p. **~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ p. 1 1 &xi / mtROPERTT OP d 1817 ARTES SC I E NTIA VERITA S f I I I I i I I Oxford Bibliographical Society Publications NEW SERIES VOLUME VIII 1956 8(a-^> ~~I I? QYLQ I.1 I revIl j ll p/ ~~~ ~~~ 'K~~~r. - ~2 cl n cr~' 9~, e ~ P4h;A '.im, '-' p (7~,~~~~~~2 P 4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~o 4 ", ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~00d t 0/~~A~i 5Ai )otg e d~~~A. (7~~~~~~~/ ' ' e 'Des Cartes's proof of a god from the1 Idea of necessary exislenlce examnined. 1696.' (M.Lokck C. 28. F11. 19) $4, ~~A 7b/( Cf ~ rel / ~ o Account book kept by S. Bromvnover, i 689-96. A SUMMARY CATALOGUE OF THE LOVELACE COLLECTION OF THE PAPERS OF JOHN LOCKE IN THE BODLEIAN LIBRARY BY P. LONG OXFORD PRINTED FOR THE SOCIETY AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS I959 \oo$.0i8z n,. PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, OXFORD v~*~ ~~?~~~~ 'BY VIVIAN RIDLER PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY CONTENTS INTRODUCTION vii NOTE ON PLATE ix ABBREVIATIONSx LIST OF SHELFMARKS xi I. JOURNALS AND OTHER PERSONAL PAPERS II. CORRESPONDENCE 3 III. ACCOUNTS 23 IV. BOOKS 24 V. PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY 27 VI. MONEY AND COINAGE 34 VII. MEDICINE 36 VIII. NATURAL SCIENCE 38 IX. TRADE AND THE COLONIES 38 X. MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS 40 XI. PAPERS OF PETER KING 46 XII. APPENDIX 47 INDEX 49 I. INTRODUCTION ON his death in 1704, apart from minor bequests of books to Lady Masham and Anthony Collins, John Locke bequeathed 'to my Cosen Peter King [later the Lord Chancellor]... all my Manuscripts and all my books that are interleaved and the one moiety of all the rest of my books not herein otherwise disposed of...'. The other half of his library of printed books he bequeathed to Francis Cudworth Masham. The papers and correspondence remained in the possession of Lord King's descendants, who later became the Earls of Lovelace, until 1947. The seventh Lord King used the collection extensively in his book The life of John Locke (I829). In 1932 some of the papers were displayed in an exhibition of 'Books and manuscripts from Locke's library', held by J. & E. Bumpus Ltd. in London, to celebrate the tercentenary of Locke's birth. In I936 Mr. Jocelyn Gibb, to whom much is owed for his successful efforts to keep the collection together, collaborated with Professor R. A. Aaron in an edition of An early draft of Locke's Essay concerning human understanding from a commonplace book begun by Locke in 166I. In 1942 the collection was deposited in the Bodleian Library for safe-keeping during the war. Dr. W. von Leyden then undertook to examine and to make a report upon the collection. It was finally purchased from the Earl of Lovelace in 1947 with the help of the Pilgrim Trust and of the Delegates of the Clarendon Press. One important item, the commonplace book of I661, remained in Lord Lovelace's possession. It was bought from him by Mr. Arthur Houghton in 1952 and is now in Harvard University Library. A general description of the collection is given by Dr. von Leyden in his edition of Locke's Essays on the law of nature (1954), pp. 1-7. A few additions have been made since 1947, the most important of which is a further collection of I65 letters from Locke to Peter King, which was purchased in 1953 and joined with those already in the Library. The present catalogue was first made when the collection had become the property of the Bodleian and had been sorted and arranged for binding. It has now been revised for publication. Much help throughout has been received from Dr. von Leyden's calendar of the collection made before the manuscripts were bought for the Library. Further assistance has been received from the descriptions of the philosophical manuscripts in an unpublished Oxford thesis for the degree of Doctor of philosophy by Mrs. C. S. Johnston, 'A bibliography of John Locke' (1956), and from Dr. E. S. de Beer, who is engaged upon an edition of Locke's correspondence. The impetus given to studies of Locke's works since the Lovelace collection was generally available to scholars may be seen from the list of publications, the authors of which have used the collection, given by Dr. von Leyden, op. cit., pp. 5-6. To them may now be added: Aaron (R. I.), John Locke. 2nd ed. I955. Bonno (G. D.), Les relations intellectuelles de Locke avec la France (Univ. of California publ. in mod. philol., vol. xxxviii). 1955. Carter (H.), Wolvercote mill (Oxf. bibliogr. sqc., N.S., extra publ.). 1957. Cranston (M.), 'John Locke's correspondence with Esther Masham' (The Newberry library bulletin, 2nd ser., no. 4, 1950, pp. 121-35). 1 A copy of Locke's will is in MS. Locke b. 5 (14). viii INTRODUCTION Cranston (M.),'John Locke' (Encounter, Dec. I956, pp. 46-54). - John Locke, a biography. I957. Dewhurst (K. E.), Truss designed by Locke' (British medicaljournal, 1954, ii. 44). 'Locke's midwifery notes' (The Lancet, 4 Sept. I954, pp. 490-x). - 'Sydenham on smallpox' (British medicaljournal I955, ii. 432-3). - 'The four constitutions' (The Medical press, ccxxxiv. 303-4). 1955. --- 'Sydenham's letters to John Locke' (The Practitioner, clxxv. 314-20). 1955. -'Sydenham on "A Dysentery"' (Bulletin of the hist. of medicine, xxix. 393-400). 1955. - The genesis of state medicine in Ireland' (Irish journal of medical science, Aug. I956, pp. 365-84). -- 'A symposium on trigeminal neuralgia' (Journal of the hist. of medicine and allied sciences, xii. 21-36). 1957 -- 'Locke and Sydenham on the teaching of anatomy' (Medical history, ii. I-I 2). 1958. Kirchberger (C.), 'Elizabeth Burnet, I661-I709' (Church quarterly review, cxlviii. 17-51). 1949 -Laslett (P.), 'Locke and the first earl of Shaftesbury: another early writing on the understanding' (Mind, Ixi. 89-92). 1952. -— The I690 edition of Locke's Two treatises of government: two states' (Trans. of the Cambridge bibliogr. soc., i. 341-7). 1952. --— 'Masham of Otes: the rise and fall of an English family' (History today, iii. 535-43). 1953 -- 'Further observations on Locke's Two treatises of government' (Trans. of the Cambridge bibliogr. soc., ii. 83-87). 1954. ---- 'The English revolution and Locke's "Two treatises of government"' (Cambridge hist. journal, xii. 40-55). I956. -- 'John Locke, the great recoinage, and the origins of the Board of trade: 1695-1698' (William and Mary quarterly, 3rd ser., xiv. 370-402). 1957. Leyden (W. von), 'John Locke and natural law' (Philosophy, xxxi. 23-35). 1956. Macpherson (C. B.), 'The social bearing of Locke's political theory' (The Western political quarterly, vii. 1-22). 1954. Marchi (E. de), 'Le origini dell' idea della toleranza religiosa nel Locke e gli scritti inediti della Lovelace collection' (Occidente, ix. 460-92). 1953. Yolton (J. W.), 'Locke and the seventeenth-century logic of ideas' (Journal of the history of ideas, xvi. 431-52). 1955. - John Locke and the way of ideas. I956. NOTE ON PLATE TO ILLUSTRATE THE HAND OF LOCKE AND OF HIS AMANUENSIS SYLVESTER BROWNOVER (a) 'Des Cartes's proof of a god from the Idea of necessary existence examined. 1696': a copy by S. Brownover with the opening words in Locke's hand (MS. Locke c. 28, fol. I9). When Locke gave drafts or copies of his works to his amanuensis to be transcribed he often started the fair copy by writing the first one or two lines himself. The photograph shows only the upper left-hand quarter of a folio sheet: it was Locke's habit to fold a sheet in two and to leave the right-hand column blank for later additions and corrections. In this piece the corrections for the words deleted in lines 17 and I9 are in the right-hand column, which is not included on the plate owing to the excessive 'show through' of ink from the verso of the leaf. (b) Account book kept by S. Brownover, 1689-96 (MS. Locke f. 34, fol. 65). The two lines at the foot of the page are in Locke's hand. ABBREVIATIONS C.S.P. Des Maizeaux Familiar letters Fox Bourne H.M.C. King Posthumous works Works Calendar of state papers. A collection of several pieces of mr. 7ohn Locke, never before printed, or not extant in his Works, publ. by the author of the Life of mr. John Hales, &c. [P. Des Maizeaux]. 1720. Some familiar letters between mr. Locke and several of his friends. I708. Fox Bourne (H. R.). The life of John Locke. 2 vols. 1876. Historical manuscripts commission. King (Peter, 7th Baron). The life and letters of John Locke, with extracts from his journals and common-place books. New ed. 8 58. Posthumous works of mr. John Locke. 1706. The works of John Locke. I2th ed. 9 vols. I824. LIST OF SHELFMARKS The form of shelfmark used consists of three elements, the name of the collection (MS. Locke), a small letter indicating the size of the volume measured by its longer side, and a running number in each size. The sizedivisions used are as follows: b, 5-20 inches; c, 12- 5 inches; d, 9-I2 inches; e, 7-9 inches; f, 5-7 inches. It should be noted that this system is only a rough guide to the size of a document where it is one of many, guarded and bound into a made-up volume, e.g. the volumes of Locke's correspondence (MSS. Locke 3-24) and other volumes in this collection into which a great quantity of loose papers of varying sizes were bound after being sorted. MS. Locke b. 1 2 3 4 5 6 c. 1,2 3 4 5,6 7 8 9 10 11 12, 13 14 15, 16 17 18 19 20 21-23 24 25 26 27 28 29 page 23 24 34 41 3 22 24 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 IO II 12 13 14 15 i6 I7 18 19 23 27 28 37 MS. Locke c. 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 d. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 e. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10, 11 page 38 4I 44 25 33 26 40 38 46 47 22 41 35 32 33 38 33 40 45 30 32 26 36 46 3I 30 35 40 33 xii LIST OF SHELFMARKS MS. Locke f. 1-10 11-13 14 15 16, 17 18-24 25 26 page I MS. Locke f. 23 4I 25 26 36 38 30 27 28, 29 30 31 32 33 34 page 4I 25 32 3' 32 40 24 I. JOURNALS AND OTHER PERSONAL PAPERS MSS. Locke f. 1-10. Journals of John Locke, 1675-1704. f. i. 12 Nov. 1675-31 Dec. 1676. vi+542 pages. f. 2. 1677. xiv +425 pages. f. 3. 1678. lxx +402 pages. f. 4. i 680. lxxxvi +222 pages. f. 5. 68I. lii + 74 pages. f. 6. I682. liv + 5o pages. f. 7. i683. liv+ 98 pages. f. 8. 684-5. vi +358 pages. f. i. 686-8. vi+370 pages. f. io. i Jan. 1689-24 Oct. 1704. 608 pages. Extracts from the journals are printed in King, passim, and in Aaron (R. I.) and Gibb (J.), An early draft of Locke's essay together with excerpts from his journals (I936), pp. 75-125. A large part of the first three volumes (MSS. Locke f. I-3) and of the journal for 1679 (British Museum Add. MS. 15642) is printed in Locke's travels in France, 1675-1679, ed. J. Lough (1953), and extracts from them in Lough (J.), 'Locke's reading during his stay in France, 1675-79' (The Library, 5th Ser., viii. 229-58). Philosophical passages in shorthand in the first volume (MS. Locke f. i) are transcribed in Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (1954), pp. 254-8. MS. Locke c. 25. Miscellaneous personal papers of John Locke, c. 1652-1704, in chronological order: a (fol. i) draft of a Latin oration in Locke's hand, with corrections by another, [c. 1652], beg. 'Post peractos aliquot annorum labores'; b (fol. 3) fair copy of another Latin oration by Locke, [c. 1652], beg. 'Reverendi Maecenates viri spectatissimi, Adesse vos ut orator vester taceat ipsi clamant parietes'; c (fol. 5) the will of John Locke the elder, holograph, 5 Dec. i 660, with an addition dated 7 Jan. i 66I, together with a copy of the will (fol. 6) and an inventory of his possessions (fol. 7) made by John Locke, Feb. i66i; d (fol. 8) a passport for Sir Walter Vane and his train [on a mission to the Elector of Brandenburg] signed by Sir William Morice, secretary of state, I I Nov. I665; e (fol. I o) draft by Locke of a warrant exempting him from service as a juror at assizes in Somerset and from paying a fine for absence on previous occasions, 12 Oct. I666; f(fol. I I) draft by Locke of a dispensation exempting him, as a student of Christ Church, from taking holy orders, 14 Nov. 1666. Cf. Fox Bourne, i. 131; g (fol. 12) a certificate testifying that Locke, as registrar to the commissioners of excise, took the oaths of allegiance and supremacy and that relating to the excise, signed by Clement Spelman, cursitor baron of the exchequer, 3 Nov. 1670; h (fol. I4) two copies of an inventory in the hand of George Walls, the second (fol. 5) endorsed by Locke 'Goods left at Oxford [I6]75'; i (fol. i6) two copies of 'A Note of things left at Exeter House y I 2 of November I675'; j (fol. 19) part of a draft of a letter by Locke giving B 7008 B 2 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS an account of his travels in France, Dec. I675, dated at Montpellier, i Mar. I676, pr. in Locke's travels in France, 1675-1679, ed. J. Lough (1953), pp. 276-8I, and incompletely in King, pp. 46-48; k (fol. 21) subject-lists for each of Locke's journals, I676-8, arranged in columns lettered A-Z, from which apparently the strictly alphabetical indexes in those volumes (MSS. Locke f. 1-3) were compiled. These lists are in the hand of S. Brownover, Locke's amanuensis, except for the first few entries on the first page; I (fol. 29) 'A note of things sent from Montpellier [to Paris] I4 Feb. [i6]79' in French; m (fol. 30) 'A note of Mr Lockes things found in his study in Canterbury quadrangle Dec. [I 6]80 and removed by Mr Walls', in the hand of G. Walls; n (fol. 32) a note by William Charleton [Courten] of the contents of two boxes sent to Locke, I Aug. I682; o (fol. 33) 'Inventory of things of mine in Dr Goodall [sic] Garret 29~ May [i6]83', 'Inventory of things left in D' Goodalls Garret Jun. [i 6]83' (fol. 34), and a list of 'Goods to be delivered to Mrs. Pont in Oxford by Nic Cully', 4 Jun. 1683 (fol. 35), all in Locke's hand; p (fol. 36) inventory of the property of Peter Locke, 28 Dec. I686, written by Peter King; q (fol. 38) 'Mrs. [Rabsy] Smithsby's Note of Mr Locks Goods left with her Anno i686', addressed to and endorsed by Edward Clarke; r (fol. 40) a list by W. Charleton [Courten] of things sent to Locke, Mar. 1688; s (fol. 4 ) draft by Locke of his petition to the king to be reinstated in his studentship at Christ Church, I689. Cf. King, p. 175; t (fol. 45) draft by Locke of a proposal to exempt fellows and scholars of colleges from the obligation of being in holy orders, I 690; u (fol. 46) a note from Mrs. Rabsy Smithsby to Locke, 23 Jun. I690; v (fol. 47) petitions from Locke to the king, i690, and to the lords commissioners of the treasury, I695 (fol. 49), claiming payment of the salary due to him as secretary of the council of trade and plantations, 1673-4, together with (fol. 48) the draft of another petition to the lords commissioners of the treasury, 1693, in the hand of S. Brownover, with corrections by Locke, claiming the expenses of passing his account of the money due to him; w (fol. 50) twelve lists by Locke of the names of those who received copies of his works, 69o-I 700, with (fol. 52) a shorter version of the third list by Lady Masham; x (fol. 56) 'Rules of the Dry Club: For the Amicable Improvemt of Mix'd Conversation' written by William Popple the elder, i692; y (fol. 58) lists by Locke and S. Brownover of boxes sent to Oates in June and July, i693; z (fol. 6I) a certificate testifying that Locke took the oaths of allegiance and supremacy and the oath as one of the commissioners of appeals concerning the duty of excise, signed by Sir Littleton Powys, 23 Dec. i695; aa (fol. 62) an inventory 'Of things belonging to me [Locke] in the Room over my Study at Oates' written by Lady Masham, 7 May I697; bb (fol. 64) 'An Acc~ of my Mrs Linnen December 11th 1697' by S. Brownover; cc (fol. 65) a list of goods brought to Oates by James Lanham, Oct. I7o00-May I70I; dd (fol. 66) 'An Acc~ of my Masters Linin 2i May 1702' by William Shaw; ee (fol. 67) two lists by Locke of poor people in High Laver, Essex, dated I 702 and 1703; ff(fol. 70) a list by Locke of things belonging to him at Oates and elsewhere, 29 Sept. I1704; gg (fol. 7 ) a list of his legacies made by Locke, 1704; hh (fol. 72) a draft by Locke of the epitaph to be placed on his tomb, pr. King, p. 266. Cf. Fox Bourne, ii. 56i; ii (fol. 75) 'Expenses about Mr Lockes funeral', and for a monument by Edward Buckingham, 30 Oct. x708, drawn up by Peter King; jj (fol. 77) a list of 'Legacys given by Mr Locke' by Peter King; kk (fol. 79) a collection of twelve recipes dated 1675 -94, of which three (fols. 85, 89, 9I) are in Locke's hand. 91 leaves. JOURNALS AND OTHER PERSONAL PAPERS 3 MS. Locke b. 5. Papers of John Locke: I-8. Deeds relating to property of John Locke and other members of the Locke family at Pensford, 1656, 664 (I-2), Badgeworth 1656-7 (3-4), and Belluton, 1668 (5) in Somerset, and at Kingston, Dorset, I674, 1683 (6-8). 9. Patent for a landgrave of Carolina granted to Locke, 4 Apr. 167 1. io. Locke's licence from the University of Oxford to practise medicine, 6 Feb. I675. I I. Grant to Locke by the 'Society of the City of London of and for the Minerall and Battryworkes' of a share in the company, 2 Dec. 168I. 12-13. Account roll of Locke as secretary and treasurer of the council of trade and plantations, I693, with a duplicate copy (I3). I4. Copy of Locke's will, I i Apr. 1704, with a codicil, I 5 Sept. 1704, of which part is pr. in King, pp. 269-71. The remaining four items were presumably added to the collection by Peter King. I5. Quittance by Francis Cudworth Masham of the trustees of the money left to him by Locke, 9 July 1711. I6-I7. Two resignations of office and admissions of new holders enacted before the chief justice of the King's Bench, I679, 1720. 18. Writ and inquisition, Maddren, Cornwall, 1702. Descriptive slips are in the MS. Calendar of charters kept in the Library. II. CORRESPONDENCE MSS. Locke c. 3-23. Letters to John Locke, I651-1704, arranged in twenty-one volumes in alphabetical order of the writers' names. The number of letters is given in brackets after the name of the writer where it exceeds one. The language is also noted where the letters are not in English. The name of the addressee is given where it is not that of Locke himself. c. 3. Aglionby, William, 1689 (fol. I) Aleaume, Jacques, in French, 1698 (fol. 3) Alford, Lady Anne (7), i664-6 (fol. 5) Alford, J., i68i (fol. I9) Allestry, James, to Samuel Tilly, 1661 (fol. 21) Anderson, George (2), I 700-I (fol. 22) Aranda, Benjamin d', in Latin, 1689 (fol. 26) Aranda, Paul d' (I5), I689-1701 (fol. 28) Four of d'Aranda's letters contain copies of parts of letters to him from Benjamin Furly, 1697 (fols. 38, 40,42, 44). Atkins, Francis (2), s.a. (fol. 53) 4 JOHN LOCKEPS PAPERS Atterbury, Francis, later Bishop of Rochester, to Christopher Codrington, 1699 (fol. 56) Aubert, [? Pierre] (2), in French, I701-2 (fol. 58) The second letter encloses a letter in French from Dr. Le Fevre to Locke, 1702 (fol. 6I). Aubrey, John, I694 (fol. 62) B., J., I696 (fol. 64) Banks, Sir John (37), i677-80 (fol. 66) Barbeyrac, Jean de (3), 702-4 (fol. 140) Barker, W. (4), 1689 (fol. 145) Barnard, Henry (2), i662-6 (fol. 153) Barnes, Joseph (2), I697 (fol. 155) Baron, John, I698 (fol. 158) Bassett, Thomas, 1693 (fol. 160) Beavis, Mrs. Anne, 1678 (fol. 162) Bedel, E. (2), I666 (fol. I64) Benson, Samuel (2), i68I, I698 (fol. 169) Beresford, Alexander (3), 1695-7 (fol. I73) The first letter encloses a paper by Beresford on the doctrine of the Trinity (fol. 175). Berkeley, George, 9th Baron, later Ist Earl, to his son, Sir Charles, 1662 (fol. 183) Berkeley, George, 9th Baron, later ist Earl, 1662 (fol. 185) Berkeley, Sir Charles (8), I663-4 (fol. 187) Berkeley, afterw. Burnet, Elizabeth (20), 1696-1702 (fol. 203) See Kirchberger (C.), 'Elizabeth Burnet, I661-I709' (Church quarterly review, cxlviii. 17-5 ). At fol. 139 is a paper endorsed 'John Barbers Directions for the Rayseing of Ewe &c. For Mr Lock', 1693, and at fol. 167 a medical report in Latin on Mrs. Anne Grenville by Dr. Bellay, 1673 (see also MSS. Locke c. I0, fols. 56, 58, 60, and c. I I, fol. 238). 238 leaves. c. 4. Bernard, Edward (4), I678-90 (fol. I) One of Bernard's letters (fol. 4V) is appended to a letter to him from James Tyrrell, 1689 (fol. 4), enclosing an account of the cost of Matthew Slade's funeral (fol. 6), and also contains an inventory of Slade's clothes (fol. 5). Blair, James (2), 1698-9 (fol. 8) Blomer, M., I677 (fol. I2) Bold, Samuel, to Awnsham Churchill (6), I697-I702 (fols. 14, 27) Bold, Samuel (15), 1697-1704 (fol. 19) Bonville, John (8I), I682-I704 (fol. 47) One of Bonville's letters contains a copy of a letter to him from Robert Pawling, 1700 (fol. 89v) and a list of 'The Grand Committee for Greenwich Hospitall', 1695 (fol. 90). Boulton, Richard (2), I698 (for. i46) CORRESPONDENCE S Bowles, Joseph, to Benjamin Furly, x688 (fol. 148) Boyle, Robert, i666 (fol. ISo) Bridges, B. (2), 1699, 1704 (fol. 153) Bridges, Sir Thomas, i680 (fol. I57) Brockman, W. (2), 1695 (fol. 159) Brouchier, Claude, in French, 1678 (fol. i65) Together with a prescription by him in Latin, 1676 (fol. 163). Brown, Andrew, to John Hutton, I695 (fol. 169) Brown, Andrew, n.d. (fol. I67) Together with a brief notice of him, n.d. (fol. 17 ). Brownover, M. (2), 1700 (fol. 172) Brownover, Sylvester (9), I688-98 (fol. 176) Brunier, M. E., in French, 1678 (fol. 193) Burges, Mary, I695 (fol. I95) Burnett, Thomas, of Kemney (3), 1697-1700 (fol. 197) The first letter, 1697 (fol. 197), originally enclosed a paper by G. W. von Leibnitz, now in MS. Locke c. 13, fol. 158a. The second, I699 (fol. I99), is pr. in King, pp. 400-3. It originally enclosed a copy of a letter from Leibnitz to Burnett, I 699, now in MS. Locke c. i3, fol. I69. Burnett, Thomas, of Kemney, to Martha Lockhart, 1700 (fol. 203) Burridge, Ezekiel (4), I695-I700 (fol. 205) Bury, Arthur, Rector of Exeter College, 1681 (fol. 213) 2I6 leaves. c. 5. Calverley, Lady Mary (5), I689-1702 (fol. I) Carr, William (4), [c. 1657-61] (fol. 8) Cary, John (5), I696-7 (fol. 14) Two of Cary's letters, I696 (fols. 14, 16) are pr. in The correspondence of J. Locke and E. Clarke, ed. B. Rand (I927), pp. 433-5,477-9, from copies in B. M. Add. MS. 5540, fols. 66, 72. Charleton [Courten], William (29), 1678-88 (fol. 22) Charleton [Courten], William, to John Richards, i68 (fol. 46) Cheney, Oliver (2), I698, 1702 (fol. 82) Cheswell, Charles (4), i69o-I (fol. 86) Chetwood, Knightly, 1703 (fol. 93) Churchill, Awnsham (69), i688-I704 (fol. 95) One of A. Churchill's letters, 1703 (fol. o20), has a postscript from John Churchill. 227 leaves. c. 6. Churchill, John (io), 1700-4 (fol. I) Clarke, Edward (93), 1682-I704 (fol. I8) All pr. in The correspondence of J. Locke and E. Clarke, ed. B. Rand (1927), except 6 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS those of 2 Oct. i686 (fol. 19), I6 Oct. I686 (fol. 20), and 13 Jan. 1704 (fol. 150). One of them contains a letter from A. T. [David Thomas] to Locke, 1 686 (fol. 23), pr. ibid., p. 171; another contains a letter from John Freke to Locke, 1696 (fol. 99), pr. ibid., pp. 429-30. Clarke, Elizabeth ( o), 1697-1704 (fol. 155) All pr. ibid., pp. 522, 580-2, 588-90, 592, 596, 599, 6oi-2. Clarke, Mary, to Edward Clarke, I695 (fol. I75) Clarke, Mary (6), 1682-90 (fol. 177) All pr. ibid., pp. 86-87, 121-2, 192-3, 246-9, 297-8. Clarke, Richard, I699 (fol. I86) Clarke, Samuel (3), 1703-4 (fol. I87) Clarke, William, 1694 (fol. 9I) Together with a paper by him entitled 'Som queries proposed, by an Inquiring man affter truth', 1693 (fol. 190). Cockshall, John, n.d. (fol. 93) Cole, William (7), 1690-1704 (fol. 195) Colleton, Sir Peter (3), 1673-4 (fol. 213) 218 leaves. c. 7. Collins, Anthony (30), 1703-4 (fol. I) Conyers, J. (4), 697-1700 (fol. 6 ) Cooper, Anthony Ashley, ist Earl of Shaftesbury (6), 1674-81 (fol. 69) All pr. in Christie (W. D.), A life of A. A. Cooper,first earl of Shaftesbury (1871), ii. 60-64, 235, 361-2, 398-401. Three letters (fols. 69, 72, 76) are also pr. in King, pp. 34-38, 137-8, the first incompletely. One, 1677 (fol. 71), is also pr. in Fox Bourne, i. 365-6. Cooper, Anthony Ashley, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury (24), 1687-1 704 (fol. 81) Twelve of Shaftesbury's letters (fols. 81, 83, 91, 9700, 0o2, 107, xo8, 110, 114, 120, 124) are pr. in Rand (B.), The life, unpublished letters and philosophical regimen of Anthony, earl of Shaftesbury (I900), pp. 273-5, 287-300, 306-7, 323. Two other letters, 1689, 1694 (fols. 85, I 2), are pr. in King, pp. I82-9, the first incompletely. At fol. 8o is a list of 'My Lord Ashley's books left in a leather portmantle with Mr. Lock at Rotterdam, November 5, 687'. Cooper, Margaret, Countess of Shaftesbury, 1682 (fol. 126) Pr. in Christie, op. cit., ii. 450, and in Fox Bourne, i. 471. Coote, Richard, ist Earl of Bellomont (5), 1697-9 (fol. I28) Together with abstracts of two letters from him to the council of trade and plantations, I698 (fols. 132, 32v), of which the full versions are pr. in Documents relative to the colonial history of the state of New-Tork, procured by J. R. Brodhead, ed. E. B. O'Callaghan (I853-77), iv. 362-6, 377-82. CORRESPONDENCE 7 Coste, Pierre (8), in French, 1695-1700 (fol. 140) One of Coste's letters has a postscript by Jean Le Clerc, 1697 (fol. 145). Covel, John (I3), 679-1700 (fol. 152) Covel, John, to Lady Masham (2), 1697 (fol. 176) Copies in Lady Masham's hand. Cox, Richard, 1689 (fol. 179) Cox, Thomas (2), 1676-8 (fol. I80) Cramphorne, John (2), I697 (fol. I83) Cramphorne, Joseph, 1700 (fol. 85) Crosse, Robert, i 66 (fol. 186) Crosse, Wa., I697 (fol. 187) Cunningham, Alexander, x655?-1730, 1699 (fol. 188) Dare, Ellen, i685 (fol. 190) Davys, Thomas (4), I688-9 (fol. 191) Day, Thomas, the elder, I689 (fol. I99) Day, Thomas, the younger (2), I691, 1701 (fol. 200) Derbie, John (2), I697 (fol. 203) Dickinson, Edmund, 1693 (fol. 206) The reverse contains a draft of Locke's reply (fol. 2o6v). Dimsdale, Robert, to William Crouch, 1692 (fol. 207) Dod, John, I662 (fol. 209) Dodart, Denis, to Olaus Roemer, in French, I679 (fol. 21 1) Dolben, John, later Archbishop of York, n.d. (fol. 213) Du Bos, Jean Baptiste (I6), in French, I698-I703 (fol. 215) All pr. in Bonno (G.), 'Une amitie franco-anglaise du xviie sicle: John Locke et l'abbe Du Bos' (Revue de littirature comparee, xxiv. 481-520), except for a postscript byToinard, I700 (fol. 235v). See also Bonno (G.), Les relations intellectuelles de Locke avec la France (I955), pp. 156-63. 251 leaves. c. 8. Duke, Isabella (27), I686-93 (fol. I) Some of Isabella Duke's letters have postscripts from Richard Duke, 1686 (fols. 2, 91), and from Sir Walter Yonge, I686-8 (fols. I, 4v 27v). Duke, Richard (2), i686 (fol. 57) Dummer, Thomas, 1701 (fol. 60) 'Elia', [? I666] (fol. 63) Together with letters over the pseudonyms 'Berelisa', [I666] (fol. 62), 'Scribelia' (3), 666-9 (fol. 64), and 'Tho. Willson', n.d. (fol. 67), all of which appear to be from the same hand. Elphinstone, Lady Isobella, I691 (fol. 68) Elys, Edmund, 1698 (fol. 70) 8 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS Evance, Sir Stephen (3), 1689-97 (fol. 72) Evelegh, Anne (3), 659 (fol. 77) Eyre, Lady Martha (3), 1699-1702 (fol. 83) Eyre, Sir Robert (2), I703 (fol. 88) Eyre, Sir Samuel, I676 (fol. 92) Fatio de Duillier, N. (4), I692-5 (fol. 93) Fell, John, Bishop of Oxford (4), I675-[82] (fol. IoI) Two of Fell's letters, 1675, 1680 (fols. I03, 105) are pr. in King, pp. I53, 152. Firmin, Thomas (4), 1694-7 (fol. I09) Firth, John, to Henry Lukin, I692 (fol. I 4) Fletcher, Henry, 1701 (fol. 125) Together with several reports from H. Fletcher on his wife's and his own state of health sent originally to Andrew Fletcher, and endorsed by Locke, 1695-170I (fols. II6, 127). Fletcher, Andrew (5), 1694-1701 (fol. 129) Together with another account by him of Mrs. Fletcher's case (fol. 133). Flower, Henry, 1665 (fol. 141) Fowler, Edward, Bishop of Gloucester (6), i697-1704 (fol. 143) Freke, John (49), 1686-I704 (fols. 155, 240) Two of Freke's letters, I687, have postscripts by Sir Walter Yonge (fols. 163, I73V). Twenty-one of them, I695-7, are also signed by Edward Clarke (fols. I83, i85, 187, I89, 191, 194, 195, I97, 201, 205, 207, 209, 2I1, 213, 214, 2I6, 218, 219, 223, 225, 227). Freke, John, milliner (3), 1700, 1704 (fol. 233) Freke, Thomas, 1700 (fol. 241) Fuller, William, Bishop of Lincoln, to Anthony Ashley Cooper, ist Earl of Shaftesbury, 1674 (fol. 243) Pr. in Christie (W. D.), A life of A. A. Cooper, first earl of Shaftesbury (1871), ii. I93-4 -244 leaves. c. 9. Furly, Arent (7), 1700-4 (fols. I, 176, 198, 206) Furly, Benjamin, to Richard Coote, Ist Earl of Bellomont, I69 (fol. i i) Furly, Benjamin, to Arent Furly, 1701 (fol. 13) Furly, Benjamin, to Pieter Guenellon, 1688 (fol. 25) Furly, Benjamin (97), 1688-1704 (fol. 22) Among Benjamin Furly's letters are a copy of a conveyance relating to the estate of Jonas Grainge at Ruswarp, Yorkshire, I671 (fol. 9); papers relating to books bought for Locke through Furly atJ. H. Ribbius's auction sale at Utrecht, 687, including a list by Locke of his desiderata from the sale catalogue (fol. I 5), two letters to Furly (fol. 1 6) together with a list of books purchased by H.D., Furly's agent, who attended the sale (fol. 20), and Locke's list of the books bought (fol. 21); a copy by P. d'Aranda of a CORRESPONDENCE 9 letter to him from Furly, I697 (fol. 142), to which is added an extract from another letter to him from J. Spademan, I697 (fol. 143); and a note quoting another letter from Furly, I697 (fol. 144). Furly, Benjohan (3), 1700-3 (fol. 202) Gastrell, Francis, later Bishop of Chester (3), I697-9 (fol. 207) Geekie, Alexander (I6), 1702-3 (fol. 2 3) 241 leaves. c. 10. Gendron, Franqois, in French, 1682 (fol. I) Gendron, Francois, to Nicolas Toinard, in French, I680 (fol. 2) Gendron, Claude Deshayes (2), in French, x688, 1701 (fol. 3) George, Richard, 1682 (fol. 7) Gerrard, Johannes (2), i666 (fol. 9) Glanville, William, I666 (fol. 2) Godolphin, Sidney, to Lucius Cary, later 2nd Visct. Falkland, n.d. (fol. I4) Godolphin, William (2), I656, I659 (fol. I5) Goodall, Charles, the elder (6), 1687-96 (fol. I9) Graevius, Johann Georg (9), in Latin, 1687-99 (fol. 30) Grassemare, - de, in French, 1693 (fol. 48) Gray, John, 1704, (fol. 50) Greenhill, Henry, I699 (fol. 52) Grenfield, Thomas (2), 1655-7 (fol. 54) Grenville, Denis (22), 1677-9 (fol. 62) Three of Grenville's letters contain papers by him on recreation, I677 (fol. 66), and on business (fol. 74), study (fol. 76), conversation (fol. 78), and devotion (fol. 92), 1678. Locke's replies to these are pr., the last incompletely, from drafts in his journal for 1678 (MS. Locke f. 3, pp. 35I-7, 69-79, 358-78), in King, pp. 330-3, I Io0 i6, and from copies in B.M. Add. MS. 4290 in Fox Bourne, i. 388-97. The original letters are in Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 849, fols. 146-51. Together with Grenville's letters are three medical reports in Latin on his wife, Anne, by Claude Brouchier, 1679 (fol. 56), Richard Lydall and Edmund Dickinson (fol. 58), and Stephen Taylor and Robert Witty, 670 (fol. 60), of which the second and third are pr. from copies in Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 85,fols. I Io-I, in The remains of Denis Granville, ed. G. Ornsby (Surtees soc., vol. 47 (I865)), pp. 8-9. See also MS. Locke c. 3, fol. 167, and c. I I, fol. 238. Greve, Alb. de, in Latin, 1694 (fol. 114) Griffith, Robert, 695 (fol. t 6) Grigg, Anna (29), I676-1702 (fol. 1 I8) Grigg, William (I ), 1682-I704 (fol. 170) Guenellon, Cornelia Maria (9), in Dutch and French, 1689-1703 (fol. I92) Three of C. M. Guenellon's letters have postscripts from Pieter Guenellon, I689-1703 (fols. 193, 203, 208). 209 leaves. B 7008 C IO JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS c. I. Guenellon, Pieter (65), in French, 1687-1704 (fol. I) Guide, Philippe (2), in French, I698, 1702 (fol. 124) Guise, Lady Elizabeth (2), i688 (fol. 128) Hackett, Laurence, 1700 (fol. 131) Hamilton, James (2), I694 (fol. 132) Hammond, Robert, [? i666] (fol. I37) Harborne, Thomas, 1663 (fol. I39) Harcourt, P., n.d. (fol. I40) Hardy, John, 1700 (fol. 142) Harley, Robert, later st Earl of Oxford, 1694 (fol. x44) Hatrell, K. (2), I695 (fol. 146) Hatton, C., to Awnsham Churchill, 1701 (fol. 50) Hawkshaw, Benjamin (5), I689-90 (fol. I52) Hawkshaw, Elinor (i 2), 1689-90 (fol. i 61) Hazard, Roger, 1704 (fol. 178) Heane, James, 1652 (fol. 180) Heathcote, Samuel, 1694 (fol. 182) Helmont, Francis Mercury van, I693 (fol. I84) Henshawe, John (2), in Latin, n.d. (fol. I86) Herbert, Thomas, 8th Earl of Pembroke (9), I680-93 (fol. 187) Three letters, I684-7 (fols. 19I, I93, 195), are pr. in King, pp. 157-8. One of them (fol. 195) also contains a letter to Locke from David Thomas, 1687 (fol. I 95V), from which an extract is pr. in King, p. 159. Hildesly, Jo., 1702 (fol. 206) Hill, Abraham, I699 (fol. 208) Hodges, James, I697 (fol. 209) Hodges, Nathaniel (4), 680-97 (fol. 2 1) The first two, 680-2 (fols. 21 I, 212), are signed 'Lysis'. Hodges, William (2), I689 (fol. 217) Honywood, Sir William (4), I694-7 (fol. 221) All addressed to Locke in his capacity as a commissioner of appeals. Two of the letters are also signed by three other commissioners of appeals, Richard Beke, George Dodington, and Edmund Chaloner, 696,1697 (fol. 225). The second of these, 697 (fol. 227), bears a copy of Locke's reply (fol. 228). Hoskins, John (2), 659, i 680 (fol. 229) Hudson, John, Bodley's Librarian (3), 703-4 (fol. 232) Huntington, Mary (3), I699-1701 (fol. 240) Huntington, Robert, later Bishop of Raphoe (2), i67 I, 1678 (fol. 246) Hutton, John (3), 1688-95 (fol. 249) At fol. 238 is a medical report in Latin on Mrs. Anne Grenville by Pierre Hunauld, 673. See also MSS. Locke c. o0, fols. 56, 58, 6o, and c. 3, fol. I67. 254 leaves. CORRESPONDENCE II c. 12. Ivie, Ayliffe, 660 (fol. I) Together with five versions, four in Latin, the fifth in English, of another letter from him to an addressee unknown, the first by Ivie (fol. 3), the other four by Locke (fol. 4). Jablonski, Daniel Ernest, in Latin, to Thomas Burnett, 1698 (fol. 9) Jackman, J., 696 (fol. I) Jacob, W. A., I680 (fol. 13) Jepp, Elizabeth, x66I (fol. x5) Jocelin, Samuel (4), I692-3 (fol. I7) Jocelyn, E. (2), 1696, I700 (fol. 2I) Johnston, James (i i), 1693-I 703 (fol. 25) Justel, Henri (I9), in French, I679-8I (fol. 60) Together with a memoir by him of places to be visited in Paris (fol. 47) with a bibliography (fol. 49^), and a letter to him from Jean Jacobe de Fremont d'Ablancourt, in French, I679 (fol. 57). See Bonno (G.), Les relations intellectuelles de Locke avec la France (1955), pp. I07-I6. King, Peter, later Ist Baron (go), 1699-1704 (fol. 1oI) One of King's letters, 1702 (fol. 170), and extracts from two others, 1703, 1704 (fols. 210, 226), are pr. in Campbell (J., ist Baron), The lives of the lord chancellors (1845-7), iv. 575-6, 578. 276 leaves. c. 13. King, Richard (3), 1701, 1703 (fol. I) King, William, Bishop of Derry, later Archbishop of Dublin, 1692 (fol. 6) Kingwell, Marg., n.d. (fol. 8) Kiplin, Timothy, 1697 (fol. 9) Kiplin, Timothy, to John Plumpton, 1696 (fol. o0) Together with a testimonial by Henry Liddell for Timothy Kiplin the younger, 1696 (fol. 12). Lane, Ar., 1699 (fol. 15) Lane, Joseph, 1700 (fol. 17) La Treille, R. de (2), in French, 1697 (fol. 18) Layton, Henry, 1702 (fol. 21) Le Clerc, Jean (65), in French, x688-1704 (fol. 23) One letter, I694 (fol. 83), and extracts from six other letters of Le Clerc, I691-2 (fols. 46, 50, 52, 54, 56, 62), are pr. in King, pp. 326-7, 229-35. Leenhof, Frederik van, in Dutch, I688 (fol. 152) Le Fevre, -, in French, 1701 (fol. 154) Liddell, Robert (2), 1694, I696 (fol. 171) Lilburne, Richard, 1675 (fol. 175) Limborch, Frans van (35), 1697-1704 (fol. 178) 12 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS At fol. 14 is a paper by Christian Knorr von Rosenroth entitled 'Observationes in Tractatur Dr. J. Locke de Intellectu: secundum doctrinam Hebraeorum & Philosophorum antiquorum', 688. A collection of papers of Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibnitz includes copies of two papers sent to Thomas Burnett (fols. 156w, 157a); three copies of his paper 'Sur l'essay de l'Entendement humain de Monsieur Lock', of which the first (fol. 158a) was originally enclosed in a letter from Burnett to Locke, I697 (MS. Locke c. 4, fol. 197), and a copy sent by Locke to William Molyneux, pr. in Familiar letters, pp. I96-205, and Works, viii. 409-15, and the third (fol. 162) in a letter from J. Le Clerc to Locke, 1697 (fol. 113); and copies of two letters from Leibnitz to Burnett, I697, I699 (fols. I66 I69), pr. in Die philosophischen Schriften von G. W. Leibniz, herausg. von C. J. Gerhardt (1875-90), iii. 208-I8, 243-53, of which the second was originally enclosed in a letter from Burnett to Locke, 699 (MS. Locke c. 4, fol. 199). See Leyden (W. von), 'Notes concerning papers of John Locke in the Lovelace collection' (Philosophical quarterly, ii. 66-67). 251 leaves. c. 14. Limborch, Philippus i (81), in Latin, I685-1704 (fol. I) Nine of Limborch's letters, I690-4 (fols. 44, 53, 57, 65, 73, 75, 8i, 83, 87), are pr. in King, pp. 404-21. Twenty-five other letters, I695-I704 (fols. 97, IOI, 103, 09, III, 114, II0, 174, 5,7, I2I, 125, 127, 129, 131, I33, 135, 37, 139, I41, 143, I45, 147, I49, 153, I57), are pr. from drafts in the Remonstrants' Library, Amsterdam, in Familiar letters, pp. 365-538, and Works, ix. 39-144. Another letter, I694 (fol. 91), is partly pr. from the draft, ibid., pp. 358-62, and ix. 39-4I, and partly from the original (fols. 9Iv-96) in King, pp. 422-34. Part of another letter, 1689 (fol. I 9), is pr. from the draft in Ollion (H.), Lettres inedites de John Locke (I912), pp. 184-5 note. Two letters, 1698 (fols. 114, I21), incompletely pr. in Familiar letters, pp. 408-10, 426-8, and Works, ix. 69, 79-80, have some of the missing parts supplied from the drafts by Ollion, op. cit., pp. 214 note, 216-17 note. See Leyden (W. von), op. cit. (Philosophical quarterly, ii. 64-65). Livingston, Robert, to Charles Mordaunt, ist Earl of Monmouth, later 3rd Earl of Peterborough, I696 (fol. 159) Lloyd, Evan, 1702 (fol. 16I) Enclosed is a copy by Lloyd of a letter from James Vernon to Thomas Herbert, 8th Earl of Pembroke, lord high admiral, 1702 (fol. 162). Locke, George, 1695 (fol. 163) Locke, John, the elder (3), 1659 (fol. 165) Locke, John, the elder, to an addressee unnamed, n.d. (fol. 169) A draft in Locke's hand. Locke, John, son of Samuel Locke (6), 1698-1702 (fol. 170) One of John Locke's letters, 1700 (fol. 1720), encloses a copy of the purwana obtained by Sir Nicholas Waite from the governor at Surat, India, granting liberty of CORRESPONDENCE '3 trade and other privileges to the English East India company, 1700 (fol. 173). Cf. Bruce (J.), Annals of the honourable East-India company (I 81 ), iii. 338. Locke, Peter (9), 1666-83 (fol. 182) One of Peter Locke's letters, I683 (fol. 197), has a postscript by William Stratton. Locke, Peter, to Thomas Stringer, 1678 (fol. i88) Locke, Samuel (17), 1699-1704 (fol. I98) Locke, William (2), 1682 (fol. 229) iv +233 leaves. c. 15. Lockhart, James, 1700 (fol. I) Lockhart, Martha (48), i690-1704 (fols. 3, 56) Lockhart, Martha, to Lady Masham, 1696 (fol. 54) This letter was originally enclosed, together with a letter to Locke from E. D., I696 (fol. 58), in a letter to Locke from M. Lockhart, 1696 (fol. 56). Lukin, John (2), 1701-4 (fol. 124) Lyde, Cornelius, to Edward Clarke, 1693 (fol. 127) Lyde, Cornelius (28), I694-I704 (fol. 128) Lynch, Sir Thomas (6), 1681-3 (fol. 183) Maer, J. (2), I702 (fol. 194) Maggs, John, n.d. (fol. 197) Mandey, Robert (3), 1662 (fol. I98) Manship (Samuel), 1694 (fol. 204) Mapletoft, John (7), 1676-8 (fol. 205) One of Mapletoft's letters, 1677 (fol. 213), and three medical reports on the Countess of Northumberland by Edmund Dickinson (fol. 215), John Micklethwaite (fol. 217), and Sir Charles Scarburgh (fol. 219) enclosed in it, are pr. in Dewhurst (K.), 'A symposium on trigeminal neuralgia' (Journal of the hist. of medicine and allied sciences, xii. 21-36). Margas, C., to Simon Peloutier, 1675 (fol. 224) Marx, Frideric, 1697 (fol. 226) 227 leaves. c. I6. Masham, Charles, 1702 (fol. I) Masham, Esther (2), 1694, 1701 (fol. 3) See Cranston (M.), 'John Locke's correspondence with Esther Masham' (The Newberry library bulletin, 2nd ser., no. 4, pp. 121-35). Masham, Sir Francis, I696 (fol. 6) Masham, Francis Cudworth (5), I692-9 (fol. 8) Mauvillain, Peter, I696 (fol. 8I) A paper originally enclosed in this letter is now in MS. Locke b. 3, fol. 102. Meara, Edmund, i661 (fol. 82) 14 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS Molyneux, Sir Thomas (2), 699-I 700 (fol. 88) Molyneux, William (4), I688-96 (fol. 92) Mordaunt, Carey, Countess of Monmouth, later Countess of Peterborough (3), I690-2 (fol. 99) Mordaunt, Charles, ist Earl of Monmouth, later 3rd Earl of Peterborough (12), I689-1703 (fol. 105) Eight letters (fols. 105,I113, I 15, 119, 121, 123,125,127) are pr. in King, pp. 237-42. Neile, Sir Paul, 1666 (fol. i29) Nelson, J., 1698 (fol. I31) Nelson, Robert, I680 (fol. 133) Newton, Isaac (13), 1690-1703 (fol. 135) The first letter, 1690 (fol. 135), is pr. in Correspondence of sir Isaac Newton and professor Cotes, [ed.] J. Edleston (i850), pp. 275-6; the remainder are pr. in King, pp. 217-29. Nicholson, Sir Francis (3), 1697-9 (fol. 57) Norris, John, rector of Bemerton (3), 692-3 (fol. 163) Offley, Jos., 698 (fol. 68) Old, Richard (5), 680-9 I (fol. 170) Owen, Sir H., 1695 (fol. I8o) Owen, William, 1663 (fol. 182) Oxenden, Sir James, 701 (fol. 84) Papillon, Thomas, I687 (fol. x86) Parry, John, later Bishop of Ossory, I 666 (fol. 88) Paschat, John, 1702 (fol. 90) Passebon, - (4), in French, 1689-92 (fol. 192) Patrick, John (3), 1701 (fol. 200) Paul, Dr. (2), I693, 1701 (fol. 206) Pawling, Robert, to Edward Clarke, I692 (fol. 21o) Pawling, Robert (26), I691-I704 (fol. 211) This volume also contains thirty-eight papers relating to the Masham trust, x688-I704 (fol. 18), including two letters from Leonard Addison to Locke, I696-7 (fols. 23, 35), a note from Awnsham Churchill to Locke, I693 (fol. I9), a letter from Richard Clarke to Lady Masham, I697 (fol. 32), sixteen letters from Lady Masham to the trustees, Edward Fowler, Bishop of Gloucester, Edward Clarke, and John Locke, 1697-1704 (fols. 27, 30, 40, 43, 5, 53, 55, 59, 6I, 63, 69, 71, 73, 75, 77), and a letter from John Willys to Edward Fowler, 1700 (fol. 19). 241 leaves. c. 17. Pawling, Robert, to Sir Francis Masham (38), I691-1704 (fol. I) These letters, though addressed to Masham, were intended for Locke and are endorsed by him. Percivall, Andrew (2), 1676, I682 (fol. 58) CORRESPONDENCE '5 Percivall, George (6), 660-6 (fol. 60) Percivall, Peter, to Pieter Guenellon, 1686 (fol. 69) Perrott, Charles, i666 (fol. 70) Pett, Sir Peter, to Charles Mordaunt, Ist Earl of Monmouth, later 3rd Earl of Peterborough, I689 (fol. 72) Enclosed is an account by Pett of three manuscript treatises by Sir William Petty (fol. 74). 'Philochristus' [Jonas Proast], 1704 (fol. 76) 'Philoclea' [Damaris Cudworth, afterw. Lady Masham] (40), i682-8 (fol. 77) See Leyden (W. von), 'Notes concerning papers of John Locke in the Lovelace collection' (Philosophical quarterly, ii. 68-69). Pickering, J., 1682 (fol. 156) Pickering, Robert, 1662 (fol. 158) Pilliod, -, in French, I70I (fol. I60) Pitt, Robert (I8), 1701-4 (fol. 162) Popple, Mary (2), 1698 (fol. 197) Popple, William, d. 1708 (3I), 1692-1702 (fol. 201) One letter, i695, not in Popple's hand (fol. 213), contains 'Mr Popple's observations' on A discourse of natural and revealed religion in several essays [by S. Nye] (169I). Cf. MS. Locke c. 27, fol. 92. Popple, William, the younger (2), I702, 1704 (fol. 267) 269 leaves. c. I8. Pound, James, I699 (fol. I) Powell, Charles, I664 (fol. 3) Powys, Sir Littleton, 1696 (fol. 5) Price, Ellis, 1662 (fol. 7) Prideaux, Humphrey, I696 (fol. 8) Raulin, Franciscus, in Latin, I666 (fol. Io) Renaudot, Eusebe (2), in French, 1679 (fol. I1) Reneu, Hilary, 1698 (fol. I5) Richards, Deborah, to Mr. Michell, 1683 (fol. I7) A copy by Edward Clarke. Richards, John, I681 (fol. 20) Robinson, Thomas, I692 (fol. 21) Enclosed are reports on his conduct as captain of H.M.S. Garland (fol. 23). Roderick, Richard, I68i (fol. 29) Roemer, Olaus (2), in Latin, 1679 (fol. 31) Roemer, Olaus, in Latin, to Nicolas Toinard, 1680 (fol. 35) Forwarded to Locke with a note added by Toinard (fol. 35). Rose, Thomas, I694 (fol. 36) Rumney, Edmund (4), I696-I702 (fol. 38) x6 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS Rush, Isaac, 1675 (fol. 45) Rushout, Sir James, I692 (fol. 47) St. John, Frances (6), I694-1702 (fol. 48) St. John, Lady Joanna (2), I693 (fol. 60) Schard, J., in Latin, 1666 (fol. 62) Seamer, James (3), 1703 (fol. 65) Selapris, Jacques, to Molse Charas, in French, 1678 (fol. 68) Selapris, Jacques (I 3), in French, 1677-80 (fol. 69) Five of Selapris's letters, 1679, are also signed by- Horutener (fols. 68, 82,85, 89, 90). Shower, J.,i 688 (fol. 93) Shute, John (5), I701-4 (fol. 95) Sibelius, Caspar (5), in Latin (4) and French, 1684-92 (fol. 105) Slade, Matthew (4), in Latin, 689 (fol. I I 2) Sloane, Sir Hans (6), 1696- 704 (fol. I 8) Smith, Humphrey (2), 1703-4 (fol. 130) Smith [Sergeant], John, I696 (fol. I34) Smithsby, Rabsy (7), I703-4 (fol. 138) Somers, Sir John, later Ist Baron (8), I689-97 (fol. 5 I) Four letters (fols. 151, I15, 159, 163) are pr. in King, pp. 235-7, 243-4, 247. South, Robert (5), 1697-I 704 (fol. 167) Sowter, John, 1704 (fol. 177) Spens, George, 1679 (fol. 179) Spranger, Edward (4), 1703-4 (fol. 181) Stanley, John, I688 (fol. I86) Strachey, John ( 7), 1658-66 (fol. 188) One of Strachey's letters, I658, bears a draft reply by Locke (fol. 192); another, I66I, contains a postscript by Elizabeth Jepp (fol. 206v); another, 1666, bears a draft letter by Locke to an addressee unknown (fol. 2I 7). Stratton, Elizabeth (Io), I695-9 (fol. 218) Stratton, Peter (8), I695-9 (fol. 234) 247 leaves. c. 19. Stratton, William (41), I680-95 (fol. 4) Among Stratton's letters are various papers relating to Locke's property in Somerset, including accounts, I68o-94 (fols. I, 26, 52, 6I, 63, 70, 82, 89), a letter of attorney from Locke to Stratton, 1683 (fol. 22), a draft letter from Locke to Edward Clarke, 1687 (fol. 36), and a letter from Stratton to Clarke, 1693 (fol. 85). Five of his letters, I680-2, bear postscripts from Elizabeth Stratton (fols. 5v 7v, Io0, 12, 7). Stringer, Jane (7), I682-1700 (fol. 97) Stringer, Thomas, to Edward Clarke, 1688 (fol. I I o) Stringer, Thomas (23), 668-92 (fol. 112) CORRESPONDENCE 7' Among Stringer's letters are a receipt for ~700 received from Locke for the Earl of Shaftesbury for the lease of the farm and manor of Kingston, Dorset, 1674 (fol. 1 14), and a receipt for ~250 received as assignee of Locke as treasurer of the council of trade and plantations, I676 (fol. 127). Extracts from five letters, 1675-7 (fols. 16, 126, 129, 131, 133), are pr. in King, pp. 38-39, and from three of these (fols. 126, 131, 133) and five others, I675-7 (fols. 18, z20, 122, 124, 137), in Christie (W. D.), A life of A. A. Cooper, first earl of Shaftesbury (I871), ii. 220-4, 239, 248-50. Another, i688 (fol. i56), is pr. from the copy in P.R.O., Shaftesbury papers, bundle 47, viii, no. 23, in The correspondence of J. Locke and E. Clarke, ed. B. Rand (1927), pp. 262-7. One letter, I68I (fol. 147), is in the hand of Jane Stringer and includes a postscript by her (fol. I47v). Sydenham, Thomas (5), I677-9 (fol. I63) Together with medical papers by Sydenham, 1675 (fol. 170), of which the first is pr. in Dewhurst (K.), 'The four constitutions' (The Medicalpress, ccxxxiv. 303-4). One letter, I677 (fol. 164), which has a postscript by John Mapletoft, is pr. in Dewhurst (K.), 'A symposium on trigeminal neuralgia' (Journal of the hist. of medicine and allied sciences, xii. 33-34). All are pr. in Dewhurst (K.), 'Sydenham's letters to John Locke' (The Practitioner, clxxv. 314-20). Symes, Thomas, n.d. (fol. 77) Tatam, John, 698 (fol. 178) Tenison, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury (3), I696-7 (fol. 80) I85 leaves. c. 20. Thomas, David (66), I666-93 (fol. I) One of Thomas's letters, i666 (fol. i), is pr. in King, p. 403. Some of them are signed 'Adrian' or 'A. T.'. Thomas, Mrs. H. (2), I694, I695 (fol. 123) The second of Mrs. Thomas's letters contains a postscript by W. Thomas (fol. 126v). Thomas, Jeremy, I697 (fol. 127) Thomas, Samuel (3), i675-82 (fol. 128) Thomas, William (I7), 1692-9 (fol. 136) Thompson, John, Ist Baron Haversham (2), 1701 (fol. I65) Thornhill, F., 1682 (fol. I69) Thornhill, Henry, I679 (fol. 171) Tilly, Samuel (5), 1655-62 (fol. 173) One of Tilly's letters, I655 (fol. I75), contains Locke's draft reply (fol. 175v). Tilson, Christopher (14), I695-I702 (fol. I8I) All Tilson's letters are addressed to Locke in his capacity as a commissioner of appeals. One of them bears a draft reply by Locke, 1702 (fol. 201). Tindal, Matthew (2), 1697, 1701 (fol. 207) 20 leaves. B 7008 D 18 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS c. 21. Toinard, Nicolas (131), in French, 1678-1704 See Bonno (G.), Les relations intellectuelles de Locke avec la France ( 955), PP. I 6 -56. One of Toinard's letters, I680 (fol. 55), encloses a note by Melchis6decThevenot; another, 1681 (fol. I21), contains a note to Locke from Franqois Gendron; a third, 1684 (fol. 139), contains a note to Locke from Captain Fromentin. 232 leaves. c. 22. Towerson, Gabriel (4), x66o-1 (fol. i) Townshend, Henry (4), 1662-3 (fol. 9) Trent, George, to Edward Clarke, I695 (fol. i6) Trumbull, Sir William (4), I695-6 (fol. 18) Tufton, Thomas (5), i678-80 (fol. 26) Tyrrell, James (63), 1677-1704 (fol. 36) One of Tyrrell's letters, 1704 (fol. 167), and extracts from three others, 1687, 1688 (fols. 56, 62, 66), are pr. in King, pp. 193-4, 168-71. Tyrrell, James, to David Thomas (2), I688 (fol. 69) Uvedale, William (6), [c. 1659] (fol. I73) At fol. I8 are drafts of five letters from Sir Walter Vane, 1665-6, relating to his embassy to the Elector of Brandenburg at Cleve. 189 leaves. c. 23. Veen, Egbert (5), in Latin, I689-98 (fol. 3) Together with verses in Dutch in Locke's hand commemorating the marriages of Jacob and Egbert Veen, [1682] (fol. I). Veen, Maria Arminius, in Dutch, I689 (fol. II) Verduin, Pieter Adriaensz, in Latin, 1696 (fol. 13) Verniets, -, in French, 1699 (fol. I5) Verryn, Gisbertus (6), in Latin, I689-95 (fol. 17) Vincent, - (2), in French, 1689 (fol. 23) Vincent, R., 1690 (fol. 27) Walls, George ( 5), 1678-98 (fol. 29) One of Walls's letters, 1679 (fol. 33), also contains a letter to Locke from Nathaniel Hodges (fol. 33v). Walter, Charles, I699 (fol. 58) Ward, Isaiah, n.d. (fol. 59) Ward, Sir Patience, to Nicolas Lee, 1676 (fol. 6I) Warren, Ed., to an addressee unnamed, 1694 (fol. 62) Warren, William, I698 (fol. 63) Watkins, Thomas, I698 (fol. 65) Weaver, Thomas, I699 (fol. 67) CORRESPONDENCE 19 West, Joseph, 1676 (fol. 69) Westron, Thomas (3), 660 (fol. 7 ) Wetstein, Johan Hendrik (6), in French, I687-96 (fol. 75) Wetstein, Johan Hendrik, to an addressee unnamed, in French, 1697 (fol. 83) Wheelock, John, to Sylvester Brownover, I696 (fol. 93) Wheelock, John (4), I692-1704 (fol. 84) Whitby, Daniel (2), 1699, 1702 (fol. 94) Williamson, George, 1663 (fol. 98) Williamson, Richard, I663 (fol. 99) Wood, Anthony, to James Tyrrell, 690 (fol. I oo) An enclosure bears a note from Tyrrell to Locke (fol. o10). Woodward, Henry, 1675 (fol. 102) Woodward, John (2), I696-8 (fol. o5) Wright, William (2), 1704 (fol. I09) Wynne, John (I2), 1695-8 (fol. i i) The first of Wynne's letters, I695 (fol. I I I), is pr. in King, pp. 189-91. One of them, 698 (fol. 1 33), contains the draft of part of a letter to him from Locke. Yonge, Elizabeth (5), i686-91 (fol. I35) One of Elizabeth Yonge's letters, 1686 (fol. 135), also contains letters to Locke from Isabella Duke (fol. 134) and Sir Walter Yonge (fol. I 34v). Yonge, Sir Walter (I8), I686-1704 (fol. 144) One of Yonge's letters, I686 (fol. 146), carries a letter from Richard Duke to Locke (fol. I46v). Another, 1687 (fol. 158), has a postscript from John Freke (fol. I58v). At the end of this volume are ten letters to Locke from unidentified writers, I694-1703 and undated (fol. 80), of which one is signed J. N., 1697 (fol. 188), and one letter each to Caleb Banks, 1678 (fol. I98), pr. in Locke's travels in France, 1675-I679, ed. J. Lough (1953), pp. xvi-xvii, note 6, John Churchill, 1697 (fol. 200oo), and Lady Masham, I696 (fol. 202), from unidentified writers. 202 leaves. MS. Locke c. 24. Letters and drafts of letters of John Locke, I652-i704, arranged in alphabetical order of the addressees' names. As Locke sometimes transposed the initials of a correspondent's name in his endorsement of a draft, the initials of unidentified addressees are included in this list under both first and second letters. A., E., n.d. (fol. 38) Banks, Sir John (3), 1677-8 (fol. 20) B., E., I697 (fol. 24) C. M., I691 (fol. 195) C[?arr], W[?illiam], n.d. (fol. 26) Carr, William (2), [i 660] (fol. 27) Churchill, John, 699 (fol. 31) 20 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS Covel, John, 1697 (fol. 32) Pr. in Fox Bourne, ii. 413, from B.M. Add. MS. 22910, fol. 463. Cox, Thomas, I678 (fol. 33) Cudworth, Charles, I683 (fol. 35) Pr. in King, pp. 251-3, and in Fox Bourne, i. 474-6. Douglas, Robina, Countess of Forfar, I691 (fol. 37) Edwards, Sarah, I659 (fol. 39) Evance, Sir Stephen, I697 (fol. 41) E. B., I697 (fol. 24) E., P. (13), I66o-I and n.d. (fol. 208) E[?velegh], A[?nne], n.d. (fol. 38) Fletcher, Henry, 1701 (fol. 42) Fowler, Edward, Bishop of Gloucester, 1696 (fol. 44) F[?reke], J[?ohn], [? I697] (fol. 46) [Furly, Benjamin], 1700 (fol. 47) G[odolphin], W[illiam] (5), [1659], i665-6 (fols. 49, 247, 25V, 252v, 254v) All except the first are together with drafts of letters to John Strachey. Two (fols. 247, 254v) are pr. as one letter in King, pp. I - 3. See MS. Locke c. 39, fol. I I. G[renville, Denis], 1679 (fol. 50) Guise, Lady Elizabeth, i688 (fol. 51) H[oskins, J[ohn], [1659] (fol. 53) Hudson, John, Bodley's Librarian, I703 (fol. 57) Ivie, Ayliffe, I66 I(fol. 58) J. F., [? 1697] (fol. 46) J., M., n.d. (fol. 187) J. O., n.d. (fol. 60) J., W., n.d. (fol. 267) Le Clerc, Jean, 1688 (fol. 154) Limborch, Philippus a (4), I690-8 (fol. 55) The first letter, in Latin, 1690 (fol. I55), is pr. in King, p. 406. The second, in French, 1697 (fol. 156), is pr. in Familiar letters, pp. 398-400, and Works, ix. 62-64. The third, in French, I698 (fol. 158), is partly pr. in Familiar letters, pp. 410-16, and Works, ix. 70-73; the remainder of it is pr. from the original in the Remonstrants' Library, Amsterdam, in Ollion (H.), Lettres ineditesde John Locke ( 9 12), pp. 21 1-I2. There is also a draft of it in English (fol. I6I). The fourth letter, in French, I698 (fol. 164), is pr. in Familiar letters, pp. 42 1-4, and Works, ix. 76-78. There is also a draft of it in English (fol. 163). Locke, John, the elder (9), i652-[6o] (fol. i65) One letter, 1652 (fol. 167), is pr. in Aaron (R. I.), John Locke (2nd ed., I955), p. 3, note 2. Another, [I66o] (fol. I79), is pr. in King, p. 2, and Fox Bourne, i. 80-8I. Locke, Peter (3), I674 (fol. I80) Abstracts made by Locke. CORRESPONDENCE 21 [? Locke, Thomas], i659 (fol. I82) Lockhart, Martha, I697 (fol. I85) M[?aggs], J[?ohn], n.d. (fol. I87) Martine, [? Gabriel], I655 (fol. i88) Masham, Lady Damaris (2), 1690, 1687 (fol. 189) M., C., I691 (fol. I95) Mordaunt, Carey, Countess of Peterborough, I697 (fol. I96) An extract is pr. in King, p. 5. Mordaunt, Charles, ist Earl of Monmouth, later 3rd Earl of Peterborough, 1689 (fol. 198) Pr. in King, pp. I72-5. Together with a letter giving an account of Monmouth's implication in the trial of Sir John Fenwick, 1697 (fol. 200oo). Newton, Isaac, I693 (fol. 203) Pr. in King, pp. 226-7. Norris, John, rector of Bemerton (3), 1692-3 (fol. 204) O., J., n.d. (fol. 60) P. E. (I3), I660-I and n.d. (fol. 208) [Parry, John, Bishop of Ossory, I666] (fol. 221) Mainly pr. in King, pp. 29-30. P[opham], A[lexander], n.d. (fol. 223) Prettyman, William, 1672 (fol. 224) S. T., n.d. (fol. 266) Somers, John, ist Baron (3), 1697-8 (fol. 226) Two letters (fols. 227, 228) are pr. in King, pp. 248-5I. Strachey, John (Io), 1665-7 (fol. 230) Five letters, 1665-7 (fols. 230, 231, 232, 237, 244), and part of a sixth, I666 (fol. 235), are pr. in King, pp. 13-28. Drafts of the first three, 1665 (fols. 230, 231, 232), are in fols. 246v, 250V-Iv, 252V, 253-4.V 255v-8v, together with drafts of four letters to William Godolphin, i665-6. Stringer, Jane, I689 (fol. 259) Stringer, Thomas (4), I688-92 (fol. 261) Pr. from another source in The correspondence of 7. Locke and E. Clarke, ed. B. Rand (1927), pp. 260-2. T., S., n.d. (fol. 266) Tenison, Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury (3), 1696-8 (fol. 268) Thiery, Ludovicus, n.d. (fol. 272) Thomas, Mrs. H., I694 (fol. 274) Thomas, William, I694 (fol. 275) Tilly, Samuel, [1655] (fol. 276) Tyrrell, James (2), I690, I694 (fol. 277) Pr. in King, pp. I98-20I. 22 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS Uvedale, William (2), n.d. and 1663 (fol. 280) W. C., n.d. (fol. 26) W. J., n.d. (fol. 267) Whitby, Daniel (2), I699-I702 (fol. 283) Willis, Sir Thomas, I698 (fol. 286) From Locke and Edward Clarke, as Lady Masham's trustees. Wynne, John, I695 (fol. 287) Pr. in King, pp. 19 -2. There are also fifteen letters and drafts (fol. i) and eight drafts (fol. 288) to addressees unknown, the latter bearing the initials TAE (fol. 288), PA (fol. 289v), GOW (fols. 288v, 290), BE (fol. 29i), TGR (fol. 29iv), AM (fol. 292v), N (fol. 293), and TG (fol. 293V), and two drafts of letters to the commissioners of appeals, 1696 (fol. 54), to the first of which is appended the draft of a letter to Sir William Trumbull (fol. 55), which is partly pr. from the final version in H.M.C., Report on the manuscripts of the marquess of Devonshire, i. 665. 200 leaves (fols. 61-153, letters from Locke to Peter King, were removed in I954 and bound up in MS. Locke c. 40). MS. Locke c. 40. Letters of John Locke to Peter King, later ist Baron (212), I698 -1704. Nineteen letters (fols. 15, 98, oo, 102, I o6, I 14, I 6, 128, 191, 206, 208, 237, 247, 271, 273, 312, 314, 318, 386) are pr., mainly incompletely, in King, pp. 254-66. Four other letters (fols. II, 402, 404, 412) are pr. incompletely in Campbell (J., Ist Baron), The lives of the lord chancellors (I845-7), iv. 570-1, 579-83. For an account of this collection see description of MS. Locke b. 6 (below). 4I5 leaves. MS. Locke b. 6. A blank volume on to the pages of which were pasted I65 letters of John Locke to Peter King, later ist Baron, I698-1704. The letters have been removed and the pages on which they had been pasted are indicated by their dates in blue ink. The volume originally contained forty-seven other letters of Locke to King, 1698-I704, which at some time had been removed and came to the Library in the Lovelace collection of Locke papers in 1947 (olim MS. Locke c. 24, fols. 6I-I53). The pages on which forty-four of these letters had been pasted are indicated by their dates in red ink; the remaining three (7 July 1701, 5 Dec. 170i, and o1 Jan. 1704) were presumably loose in the volume. The whole collection of 212 letters has now been bound together in MS. Locke c. 40. i+I87 leaves. Parchment binding lettered '49e N' and 'I7'; and 'MSS. LETTERS from John LOCKE I698, I699, 1700, 1701, 1702, 1703, 1704'. Purchased, 1953, with the aid of contributions from the Friends of the National Libraries and the Friends of the Bodleian. See Friends of the National Libraries, Annual report, i952-3, p. 3, pl. I, where one letter, I698 (MS. Locke c. 40, fols. 3V4), is reproduced. ACCOUNTS 23 III. ACCOUNTS MSS. Locke f. 11-13. Account books of John Locke, I649-74. f. I. Accounts kept at Westminster School, x649-52 (fols. I-2, 86v rev.-66, rev.), and at Oxford, I652-7 (fols. 4-7, 65V rev.-58v rev.), with accounts of money received from and disbursed for his pupils at Christ Church, 1661-6 (fols. 7v-57). 88 leaves. f. 12. Memoranda (pp. I-I8) and accounts (pp. 262 rev.-246 rev.) relating to his lands in Somerset, 1664-72. xii +278 pages (pp. 19-225 blank). f. I3. An interleaved copy of Goldsmith's An almanackfor... x674 (pp. xv-lxxxiv) followed by accounts for that year (p. i). Numbers in the margins refer to pages in Locke's ledger for x67I-I702 (MS. Locke c. I). lxxxiv +70 pages. MS. Locke c. 26. Papers concerning John Locke's property in Pensford and Belluton, Somerset, 1 6 1-1 705. They include rentals, accounts, drafts of letters of attorney appointing Peter Locke, i660 (fol. i), William Stratton, I680 (fol. 68), and Cornelius Lyde, 1696 (fol. 75),as his legal representatives, and a list by Peter King of Locke's property bequeathed to him and Peter Stratton, 1705 (fol. 95). There are also drafts of letters from Locke to Elizabeth Stratton, 1696, 1699 (fols. 77, 79), and to Cornelius Lyde, 1695, 1698, 1700 (fols. 74, 81', 83). At fol. 70O is a letter from John Clarke [to Edward Clarke], 1689. 95 leaves. MS. Locke b. 1. Accounts of John Locke's income and expenditure, both private and official, c. i660-1704. They include, together with many bills and receipts for everyday expenses: a accounts with Caleb Banks, I679-80 (fol. 36), B. Bridges, 1693, 1700 (fols. I66, 241), Sylvester Brownover, 689-96 (fol. I 1 7), Awnsham Churchill, 1693-1703 (fols. I70, I85, 198, 222, 242, 250, 256, 265), Edward Clarke, I683-I703 (fols. 59, 64, 42z, i6o, 163, 172, I77, I88, 201, 221, 237, 260), Anthony Collins, I704 (fol. 285), Sir Stephen Evance, 1695-7 (fols. 8 1, 96), Peter King, later Ist Baron, 1698-1704 (fols. 202, 225, 243, 247, 259, 262, 268, 272, 277, 28I), Frans van Limborch, 1704 (fol. 279), Sir Francis Masham, I703-4 (fol. 274), Robert Pawling, 1695-I702 (fols. 176, 195, 252), Thomas Stringer, 1675-9 (fol. 24), and George Walls, I680-I (fols. 45, 47); b two agreements with Thomas Bassett for the publication of the first edition of An essay concerning humane understanding (I690), 24 May 1689 (fol. o09), and for the second edition (1694), in Locke's hand, 13 June 693 (fol. 168), four agreements with Awnsham and John Churchill relating to the copyright of Some considerations of the consequences of the lowering of interest, and raising the value of money (i692), 2 Mar. 1692 (fol. 161), to the copyright of Robert Boyle's The general history of the air (1692), 25 July I692 (fol. I64), to further editions of Some thoughts concerning education (I693), 20 June 1694 (fol. I73), and to the publication of 24 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS The reasonableness of Christianity, as delivered in the Scriptures (1695), 12 June 1695 (fol. 178), and an agreement with Samuel Manship and the Churchills relating to further editions of the Essay, 8 June I699 (fol. 218); c (fol. 67) bills of exchange, I689-I704; d (fols. 123, 175, 206, 238) receipts for taxes, I690-1704; e (fols. I90, 276, 283) lists of debts owing to him, I697-1704. 286 leaves. MSS. Locke c. 1-2. Two ledgers containing John Locke's accounts, 1671-1704. c. I. 1671-1702. There is an alphabetical index of names of those who had accounts with Locke at the beginning of the volume (p. ii). At the end (p. 374) are notes of various transactions, chiefly loans of books, with a separate index (pp. 440-1). The spine of the volume is marked 'Accts from 664 to I704' in the hand of Peter King. xxiv +444 pages. c. 2. 1701-4. There is an alphabetical index of names at p. ii. This volume contains many entries dated between Locke's death and 1706 in the hand of Peter King, who also wrote on the spine 'Old Accts from I700 to I704'. xxvi +342 pages (of which 97-337 are blank). MS. Locke f. 34. Three small account books: A (fol. I). Part of an account book of Sylvester Brownover in which he entered payments made by him on Locke's behalf in Holland, 685-8. B (fol. 9). Account book of Sylvester Brownover in which he entered payments made by him on Locke's behalf, I689-96. See Plate (b). C (fol. 69). Account book of William Shaw, servant of Locke, in which he entered payments made by him on Locke's behalf, 1701-4. 92 leaves. IV. BOOKS MS. Locke b. 2. Papers of John Locke relating to books and to his library, I675-1704. Lists of parts of his library are to be found in: a (fol. 6) 'A Catalogue of Mr [Caleb] Banks's books and mine put into boxes Jul. [I 6]78', also endorsed (fol. 7V) 'A catalogue of my books left at Paris Jul. [i6]78'. Cf. another copy of this list in Locke's journal, 1678 (MS. Locke f. 3, pp. 172-84), pr. in Lough (J.), 'Locke's reading during his stay in France, I675 -79' (The Library, 5th ser., viii. 244-8); b (fol. 20) 'These boxes of books left with Mr Brisban [John Brisbane] at our coming from Paris May [i6]79', pr. ibid. 254-6; c (fol. 22) 'A catalogue of such books of mine as I laid aside at Sr John Banks's May [i6]79', pr. ibid. 256-8; d (fol. 43) a draft for a catalogue of his library in Holland, Oct. I686; e (fol. 85) 'Catalogus librorum Jo. Locke', written by S. Brownover with additional entries by BOOKS 25 Locke, in which the latest date of publication of a book mentioned is I687; f (fol. 91) a list of his books, written later than e, in alphabetical order of authors' names, in which the latest date of publication mentioned is i688; g (fol. 1 2) 'A catalogue of physick books sent for from Mr [James] Tyrrell's [i6]9 ' with a copy by S. Brownover; h (fol. 124) 'A catalogue of books Recd from Mr Tyrrell Oct [i6]9 '; i (fol. I25) 'A catalogue of books and other things I recd from Mr Tyrrell. [I6]9I'; j (fol. 126) 'A Catalogue of the [medical] bookes belonging to Mr John Lock delivered by me James Tyrrell to Mr William Thomas July 280 I692' mainly written by Tyrrell; k (fol. I28) 'Things left by Mr Tyrrell at Mr [Robert] Pawlings for me [i6]9I or 92' written, except for the heading, by S. Brownover; I (fol. I30) 'A catalogue of a Box of Books Receivd from Mr Wm Thomas [I6]92/3'; m (fol. 150) 'Catalogue of books left in London Jun [i6]93'; n (fol. I55) 'Bound books at Mr Pawlings in Litle Lincolns Inne feilds [I6]94'; o (fol. I57) lists of books exchanged between Locke and Thomas Pawling in June I694; p (fol. I6o) 'Catalogue of Books Rd of Mr [William] Thomas July 24th [i6]95'; q (fol. I69) 'Sent me by Mr Toinard and Mr Du Bos May [i6]99', a list of books written by J.-B. Du Bos, together with (fol. 170) a list by Locke of books they had sent to and received from him, 1698-I702; r (fol. 171) 'A catalogue of unbound books at Mr Pawlings 19 Jun [i6]99'; s (fol. i82) 'A catalogue of books Received from Mr La Motte 28 Aug. [i 7]02'; t (fol. 185) 'Catalogue de quelques livres que j'ai pris chez Mr. Pawling, et qui appartiennent i Mr. Locke' written and signed by Pierre Coste, I703. Items a-d, g, r, and s are in Locke's hand;f, A, /, -p are written by Sylvester Brownover. The papers also include lists of books bought at auction sales (fols. 36, 40, 42, 66, 76, 66, i80); bills for books bought (fols. I, I9, 34, 48, 75 15, 117, 7 20, I2, I6I 62, I64, 173, I75, 176, 179, i8i, 183, I84, X86); several lists of books on travels (fols. 4, 14, 39, I29, 131, 147); and a 'Catalogue de livres deffendus et qu'on trouve avec peine', I679 (fol. 26), pr. in Lough (J.), 'Locke's list of books banned in France in 1679' (French studies, v. 217-22). 187 leaves. MS. Locke c. 33. Memoranda of books read by John Locke, mainly in the years 676-9, 1683-4, i687-8, and I690, with notes and excerpts, arranged according to his method of commonplacing. At fol. I I there are a number of entries on various subjects, some of which were later incorporated in Locke's journal for 1679 (B.M. Add. MS. 15642); the remainder are printed in Locke's travels in France, i675-I679, ed. J. Lough (1953), pp. 282-4. See also Lough (J.), 'Locke's reading during his stay in France, I675-79' (The Library, 5th ser., viii. 251-2). 44 leaves. MSS. Locke f. 15, 28, 29. Three notebooks containing chiefly lists of books, but also accounts and other memoranda. f. I5. 677-8. There is an index at pp. ii-iii. On the outside back cover is written in Locke's hand 'No. I. 30 June 1677-30 Jun. I678'. iv +152 pages. B 7008 E 26 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS f. 28. Mainly 1678-9, with a few later entries up to i685. There is an index at pp. 2-3. The date 'I Jul. 1678' is in Locke's hand on p. I. 196 pages. f. 29. 1683-1702. The second half of an index is at p. i, the page containing the first half is missing. ii + 8o pages. See Lough (J.), 'Locke's reading during his stay in France, 1675-79' (The Library, 5th ser., viii. 252-4), where a list of books in the second notebook (f. 28, pp. I7, 156-9) is printed. Another list (pp. 161-5, 172-3) is pr. ibid. 254-6, from a copy in MS. Locke b. 2, fols. 20-21. MSS. Locke f. 16, 17; e. 3. Catalogues of Locke's library. f. 17. 'A true Catalogue of Mr Lockes bookes now in the custody of me James Tyrrell A.D. 169 I', in Tyrrell's hand. The entries are classified as Libri Theologici (fols. i, 45), Ethici (fols. 4V, 45), Historici et Politici (fol. 6), Geographici, et Itineraria (fol. 12), Philologici, Grammatici, et Critici (fol. 19), Philosophiae naturalis et medicinae (fol. 23v), Geometrici et Arithmetici (fol. 41), Culinarii et Hortularii (fol. 43V). The volume was originally started by Locke as a medical commonplace book (fols. iii, I7 I-2) and called 'Adversaria 7' (fol. i). At fol. 5 there is an alphabetical list of medical and chemical terms in his hand. iii + 1 75 leaves (fols. 74-I 7 blank). f. I6. Catalogue of Locke's library made by Sylvester Brownover [i693]. The entries are alphabetical under the authors' names and include their shelfmarks. The original list on the right-hand pages contains no book published after I693. Additions acquired up to 1697 are entered on the left-hand pages, some of them in Locke's hand. Further additions are entered in a separate section at pp. 242-70. The inside front cover bears the date '[I 6]72'. The volume was originally intended for use as a commonplace book with an index at pp. ii-iii. Most of the entries made then (e.g. pp. I, 2, 5, 6, &c.) have been crossed out. iv+282 pages. e. 3. Catalogue of Locke's library transcribed by S. Brownover [I697] from the previous volume (MS. Locke f. I6). Additions acquired up to 1704 are entered on the left-hand page in Locke's hand. xiv +456 pages. MS. Locke c. 35. Two sets of papers relating to John Locke's bequests: A. I (fol. 4). Acknowledgements of receipt by persons to whom John Locke had bequeathed money or property, I704-9. 2 (fol. 30). A catalogue by Peter King of that part of Locke's library which was bequeathed to him, 1704. BOOKS 27 B. 3 (fol. 47). A list of books bequeathed by Locke to Francis Cudworth Masham, written by Anthony Collins, 2 Nov. 1704. It is in two parts: a (fol. 47) 'Catalogue of the Moiety of the Books at Mr Pawlings of John Locke Esqr Devis'd by him to Francis Cudworth Masham, and if he dyes under the age of one and twenty years to Peter King'; b (fol. 49) 'Catalogue of the moiety of the Books of John Locke Esqr devised by him to Francis Cudworth Masham, and if he dys under the age of one and twenty years to Peter King, taken the second of November 1704 by Anthony Collins, Mrs. Masham and Peter Coste'. 66 leaves. V. PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY MS. Locke c. 27. Papers of John Locke relating to theology and religion, including: a (fol. i) an English translation of a letter of Paolo Sarpi to the Abbot of St. MWdard, 22 July i608, pr. in Parr (R.), The life of the most reverendfather in God, James Usher, late archbishop of Armagh (i686), App. pp. 2-3; b (fol. 3) part of 'The Questions of Abdalla Ebn Salam the Jew and answers of Mahomet, written in Arabicke by Abdalla Ebn Abbas, and translated into English by J[ohn] G[reaves]', in the translator's hand; c (fol. 9v) an account in the hand of Thomas Greaves of a meeting between him and James Ussher, Archbishop of Armagh, 8 Feb. 655; d (fol. I 2) draft by Locke of a letter to S. H. [Henry Stubbs] about the latter's book An essay in defence of the good old cause, or A discourse concerning the rise and extent of the power of the civil magistrate in reference to spiritual affairs (1659). See Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (I950), pp. 21-22; e (fol. 29a) definitions of the nature and extent of civil and ecclesiastical power, partly in Locke's hand, 1674, pr. in King, pp. 300-6; f (fol. 30a) 'The Particular Test for Priests', a list of Catholic doctrines to be renounced by English priests, in the hand of S. Brownover, n.d.; g (fol. 30C) a paper entitled 'Philanthropoy [sic] or The Christian Philosophers', 1675; h (fol. 32) 'Queries' about the infallibility of the Pope or the Catholic Church, I675; i (fol. 34) 'Excerpta ex veteri autographo Inquisitionis Tholosanae' by Locke, I677. The MS. was printed in Limborch (P. a), Historia Inquisitionis (i692); j (fol. 49) notes by Locke on Nicolas Toinard's Evangeliorum harmonia Graeco-Latina (n.d.), 1678; k (fol. 54) extracts, I679, from Nicolaus Boerius, Praeclarus et elegans tractatus de seditiosis omnibus, and Gundissalvus de Villadiego, Tractatus contra haereticam pravitatem; I (fol. 56) two lists of Hebrew chronology written by S. Brownover, i680; m (fol. 67) notes by Locke on a theological treatise by Robert Boyle, I68i; n (fol. 69) notes by Locke on passages in Sentimens de quelques theologiens de Hollande sur I'Histoire critique du Vieux Testament, composee par le p. Richard Simon de l'Oratoire [by J. Le Clerc] (1685); o (fol. 73) notesby Locke onthe nature of inspiration, Dec. I687; p (fol. 75) 'Dubia circa Philosophiam Orientalem', extracts with notes by Locke from Knorr von Rosenroth (C.), Adumbratio kabbalae Christianae (1684); q (fol. 8oa) 'Pacifick Christians', a paper in Locke's hand containing the rules of a religious society, i688, pr. in King, pp. 276-8; r (fol. 8i) 'Concordantiae Bibliorum AnglicoHebraico-Gr;cae Methodus et Utilitas', by Nicolas Toinard, with reference to Newman (S.), A large and complete concordance to the Bible (I650), followed by (fol. 85) 'In opere 28 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS Concordantiae Bibliorum Anglico-Hebraico-Graecae consideranda Methodus et Utilitas, cujus rei gratia sub vocabulo Hope duo hic adsunt specimina', 1689; s (fol. 88) a table, written by Isaac Newton, 1691, illustrating the fulfilment of the prophecy of the seven seals and trumpets and its interpretation according to the Revelation of St. John; t (fol. 89a) copy of a declaration by Huguenot priests, 1693; u (fol. 9oa) two lists of Hebrew chronology, the second of which is written by Peter King, I695; v (fol. 92) 'Observations on a discourse concerning natural and revealed Religion [A discourse of natural and revealed religion in several essays (I691)] by S[tephen] N[ye] [I6]95' written by Locke. Cf. paper by W. Popple on this work in MS. Locke c. 17, fol. 213; w (fol. 94) notes made by Locke for The reasonableness of Christianity (I695), including (fol. 94) three addenda inserted in the second edition of 1696; x (fol. I 2) Bible references and (fol. 129) quotations by Locke; y (fol. I 3) notes by Locke on the distinction between 'Spirit soule and body' in I Thess. v. 23; z (fol. 138) 'Revelation. Its several ways under the old Testament [I6196', quotations written out by Locke; aa (fol. 142) extracts by Locke from a sermon of Daniel Williams, Aug. 1696; bb (fol. I43) 'N's [? S. Nye's] Critick' on Richard Bentley's sermon, Of revelation and the Messias (I696); cc (fol. 147) corrections and notes by Locke, Dec. 1698, relating to a manuscript copy of Samuel Bold's Some considerations on the principal objections and arguments which have been publish'd against mr. Lock's Essay of humane understanding (I 699); dd (fol. 15 ) 'Some remarkes on Mr [John] Edward's late papers entituled, A Brief vindication of the Fundamental Articles of the Christian Faith, &c.' by Samuel Bold; ee (fol. 157) 'The Evangelists narratives concerning Christ Resurrection reconciled by the BP of Glocester [Edward Fowler]' written by an amanuensis, I699; ff(fol. I6 i) a leaf bearing the signature PPx, from Locke's draft of his Reply to the... bishop of Worcester's answer to his second letter (1699) in the hand of an amanuensis, with a few corrections by Locke, pr. ibid., pp. I 18-9; gg (fol. i62) 'Resurrectio et quae sequuntur' by Locke [c. i699], pr. in King, pp. 316-23; hh (fol. 178) 'China [17]oi. Papers in the Controversie betwixt the Jesuits and other Missionaries', an alphabetical list by Locke; ii (fol. 179) notes by Locke on the religion and government of China, written mainly on the covers of old letters, of which two are dated 1696 (fols. 8 v, I 85v), but also on the backs of a letter of E. Clarke to Locke, 1702 (fol. 207v), and of a draft letter of Locke, 1702 (fol. 21 iv); jj (fol. 213) 'Christianae Religionis Synopsis [I 7]02' by Locke; kk (fol. 217) an early draft by Locke of An essay for the understanding of st. Paul's epistles by consulting st. Paul himself (I 707), with notes on the chronology of the epistles, 1703, and (fol. 221) a draft 'Synopsis Epistolarum Pauli'; 11 (fol. 224) a review of The reasonableness of Christianity (2nd ed., 1696), dated by Locke'[I 7103/4'; mm (fol. 238) 'Volkelii Hypothesis lib: de Vera Religione' written by Locke, n.d.; nn (fol. 246) notes in French by Locke on oracles; oo (fol. 248) fragment of notes on resurrection by Locke headed 'F. M. V. H.', referring perhaps to Helmont (F. M. van), Seder olam: or, The order of ages, tr. by J. Clark (I 694); pp (fol. 258) lists of Hebrew chronology with notes by Locke; qq (fol. 264) English versions of part of each of the Psalms; rr (fol. 274) 'An Essay about ye Explanation of ye I 4 first Verses of ye Gospel according to St. John', endorsed 'D'Avaux'; ss (fol. 278) notes by Locke on I Cor. xv. 17-24. 285 leaves. MS. Locke c. 28. Papers of John Locke relating to philosophy and religion. They include: PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY 29 a (fol. i) 'The preface to the Reader', written by Locke for his treatise 'Quest: whether the Civill Magistrate may lawfully impose and determine ye use of indifferent things in reference to Religious Worship', 1660 (MS. Locke e. 7), partly pr. in King, pp. 7, 8; b (fol. 3) Latin treatise by Locke entitled 'An Magistratus civilis possit res adiaphoras in divini cultus ritus asciscere Eosque populo imponere? Aff:' [c. 1660], of which there is a draft in MS. Locke e. 6, fol. 9Iv rev. See Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (1954), pp. 21-30; c (fol. 2I) 'An Essay concerning Toleracion 1667', a copy by an amanuensis with extensive additions and corrections, most of which are pr. in Gough (J. W.), John Locke's politicalphilosophy (I950), pp. I97-9. The text differs from the version in the P.R.O., Shaftesbury papers, pr. in Fox Bourne, i. 174-94. Other drafts are in the Henry E. Huntington Library and in Locke's commonplace book, 166 I, now in the Houghton Library, Harvard University, from which the end is pr. in King, p. 156. Microfilms of the Huntington and Harvard manuscripts are kept in the Library (MSS. Film 151 and 77); d (fol. 33) summary by Locke of his draft 'De Intellectu humano, I67I, An Essay' (MS. Locke f. 26), pr. in Locke (J.), An essay concerning the understanding, knowledge, opinion and assent, ed. B. Rand (1931), pp. 3-13; e (fol. 42) notes by Locke, 1677, on his translation of three of Pierre Nicole's Essais de morale, of which the first note (fol. 42), in shorthand, is transcribed and reproduced in Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (1954), pp. 252-4, and the second and third (fols. 42v-43v) are pr. in King, pp. 130-1; f(fol. 50) 'In legendis Authoribus haec mihi praecipue observanda videntur', two lists of heads written by Locke, I677. Cf. an entry in his journal, I677 (MS. Locke f. 2, pp. 247-52), pr. in King, pp. I I8 -19, and in An early draft of Locke's Essay, ed. R. I. Aaron and J. Gibb (1936), pp. 92-94; g (fol. 52) an abstract of Locke's manuscript of An essay concerning humane understanding (1690) in the hand of S. Brownover with a few corrections and additions by Locke, pr. in King, pp. 365-98; h (fol. 83) notes by Locke on William Sherlock, The case of allegiance due to soveraign powers stated and resolved according to Scripture and reason (i691); i (fol. 99) observations by William King, Bishop of Derry, later Archbishop of Dublin, on Locke's Essay (169o), originally enclosed in a letter to Locke, 1692 (MS. Locke c. I3, fol. 6); j (fol. 107) draft by Locke, 1692, of an answer to John Norris's Cursory reflections upon a book call'd, An essay concerning human understanding (2nd ed., I692); k (fol. I 13) notes by Locke on various subjects arranged according to his method of commonplacing, 1693; 1 (fol. i5) additions by Locke [c. I694] for his Essay (I690), pr. in King, pp. 323-5, 327-8, 359-64; m (fol. I 19) 'Des Cartes's proof of a god from the Idea of necessary existence examined. 1696', in the hand of S. Brownover with the opening words, part of the last sentence, and a few corrections in Locke's hand, pr. in King, pp. 313-I6. See Plate (a); n (fol. 121) the first three paragraphs, the second half of paragraph 6, and paragraphs 7 and 8 of Locke's 'Of the conduct of the understanding', copied by two amanuenses from the original draft (MS. Locke e. i), with heads of paragraphs and an addition (fol. 123) in Locke's hand; o (fol. 139) 'Morality', notes by Locke, n.d.; p (fol. 141) notes by Locke on happiness, misery, and law, endorsed 'Ethica', n.d.; q (fol. 143) two papers, the first in Locke's hand, the second partly in his and partly in that of S. Brownover, entitled 'Thus I thinke' and (fol. 146) 'Of Ethick in general', both pr. in King, pp. 306-1 3. See also Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (I954), pp. 69-73; r (fol. i55) notes by Locke on the division of the sciences for Book IV, ch. 20, of the Essay (I690). See ibid., p. 69; s (fol. 159) 30 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS comments by Locke on Nicolas Malebranche's De la recherche de la verite (1674-8). This leaf was originally enclosed in a draft letter by Locke, 1693 (MS. Locke c. 24, fol. 17). 59 leaves. MS. Locke e. 7. 'Quest: whether the Civill Magistrate may lawfully impose and determine ye use of indifferent things in reference to Religious Worship', a treatise written by John Locke in answer to The great question concerning things indifferent in religious worship [by Edward Bagshaw the younger] (i 660). See Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (I954), pp. 21-30. Extracts are pr. in Gough (J. W.), John Locke's politicalphilosophy (1950), pp. 179-80. At fol. 35 is the draft of a letter by Locke, perhaps to Gabriel Towerson, summarizing the contents of his treatise, 1 Dec. i 660. A preface written later is in MS. Locke c. 28, fol. I. i +47 leaves. MS. Locke f. 26. 'Intellectus 167I J. L.' (p. i); 'De Intellectu humano 167i An Essay' (p. i). An early draft by Locke of An essay concerning humane understanding (I 690) entitled (p. 3) 'An Essay concerning The Understanding, Knowledge, Opinion [correction from Beleif] and Assent', ed. B. Rand (I93I). The end of the text is missing after 'wch collection of simple ideas in ye action agreeing wth' (p. 306 in Rand's ed.). See also An early draft of Locke's Essay, ed. R. I. Aaron and J. Gibb (1936), pp. xi-xxviii, 127-30, where this manuscript is referred to as 'Draft B'. 'Draft A', i671, printed by Aaron and Gibb, ibid., is in Locke's commonplace book, I66I, now in the Houghton Library, Harvard University. An incomplete copy of Draft A is in the P.R.O., Shaftesbury papers: see Laslett (P.), 'Locke and the first earl of Shaftesbury: another early writing on the understanding' (Mind, N.S. lxi. 89-92), and Johnston (C. S.), 'A note on an early draft of Locke's Essay in the Public record office' (ibid. Ixiii. 234-8). Another draft of the first two books of the Essay, 'Draft C', dated 1685, is in the Pierpont Morgan Library: see Aaron (R. I.), John Locke (2nd ed., I955), pp. 50-73. Microfilms of Drafts A and C are kept in the Library (MSS. Film 77 and 57). viii +514 pages. MS. Locke e. 1. Drafts by John Locke of additions to An essay concerning humane understanding which were included in the 4th edition (I 700): a (pp. 2-30) 'Of Enthusiasm', pr. ibid., Book IV, ch. xix, pp. 422-8; b (pp. 6, 8-Io) an addition to Book IV, ch. iii, ~ 6, pr. ibid., pp. 324,11. 7-325, 1. 6; c (pp. 30-56) 'Of the Association of ideas', pr. ibid., Book II, ch. xxxiii, pp. 221-6. The draft is longer than the printed version; d (p. I82) an addition to Book IV, ch. xii, ~ 3, pr. ibid., p. 386, 11. 33-55; e (p. 84) an addition to Book III, ch. vi, ~ 26, pr. ibid., p. 266, 11. 32-50. The remaining chapter (pp. 56-260) entitled 'Of the Conduct of the Understanding' was originally intended to become Book IV, ch. xx, of the Essay, according to Locke's note on p. 62. It was printed as a separate work in Posthumous works, pp. I-I 37. There are heads of a few subjects dealt with in this treatise at p. i, followed by a memorandum by Locke 'That these following discourses are to be writ out under their several heads into distinct chapters, PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY 3I and then to be numbered and ranged according to their natural order'. At p. 260 is the beginning of a chapter entitled 'Custome'. Pp. 210-I6 are not in Locke's hand. References to the additions to the Essay and 'Of the Conduct of the Understanding' are made in letters of Locke to William Molyneux, 1695, 1697. See Familiar letters, pp. 96- 03, 107-I 2, I92-6, and Works, viii. 347-52, 354-7, 406-8. vi + 272 pages. MS. Locke e. 6. A notebook originally used by Locke for entries of 'Lemmata' (fol. i) but also containing in his hand, [c. I660-4]: a (fol. 9Iv rev.) a draft of his Latin treatise 'An Magistratus Civilis possit res adiaphoras in divini cultus ritus asciscere, Eosque populo imponere? Aff.' beg. incomplete 'vehementius vociferantur, hinc magistratus contemptus'. A copy of this work is in MS. Locke c. 28, fol. 3. See Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (I954), pp. 21-30; b (fol. 68v rev.) the story of a play about 'Orozes, King of Albania'; c (fols. 63V rev., &c.) drafts of six essays in Latin on the law of nature, entitled 'An Ratio per res a sensibus haustas devenire potest in Cognitionem legis naturae? Aff.' (fol. 63V rev.), 'An Lex naturae cognosci potest ex hominum consensu? Neg.' (fol. 52v rev.), 'An Lex naturae homines obligat? Affirmatur' (fol. 4 I rev.), 'An obligatio Legis naturae sit perpetua et Universalis? Affir.' (fol. 35v rev.), 'An privata cujusque utilitas sit fundamentum legis naturae? Neg.' (fol. 25v rev.), and 'An secundum legem naturae quisquam potest esse faelix in hac vita? Neg.' (fol. 3). The title for another essay apparently never written, 'An firma animi persuasio probat legem naturae', is on fol. 53V rev. Revised copies of these essays together with three others are contained in MS. Locke f. 31. See Locke (J.), ibid., pp. 7-I5. At fol. 2 is a list of books cited in the 'Lemmata' of which the latest date of publication is 1654. Pp. 21-91 of original pagination 1-237 are missing. 91 leaves. MS. Locke f. 31. A notebook containing nine essays in Latin by Locke on the law of nature, pr. in Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (I954). See also Leyden (W. von), 'John Locke and natural law' (Philosophy, xxxi. 23-35). The essays are in the hand of an amanuensis with corrections and additions and most of the titles in Locke's hand. The titles are: a (fol. 9) 'An Detur Morum Regula sive Lex Naturae? Affirmatur'; b (fol. 22) 'An Lex naturae sit lumine naturae Cognoscibilis? Aff.'; c (fol. 36) 'An lex naturae per traditionem nobis innotescat? Neg.' (title only); d (fol. 37) 'An Lex Naturae hominum animis inscribatur? Neg.'; e (fol. 47) 'An Ratio per res a sensibus haustas pervenire potest in cognitionem legis naturae? Aff.'; f(fol. 6 ) 'An ex inclinatione hominum naturali potest cognosci lex Naturae? Neg.' (title only); g (fol. 62) 'An lex naturae cognosci potest ex hominum consensu? Neg.'; h (fol. 82) 'An lex naturae homines obligat? Aff.'; i (fol. 90) 'An Lex naturae obliget bruta? Neg.' (title only); j (fol. 9I) 'An obligatio legis naturae sit perpetua et Universalis? Aff.'; k (fol. Io5) 'An privata cujusque utilitas sit fundamentum legis naturae? Neg.'. At the end of this essay (fol. I 19) is 'Sic CogitavitJ. Locke 1664' in Locke's hand; I (fol. I20) 'An secundum Naturam quisquam potest esse faelix in hac vita? Neg.', against which is written 'Oratio Censoria funebris [i6]64' in Locke's hand. 32 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS His drafts of six of these essays (, g, h,j, k, and 1) are contained in MS. Locke e. 6. A copy of all of them by S. Brownover is in MS. Locke f. 30, fols. 122-84. The volume also contains an address written by Locke 'Principi Daniae [later King Christian V] Oxonium ex Itinere divertenti [i6]62' (fol. I36v rev.), a list of Hebrew words in the Psalms with their Latin equivalents (fol. I58V rev.), and two lists of 'Anomola [sic] Ex Psalmis' (fol. 5v) and 'Anomola ex Genesi' (fol. I39g rev.). The date '[I 6]63' is in Locke's hand on the inside front cover. 161 leaves. MS. Locke f. 30. A parchment box containing: i (fol. i). Notes by Locke on the books of the New Testament consisting chiefly of extracts from commentaries. 2 (fol. 122). An uncorrected copy by S. Brownover of the essays on the law of nature in MS. Locke f. 31. See Locke (J.), Essays on the law of nature, ed. W. von Leyden (I954), p. 8. 188 leaves. MS. Locke f. 32. A parchment box containing notes by Locke on Simon (R.), Histoire critique du Yieux Testament (nouv. ed., I685) (fol. I), followed by notes on the books of the Old Testament from Job to Malachi (fol. 25), consisting chiefly of extracts from commentaries. The notes are undated but there is an entry on Daniel vii. 1 3 (fol. 43v) extracted from a letter of Isaac Newton to Locke, 7 Feb. 1691 (MS. Locke c. 16, fol. 140), pr. in King, pp. 217-I8. i 68 leaves. MS. Locke d. 3. A fair copy of two works by Locke in the hand of S. Brownover: I (p. I). 'Of seeing all thing [sic] in God. 1693', with the opening words, several additions and corrections, paragraph numbers, and a note at the end (p. 86) 'Thus far 1693' in Locke's hand. Pr. under the title 'An examination of P. Malebranche's opinion of seeing all things in God' in Posthumous works, pp. 139-213. Paragraphs I, 3, 4 in the manuscript are not included in the printed version; part of paragraphs 2 and 5 are printed as para. I; a sentence at the beginning of para. 29 in the manuscript (p. 24) is omitted from the printed text (para. 25). 2 (p. 89). 'Some other loose thoughts wch I set down as they came in my Way in a hasty perusal of some of Mr Norris's writeings, to be better digested when I shall have leisure to make an End of this Argument', with several additions and corrections, and paragraph numbers in Locke's hand. Pr. under the title 'Remarks upon some of Mr. Norris's books, wherein he asserts F. Malebranche's opinion of our seeing all things in God' in Des Maizeaux, pp. 151-76. I 12 pages. MS. Locke e. 2. Locke's final drafts of: a (fol. i) A paraphrase and notes on the epistle of st. Paul to the Romans (I707), dated (fol. Ioo) 'Finis 1702'; b (fol. i ) A paraphrase and PHILOSOPHY AND THEOLOGY 33 notes on the first epistle of st. Paul to the Corinthians (I706), dated (fol. 199) 'Finis I70I'; c (fol. I68) A paraphrase and notes on the second epistle of st. Paul to the Corinthians (I 706); d (fol. 200) A paraphrase and notes on the epistle of st. Paul to the Galatians (1705), dated (fol. 232v) 'I703 Finis'. There is an early draft of An essay for the understanding of St. Paul's epistles by consulting St. Paul himself (I707) in MS. Locke c. 27, fol. 217. 233 leaves. MS. Locke c. 34. Critical notes by James Tyrrell and John Locke on (p. I) The mischief of separation ( 680) and (p. 7) The unreasonableness of separation (I68 ) by Edward Stillingfleet, later Bishop of Worcester. They are mainly in Tyrrell's hand but also in that of Locke (p. 29, &c.) and of his amanuensis Sylvester Brownover (p. 49, &c.) and were probably written between I681 and 1683. There are two alphabetical indexes by Locke of keywords in the first and in the preface of the second of these works (pp. 165-6). Extracts (pp. 86-87, I 6-2, 150-4, 142-3, I55-7, 74, 9b-94)arepr. in King,pp. 346-58. 170 pages. MS. Locke d. 4. Draft by Locke of part of a 'Fourth Letter for Toleration', written on the wrappers of old letters, the latest endorsement of which is '8 Aug. [i 7]o4' (fol. 8v). The leaves bear the signatures A-T (fols. I —9), E-T (except M and N) (fols. 20-32). This work is pr. in Posthumous works, pp. 233-77, probably not from this manuscript but from a fair copy. There are differences between the draft and the printed text. The last paragraph of the printed text (pp. 276-7) is missing from the draft. The two leaves referred to as lost or mislaid, ibid., p. 269, are presumably the ones in the fair copy which contained the piece later pr. in King, pp. 364-5, from sig. L (fol. 26) and the first sentence on sig. O (fol. 27) of the draft. 32 leaves. MS. Locke e. 10. Notes on passages in the Old Testament and Apocrypha in the hand of Thomas Greaves. The date 'I65I' is on fol. I14, and 'Mar. 24.53' on fol. 117. There are a few notes (fols. 18-2I) on Fuller (T.), The church-history of Britain (I655). 153 leaves. MS. Locke e. 11. Part of Daniel Whitby's manuscript of 'The Preface to the first Epistle to the Corinthians'. The text has some differences from that printed in A paraphrase and commentary on the New Testament (I 703), ii. 105-I I. It was originally enclosed in Whitby's letter to Locke, I Jan. I699 (MS. Locke c. 23, fol. 94). 24 leaves. MS. Locke d. 6. A sermon on Romans viii. 29, 30 by William King, Archbishop of Dublin, pr. under the title Divine predestination andforeknowledg, consistent with the freedom B 7008 F 34 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS of man's will. A sermon preach'd at Christ-Church, Dublin; May 15. 1709 (I709). At the end of the sermon (fol. I 6v) is 'Ane Explanation of negative quantitys'. This manuscript was probably added to Locke's papers after his death by Peter King. 16 leaves. VI. MONEY AND COINAGE MS. Locke b. 3. Papers of John Locke relating to money and the coinage, including: a (fol. 2) part of Locke's original draft of his essay on 'Some of ye Consequences yt are like to follow upon Lessening of Interest to 4 Per Cent' (MS. Locke e. 8), including two leaves of which the pages are numbered 21-24. Pp. 25-44 of this draft were later incorporated in the final draft of Some considerations of the consequences of the lowering of interest, and raising the value of money (1692) (MS. Locke d. 2); b (fol. 6) notes by Locke on Thomas Manley's tract Usury at six per cent. examined... (I669); c (fol. I o) a list by Locke showing the values of French and German coins compared with a Spanish pistol, x677; d (fol. 12) proposals for a financial scheme by Hugh Chamberlen the elder, 18 Nov. 1689; e (fol. i 8) papers containing arguments against raising the denomination of the coinage, 1690; f(fol. 28) notes and excerpts by Locke from letters of Benjamin Furly, 12 Dec. I690 and 5 Jan. 1691 (MS. Locke c. 9, fols. 5I, 56), on the rate of interest and weight of coins in Holland; g (fol. 29) 'Extracts of the Grant for making Copper Farthings and halfpence', I 694; h (fol. 3 I) extracts by Locke, with notes and queries, from the Tonnage act, 1694; i (fol. 33) drafts by Locke of a speech and of three dialogues concerning the Bank of England, I 694; j (fol. 39) two copies, the second written by Sylvester Brownover, of 'Representation of the Rt. Honble the Lords Commrs of ye Treasury to their Excies ye Lords Justices of England concerning ye price of Guineas', 3 July 1695; k (fol. 47) draft by Locke and copy by S. Brownover (fol. 48) of'A paper written at Sr Wm Trumbulls request [and given him Aug. 95 deleted] upon occasion of a paper of the Lds Comrn of the Treasury submitted to the Lds Justices 30 Jul. [i 695'; I (fol. 50) an early draft by Locke of part of Further considerations concerning raising the value of money (i 695), together with (fol. 62) two copies by S. Brownover of the first part of the draft with additions and corrections by Locke, endorsed (fol. 63v) 'Written at Sr Wm Trumbulls request and given him in Sept. [i6J95'; m (fol. 66) two copies by S. Brownover of a paper by Locke with additions and corrections in his hand, on 'Money, propositions sent to ye Lds Justices 23 Oct. [I6j95'. Cf. ibid., pp. I-23; n (fol. 70) 'Money, Answer to my Ld Keepers Q8 30 Oct. [i6]95', originally forming the second part of Brownover's copy of Locke's early draft of Further considerations, with prefatory letter, additions, and corrections by Locke. Cf. ibid., pp. 24-72; o (fol. 76) 'Some thoughts concerning Money, Exchange, Trade & mending the Coin', copy of a paper by John Freke, Nov. I695; p (fol. 81) 'Qs sent to the Colledg. 90 Dec. [i6]95', two papers on the recoinage, in the hand of S. Brownover; q (fol. 83) table by Locke of the weights of guineas and milled money, I695; r (fol. 84) a copy by S. Brownover of 'Reflections upon ye Coyn or Money of England', by Sir Philip Meadows the elder, 1695; s (fol. 98) 'An Accompt of Gold and Silver Monyes coyned Yearly... from... I659 to... I69I', with another copy continued to Sept. 1695, MONEY AND COINAGE 35 both in the hand of S. Brownover; t (fol. 102) a paper on the pound sterling by Peter Mauvillain, originally enclosed in a letter to Locke, I696 (MS. Locke c. 6, fol. 8 ); u (fol. 103) 'A Modest enquiry into the true causes of the falling of the Course of the Exchange betwixt Engld & the Dutch', endorsed by Locke 'From Mr. Wrights brother in Law Sunman from B[enjamin] F[urly] [I6]95/6'; v (fol. Io4) 'An account of Holland money writ me by Mr. B. Furley vid his letter of i~ May 96 [MS. Locke c. 9, fol. 135]' in Locke's hand; w (fol. I o6) a scheme for a tax 'For the Raiseing of Seaven Millions pounds Sterll' for one yeare', [ 6]96; x (fol. I09) a list of 'The Nationall Coine of Portugall', I696; y (fol. I lo) 'An Answer to Sr Richard Temples Short Remarks on my Answer to Mr Lounds' by Locke, in the hand of an amanuensis except the title and first three lines, [c. 1696]; z (fol. 124) 'A method of Laying a Tax upon Such Commodities as the Parliament shall think fit to be payd by the Consumer & to be Collected Monthly', by T. Whateley, 1697; aa (fol. 126) copy by S. Brownover of a table of the values and weights of foreign silver coins and of letters of Hopton Haynes, Samuel Locke, and Isaac Newton, I698; bb (fol. 129) copy by S. Brownover [I 698] of tables of the weights and values of foreign silver coins and of the weight and value of gold, endorsed by Locke 'John Reynolds' Brief Tables to cast up Silver and Gold 80 Lond 1651'; cc (fol. I29) notes by Locke on the value and price of guineas, I698; dd (fol. I32) copy by S. Brownover of a letter from the council of trade, signed by Sir Philip Meadows, John Pollexfen, John Locke, and Abraham Hill, to the lords justices, 22 Sept. I698; ee (fol. 136) notes by Locke on the Aid, 1702. 141 leaves. MS. Locke e. 8. A treatise entitled 'Some of ye Consequences yt are like to follow upon Lessening of Interest to 4 Per Cent' by John Locke. A copy in the hands of two amanuenses, with a few additions and corrections by Locke, including a note 'Sic cogitavit J. L. 1668' (fol. 27V), and an endorsement with the date '[I 6]74' (fol. 38v). Parts of Locke's original draft are in MSS. Locke b. 3, fols. 2-5, and d. 2, fols. 28-37. This essay was later incorporated into the first part of Some considerations of the consequences of the lowering of interest, and raising the value of money (I692). Cf. MS. Locke d. 2, fols. 8 -34v, and ibid., pp. 17-78. 38 leaves. MS. Locke d. 2. Final draft of Some considerations of the consequences of the lowering of interest, and raising the value of money (I692) by John Locke. It is written partly by Locke (fols. I, 10, 23, 42V) and partly by Sylvester Brownover (fols. 4, 15, 38). It includes several leaves, of which the pages are numbered 25-44 (fols. 28-31, 32-37), from his original draft of 1668 and the continuation in 1674 of his earlier treatise 'Some of ye Consequences yt are like to follow upon Lessening of Interest to 4 Per Cent' (MS. Locke e. 8). Pp. 21-24 of the original draft are in MS. Locke b. 3, fols. 2-5. 71 leaves. 36 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS VII. MEDICINE MSS. Locke e. 4; f. 18-24. Locke's medical notebooks. e. 4. 'Farrago John Locke Agnis Locke': prescriptions in English and Latin, and extracts from medical works. The sources of some of the prescriptions are indicated: they include Richard Lower (pp. I6, 24-25, 136) and John Bathurst (p. 69). At p. 141 is an account of 'Dr Bathurst's method of cureing a gent:woman of ye Scurvy'. The date '[I6]52' is in Locke's hand on the inside front cover. The date 'Feb. 6. 1654/5' occurs on p. 144. vi + 76 pages. f. 18. A notebook containing chiefly prescriptions in English and Latin, and extracts from medical works, the titles of which are listed at p. I 13. The sources of some of the prescriptions are indicated. There are two indexes (pp. o8, I o) arranged according to Locke's method of commonplacing. On the inside front cover is '76 Pensford 1659' in Locke's hand. vi + 1 6 pages. f. 19. A notebook kept c. 1664-9 containing notes in Latin on the lectures of [Thomas] Willis in Christ Church (p. I), notes and extracts from medical works, and prescriptions, including two in the hand of David Thomas (pp. 328, 346). At p. 394 is a table of temperatures and weather for London, Oct. 1667. The index, arranged according to Locke's method of commonplacing, is at p. 396c. The latest date of publication of a book quoted is 1669. iv +416 pages. f. 20. A notebook containing extracts from medical works, the authors and titles of which are listed at p. 265. There is a subject index for the entries contained in pp. I-29 at pp. 253-62. Another index (p. 250), arranged according to Locke's method of commonplacing, covers entries from pp. 174-246. The latest date of publication of a book quoted is 1656. vi +274 pages. f. 21. A notebook containing (p. 3) 'Sagacissimi viri, et practici faelicissimi Dni Dris Thomas Sydenham amici sui plurimum Colendi tractatus de Variolis, anno 1669', followed (p. 17) by extracts from Sydenham's lectures mostly written in shorthand. Among them are four (pp. 40, 66, 6i, 82) of which longhand versions are in MS. Locke c. 29, fols. 19, 23, 25, 27. There is a prescription in Sydenham's hand at p. I. An index, arranged according to Locke's method of commonplacing, is at p. 364. The date '[I6]69' is written on the inside front cover. There is an entry dated '[I6]8I' on p. 238. iv +376 pages (240-363 blank). f. 22. A notebook containing (pp. 22-249) entries in Latin on diseases divided under each heading into four sections: E[xempla], D[escriptio], P[rognosisJ, C[uratio]. MEDICINE 37 At the beginning of the book (pp. 2-2I) are prescriptions in Latin. There is an index of subjects at p. 362. The date '[i6]74' is written on the inside front cover. iv +370 pages (250-36i blank). f. 23. A notebook on diseases, with an index (p. iiv) arranged according to Locke's method of commonplacing. The entries are mainly in shorthand. A copy of Pharmacopoeiae Londinensis remedia (1578), of which the title-page is missing, is bound in behind the notebook (p. 225). The date '[i6]8I' is written on the inside front cover. There is an entry dated '9 Oct. [i6]88' on p. 7. iv +370 pages (121-225 blank). f. 24. A parchment box containing medical notes, mainly in Latin but also in French and English, arranged according to Locke's method of commonplacing, c. 1683-8. 190 leaves. MS. Locke c. 29. Medical papers of John Locke, containing many recipes and prescriptions in various hands. They also include: a (fol. I) prescriptions and notes in Latin by Locke; b (fol. 5) a prescription 'For Mr Locke' [the elder]; c (fol. 7) a table in Latin by Locke of 'Antecedentia', 'Comitantia', and 'Consequentia sive Symptomata' of illnesses and diseases; d (fol. 9V) alphabetical indexes by Locke of subjects dealt with in nine medical works; e (fol. 19), papers by Locke, I670, entitled 'A Dysentery', pr. in Dewhurst (K.), 'Sydenham on "A Dysentry"' (Bulletin of the history of medicine, xxix. 393-400), 'Febres intercurrentes', 'Variola', pr. in Dewhurst (K.), 'Sydenham on smallpox' (British medical journal, 1955, ii. 432-3), 'Pleurisie', with two on 'Febres intermittentes', being extracts from lectures or medical notebooks of Thomas Sydenham, 'ex attenta et faelici observatione Tho: Sydenham' (fol. I 9v). Cf. Bodl. MS. Rawl. C. 406, pp. 4-34. Shorthand versions of the first, fourth, fifth, and sixth of these papers occur in one of Locke's medical commonplace books (MS. Locke f. 21, pp. 40, 66, 6 1, 82); f (fol. 29) a booklet containing recipes and essays on various diseases by Locke, x 675, partly in shorthand, among which are short versions of some of the papers in e; g (fol. 52) a prescription endorsed by Locke 'This was sent my Lady Northumberland when ill at Paris [I6]78'; h (fol. 54) a subject index by Locke, [i6]78, to Sydenham (T.), Observationes medicae (1676); i (fol. 57) extracts by S. Brownover from Bacon (F.), Sylva sylvarum (I670), endorsed by Locke 'Arthritis [i6]79'; j (fol. 60) 'Some observables collected from ye Evisceration of Sr Robert Hacket Kt', I679; k (fol. 72) recipes in the hand of S. Brownover 'For ye Kings Evil', 1682; I (fol. 74) an account of 'Mr Blechendens case Jun. [i6]82'; m (fol. 80) a paper on diabetes in the hand of David Thomas, 1691; n (fol. 84) prescription by Locke 'For a cancerous Tumour in the breast', I692; o (fol. 86) various recipes written by Locke and Edward Clarke, I693; p (fol. 90) recipe by Locke for an ointment for sprains in horses and men; q (fols. 92, Ioo) directions by Locke for Mrs. Fletcher during pregnancy, 1695 and 1701. Cf. reports and letters of H. and J. Fletcher (MS. Locke c. 8, fol. I I6); r (fol. 95) general notes by Locke on midwifery, [c. 1695],pr. in Dewhurst (K.), 'Locke's midwifery notes' (The Lancet, 1954, ii. 490-I); s (fol. 121) 38 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS The forme of a trusse to be made in sole leather' by Locke, reprod. in Dewhurst (K.), 'Truss designed by Locke' (British medicaljournal, I954, ii. 44). The wrapper enclosing fols. 93-98 contains (fol. 99) a draft passage by Locke in defence of his treatise The reasonableness of Christianity, as delivered in the Scriptures ( 695). I 2 leaves. VIII. NATURAL SCIENCE MS. Locke f. 25. 'Adversaria 4 Pharmacopaea', a notebook on chemistry kept by Locke, [c. I666]. The sources of some of his notes are indicated and include many derived from David Thomas and Robert Boyle. There is an index of subjects, arranged according to Locke's method of commonplacing, at p. 368. Dated entries, all for I666, occur on pp. 33, 50, 36, i69, 276, 322, 354. The notebook was evidently one of a series: there is a reference to 'Adver. 5. p. 64' on p. 45. vi +380 pages. MS. Locke c. 37. Part of Robert Boyle's manuscript of Thegeneralhistory of the air (i 692), in various hands in addition to that of the author, with a few corrections by J. Locke. The first page of the manuscript is missing: it begins at 'Title 2' and ends towards the end of 'Title 17' (pp. 2-100 in the edition of I692). 'Giv'n By Mr Boyle: To Mr H. Oldenburg' (fol. 3). o6 leaves. MS. Locke d. 5. Transcripts probably in the hand of Sylvester Brownover, 1688. I (fol. I). 'Tertia Synodus Pythagorica sive Liber Turbae Philosophorum de occulta Sapientia inscriptus, in quo Discipulorum Hermetis prudentiorum dicta Aristeus congregavit, Pithagoram Philosophum et Magistrum introducendo, Sententiasque ex Discipulis colligendo, ut posteritati Ars Sacra innotesceret, et qui ad hanc capessandam animum appulissent, ad veritatis semitam ducerentur. Ex recensione Hortulani, Ev n prjco MDCLXXXVIII', containing the first nineteen discourses of the Liber turbae philosophorum, parts of which are also translated into French. 2 (fol. 25). 'Hermetis Trisgemisti [sic] Philosophorum Principis Opera Chymica quae extant Latino-Gallica quorum Versio Gallica plurimis in locis obscurioribus Commentarii loco esse potest ex recensione Hortulani, Ev r p EupcL MDCLXXXVIII', containing Latin and French versions of'Tabula Smaragdina (fol. 25'), 'Compendium Tabulae Smaragdinae ex Bernhardo Trevisano' (fol. 26v), and 'Tractatus vere aureus' (fol. 27V). 46 leaves. IX. TRADE AND THE COLONIES MS. Locke c. 30. Papers of John Locke relating to trade and the colonies, I671-1702. They include: a (fol. I) minutes by Locke of meetings of the lords proprietors of Carolina, I67I-5; b (fol. 12) copy of a letter of Abraham Woods to John Richards, 22 Aug. 1674, of which the original is in P.R.O., Shaftesbury papers, sect. ix, bundle 48, no. 94. Cf. C.S.P., colonial ser., America and West Indies, x669-x674 ( 889), pp. 604-7, no. 1347; c (fol. 8) TRADE AND THE COLONIES 39 notes by Locke for an essay on trade, 1674; d (fol. 20) table of bounties paid on the export of corn from England, i675-9; e (fol. 21) two papers relating to the company of mineral and battery works at Whitebrook, I678; f(fol. 25) 'An Abridgemt of divers Papers & large Narratives of great Concernmt in relation to the Advancemt of the Trade of the Nation & of his Mat' Revenue, Drawne up by John Collins Accomptant', 1679; g (fol. 27) 'The ill Consequences attending the necessary and immediate dissolution of the present Royall Fishery Company', by John Collins, I679; h (fol. 29) 'An Expedient for the Preventing the importacion of French wines...', 1689; i (fol. 31) extracts by Locke from letters of John Stewart concerning Carolina, 1690; j (fol. 38) notes by Locke on trade in Sweden, Denmark, and New England, I696; k (fol. 4o) notes by Locke on New England, [1696], and Darien, [1697]. Cf. C.S.P., colonial ser., America and West Indies, I696-x697 (1904), pp. 134-8, no. 250, and p. 525, no. I 20; I (fol. 42) 'A brief information whereon to ground an Enterprise for intercepting the Canada fleet in their returne from thence to France &c', written by Locke, 19 Oct. 1696; m (fol. 43) 'Reason why the Pa[per] Manufacture in England has not succeeded', 1696, pr. in Carter (H.), Wolvercote mill (Oxf. bibliogr. soc., N.S., extra publ., 1957), p. 66; n (fol. 45) copy of an instrument of arbitration made in Holland, written in Dutch by Paul d'Aranda, with an English translation and (fol. 46) a letter from d'Aranda to Locke, 1696; o (fol. 47) copy by William Popple of a letter from James Vernon to the council oftrade and plantations, 20 May 1697; p (fol. 49) 'Copy of a Representation relating to the Designes of the Scotch East India Company upon the Isthmus of Darien in America, Augt 10th 1697', written in answer to Vernon's letter; q (fol. 55) notes by Locke, 1697, concerning the claim of William Douglas, 3rd Duke of Hamilton, to lands in Connecticut, cf. C.S.P., colonial ser., America and West Indies, l696-l697 (I904), pp. 576 -9, no. 1234, together with (fols. 56, 57) excerpts from Hakluyt (R.), The principall navigations (1589), relating to trade between England and Russia. Cf. C.S.P., domestic ser., x697 (1927), pp. 295-7; r (fol. 59) 'Queries to be put to Coll. Henry Hartwell or any other discreet person that knows the constitution of Virginia, Aug. 30, 1697'. Cf. C.S.P., colonial ser., America and West Indies, I696-1697 (1904), p. 602, no. 1314, and pp. 6o6-io, no. 1320; s (fol. 62) proposal by Locke for an amnesty to be granted to pirates, i697; t (fol. 65) copy of a scheme by Sir Francis Brewster for promoting the manufacture of linen in Ireland, 1697; u (fol. 67) 'An Abstract of the Heads of the Bill for encourageing the Linnen and Hempen Manufactur's in Ireland', 1697, originally enclosed in a letter of William Molyneux to Locke, 4 Oct. I 697, which is pr. in Familiar letters, pp. 238-42, and Works, viii. 435-8; v (fol. 69) copy of a letter of Philip Bayley to George Stead concerning linen manufacture, 21 Aug. 1697; w (fol. 70) notes by Locke on linen manufacture, I697; x (fol. 78) 'Proposalls to prevent the Exportation of our English Wooll', by S. Heathcote, 14 Oct. 1697; y (fol. 82) notes by Locke on Irish trade, i697; z (fol. 84) 'Proposall for a Poll Tax of Hemp and Flax in Ireland', x697, endorsed by Locke 'Van Bourch'; aa (fol. 86) notes by Locke on the employment of poor children and vagrants, x697; bb (fol. 94) an early draft by Locke of his scheme of poor-law reform, I697. Cf. Fox Bourne, ii. 376-93; cc (fol. 96) 'Memorial to the Lords of the Councell of Trade By the Directors of the Royal Lustring Company', 1698; dd (fol. i o6) copy of a petition presented to parliament by the East India company, May 1698. Cf. Journals of the house of commons, xii. 284; ee (fol. Io8) copy of a proposal presented to parliament by the East India company, 10 June 1698, pr. ibid. xii. 40 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS 308; ff(fol. o9) a paper on merchants' companies by S. Heathcote, 1698; gg (fol. II I) notes on poor-law reform with additions and corrections in Locke's hand, 1699; hh (fol. I 12) copy of a letter of Alexander Shields, 25 Dec. I699, about the second expedition to Darien; ii (fol. I 14) copy of a representation concerning their taxes from the officers of the council of trade and plantations to the treasury, 8 Jan. 1700; jj (fol. I 17) copy of the council of trade's report on Darien, I8 Jan. 1700. Cf. C.S.P., colonial ser., America and West Indies, 1700 (1910), p. 30, no. 38, and pp. 32-34, no. 43; kk (fol. I 9) copy of a report of the council of trade to the house of commons, 22 Mar. 1700. Cf. ibid., pp. 131-3, no. 244; /1 (fol. I25) notes by Locke on overseas trade and the colony at Darien, [1700]; mm (fol. 127) 'A Memoriall concerning the setling a Colony on the Istmus of Darien in America', by W. T., n.d.; nn (fol. 129) 'An Estimate of what Value is shipt Every Year from Jamaica to England', 1700; o0 (fol. 131) 'A List of Shipps abroad in ye service of Honble ye Engl: Company tradeing to ye E. Indies', 27 Sept. 1700, written by John Locke, son of Samuel Locke; pp (fol. 132) 'Proposalls for an Agreement between the Two East India Companies', 1702, in the same hand; qq (fol. 134) two copies of a commission of Nicholas Trott as chief justice in South Carolina, granted 8 Mar. 1707 and confirmed 8 Sept. 1714, presumably added to Locke's papers by Peter King. 135 leaves. MS. Locke e. 9. Papers on Virginia, [I697]: a (fol. I) 'Some of the Cheif Grievances of the present constitution of Virginia with an Essay towards the Remedies thereof'; b (fol. 39) a list of 'Queries' about the land, people, constitution, and revenue of Virginia, which is the same as that in MS. Locke c. 30, fol. 59; c (fol. 43) a paper on public administration in Virginia. Cf. C.S.P., colonial ser., America and West Indies, 1696-I697, p. 602, no. 134, p. 606, no. 1320, and pp. 641-66, no. I396. Written by S. Brownover except for the opening lines of a and b and some additions and corrections in b which are in Locke's hand. i+7I leaves. MS. Locke c. 36. Copies of the minutes of the council of trade and plantations, 23 Nov. 1699-7 May 1700, sent to Locke by William Popple, secretary to the council. 82 leaves. MS. Locke d. 7. 'Of the American Plantations', I 8 Oct. 7 14, a copy of a report submitted to the council of trade and plantations, presumably added to Locke's papers by Peter King. Cf. C.S.P., colonial ser., America and West Indies, 1714-17I5 (1928), pp. I 5-6, no. 236. ii +22 pages. X. MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS MS. Locke f. 33. A notebook containing entries in an unidentified hand on logic (fols. 8 -25, 86 rev.-I 74 rev.), the Greek dialects (fols. I-6, 174 rev.-I 69 rev.), and the etymological derivation of Greek words illustrated by words from Xenophon (fol. 29), Homer (fols. 47v-55), Musaeus (fols. I08 rev.-Io6 rev.), and the Old Testament (fols. 167 rev.-i59y rev.). 187 leaves (fols. 30-46, 56-I05, 109-58 are blank). MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS 41 MS. Locke f. 27. Miscellaneous notebook kept by John Locke, 1664-6. It is used at both ends. The entries at the front (pp. I-9 ) are headed 'Mem', those at the back (pp. I70-148 rev.) are headed 'Q'. They include notes of accounts and of lands and rents in Somerset, quotations, recipes, and medical notes. 175 pages. MS. Locke f. 14. A notebook containing extracts by Locke in English and Latin describing the virtues and attainments of famous scholars and authors, with references to the works from which they are taken. There is an index of names, compiled according to Locke's method of commonplacing, at pp. 262-3. The date '[ 6]67' is written on the inside front cover. vi +274 pages. MS. Locke d. 1. Commonplace book of John Locke. Most of the entries are dated 1679 but there are a few of 1692 (pp. 177-89). There is an index at p. vi. Extracts (pp. 53, 57, 177) are pr. in King, pp. 29I-5, and (pp. 9, 33, 53, IOI) in Locke's travels in France, i675-I679, ed. J. Lough (1953), pp. 284-5. See also Lough (J.), 'Locke's reading during his stay in France, 1675-79' (The Library, 5th ser., viii. 25I). viii +578 pages (pp. 190-578 blank). MSS. Locke b. 4, c. 31. Two volumes of miscellaneous papers. They include: b. 4. a (fol. i) passages referring to Sir Anthony Ashley Cooper (later ISt Earl of Shaftesbury) suppressed from Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow (1698-9), pr. in Christie (W. D.), A life of Anthony Ashley Cooper,first earl of Shaftesbury (1871), i. Ivi-lxii, and incorporated in the text of The memoirs of E. Ludlow, ed. C. H. Firth (I894); b (fol. 3) notes on the report of the commissioners for accounts, 1 667; c (fol. 5) papers relating to the case of John Howland, former registrar of excise, consisting of a copy of a warrant granting him and John Champante, correspondent and clerk of the bonds to the excise commissioners, their offices for life, 6 Aug. 669, endorsed by Locke 'Jun. [i6]74', cf. C.S.P., domestic ser., 1668-1669 (1894), p. 439, petition of Howland to the King for the restoration of his office and salary, [I674] (fol. 14), and notes by Locke on Howland's case (fol. I 6), including lists of salaries paid to excise com-.missioners and clerks, 1662-9; d (fol. 23) copy by Locke of a letter of Charles II to Sir George Downing, I6 Jan. I672, pr. in King, p. 41, and, from the original in B.M. Stowe MS. 142, fol. 84, in Beresford (J.), The godfather of Downing street (1925), pp. 247-8; e (fol. 25) copy by Locke of 'Les Capitulations faits par sa Majest6 Tres Chrestien avec son Altesse le Duc de Monmouth Ou son Altesse s'engage de faire transporter un Regimt d'Infanterie Anglois Compose de 2400 hommes en 24 Compagnies de Cent hommes chacque Compagnie pour la Service de Sa Majeste', 24 Feb. 1672; f (fol. 27) 'An Abstract of severall Presidents for the Lord Chancellors Sending out Writts in tyme of Prorogacion for Elleccion of Members to sit in Parliamt', 1673. See Christie (W. D.), op. cit. ii. 122-4. g (fol. 34) an index by Locke of proper names in shorthand, arranged according to his method of commonplacing, endorsed '[I6]65' and '[I6]73'; h (fol. 36) declaration by the house of lords concerning the commons' order to take into custody the counsellors at law assigned by the lords for the appeal of Sir Nicholas Crispe against Thomas Dalmahoy, and the house of commons' answer, June I675. Cf. Journals of the house of commons, ix. 352-4; i (fol. 38) copy of a B 7008 G 42 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS letter in French from Pope Innocent XI to Louis XIV, King of France, 24 Sept. 676. See Michaud (E.) Louis xi et Innocent xi ( 882-3), iii. 251; j (fol. 40) copy of a letter in French to Louis XIV about Nicolaus Drabicius, endorsed by Locke '25 Apr. [x6]78'; k (fol. 48) 'Mesures et proportions du Royal Louys' by Rodolphe Gedeon dit Corneille, Ingenieur a Toulon, 1678; 1 (fol. 50o) Table des Appointemens et Solde des Equipages des Vaisseaux de guerre du Roy', n.d.; m (fol. 52) 'Instructions to Councill in Mr [Henry] Slingesby's case before the Barons with Answers to the Auditors Exceptions to his Accompts', 7 May 1680. Cf. C.S.P., domestic ser., I679-68o (i915), p. 531; n (fol. 55) 'A Lettr from a Livery man of ye Citty of London to Sr George Jeffreyes the Recordr', 17 July x680; o (fol. 57) copy by Robert Pawling of a letter from [Arthur Annesley, Ist Earl of Anglesey], to Charles II, 2 Aug. 1682, relating to his A letter from a person of honour in the countrey, written to the earl of Castlehaven (i681); p (fol. 59) depositions of witnesses taken in support of the claim that Arthur Capel, Earl of Essex, did not commit suicide but was murdered in the Tower of London, [1683]; q (fol. 69) 'A list of their Mates ships now at and fitting for the Sea undr the Commd of the Rt Honble the Earl of Torrington Admiral of the Fleet &ca, Spitthead, 8 June 1689 [the Channel fleet]' in the hand of S. Brownover; r (fol. 71) 'The Contents of an Act for hindring the sale of Offices, Assertaining the Fees of Lawyers, Advocates, Officers Clarks and Attorneys and for their MatYs having the first yeares Profitts of Offices when they become void payable in two yeares times', [? 689]; s (fol. 73) copy in the hand of S. Brownover of the proclamation issued by the lords justices at Dublin, 7 July 1691, granting an amnesty to Irish rebels willing to surrender and (fol. 73v) of the 'Articles Granted to the Towne and Garrison of Galloway by Generall Ginckle Commandr in Cheif of their Maties Forces in Ireland ye 2Ith of July I691', pr. in Story (G.), A continuation of the impartial history of the wars of Ireland (i693), pp. i66-8o [recte 170]; t (fol. 75) four papers relating to the Licensing act consisting of extracts by Locke from 'An Act for preventing abuses in Printing Seditious Treasonable and unlicensed books and pamphlets and for regulating printing and printing presses' (i4 Car. II, c. 33) with his observations on them, I694, a copy of a 'Byll for ye Better Regulateing of Printeing and Printing [sic] and Printing Presses' in the hand of John Freke, 1695 (fol. 77), with Locke's notes on some passages in it (fol. 78), and a copy of the eighteen 'Reason [sic] of the Commons agt Reviveing the Printing act, [x6]95', pr. in Journals of the house of commons, xi. 305-6; u (fol. 8 I) a list of names of commissioners of Greenwich hospital, 1695; v (fol. 86) letters and papers relating to the proceedings against Thomas Aikenhead for blasphemy, I 696, pr. in Howell (T. B.), A complete collection of state trials (I 809-28), xiii. 9 I 7-34; w (fol. 107) an unsigned letter about witches in Scotland, 1697; x (fol. 109) a copy of Locke's 'Memoirs relating to the life of Anthony first Earl of Shaftesbury', pr. in Works, viii. 266-8; y (fol. 15) resolutions by the house of lords and the house of commons concerning the lords' examination of the observations of the commissioners of accounts in relation to the charge against Charles Montagu, i st Earl of Halifax, of neglect of his duties as auditor of the exchequer, 1703, pr. in Journals of the house of lords, xvii. 296, and Journals of the house of commons, xiv. 208. I i6 leaves. c. 31. a (fol. I) extracts relating to Richard Foxe, Bishop of Winchester, including the petition of Edmund Dudley to him and Sir Thomas Lovell, [I51 o], in the hand of Richard MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS 43 James; b (fol. 2) two copies of 'Calculus Eclipsis Lunaris Die 4 Martii I633/4: ex Tabulis Lansbergii, ad meridianum Londinensem factus a Doctore Bambergio Astronomiae professore Oxonii'; c (fol. 7) letter of John Walker to Francis Rous, in Latin, 30 Sept. 1637, about Rous's work Archaeologiae Atticae libri tres (I637); d (fol. I I) copy by S. Brownover of a letter of Nicolas Heinsius to Christina, Queen of Sweden, in Latin, 5 Jan. I656; e (fol. 13) 'The Lives and manners of the Laplanders', a description by William Allestree of a picture sent to Locke, I6 Sept. 1673. Cf. Fox Bourne, i. 320; f(fol. 5) 'The way of Ordering the Goates', directions in Locke's hand, 1675; g (fol. 18) copy of'Harangue au Roy Pour l'Academie francoise', by Paul Pellisson, 25 July 1676, pr. in Pellisson-Fontanier (P.) and Olivet (P. J. T. d'), Histoire de l'academiefranfoise (I858), i. 353-8; h (fol. 24) a rough sketch of a model of Jupiter and its satellites signed by Olaus Roemer, March 1679, reprod. in Locke's travels in France, 1675-I679, ed.J. Lough (X953), p. 263,n. 2; i (fol. 25) 'Ancre d'Imprimerie', an account in the hand of Nicolas Toinard of methods of making printing ink, March 1679; j (fol. 26) notes in French on botanists and their works, inscribed by Locke 'Dr Magnol', 1679; k (fol. 27) copy of a letter in French from Jean Jacob6 de Fremont d'Ablancourt to Henri Justel, concerning maps, 1679, from the original in MS. Locke c. 12, fols. 57-58; 1 (fol. 29) 'Deux manieres des Canadois de passer les peaux d'Elan' in the hand of Nicolas Toinard, I679; m (fol. 32) account in Latin by Jean Picard of solar spots with a note by N. Toinard, May 1680; n (fol. 33) 'St Clare's [George Sinclair] Explication of the Arithmetical Cylinders' for multiplication, division and the extraction of square and cube roots, i680; o (fol. 35) 'Of the Irish', an incomplete account in the hand of James Tyrrell, i680; p (fol. 4.I) an account in Latin of the divisions of canon law, I68o; q (fol. 43) 'Description d'un Pendule amobile que l'on ajoute aux grandes Orloges a ressort en volute' in the hand of N. Toinard, Jan. I68I; r (fol. 44) diagram by Locke endorsed 'Almanake perpetuall of Mr Herbert [?Thomas, later 8th Earl of Pembroke] I681'; s (fol. 47) 'Eclipse de Lune observee a Paris le 29 Aoust 1681 au matin a l'Observatoire Roial', an account by N. Toinard; t (fol. 48) account by Locke of a towing engine, I68I; u (fol. 49) a list of contents of Robert Boyle's New experiments and observations touching cold (1683); v (fol. 5I) 'Excerpta Ex MS [of Schediasma de Promontorio Bonae Spei (I686)] domini Ten Rhyne' in the hands of Locke and Brownover. There is another copy of these extracts in Locke's journal for I684 (MS. Locke f. 8, pp. 177-203). At fol. 62v is an extract from a letter of Ten Rhyne to Caspar Sibelius, in Latin, 5 Feb. I678; w (fol. 67) a Latin version of Locke's 'A new method of a commonplace-book', undated but the year [i6]85 is mentioned on fol. 73V; x (fol. 79) an account of an earthquake in Syria in A.D. 750 'Abreg6 de l'histoire Byzantine de S. Nicephore Patriarche de Constantinople v. Journal des Scavans An. x685 [pp. 40-I]', endorsed by Locke 'Gelu 750'; y (fol. 80) 'Cento Virgilianus de Te' in Locke's hand made up of lines from Vergil with their references, i686; z (fol. 83) copies of two letters of John Wallis to Simon Ford, 23 Feb. I688 and 24 June 1689, and of a letter of Ford to Wallis, 17 June 1689, relating to Ford's English version of the Psalms; aa (fol. 98) 'Machina ad poliendos lapides pretiosos, [Francis Mercury van] Helmont, [i 6]88', a sketch in red pencil; bb (fol. 99) a brief summary by Locke, 1688, of the contents of Isaac Newton's Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica (I687); cc (fol. IoI) a copy by S. Brownover, Mar. I690, of a paper by Newton entitled 'A Demonstration that the Planets by their gravity towards the Sun may move in Ellipses', pr. in King, pp. 21o-i6; 44 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS dd (fol. o15) 'Exerpta [sic] ex libris Pontif[icum] Linteis', pr. in Dodwell (H.), Praelectiones academicae in schola historices Camdeniana (I692), pp. 665-7, 690-2; ee (fol. 107) an account of 'P's Dream May [i6]93'; ff(fol. I Io) copies by S. Brownover of two letters of James Garden to John Aubrey, 2 Jan. and 4 May 694, on the subject of second sight. The originals are in MS. Aubrey 2, fols. 129-30, 132-3, pr. in Aubrey (J.), Miscellanies (1696), pp. 151-77; gg (fol. 126) two plans of houses, the first endorsed by Locke 'Mr. Fletcher [i6]95'; hh (fol. 128) an extract by S. Brownover from Jobson (R.), The golden trade; or, A discovery of the river Gambra (1623), pp. 125-9, endorsed by Locke 'Air [i6]96'; ii (fol. 132) an extract [by Abraham Hill] from Valla (L.), De linguae Latinae elegantia, endorsed by Locke 'Persona [i6]97'; jj (fol. 134) a list of the sizes and prices of lookingglasses made in Paris and Venice, 1698; kk (fol. 136) a note about the tarantula in the hand of S. Brownover; /1 (fol. 137) 'Horatii Scripta secundum ordinem temporis', a few notes by Locke, n.d.; mm (fol. 139) 'Ciceronis Scripta secundum ordinem temporis digesta', lists compiled by Locke, n.d.; nn (fol. 151) copies of inscriptions on the bridge at Lyons, 1675, from two churches in France and Geneva by John Ledgerd, 1679 (fol. 152), and from 'one of the old gates of Smyrna given me by Dr. Covel' (fol. I 53); oo (fol. 154) a recipe in French for marcasite powder and other chemical notes; pp (fol. 60) lists in French of various kinds of fruits and seeds, 1677-95, including 'A catalogue of ye grapes yt grow in or about Montpellier', 1679, inscribed by Locke 'Dr Magnol' (fol. 66), 'Magnol. List of seeds he desired. [i6]79/8o' (fol. I67), 'A noate of such fruite trees I desire Mr. Locke to gett me from France this yeare', signed by Lord Shaftesbury, Aug. i 680 (fol. i68), and 'Fruit trees at the Earle of Pembroke's at Wilton [i6]95' (fol. 171); qq (fol. 173) grammatical exercises in French in the hand of M. Pasty with Locke's notes in Latin, i676, cf. Locke's travels in France, i675-i679, ed. J. Lough (1953), p. 17, n. 5, in Italian, i677 (fol. I76), and in Dutch, 1683(fol. I78), by Locke, and a list of rules for Latin syntax, 1694 (fol. i 8); rr(fol. i82) lists of weights and measures in various hands, including two endorsed by Locke 'Mr L'Abbe Picar Mar. [i6]79' (fol. i86) and 'Dr Paul 13 Aug. [i6]8o' (fol. i87). 193 leaves. MS. Locke c. 32. A collection of poems: a (fol. i) 'His Graces most excellent Rodomontadoes sent by his servant, the Ld Grymes, to the Lower house of Parliament', pr. in Poems and songs relating to George Villiers, duke of Buckingham, ed. F. W. Fairholt (I850), pp. 28-31; b (fol. 3) 'An Elegie Uppon the most victorius Kinge of Sweden Gustavus Adolphus', by Henry King, pr. in The Swedish intelligencer, part 3 (I633); c (fol. 5) a poem beg. 'Power is soe jealous and soe unsecure'; d (fol. 7) a poem beg. 'Hee's a stately thing'; e (fol. 8) drafts by Locke [c. I 652] of two letters in Latin [? to Alexander Popham] asking for his favour and assistance, followed in both cases by verses in Latin beg. 'Unda obruisset Xanthus' and 'Numinibus faciunt populi sua vota benignis' and endorsed 'Electio'; f (fol. x ) draft by Locke [c. 1659] of a poem beg. 'Now our Athenian olive spreads', endorsed 'Verses to A[lexander] P[opham]'; g (fol. i I) 'Chanson', beg. 'A Dieu Ceintures et Scapulaire', endorsed by Locke 'Verses on the popes bull [i 6]78'; h (fol. 12) 'Upon Nothing' [by John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester], 1679, pr. in Rome rhym'd to death (i 683), pp. 126-7; i (fol. I 3) an epigram in Latin beg. 'Fama est ignaro quondam Iove munera multa', 1679; j (fol. 14) a poem in Latin beg. 'Amantis Appellatio ad Feles' with an English version, 1679; k (fol. 5) MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS 45 a poem beg. 'Who knows but wt we call to live' [? by Lady Masham], in the hand of S. Brownover, 1682; 1 (fol. 17) two poems, 1682, [? by Lady Masham], the first beg. 'When deaths cold hand shall close my eyes', the second, entitled 'Upon the former and present state of the Soule', beg. 'Thou whom ye Morning stars for Joys did sing', both in the hand of S. Brownover, except the first eight lines of the first poem, the title of the second, and a few corrections, which are in Locke's hand; m (fol. I9) 'On Damons Loveing of Clora' by Lady Masham, beg. 'Say wherefore is't that Damon flys', followed by a copy in the hand of S. Brownover and (fol. 2 ) a poem in reply by Locke, in his hand, 1683, beg. 'But this disdain could not yet move'; n (fol. 22) two poems in Greek by Matthew Slade in honour of Thomas Sydenham, the first with a version in Latin, endorsed by Locke 'Dr. Sladus [i6]85'; o (fol. 24) two poems, the second in Locke's hand, beg. 'O Bright Diana spotless Faire' and 'Man and wife are one', i689; p (fol. 26) three copies, I689, one in Locke's and two in S. Brownover's hand, of 'Portrait de Clarice' by Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle, pr. in cEuvres diverses de m. de Fontenelle, (I728-9), ii. 262-3; q (fol. 29) a poem in French, I693, beg. 'Or d'arquemie tant empraignens'; r (fol. 31) 'The Clubb', I694, pr. under the title 'The Pensioners' in Poems on affairs of state, vol. iii ( 704), pp. 330-3, except five verses on fol. 33; s (fol. 34) 'Stroullers Prologue', beg. 'In Early days, ere Prologues did begin', 1695; t (fol. 36) 'The taking of Namure. Lt Generall Rumney', 1695, beg. 'Now had the Sunn Sunk Down to's Liquid bed'; u (fol. 38) a poem in Latin beg. 'Ambiguo genitore satus, ClimeneYus Heros', endorsed 'Grassemare [I6]95'; v (fol. 40) a Latin couplet with a French translation and a poem in Latin beg. 'Quis furor humanum stimulat genus?'; w (fol. 41) a poem beg. 'A Dean and Prebendary', alluding to William Sherlock, Robert South, and Thomas Burnet, master of the charterhouse, 1698; x (fol. 43) 'A letter from J. D. [sic] to Coll" Heveningham occasion'd by ye Colls two last Lettrs', 1698, pr. in Poems on afairs of state, vol. ii (I 703), pp. 255-7; y (fol. 44) 'The History and fall of the Conformity Bill' [by Arthur Mainwaring], 1704, pr. in Poems on affairs of state, vol. iii (I 704), pp. 425-31. Cf. Oldmixon (J.), The life andposthumous works of Arthur Maynwaring (I 715), pp. 40-1; z (fol. 47) a poem in Latin to Anne Conway, Viscountess Conway, beg. 'Juste Pater, quem cuncta timent, qui sola Dolorum', followed by 'Cantio sacra A[dam] B[oreel] e carmine Belgico oratione soluta in latinitatem traducta', beg. 'O Lux (vere) coelestis'; aa (fol. 48) a poem in French in a childish hand, beg. 'Gardez mes moutons', with another version of some lines in Locke's hand; bb (fol. 49) a poem in Latin beg. 'Vos mihi Sicelides, si sint praeclara canenda' by 'Rudolphus Smithus discipulus divi Johannis evangelistae, 3io Calend. Maii'. 50 leaves. MS. Locke d. 8. A pasquinade in verse, entitled 'Pasquino Apostata', beg. 'Benche sia brutto, e puzzi alquanto il titolo'. It is in three parts, of which the second is entitled 'Viaggio al Cielo della Luna' (fol. 8), and the third 'La Nave in Porto' (fol. 20), and, from allusions to Clement XI and Innocent XIII on fols. 22z-23, was apparently written about the time of the election of Pope Benedict XIII in I724. The manuscript was presumably added to Locke's papers by Peter King. i+25 leaves. 46 JOHN LOCKE'S PAPERS XI. PAPERS OF PETER KING MS. Locke e. 5. A diary of proceedings in the house of commons, 25 Apr. 1660 to 28 Mar. i68I, compiled by Peter King, mainly in shorthand. i+I67 leaves. MSS. Locke f. 35-46; e. 12-16. Seventeen law reporter's notebooks containing notes in shorthand by Peter King on cases chiefly in the court of Queen's (then King's) Bench, 1702-23. f. 35. 1702. f. 36. 1703-4. f. 37. 1704-5. f 38. I705-6. f. 39. 706. f. 40. 706-8. f. 4. 1709. f.42. 1709-13. f.43. 1710-I. f. 44 1711-12. f. 45. 1712-13. e. 12. 1714-15. e. 13. I7I7. e. 14. 1717-19. e. 15. 1719. e. i6. 1720. f. 46. 1723. ii +I 78 pages. ii +278 pages. iv+278 pages. ii +308 pages. ii + 304 pages. ii +302 pages. ii +302 pages. ii + 246 pages (pp. iii +302 pages. iv +292 pages. ii + 42 pages. ii + I80 pages. ii + 190 pages. ii +354 pages. ii +250 pages. ii +250 pages. iv+ 224 pages. 5 -end blank). All except two (f. 42, 44) have an index of cases. MS. Locke c. 38. Papers of Peter King, including: a (fol. I, &c.) letters to him, 1705-32. Among the writers are Sir Francis Drake (fol. 3), William Fortescue (fol. 29), Walter Moyle (fol. 14), Sir Richard Onslow, later i st Baron (fol. I), Thomas Parker, ist Earl of Macclesfield (fol. I8), Charles Paulet, 3rd Duke of Bolton (fol. 3i), Richard Seys (fol. io), Richard Verney, later I3th Baron Willoughby de Broke (fol. 21), Sir Robert Walpole (fol. 33), and Thomas Wyndham, later ist Baron (fol. 27); b (fol. 9) an account with Sir Richard Hoare, 171; c (fol. I6) a report by King on persons convicted of high treason before him and others, 1716; d (fol. 38) 'Mr [Hilkiah] B[edford']s Defence against the Information' charging him with the authorship of a 'false, scandalous and seditious Libel' entitled The hereditary right of the crown of England asserted (I 7 3); e (fol. 5 ) two corrected proof sheets of pp. 5 and 8 of The report of the committee appointed to enquire into the frauds and abuses PAPERS OF PETER KING 47 committed in the victualling her majesty's navy: with the resolutions and orders of the house of commons thereupon (I710); f(fol. 53) letters to Peter King, 7th Baron, 1829, including one from Charles Mansfield Clarke (fol. 53) and one from Sir Cuthbert Sharp (fol. 57). 62 leaves. XII. APPENDIX MS. Locke c. 39. A guardbook containing: a (fol. I) a copy of letters between Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland, and John Fell, Bishop of Oxford, relating to John Locke's expulsion from Christ Church, 1684, pr. in King, pp. I49-52. Given by A. M. Muirhead, 1951; b (fol. 3) typewritten copies of a note by Locke for the constitution of Carolina and (fol. 4) of a letter of Sir Paul Neile to Locke, 22 Feb. 68. Given by T. P. R. Laslett, I952; c (fol. 5) notes by Locke, 1669, on A discourse of ecclesiasticalpolitie [by Samuel Parker] (i 670). Lot 265 in Sotheby's sale, 15 Mar. I954; d (fol. Ii) two letters of Locke to William Godolphin, I665, 666, of which drafts are in MS. Locke c. 24, fols. 25 Iv, 254'. Lot 709 in Sotheby's sale, i I Dec. 1957, purchased with the aid of a contribution from Dr. E. S. de Beer; e (fol. 5) letter of Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury, to Locke, 23 May 1702. Lot 720 in Sotheby's sale, i I Dec. 1957. Acquired at various dates, 195I-7. I INDEX The numbers refer to pages of the catalogue A. (E.). Letter to, from Locke, I9. Abdalla Ebn Abbas. Questions of Abdalla Ebn Salam and answers of Mahomet, 27. Ablancourt see Fremont d'Ablancourt. AcadEmie franxaise. Speech by P. Pellisson at, 43. Addison (Leonard). Letters to Locke, I4. Aglionby (William). Letter to Locke, 3. Aikenhead (Thomas). Papers rel. to proceedings against, 42. Aleaume (Jacques). Letter to Locke, 3. Alford (Lady Anne). Letters to Locke, 3. Alford (J ). Letter to Locke, 3. Allestree (William). Description of picture illustr. lives and manners of Laplanders, 43. Allestry (James). Letter to S. Tilly, 3. America. Report on plantations, 40. Anderson (George). Letters to Locke, 3. Anglesey (Ist Earl of) see Annesley (Arthur). Annesley (Arthur) ist Earl of Anglesey. Letter to Charles II, 42. Apocalypse misc. Table by I. Newton illustr. fulfilment of prophecy, 28. Apocrypha. Notes on, by T. Greaves, 33. Aranda (Benjamin d'). Letter to Locke, 3. Aranda (Paul d'). Instrument of arbitration made in Holland, 39. - Letters to Locke, 3, 39. -Letters to, from B. Furly, 3, 8-9; from J. Spademan, 9. Athlone (Ist Earl of) see Ginkel (Godert de). Atkins (Francis). Letters to Locke, 3. Atterbury (Francis) Bp. of Rochester. Letter to C. Codrington, 4. Aubert (? Pierre). Letters to Locke, 4. Aubrey (John). Letter to Locke, 4. - Letters to, from J. Garden, 44. Avaux (D'). Endorsement, 28. B. (A.). See Boreel (Adam). B. (E.). Letter to, from Locke, I9. B. (J.). Letter to Locke, 4. Bacon (Francis) Visct. St. Albans. Extracts from Sylva sylvarum, 37. Badgeworth Somerset. Deeds rel. to property at, 3. Bagshaw (Edward) the younger. Locke's treatise in answer to The great question concerning things indifferent in religious worship (I660), 30. Bainbridge (John). Calculus eclipsis lunaris, 43. Bank of England. Speech and dialogues by Locke concerning, 34. Banks (Caleb). Account with Locke, 23. - Letter to, I9. - List of his books, 24. Banks (Sir John). Letters to Locke, 4. - Letters to, from Locke, I9. - List of Locke's books left with, 24. Barber (John). Directions for raising ewe, 4 -Barbeyrac (Jean de). Letters to Locke, 4. Barker (W ). Letters to Locke, 4. Barnard (Henry). Letters to Locke, 4. Barnes (Joseph). Letters to Locke, 4. Baron (John). Letter to Locke, 4. Barrington (John Shute) rst Visct. Letters to Locke, i6. Bassett (Thomas). Agreement for publication of An essay concerning humane understanding (I690), 23; for publication of second edition (I694), 23. - Letter to Locke, 4. Bathurst (John). Method of curing scurvy, 36. - Prescription, 36. Bayley (Philip). Letter to G. Stead on linen manufacture, 39. Beavis (Anne). Letter to Locke, 4. Bedel (E ). Letters to Locke, 4. Bedford (Hilkiah). Defence against charge of authorship of The hereditary right of the crown of England asserted (1713), 46. Beke (Richard). Letters to Locke signed by, I0. Bellay ( ). Medical report on Mrs. Grenville, 4. Bellomont (ist Earl of) see Coote (Richard). Belluton Somerset. Deeds rel. to property at, 3. - Papers rel. to property in, 23. Benson (Samuel). Letters to Locke, 4. B 7008 H 50 INDEX Bentley (Richard). Criticism of Of revelation and the Messias (I696), 28. Berelisa pseud. Letter to Locke, 7. Beresford (Alexander). Letters to Locke, 4. - Paper on doctrine of the Trinity, 4. Berkeley (Sir Charles). Letters to Locke, 4. - Letter to, from Lord Berkeley, 4. Berkeley (Elizabeth) see Burnet. Berkeley (George) ist Earl. Letter to Sir C. Berkeley, 4; to Locke, 4. Bernard (Edward). Letters to Locke, 4. - Letter to, from J. Tyrrell, 4. Bible misc. References and quotations by Locke, 28. - Scheme for concordance by N. Toinard, 27. - See also under separate books. Blair (James). Letters to Locke, 4. Blechenden ( ). Medical case of, 37. Blomer (M ). Letter to Locke, 4. Boerius (Nicolaus). Extract from Praeclarus et elegans tractatus de seditiosis omnibus, 27. Bold (Samuel). Letters: to A. Churchill, 4; to Locke, 4. - Notes by Locke rel. to Some considerations on the principal objections and arguments which have been published against mr. Lock's Essay of humane understanding (I699), 28. -Remarks on Edwards (J.), A brief vindication of the fundamental articles of the Christian faith (I697), 28. Bolton (3rd Duke of) see Paulet (Charles). Bonville (John). Letters to Locke, 4. - Letter to, from R. Pawling, 4. Boreel (Adam). Poem, 45. Botany. Notes on botanists, 43. Boulton (Richard). Letters to Locke, 4. Bowles (Joseph). Letter to B. Furly, 5. Boyle (Robert). Agreement rel. to copyright of The general history of the air (1692), 23. - Contents of New experiments and observations touching cold (1683), 43. - General history of the air, 38. - Letter to Locke, 5. - Notes by Locke derived from, 38. - Notes by Locke on a treatise by, 27. Brewster (Sir Francis). Scheme for promotion of linen manufacture in Ireland, 39. Bridges (B ). Accounts with Locke, 23. - Letters to Locke, 5. Bridges (Sir Thomas). Letter to Locke, 5. Brisbane (John). List of Locke's books left with, 24. Brockman (W ). Letters to Locke, 5. Brouchier (Claude). Letter to Locke with prescription, 5. - Medical report on Mrs. Grenville, 9. Brown (Andrew). Letter to J. Hutton, 5; to Locke, 5. - Notice of, 5. Brownover (M ). Letters to Locke, 5. Brownover (Sylvester). Account books, 24. - Accounts with Locke, 23. - Letters to Locke, 5. - Letter to, from J. Wheelock, 19. Brunier (M E ). Letter to Locke, 5. Buckingham (Edward). Expenses for a monument by, 2. Burges (Mary). Letter to Locke, 5. Burnet (Elizabeth). Letters to Locke, 4. Burnet (Thomas) master of the charterhouse. Poem alluding to, 45. Burnett (Thomas) of Kemney. Letters: to Locke, 5; to M. Lockhart, 5. -Letter to, from D. E. Jablonsky, ii. Burridge (Ezekiel). Letters to Locke, 5. Bury (Arthur). Letter to Locke, 5. C. M. Letter to, from Locke, i9. Calverley (Lady Mary). Letters to Locke, 5. Capel (Arthur) Earl of Essex. Depositions rel. to murder of, 42. Carolina. Commission of N. Trott as chief justice in, 40. -Extracts by Locke from letters of J. Stewart concerning, 39. - Locke's patent for a landgrave of, 3. - Minutes by Locke of meetings of lords proprietors, 38. - Note by Locke for constitution of, 47. Carr (William). Letters to Locke, 5. - Letters to, from Locke, I9. Cary (John). Letters to Locke, 5. Cary (Lucius) 2nd Visct. Falkland. Letter to, from S. Godolphin, 9. Chaloner (Edmund). Letters to Locke signed by, Io. Chamberlen (Hugh) the elder. Proposals for financial scheme, 34. Champante (John). Warrant granting him office for life as clerk of the bonds, 4I. Charas (Moise). Letter to, from J. Selapris, I6. INDEX SI Charles II K. of Engl. Letter to Sir G. Downing, 4I. - Letter to, from Earl of Anglesey, 42. Charleton (William). Letters: to Locke, 5; to J. Richards, 5. - Lists of goods sent to Locke, 2. Cheney (Oliver). Letters to Locke, 5. Cheswell (Charles). Letters to Locke, 5. Chetwood (Knightly). Letter to Locke, 5. China. Notes by Locke on religion and government, 28. - Papers in controversy between Jesuits and other missionaries, 28. Christian V K. of Denmark. Address to him, 32. Christianity. Christianae Religionis Synopsis, by Locke, 28. Christina Q. of Sweden. Letter to, from N. Heinsius, 43. Chronology. Lists of Hebrew chronol., 27, 28. Church of England. List of Catholic doctrines to be renounced, 27. Churchill (Awnsham). Accounts with Locke, 23. -Agreements rel. to copyright of Some considerations of the consequences of the lowering of interest, and raising the value of money (1692), 23; to further editions of Some thoughts concerning education (1693), 23; to copyright of Boyle (R.), The general history of the air (1692), 23; to publication of The reasonableness of Christianity (1695), 23-24; to further editions of An essay concerning humane understanding, 24. - Letters to Locke, 5, 14. -Letters to, from S. Bold, 4; from C. Hatton, Io. Churchill (John). Letters to Locke, 5. - Letter to, I9; from Locke, 19. -See also Churchill (Awnsham). Cicero (Marcus Tullius). Notes on, by Locke, 44. Clarke (Charles Mansfield). Letter to 7th Lord King, 47. Clarke (Edward). Accounts with Locke, 23. -Letters: to Locke, 5, 8, 28; to Sir T. Willis, 22. - Letters to, from J. Clarke, 23; from M. Clarke, 6; from Locke, I6; from C. Lyde, 13; from Lady Masham, I4; from R. Pawling, I4; from R. Smithsby, 2; from W. Stratton, 16; from T. Stringer, I6; from G. Trent, I8. Clarke (Edward). Recipes written by, 37. Clarke (Elizabeth). Letters to Locke, 6. Clarke (John). Letter to E. Clarke, 23. Clarke (Mary). Letters: to E. Clarke, 6; to Locke, 6. Clarke (Richard). Letter to Locke, 6; to Lady Masham, I4. Clarke (Samuel). Letters to Locke, 6. Clarke (William). Letter to Locke with paper by him, 6. Cockshall (John). Letter to Locke, 6. Codrington (Christopher). Letter to, from F. Atterbury, 4. Coinage. Account of gold and silver money coined, I659-95, 34. - Extracts of the grant for making copper farthings and halfpence, 34. - Letters on, by H. Haynes, S. Locke, and Sir I. Newton, 35. - Notes by Locke on value and price of guineas, 35. - Papers against raising the denomination of, 34. - Papers on the recoinage, 34. -Table of weights of guineas and milled money by Locke, 34. - Tables of values and weights of foreign silver coins, 35. Cole (William). Letters to Locke, 6. Colleton (Sir Peter). Letters to Locke, 6. Collins (Anthony). Account with Locke, 23. - Catalogue of books bequeathed by Locke to F. C. Masham, 27. -Letters to Locke, 6. Collins (John). Paper on trade, 39. -Paper rel. to Royal fishery company, 39 -Commissioners for accounts. Notes on report of, 41. Commissioners of appeals. Letters: to Locke, 10; to Locke from C. Tilson, 17. -Letters to, from Locke, 10, 22; to C. Tilson from Locke, 17. Commissioners of excise. Lists of salaries paid to, 41. Commissioners of the treasury. Representation on the price of guineas, 34. Company of mineral and battery works. Grant to Locke of share in, 3. - Papers rel. to, 39. Connecticut. Notes on Duke of Hamilton's claim to lands in, 39. Conway (Anne) Viscountess. Poem to, 45. 52 INDEX Conyers (J ). Letters to Locke, 6. Cookery. Recipes, 2. Cooper (Anthony Ashley) Ist Earl of Shaftesbury. Letters to Locke, 6. - Letter to, from W. Fuller, 8. - List of fruit trees desired by, 44. - Memoirs by Locke, 42. - Passages referring to, suppressed from Memoirs of E. Ludlow (i698-9), 41. - Precedents for issuing writs for election of members of parliament during prorogation, 41. Cooper (Anthony Ashley) 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury. Letters to Locke, 6, 47. - List of books, 6. — Receipt for money paid by Locke for lease of property at Kingston, 17. Cooper (Margaret) Countess of Shaftesbury. Letter to Locke, 6. Coote (Richard) ist Earl of Bellomont. Letters: to council of trade, 6; to Locke, 6. - Letter to, from B. Furly, 8. Corinthians, epist. to, see Epistles. Coste (Pierre). Letters to Locke, 7. - List of Locke's books borrowed by, 25. Council of trade and plantations. Letter to the lords justices, 35. -Letters to, from Earl of Bellomont, 6; from J. Vernon, 39. - Locke's account roll as sec., 3. - Memorial to, by Royal lustring co., 39. - Minutes, 40. - Receipt, 17. -Report on American plantations submitted to, 40. - Report on Darien, 40. - Report to house of commons, 40. - Representation rel. to designs of East India co. of Scotland upon Darien, 39. - Representation to treasury concerning taxes of officers of, 40. Courten (William) see Charleton. Covel (John). Copy of inscription, 44. - Letters: to Locke, 7; to Lady Masham, 7. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. Cox (Richard). Letter to Locke, 7. Cox (Thomas). Letters to Locke, 7. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. Cramphorne (John). Letters to Locke, 7. Cramphome (Joseph). Letter to Locke, 7. Crispe (Sir Nicholas). Declaration by house of lords and commons' answer rel. to case against T. Dalmahoy, 41. Crosse (Robert). Letter to Locke, 7. Crosse (Wa ). Letter to Locke, 7. Crouch (William). Letter to, from R. Dimsdale, 7. Cudworth (Charles). Letter to, from Locke, 20. Cudworth (Damaris) see Masham (Lady Damaris). Cunningham (Alexander) r655?-I73o. Letter to Locke, 7. D. (E.). Letter to Locke, 13. Dalmahoy (Thomas). Declaration of house of lords and commons' answer rel. to case of Sir N. Crispe against, 41. Daniel, bk. of. Note on Dan. vii. 13 by I. Newton, 32. D'Aranda see Aranda. Dare (Ellen). Letter to Locke, 7. Darien. Letter from A. Shields about second expedition to, 40. - Memorial by W. T. on, 40. - Notes by Locke on, 39, 40. - Report on, by council of trade, 40. - Representation rel. to designs of East India co. of Scotland upon, 39. Davys (Thomas). Letters to Locke, 7. Day (Thomas) the elder. Letter to Locke, 7. Day (Thomas) the younger. Letters to Locke, 7 -De Barbeyrac see Barbeyrac. De Grassemare see Grassemare. Denmark. Notes by Locke on trade in, 39. Derbie (John). Letters to Locke, 7. Descartes (Rene). His proof of a god from the idea of necessary existence examined, 29. Dickinson (Edmund). Letter to Locke, 7. - Letter to, from Locke, 7. - Medical report on Mrs. Grenville, 9; on Countess of Northumberland, 13. Dimsdale (Robert). Letter to W. Crouch, 7. Dod (John). Letter to Locke, 7. Dodart (Denis). Letter to 0. Roemer, 7. Dodington (George). Letters to Locke signed by, Io. Dolben (John) Abp. of York. Letter to Locke, 7. Douglas (Robina) Countess of Forfar. Letter to, from Locke, 20. Douglas (William) 3rd Duke of Hamilton. Notes on his claim to lands in Connecticut, 39. INDEX 53 Downing (Sir George). Letter to, from Charles II, 4I. Drabicius (Nicolaus). Letter about, 42. Drake (Sir Francis). Letter to P. King, 46. Dry Club. Rules, 2. Du Bos (Jean Baptiste). Letters to Locke, 7. - Lists of books sent to and received from Locke, 25. Dudley (Edmund). Petition of, 42. Duillier (N de Fatio) see Fatio de Duillier. Duke (Isabella). Letters to Locke, 7, I9. Duke (Richard). Letters to Locke, 7, I9. Dummer (Thomas). Letter to Locke, 7. Dutch language. Grammatical exercises by Locke, 44. E. B. Letter to, from Locke, 20. East India co. List of ships in service of, 40. - Petition to parliament, 39. - Proposal to parliament, 39. -Proposals for agreement between the two East India companies, 40. - Purwana granting liberty of trade, 12. East India co. of Scotland. Proposals for agreement between the two East India companies, 40. - Representation rel. to their designs upon Darien, 39. Edwards (John). Remarks by S. Bold on A brief vindication of the fundamental articles of the Christian faith (I697), 28. Edwards (Sarah). Letter to, from Locke, 20. Elia pseud. Letter to Locke, 7. Elphinstone (Lady Isobella). Letter to Locke, 7. Elys (Edmund). Letter to Locke, 7. Epistles Pauline. Draft of An Essay for the understanding of St. Paul's epistles (I707), 28. Locke's paraphrases and notes on the epistles of St. Paul, 32-33. - Corinthians i. Notes on I Cor. xv. 17-24 by Locke, 28. - - Preface to, by D. Whitby, 33. - Romans. Sermon on Rom. viii. 29, 30 by W. King, 33. - Thessalonians i. Notes on I Thess. v. 23 by Locke, 28. Essex (Earl of) see Capel (Arthur). Evance (Sir Stephen). Accounts with Locke, 23. -Letters to Locke, 8. Evance (Sir Stephen). Letter to, from Locke, 20. Evelegh (Anne). Letters to Locke, 8. - Letter perhaps to, from Locke, 20. Eyre (Lady Martha). Letters to Locke, 8. Eyre (Sir Robert). Letters to Locke, 8. Eyre (Sir Samuel). Letter to Locke, 8. Falkland (2nd Visct.) see Cary (Lucius). Fatio de Duillier (N ). Letters to Locke, 8. Fell (John) Bp. of Oxford. Corresp. with Earl of Sunderland, 47. - Letters to Locke, 8. Fenwick (Sir John). Letter giving account of Earl of Monmouth's implication in trial of, 21. Firmin (Thomas). Letters to Locke, 8. Firth (John). Letter to H. Lukin, 8. Fletcher ( ). Endorsement, 44. Fletcher (Andrew). Account of Mrs. M. Fletcher's case, 8. - Letters to Locke, 8. Fletcher (Henry). Letter to Locke, 8. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. - Reports on his wife's and his own health, 8. Fletcher (Margaret). Directions from Locke for her pregnancy, 37. - Reports on her health, 8. Flower (Henry). Letter to Locke, 8. Fontenelle (Bernard le Bovier de) see Le Bovier de Fontenelle. Ford (Simon). Letter to J. Wallis, 43. - Letters to, from J. Wallis, 43. Forfar (Countess of) see Douglas (Robina). Fortescue (William). Letter to P. King, 46. Fowler (Edward) Bp. of Gloucester. Letters to Locke, 8. - Letters to, from Locke, 20; from Lady Masham, I4; from J. Willys, I4. -Paper on the gospel narratives of the Resurrection, 28. Foxe (Richard) Bp. of Winchester. Extracts rel. to, 42. France navy. Table of wages of officers and men, 42. Freke (John). Copy of a bill for regulating printing, 42. - Letters to Locke, 6, 8, I9. - Letter perhaps to, from Locke, 20. - Paper on money, 34. Freke (John) milliner. Letters to Locke, 8. Freke (Thomas). Letter to Locke, 8. 54 INDEX Fr6mont d'Ablancourt (Jean Jacobe de). Letter to H. Justel, II, 43. French language. Grammatical exercises, 44. Fromentin ( ). Note to Locke, I8. Fuller (Thomas). Notes by T. Greaves on The church-history of Britain (1655), 33. Fuller (William) Bp. of Lincoln. Letter to ist Earl of Shaftesbury, 8. Furly (Arent). Letters to Locke, 8. - Letter to, from B. Furly, 8. Furly (Benjamin). Account of Dutch money, 35. - Extract from letter, 9. — Letters: to Earl of Bellomont, 8; to P. d'Aranda, 3, 8-9; to A. Furly, 8; to P. Guenellon, 8; to Locke, 8, 34. - Letters to, 8; from J. Bowles, 5; from Locke, 20. Furly (Benjohan). Letters to Locke, 9. Galway. Terms of surrender granted to, 42. Garden (James). Letters to J. Aubrey, 44. Gardening. Lists of fruits and seeds, 44. Garland, H.M.S. Reports on captain's conduct, I5. Gastrell (Francis) Bp. of Chester. Letters to Locke, 9. Gedeon (Rodolphe). Account of dimensions of Royal Louis, 42. Geekie (Alexander). Letters to Locke, 9. Gendron (Claude Deshayes). Letters to Locke, 9. Gendron (Francois). Letters: to Locke, 9, I8; to N. Toinard, 9. George (Richard). Letter to Locke, 9. Gerrard (Johannes). Letters to Locke, 9. Ginkel (Godert de) ist Earl of Athlone. Terms of surrender granted to Galway, 42. Glanville (William). Letter to Locke, 9. Godolphin (Sidney). Letter to L. Cary, 9. Godolphin (Sir William). Letters to Locke, 9. - Letters to, from Locke, 20, 47. Goldsmith (John). An almanack for I674, 23. Goodall (Charles) the elder. Inventories of Locke's goods left with, 2. - Letters to Locke, 9. Gospels misc. Paper on gospel narratives of the Resurrection by E. Fowler, 28. Graevius (Johann Georg). Letters to Locke, 9. Grainge (Jonas). Conveyance rel. to estate of, 8. Grassemare. Endorsement, 45. Grassemare ( de). Letter to Locke, 9. Gray (John). Letter to Locke, 9. Greaves (John). Questions of Abdalla Ebn Salam, tr. into English by, 27. Greaves (Thomas). Account of meeting with J. Ussher, 27. - Notes on Fuller (T.), The church-history of Britain (I655), 33. - Notes on Old Testament and Apocrypha, 32. Greek language. Notes on dialects and etymology, 40. Greenhill (Henry). Letter to Locke, 9. Greenwich hosp. List of committee, 4. - List of names of commissioners of, 42. Grenfield (Thomas). Letters to Locke, 9. Grenville (Anne). Medical reports on, 4, 9, I0. Grenville (Denis). Letters to Locke, 9. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. - Papers on recreation, business, study, conversation, and devotion, 9. Greve (Alb de). Letter to Locke, 9. Griffith (Robert). Letter to Locke, 9. Grigg (Anna). Letters to Locke, 9. Grigg (William). Letters to Locke, 9. Guenellon (Cornelia Maria). Letters to Locke, 9. Guenellon (Pieter). Letters to Locke, 9, Io. -Letters to, from B. Furly, 8; from P. Percivall, 15. Guide (Philippe). Letters to Locke, Io. Guise (Lady Elizabeth). Letters to Locke, Io. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. Hackett (Laurence). Letter to Locke, I0. Hackett (Sir Robert). Evisceration of, 37. Hakluyt (Richard). Excerpts by Locke from The principall navigations (1589), 39. Halifax (Ist Earl of) see Montagu (Charles). Hamilton (James). Letters to Locke, Io. Hammond (Robert). Letter to Locke, o0. Harborne (Thomas). Letter to Locke, Io. Harcourt (P ). Letter to Locke, I0. Hardy (John). Letter to Locke, Io. Harley (Robert) Ist Earl of Oxford. Letter to Locke, I0. Hartwell (Henry). Queries to be put to, 39. Hatrell (K ). Letters to Locke, Io. Hatton (C ). Letter to Awnsham Churchill, Io. Haversham (ist Baron) see Thompson (John). IND Hawkshaw (Benjamin). Letters to Locke, 1O. Hawkshaw (Elinor). Letters to Locke, Io. Haynes (Hopton). Letter rel. to coinage, 35. Hazard (Roger). Letter to Locke, Io. Heane (James). Letter to Locke, Io. Heathcote (Samuel). Letter to Locke, Io. - Paper on merchants' companies, 40. -Proposals to prevent export of wool, 39. Hebrew language. Lists of words by Locke, 32. Heinsius (Nicolas). Letter to Queen Christina, 43. Helmont (Francis Mercury van). Letter to Locke, Io. -Notes by Locke perhaps referring to Seder olam: or, The order of ages, tr. by J. Clark (I694), 28. - Sketch of machine for polishing precious stones, 43. Henshawe (J ). Letters to Locke, o0. Herbert (Arthur) Earl of Torrington. List of ships under command of, 42. Herbert (Thomas) 8th Earl of Pembroke. Letters to Locke, Io. - Letter to, from J. Vernon, 12. - List of fruit trees at Wilton, 44. -Perpetual almanac, 43. Hermes Trismegistus. Liber turbae philosophorum, 38. - Opera chymica, 38. High Laver Essex. Lists of poor people at, 2. Hildesly (Jo ). Letter to Locke, Io. Hill (Abraham). Extract from Valla (L.), De linguae Latinae elegantia, 44. - Letter to Locke, Io. - Letter from council of trade signed by, 35. Hoare (Sir Richard). Account with P. King, 46. Hodges (James). Letter to Locke, Io. Hodges (Nathaniel). Letters to Locke, Io, I8. Hodges (William). Letters to Locke, Io. Holland. Instrument of arbitration made in, 39. - Extracts from letters of B. Furly on the rate of interest and weight of coins in, 34. - Paper on rate of exchange, 35. Homer. Notes on Greek etymology illustr. by words from, 40. Honywood (Sir William). Letters to Locke, IO. Horatius Flaccus (Quintus). Notes on, by Locke, 44. )EX 55 Horticulture see Gardening. Horutener ( ). Letters of J. Selapris to Locke also signed by, i6. Hoskins (John). Letters to Locke, Io. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. Howland (John). Papers relating to, 41. Hudson (John). Letters to Locke, o0. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. Huguenots. Declaration by Huguenot priests, 28. Hunauld (Pierre). Medical report on Mrs. Grenville, o0. Huntington (Mary). Letters to Locke, o0. Huntington (Robert) Bp. of Raphoe. Letters to Locke, o0. Hutton (John). Letters to Locke, o0. - Letter to, from A. Brown, 5. Indies, East, see East India co. Ink. Account of manufacture by N. Toinard, 43 -Innocent XI Pope. Letter to Louis XIV, 42. Inquisition. Excerpta ex veteri autographo Inquisitionis Tholosanae, 27. Inscriptions. Copies of, 44. Ireland. Account of the Irish, 43. -Bill for encouraging linen manufacture in, 39. - Notes by Locke on Irish trade, 39. - Proclamation granting amnesty to rebels, 42. - Proposal for poll tax of hemp and flax, 39. - Scheme by Sir F. Brewster for promotion of linen manufacture in, 39. Italian language. Grammatical exercises by Locke, 44. Ivie (Ayliffe). Letter, II; to Locke, II. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. J. (M.). Letter to, from Locke, 20. J. (W.). Letter to, from Locke, 20. J. F. Letter to, from Locke, 20. J. O. Letter to, from Locke, 20. Jablonski (Daniel Ernest). Letter to T. Burnett, ii. Jackman (J ). Letter to Locke, II. Jacob (W A ). Letter to Locke, II. Jamaica. Estimate of annual value of trade shipped to England, 40. James (Richard). Extracts rel. to R. Foxe, 42-43. Jeffreys (Sir George). Letter to, 42. Jepp (Elizabeth). Letters to Locke, II, I6. INDEX Jesuits. Papers in controversy with other missionaries in China, 28. Jobson (Richard). Extract from The golden trade (1623), 44. Jocelin (Samuel). Letters to Locke, II. Jocelyn (E ). Letters to Locke, II. John, st., Gospel of. Essay on John i. I-I4, 28. Johnston (James). Letters to Locke, II. Justel (Henri). Letters to Locke, II. - Letter to, from J. J. de Fremont d'Ablancourt, II, 43. -Memoir of places to be visited in Paris with a bibliogr., II. King (Henry) Bp. of Chichester. Poem, 44. King (Peter) ist Baron. Account with Sir R. Hoare, 46. - Accounts, 24. - Accounts with Locke, 23. - Catalogue of books bequeathed by Locke to, 26. -Corrected proof sheets from report of committee on victualling the navy, 46. - Inventory of P. Locke, 2. - Law notebooks, 46. - Letters to Locke, II. - Letters to, 46; from Locke, 22. - List of Hebrew chronol., 28. - List of Locke's legacies, 2. - List of property bequeathed to, 23. - Locke's funeral expenses, 2. - Parliamentary diary, 46. - Report on persons convicted of high treason, 46. King (Peter) 7th Baron. Letters to, 47. King (Richard). Letters to Locke, II. King (William) Abp. of Dublin. Letter to Locke, II. - Observations on Locke's Essay, 29. - Sermon, 33. King's Bench, court of. Notebook by P. King on cases in, 46. - Resignations of and admissions to office, 3. King's evil. Recipes for, 37. Kingston Dorset. Deeds rel. to property at, 3. - Receipt for payment by Locke for lease of property at, I7. Kingwell (Marg ). Letter to Locke, Ii. Kiplin (Timothy) the elder. Letter to Locke, II; to J. Plumpton, II. Kiplin (Timothy) the younger. Testimonial, II. Knorr von Rosenroth (Christian). Notes by Locke on Adumbratio kabbalae Christianae (1684), 27. - Observationes in tractatum J. Locke de intellectu, 12. La Motte ( ). List of books received by Locke from, 25. Lane (Ar ). Letter to Locke, II. Lane (Joseph). Letter to Locke, II. Lansbergen (Philippus van). Calculus eclipsis from his Tabulae motuum coelestium perpetuae (i632), 43. Lapland. Description of picture illustr. lives and manners of Laplanders, 43. Latin language. Rules for syntax, 44. La Treille (R de). Letters to Locke, 11. Law civil, English. Act for hindering the sale of offices, 42. -Extracts by Locke from the Tonnage Act, 34. - Papers rel. to licensing act, 42. Law ecclesiastical. Account of canon law, 43. Layton (Henry). Letter to Locke, II. Le Bovier de Fontenelle (Bernard). Poem, 45. Le Clerc (Jean). Letters to Locke, 7, II. - Letter to, from Locke, 20. - Notes by Locke on Sentimens de quelques theologiens de Hollande sur l'histoire critique du Vieux Testament, par R. Simon (i685), 27. Ledgerd (John). Copies of inscriptions, 44. Lee (Nicolas). Letter to, from Sir P. Ward, 18. Leenhof (Frederik van). Letter to Locke, II. Le Fevre ( ). Letters to Locke, 4, II. Leibnitz (Gottfried Wilhelm von). Letters and papers sent to T. Burnett, 12. - Paper on Locke's Essay, 12. Liddell (Henry). Testimonial for T. Kiplin the younger, II. Liddell (Robert). Letters to Locke, II. Lilbume (Richard). Letter to Locke, II. Limborch (Frans van). Account with Locke, 23. - Letters to Locke, II. Limborch (Philippus a). Letters to Locke, I2. - Letters to, from Locke, 20. Livingston (Robert). Letter to Earl of Monmouth, I2. Lloyd (Evan). Letter to Locke, I2. Lockefamily. Deeds rel. to property, 3. Locke (Agnes). Medical notebook, 36. INDEX 57 Locke (George). Letter to Locke, 12. Locke (John) the elder. Letter, 12. - Letters to Locke, 12. - Letters to, from Locke, 20. - Prescription for, 37. - Will and inventory, i. Locke (John). Entries under this heading are confined to: (x) manuscripts of his works, (2) his correspondence, (3) misc. items which are not to be found in that part of the collection to which by classification (see p. v) they strictly belong. - (i) Draft of An essay concerning humane understanding (169o), 30. - Summary of draft of Essay, 29. - Notes for Essay, 29. - Abstract of Essay, 29. - Additions for Essay, 29, 30. - Drafts of the conduct of the understanding, 29, 30. - Essays on the law of nature, 3,, 32. -Paper entitled 'Of Ethick in general', 29. - Paper entitled 'Thus I thinke', 29. - Preface for treatise on the civil magistrate, 29. - Treatise on the civil magistrate, 30. - Latin treatise on the civil magistrate, 29, 31. - Essay concerning toleration, 29. - Fourth letter for toleration, 33. - Descartes's proof of a god from the idea of necessary existence examined, 29. - Examination of P. Malebranche's opinion of seeing all things in God, 32. -Remarks upon some of Mr. Norris's books, wherein he asserts F.Malebranche's opinion of our seeing all things in God, 32. - Notes and addenda for The reasonableness of Christianity (1695), 28. - Fragm. of draft of Reply to the bishop of Worcester's answer to his second letter (1699), 28. - Draft of An essay for the understanding of st. Paul's epistles by consulting st. Paul himself (1707), 28. - Final drafts of paraphrase and notes on the epistles of St. Paul, 32-33. - Draft of part of treatise on the consequences of lessening interest, 34. - Treatise on the consequences of lessening interest, 35. Locke (John). Final draft of Some considerations of the consequences of the lowering of interest, and raising the value of money (1692), 35. - Draft of parts of Further considerations concerning raising the value of money (1695), 34. - Latin version of his new method of a commonplace-book, 43. - Memoirs rel. to the life of Earl of Shaftesbury, 42. - (2) Letters from, 19. Addressees whose names occur in strict alphabetical order in MS. Locke c. 24 (see p. 19) are not indexed here. - Letters: to E. Clarke, i6; to commissioners of appeals, 10, 22; to E. Dickinson, 7; to W. Godolphin, 47; to P. King, 22; to C. Lyde, 23; to A. Popham, 44; to J. Strachey, i6; to E. Stratton, 23; to W. Stratton, i6; to H. Stubbs, 27; to S. Tilly, I7; to C. Tilson, 17; to G. Towerson, 30; to Sir W. Trumbull, 22; to J. Wynne, 19; to addressees unknown, i6, 22, 28. - Letter from council of trade signed by, 35. - Letters to, 3. Writers whose names occur in strict alphabetical order in MSS. Locke c. 3-23 (see p. 3) are not indexed here. -Letters to, from L. Addison, 14; from P. d'Aranda, 39; from 'Berelisa', 7; from A. Churchill, 14; from J. Churchill, 5; from E. Clarke, 8, 28; from commissioners of appeals, o10; from E. D., 13; from I. Duke, 19; from R. Duke, 7, 19; from J. Freke, 6, I9; from - Fromentin, i8; from B. Furly, 34; from F. Gendron, i8; from P. Guenellon, 9; from N. Hodges, i8; from - Horutener, i6; from E. Jepp, i6; from J. Le Clerc, 7; from - Le Fevre, 4; from J. Mapletoft, 17; from Lady Masham, 14; from J. N., i9; from Sir P. Neile, 47; from 'Scribelia', 7; from 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury, 47; from R. Smithsby, 2; from E. Stratton, 16; from W. Stratton, 13; from J. Stringer, I7; from D. Thomas, 6, Io; from W. Thomas, 17; from N. Toinard, I5; from J. Tyrrell, 19; from 'Tho. Willson', 7; from Sir W. Yonge, 7, 8, i9; from unidentified writers, 19. - (3) Account roll as sec. of council of trade, 3. - Latin orations by, x. B 7008 I S8 INDEX Locke (John). Latin verses by, 44. - Lemmata, 3I. - Letters rel. to his expulsion from Christ Church, 47. - Licence to practise medicine, 3. - List of property bequeathed to P. King and P. Stratton, 23. - Medical commonplace book, 26. - Note for constitution of Carolina, 47. - Notes of accounts and property, quotations, recipes and medical notes, 4I. -Notes on Parker (S.), A discourse of ecclesiastical politie (I670), 47. - Papers rel. to books bought at Utrecht, 8. - Papers rel. to property in Somerset, I6. - Passage in defence of The reasonableness of Christianity (1695), 38. - Petitions by, claiming payment of salary as secretary of council of trade and plantations, 2. - Poems by, 44, 45. -Receipt for money paid for lease of property at Kingston, 17. - Receipt by T. Stringer as his assignee as treasurer of council of trade, 17. -— Receipts from beneficiaries under his will, 26. - Story of a play, 3I. - Verses in Dutch in his hand, I8. Locke (John) son of Samuel Locke. Letters to Locke, 12. - List of ships in service of East India co., 40. Locke (Peter). Inventory, 2. - Letter of attorney, 23. - Letters: to Locke, 13; to T. Stringer, I3. - Letters to, from Locke, 20. Locke (Samuel). Letters to Locke, I3. - Letter rel. to coinage, 35. Locke (Thomas). Letter perhaps to, from Locke, 20. Locke (William). Letters to Locke, I3. Lockhart (James). Letter to Locke, I3. Lockhart (Martha). Letters: to Locke, I3; to Lady Masham, I3. -Letter to, from T. Burnett, 5; from Locke, 2I. Logic. Notes on, 40. London city. Table of temperatures and weather, 36. Lords justices. Letter to, from council of trade, 35. Lords justices. Propositions on money by Locke sent to, 34. - Representation to, from council of trade, 34. Louis XIV K. of France. Agreement with Duke of Monmouth, 4I. - Letter to, from Innocent XI, 42; about N. Drabicius, 42. - Speech addressed to, by P. Pellisson, 43. Lovell (Sir Thomas). Petition to, 42. Lower (Richard). Prescriptions, 36. Lukin (Henry). Letter to, from J. Firth, 8. Lukin (John). Letters to Locke, 13. Lydall (Richard). Medical report on Mrs. Grenville, 9. Lyde (Cornelius). Letter of attorney, 23. - Letters: to E. Clarke, 13; to Locke, 13. - Letters to, from Locke, 23. Lynch (Sir Thomas). Letters to Locke, I3. Lyons. Inscription on bridge at, 44. Lysis pseud. See Hodges (Nathaniel). M. (C.). Letter to, from Locke, 2I. Macclesfield (Ist Earl of) see Parker (Thomas). Maddren Cornwall. Writ and inquisition, 3. Maer (J.). Letters to Locke, 13. Maggs (John). Letter to Locke, 13. - Letter perhaps to, from Locke, 21. Magnol (Pierre). Catalogue of grapes, 44. - Inscription, 43. - List of seeds desired by, 44. Mainwaring (Arthur). Poem, 45. Malebranche (Nicolas). Comments by Locke on De la recherche de la verite (I674-8), 29-30. - Locke's examination of his opinion of seeing all things in God, 32. -Locke's remarks upon some of Mr. Norris's books, wherein he asserts F. Malebranche's opinion of our seeing all things in God, 32. Mandey (Robert). Letters to Locke, I3. Manley (Thomas). Notes by Locke on Usury at six per cent. examined (1669), 34. Manship (Samuel). Agreement rel. to further editions of An essay concerning humane understanding, 24. - Letter to Locke, 13. Mapletoft (John). Letters to Locke, 13, 17. Margas (C ). Letter to S. Peloutier, 13. Martine (? Gabriel). Letter to, from Locke, 21. INDEX 59 Marx (Frideric). Letter to Locke, I3. Masham (Charles). Letter to Locke, I3. Masham (Lady Damaris). Inventory of Locke's possessions at Oates, 2. - Letters: to Locke, I5; to trustees, 14. -Letters to, I9; from R. Clarke, 14; from J. Covel, 7; from Locke, 2I; from M. Lockhart, I3. -List of names of recipients of Locke's works, 2. - Papers rel. to trust, 14, 22. - Poems, 45. Masham (Esther). Letters to Locke, I3. Masham (Sir Francis). Account with Locke, 23. - Letter to Locke, I3. -Letters addressed to, from R. Pawling, 14. Masham (Francis Cudworth). Catalogue of books bequeathed by Locke to, 27. - Letters to Locke, I3. - Quittance of trustees, 3. Mauvillain (Peter). Letter to Locke, I3. - Paper on the pound sterling, 35. Meadows (Sir Philip) the elder. Letter from council of trade signed by, 35. - Paper on money, 34. Meara (Edmund). Letter to Locke, 13. Medicine. Recipes and prescriptions, 36-38, 41. Michell ( ). Letter to, from D. Richards, I5. Micklethwaite (John). Medical report on Countess of Northumberland, 13. Molyneux (Sir Thomas). Letters to Locke, 14. Molyneux (William). Letters to Locke, 14. Money. Comparative values of French, German, and Spanish coins, 34. - Paper on rate of exchange between England and Holland, 35. -Papers on, by J. Freke, 34; by P. Mauvillain, 35; by Sir P. Meadows, 34. - Scheme for raising ~7,000,000, 35. Monmouth (Countess of) see Mordaunt (Carey) Countess of Peterborough. Monmouth (Duke of) see Scott (James). Monmouth (ist Earl of) see Mordaunt (Charles) 3rd Earl of Peterborough. Montagu (Charles) Ist Earl of Halifax. Resolutions in parliament rel. to, 42. Montagu (Elizabeth) Countess of Northumberland. Medical reports on, 13. - Prescription sent to, 37. Mordaunt (Carey) Countess of Peterborough. Letters to Locke, 14. - Letter to, from Locke, 21. Mordaunt (Charles) 3rd Earl of Peterborough. Letters to Locke, I4. - Letter to, from R. Livingston, 12; from Locke, 2I; from Sir P. Pett, I5. - Letter giving account of his implication in trial of Sir J. Fenwick, 2I. Morice (Sir William). Signature on passport, I. Moyle (Walter). Letter to Peter King, 46. Musaeus. Notes on Greek etymology illustr. by words from, 40. N. (J.). Letter to Locke, 19. Navy. List of ships of the channel fleet, 42. Neile (Sir Paul). Letters to Locke, 14, 47. Nelson (J ). Letter to Locke, 14. Nelson (Robert). Letter to Locke, 14. New England. Notes by Locke on, 39. - Notes by Locke on trade in, 39. New Testament misc. Notes on, by Locke, 32. Newman (Samuel). References by N. Toinard to A large and complete concordance to the Bible (1650), 27. Newton (Sir Isaac). Letters to Locke, 14. - Letter to, from Locke, 21. - Letter rel. to coinage, 35. - Note on Dan. vii. 13, 32. - Paper on planets, 43. - Summary by Locke of Philosophiae naturalis principia mathematica (I687), 43. - Table illustr. fulfilment of prophecy, 28. Nicholson (Sir Francis). Letters to Locke, 14. Norris (John). Answer by Locke to Cursory reflections upon a book call'd, An essay concerning human understanding, 2nd ed. (I692), 29. - Letters to Locke, 14. - Letters to, from Locke, 2I. -Locke's remarks upon some of Mr. Norris's books, wherein he asserts F. Malebranche's opinion of our seeing all things in God, 32. Northumberland (Countess of) see Montagu (Elizabeth). Nye (Stephen). Criticism perhaps by him of Bentley (R.), Of revelation and the Messias (I696), 28. - Locke's observations on A discourse of natural and revealed religion in several essays (I691), 28. 6o INDEX 0. (J.). Letter to, from Locke, 21. Offley (Jos ). Letter to Locke, I4. Old (Richard). Letters to Locke, 14. Old Testament misc. Notes on, by T. Greaves, 33; by Locke, 32. -Notes on Greek etymology illustr. by words from, 40. - References to revelation in the Old Testament by Locke, 28. Oldenburg (Henry). R. Boyle's manuscript of The general history of the air (I692) given to, 38. Onslow (Richard) 1st Baron. Letter to P. King, 46. Owen (Sir H ). Letter to Locke, 14. Owen (William). Letter to Locke, 14. Oxenden (Sir James). Letter to Locke, I4. Oxford univ. Locke's licence to practise medicine, 3. Oxford univ., Christ Church. Locke's accounts at, 23. - Locke's petition for reinstatement at, 2. - Notes by Locke on lectures by T. Willis in, 36. Oxford (ist Earl of) see Harley (Robert). P. E. Letters to, from Locke, 2I. Paper. Reason why manufacture in England has not succeeded, 39. Papillon (Thomas). Letter to Locke, 14. Paris. List of sizes and prices of lookingglasses in, 44. - Memoir of places to be visited, with a bibliogr., ii. Parker (Samuel) Bp. of Oxford. Notes by Locke on A discourse of ecclesiastical politie (I670), 47. Parker (Thomas) ist Earl of Macclesfield. Letter to P. King, 46. Parliament. Declaration by house of lords and the commons' answer rel. to case of Sir N. Crispe against T. Dalmahoy, 41. - Resolutions rel. to Earl of Halifax, 42. - house of commons. Petition of East India co. to, 39. - - Precedents for issuing writs for election of members during prorogation, 41. - - Proposal to, by East India co., 39. -- Report to, from council of trade, 40. Parry (John) Bp. of Ossory. Letter to Locke, 14. - Letter to, from Locke, 21. Paschat (John). Letter to Locke, 14. Passebon ( ). Letters to Locke, 14. Pasty ( ). French grammatical exercises, 44. Patrick (John). Letters to Locke, 14. Paul ( ). Endorsement, 44. - Letters to Locke, 14. Paul, St., epistles of, see Epistles. Paulet (Charles) 3rd Duke of Bolton. Letter to P. King, 46. Pawling (Robert). Accounts with Locke, 23. - Copy of letter from Earl of Anglesey to Charles II, 42. - Letters: to J. Bonville, 4; to E. Clarke, 14; to Locke, 14. - Letters addressed to Sir F. Masham, 14. - List of Locke's books left with, 25. Pawling (Thomas). Lists of books exchanged with Locke, 25. Pellisson (Paul). Speech, 43. Peloutier (Simon). Letter to, from C. Margas, 13. Pembroke (8th Earl of) see Herbert (Thomas). Pensford Somerset. Deeds rel. to property at, 3. - Papers rel. to property in, 23. Percivall (Andrew). Letters to Locke, I5. Percivall (George). Letters to Locke, I5. Percivall (Peter). Letter to Pieter Guenellon, I5. Percy (Elizabeth) Countess of Northumberland. See Montagu (Elizabeth). Perrott (Charles). Letter to Locke, I5. Peterborough (Countess of) see Mordaunt (Carey). Peterborough (3rd Earl of) see Mordaunt (Charles). Pett (Sir Peter). Letter to Earl of Monmouth, I5. Petty (Sir William). Account of treatises by, I5. Philochristus pseud. See Proast (Jonas). Philoclea pseud. See Masham (Lady Damaris). Picard (Jean). Account of solar spots, 43. - Endorsement, 44. Pickering (J ). Letter to Locke, 15. Pickering (Robert). Letter to Locke, I5. Pilliod ( ). Letter to Locke, 15. Pirates. Proposal by Locke for amnesty to be granted to, 39. Pitt (Robert). Letters to Locke, 15. Plans. Plans of houses, 44. INDEX 6i Plumpton (John). Letter to, from T. Kiplin the elder, II. Poetry general & misc. Collection made by Locke, 44. Individual poems in MS. Locke c. 32 (see p. 44) are not indexed separately here. Poetry Dutch. Verses on the marriages of J. and E. Veen, I8. - Italian. Pasquino apostata, 45. -See also names of individual poets. Pollexfen (John). Letter from council of trade signed by, 35. Poor Law. Notes on reform, 40. - Scheme of reform by Locke, 39. Popham (Alexander). Letter to, from Locke, 21. - Letters perhaps to, from Locke, 44. - Verses to, 44. Popple (Mary). Letters to Locke, I5. Popple (William) the elder. Copy of letter from J. Vernon to council of trade, 39. - Letters to Locke, I5. - Minutes of council of trade, 40. - Observations on Nye (S.), A discourse of natural and revealed religion in several essays (I691), I5. - Rules of the Dry Club, 2. Popple (William) the younger. Letters to Locke, 15. Portugal. Coinage of, 35. Pound (James). Letter to Locke, I5. Powell (Charles). Letter to Locke, I5. Powys (Sir Littleton). Letter to Locke, 15. - Signature, 2. Prettyman (William). Letter to, from Locke, 21. Price (Ellis). Letter to Locke, I5. Prideaux (Humphrey). Letter to Locke, I5. Proast (Jonas). Letter to Locke, I5. Psalms. Engl. versions, 28. Raulin (Franciscus). Letter to Locke, I5. Renaudot (Eusebe). Letters to Locke, I5. Reneu (Hilary). Letter to Locke, 15. Revelation, bk. of, see Apocalypse. Reynolds (John). Endorsement referring to A brief and easie way by tables, to cast up silver... and gold (1651), 35. Rhyne (Willem ten). Excerpts by Locke from MS. of Schediasma de Promontorio Bonae Spei (I686), 43. - Extract from letter to C. Sibelius, 43. Ribbius (Johannes Hermanus). Auction sale of books, 8. Richards (Deborah). Letter to - Michell, I5. Richards (John). Letter to Locke, 15. -Letter to, from W. Charleton, 5; from A. Woods, 38. Robinson (Thomas). Letter to Locke, 15. - Reports on his conduct in H.M.S. Garland, I5. Rochester (2nd Earl of) see Wilmot (John). Roderick (Richard). Letter to Locke, I5. Roemer (Olaus). Letters: to Locke, I5; to N. Toinard, I5. - Letter to, from D. Dodart, 7. - Sketch by, 43. Roman catholic church. Queries about the infallibility of the pope, 27. Roman history. Excerpta ex libris pontificum linteis, 44. Romans, epist. to, see Epistles. Rome, church of, see Roman catholic church. Rose (Thomas). Letter to Locke, I5. Rosenroth (Christian Knorr von) see Knorr von Rosenroth. Rous (Francis). Letter to, from J. Walker, 43. Royal fishery co. Paper rel. to, 39. Royal Louis. Account of her dimensions, 42. Royal lustring co. Memorial to council of trade, 39. Rumney (Edmund). Letters to Locke, I5. Rush (Isaac). Letter to Locke, I6. Rushout (Sir James). Letter to Locke, I6. Russia. Excerpts by Locke from Hakluyt (R.), The principall navigations (I589), rel. to trade with England, 39. Ruswarp Yorks. Conveyance, 8. S. T. Letter to, from Locke, 21. St. John (Frances). Letters to Locke, i6. St. John (Lady Joanna). Letters to Locke, I6. Sarpi (Paolo). Letter to abbot of St. Medard, 27. Scarburgh (Sir Charles). Medical report on Countess of Northumberland, 13. Schard (J ). Letter to Locke, i6. Scotland. Letter about witches in, 42. Scott (James) Duke of Monmouth. Agreement with Louis XIV, 4I. Scribelia pseud. Letters to Locke, 7. Seamer (James). Letters to Locke, I6. Selapris (Jacques). Letters: to M. Charas, I6; to Locke, I6. 62 INDEX Sergeant (John). Letter to Locke, i6. Seys (Richard). Letters to P. King, 46. Shaftesbury (Countess of) see Cooper (Margaret). Shaftesbury (ist Earl of) see Cooper (Anthony Ashley) rst Earl of Shaftesbury. Shaftesbury (3rd Earl of) see Cooper (Anthony Ashley) 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury. Sharp (Sir Cuthbert). Letter to 7th Lord King, 47. Shaw (William). Account book, 24. Sherlock (William). Notes by Locke on The case of allegiance due to soveraign powers stated and resolved according to Scripture and reason (I691), 29. - Poem alluding to, 45. Shields (Alexander). Letter about second expedition to Darien, 40. Shower (J ). Letter to Locke, i6. Shute (John) see Barrington (John Shute) Ist Visct. Sibelius (Caspar). Letters to Locke, I6. - Letter to, from W. ten Rhyne, 43. Sinclair (George). Explanation of his arithmetical cylinders, 43. Slade (Matthew). Funeral expenses and inventory of clothes, 4. - Letters to Locke, I6. - Poems in Greek, 45. Slingsby (Henry). Instructions to counsel in his case, 42. Sloane (Sir Hans). Letters to Locke, I6. Smith (Humphrey). Letters to Locke, I6. Smith (John) see Sergeant. Smith (Rudolph). Poem, 45. Smithsby (Rabsy). Letters to Locke, 2, I6. - Note of Locke's goods left with, 2. Smyrna. Inscription at, 44. Somers (John) Ist Baron. Letters to Locke, 16. - Letters to, from Locke, 21. Somerset. Deeds rel. to property in, 3. -Memoranda and accounts rel. to property in, 23. - Notes by Locke of lands and rents in, 41. - Papers rel. to Locke's property in, i6. South (Robert). Letters to Locke, i6. - Poem alluding to, 45. Sowter (John). Letter to Locke, i6. Spademan (John). Letter to P. d'Aranda, 9. Spelman (Clement). Signature, i. Spencer (Robert) 2nd Earl of Sunderland. Corresp. with J. Fell, 47. Spens (George). Letter to Locke, i6. Spranger (Edward). Letters to Locke, I6. Stanley (John). Letter to Locke, i6. Stead (George). Letter to, from P. Bayley, on linen manufacture, 39. Stewart (John). Extracts from letters of, 39. Stillingfleet (Edward) Bp. of Worcester. Notes by J. Tyrrell and Locke on The mischief of separation (i680) and The unreasonableness of separation (I68I), 33. Strachey (John). Letters to Locke, i6. - Letters to, from Locke, i6, 2I. Stratton (Elizabeth). Letters to Locke, i6. - Letters to, from Locke, 23. Stratton (Peter). Letters to Locke, i6. - List of property bequeathed to, 23. Stratton (William). Letters of attorney, i6, 23. - Letters: to E. Clarke, I6; to Locke, 13, i6. Stringer (Jane). Letters to Locke, i6, I7. - Letter to, from Locke, 21. Stringer (Thomas). Account with Locke, 23. - Letters: to E. Clarke, 16; to Locke, I6. -Letters to, from Locke, 21; from P. Locke, 13. - Receipt as assignee of Locke as treasurer of council of trade, I7. Stubbs (Henry). Letter to, from Locke, 27. Sunderland (2nd Earl of) see Spencer (Robert). Sweden. Notes by Locke on trade in, 39. Sydenham (Thomas). Extracts from his lectures, 36. - Letters to Locke, 17. - Medical papers, I7. - Papers by Locke extracted from his. lectures or notebooks, 37. - Poems in honour of, 45. - Prescription, 36. - Subject index by Locke to Observationes medicae (I676), 37. - Treatise on smallpox, 36. Symes (Thomas). Letter to Locke, 17. Syria. Account of earthquake ip, 43. T. (A.) see Thomas (David). T. (S.). Letter to, from Locke, 21. T. (W.). Memorial on Darien, 40. Tarantula. Note about, 44. Tatam (John). Letter to Locke, I7. Taylor (Stephen). Medical report on Mrs. Grenville, 9. INDEX 63 Temple (Sir Richard). Locke's answer to Some short remarks upon mr. Locke's book, in answer to mr. Lounds (i696), 35. Tenison (Thomas) Abp. of Canterbury. Letters to Locke, I7. - Letters to, from Locke, 21. Thessalonians, epist. to, see Epistles. Thevenot (Melchisedec). Note by, I8. Thiery (Ludovicus). Letter to, from Locke, 21. Thomas (David). Letters to Locke, 6, Io, 17. - Letter to, from J. Tyrrell, x8. - Notes by Locke derived from, 38. - Paper on diabetes, 37. - Prescriptions, 36. Thomas (Mrs. H ). Letters to Locke, 17. - Letter to, from Locke, 21. Thomas (Jeremy). Letter to Locke, I7. Thomas (Samuel). Letters to Locke, 17. Thomas (William). Letters to Locke, 17. - Letter to, from Locke, 21. - Lists of books received by Locke from, 25. Thompson (John) ist Baron Haversham. Letters to Locke, 17. Thornhill (F ). Letter to Locke, I7. Thomhill (Henry). Letter to Locke, 17. Tilly (Samuel). Letters to Locke, 17. -Letters to, from J. Allestry, 3; from Locke, 17, 21. Tilson (Christopher). Letters to Locke, 17. Tindal (Matthew). Letters to Locke, 17. Toinard (Nicolas). Account of eclipse of the moon, 43. - Account of methods of making printing ink, 43. — Account of two ways of dressing elk skins, 43. - Description of a pendulum, 43. - Letters to Locke, 15, I8. - Letter to, from F. Gendron, 9; from 0. Roemer, 15. -Lists of books sent to and received from Locke, 25. - Note on solar spots, 43. - Notes by Locke on Evangeliorum harmonia Graeco-Latina (n.d.), 27. - Scheme for Bible concordance, 27. Torrington (Earl of) see Herbert (Arthur). Towerson (Gabriel). Letters to Locke, I8. - Letter perhaps to, from Locke, 30. Townshend (Henry). Letters to Locke, I8. Trade. Bounties paid on export of corn, 39. Trade. Estimate of annual value shipped from Jamaica to England, 40. - Expedient for preventing importation of French wines, 39. Treasury. Representation to, from council of trade, 40. Trent (George). Letter to E. Clarke, i8. Trinity, Holy. Paper on doctrine of, 4. Trott (Nicholas). Commission of, as chief justice in Carolina, 40. Trumbull (Sir William). Letters to Locke, i8. -- Letter to, from Locke, 22. - Papers written by Locke at request of, 34. Tufton (Thomas). Letters to Locke, i8. Tyrrell (James). Account of the Irish, 43. - Catalogue of Locke's books in custody of, 26. - Letters: to E. Bernard, 4; to Locke, i8, 19; to D. Thomas, i8. — Letters to, from Locke, 21; from A. Wood, 19. - Lists of Locke's books left with, 25. - Notes on Stillingfleet (E.), The mischief of separation (i68o) and The unreasonableness of separation (i68i), 33. Ussher (James) Abp. of Armagh. Account of meeting with T. Greaves, 27. Utrecht Holland. Auction sale of books at, 8. Uvedale (William). Letters to Locke, i8. - Letters to, from Locke, 21, 22. Valla (Laurentius). Extract from De linguae Latinae elegantia, 44. Van Bourch. Endorsement, 39. Vane (Sir Walter). Letters, i8. - Passport, i. Veen (Egbert). Letters to Locke, I8. - Verses commemorating his marriage, i8. Veen (Jacob). Verses commemorating his marriage, i8. Veen (Maria Arminius). Letter to Locke, i8. Venice. List of sizes and prices of lookingglasses in, 44. Verduin (Pieter Adriaensz). Letter to Locke, 18. Vergilius Maro (Publius) misc. Cento Virgilianus by Locke, 43. Verney (Richard) i3th Baron Willoughby de Broke. Letter to P. King, 46. Vemiets ( ). Letter to Locke, i8. Vernon (James). Letter to council of trade, 39; to Earl of Pembroke, 12. 64 INDEX Verryn (Gisbertus). Letters to Locke, i8. Veterinary medicine. Prescription for goats, 43. Villadiego (Gundissalvus de). Extract from Tractatus contra haereticam pravitatem, 27. Vincent ( ). Letters to Locke, i8. Vincent (R ). Letter to Locke, I8. Virginia. Papers on, 40. - Queries to be put to H. Hartwell, 39. Volkelius (Johannes). Notes by Locke on De vera religione, 28. W. C. Letter to, from Locke, 22. W. J. Letter to, from Locke, 22. Waite (Sir Nicholas). Purwana obtained by, 12. Walker (John). Letter to F. Rous, 43. Wallis (John). Letters to S. Ford, 43. - Letter to, from S. Ford, 43. Walls (George). Accounts with Locke, 23. - Inventories of Locke's possessions, I, 2. - Letters to Locke, I8. Walpole (Sir Robert). Letter to P. King, 46. Walter (Charles). Letter to Locke, I8. Ward (Isaiah). Letter to Locke, I8. Ward (Sir Patience). Letter to N. Lee, I8. Warren (Ed ). Letter, i8. Warren (William). Letter to Locke, i8. Watkins (Thomas). Letter to Locke, i8. Weaver (Thomas). Letter to Locke, i8. Weights and measures. Lists of, 44. West (Joseph). Letter to Locke, I9. Westminster school. Accounts at, 23. Westron (Thomas). Letters to Locke, I9. Wetstein (Johan Hendrik). Letter, i9. - Letters to Locke, i9. Whateley (T ). Scheme for a tax, 35. Wheelock (John). Letter to S. Brownover, 19; to Locke, I9. Whitby (Daniel). Letters to Locke, i9. - Letter to, from Locke, 22. - Preface to the first epistle to the Corinthians, 33. Williams (Daniel). Extracts by Locke from a sermon by, 28. Williamson (George). Letter to Locke, I9. Williamson (Richard). Letter to Locke, I9. Willis (Thomas). Notes on his lectures, 36. Willis (Sir Thomas). Letter to, from Locke and E. Clarke, 22. Willoughby de Broke (I3th Baron) see Verney (Richard). Willson (Thomas) pseud. Letter to Locke, 7. Willys (John). Letter to E. Fowler, 14. Wilmot (John) 2nd Earl of Rochester. Poem, 44. Wilton Wilts. List of fruit trees at, 44. Witchcraft. Letter about witches in Scotland, 42. Witty (Robert). Medical report on Mrs. Grenville, 9. Wood (Anthony). Letter to J. Tyrrell, I9. Woods (Abraham). Letter to J. Richards, 38. Woodward (Henry). Letter to Locke, I9. Woodward (John). Letters to Locke, I9. Wright (William). Letters to Locke, I9. Wyndham (Thomas) Ist Baron. Letter to P. King, 46. Wynne (John). Letters to Locke, I9. -Letter to, from Locke, 22. Xenophon. Notes on Greek etymology illustr. by words from, 40. Yonge (Elizabeth). Letters to Locke, I9. Yonge (Sir Walter). Letters to Locke, 7, 8, i9. 1 35OS THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN DATE DUE ~rJa 4 1996 OC ~ F, '1111li '~ jAL V ACREW BooKB:VIN1i1G CO6 Ur.IFTED Uw?-hDia TOLEDO. OHIto