was invited to take a hand in the composition with the greatest men of the day.

"The design of the Memoirs of Scriblerus was to have ridiculed all the false tastes in learning, under a character of a man of capacity enough, that had dipped into every art and science, but injudiciously in each," we have been told.

"It was begun by a club of some of the greatest wits of the age.

Lord Oxford, the Bishop of Rochester, Mr.Pope, Congreve, Arbuthnot, Swift, and others.


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