BEYOND FURBANK AND OWENS: A NEW CONSIDERATION OF THE EVIDENCE
FOR THE "DEFOE" CANON
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APPENDIX
A Tabular Representation of the Furbank And Owens Canon
For an explanation of the logic of categorization and the analytic rationale of this presentation of the works attributed to Defoe by Furbank and Owens (both definite and "probable"), see section 3, above. Unless otherwise stated, all quotations and details in the table are from the relevant entry in the Critical Bibliography. The numeration is also from that volume; the table begins with item number 3 because numbers 1 and 2 are collections of works (the True Collection and the Second Volume). I have filled in as many columns as possible, but in most cases works are categorized on the basis of the strongest evidence. For example: in the case of items claimed by Defoe, I also list any other contemporary or late-life evidence in attribution noted by Furbank and Owens. Limitations of space require considerable abbreviation, including the shortening of most titles; that information is of course supplied more fully in the Critical Bibliography.
The table includes a number of shorthand references. Several initially anonymous works were reprinted in collections in Defoe’s lifetime with his name attached (column 7, "Reprint").1
TC | Defoe’s A True Collection of the Writings of the True Born English-man (an authorized collection published in 1703). |
SV | Defoe’s A Second Volume of the Writings of the Author of the True-Born Englishman (an authorized collection published in 1705). |
How | A Collection of the Writings of the Author of the True-Born English-Man (an unauthorized collection by John How in 1703); the volume included thirteen works, two of which (11(P) and 40(P)) Defoe did not include in the True Collection. |
Column 8 ("Epithet") lists instances where a work is signed with one of Defoe’s pseudonyms, which take the form of "by the author of [work]." To save space, I give only the title or an abbreviation (i.e., SW for The Shortest-Way with the Dissenters and TBE for The True-Born Englishman). Where I say "Review," then, the item in question is attributed on the title page to "the author of the Review." The tenth and eleventh columns record late attributions, those made in the second half of the century ("Later 18c") or between the beginning of the nineteenth century and the present ("After 18c"). The source of the attribution is given there. I take the assignment of attribution from Furbank and Owens, and except in one case (I have changed "Cibber" to "Cibber/Shiels") I use their shorthand terms.
Chalmers | George Chalmers in his "List of Writings" of Defoe, included in his Life of Daniel De Foe (1790). |
Cibber/Shiels | Robert Shiels in "Cibber’s" The Lives of the Poets of Great Britain and Ireland, 5 vols. (1753); the entry on Defoe is in vol. 4 (pp. 313–325). |
Crossley | James Crossley in his MS list of 60 "Defoe" works; the list was made between 1869 and 1883 and is reprinted in Furbank and Owens, Canonisation. |
Lee | William Lee in Daniel Defoe: His Life, and Recently Discovered Writings, 3 vols. (1869). |
Stace | Machell Stace in An Alphabetical Catalogue of an Extensive Collection of the Writings of Daniel De Foe (1829). |
Trent (Biblio) | William Peterfield Trent in an unpublished bibliography (on which he worked until his death in 1927). |
Trent (CHEL) | Trent in the list of works included in his chapter on Defoe in the Cambridge History of English Literature, ed. A. W. Ward and A. R. Waller, 14 vols. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1912), vol. 9. |
Trent (Nation) | Trent in his "Bibliographical Notes on Defoe, I-III," in the New York Nation 84 (June 1907): 515–518, and 85 (July and August 1907): 29–32 180–183. |
Wilson | Walter Wilson in his Memoirs of the Life and Times of Daniel De Foe, 3 vols. (1830). |
Author's name | Time of attribution | |||||||||||
F&O # | Title | Evidence | Date | Imprint | Early ed. | Reprint | Epithet | Lifetime | Later 18c | After 18c | Other evidence | |
Books, Pamphlets, and Broadsheets | ||||||||||||
3(P) | A Letter to a Dissenter from his Friend at the Hague | deduced-context | [1688] | false imprint | Moore | probable ref. in Review; ref. in 171 | ||||||
4 | A New Discovery of an Old Intreague | claimed by D | 1691 | SV (1705) | ||||||||
5 | An Essay upon Projects | signed | 1697 | R. R. for Tho. Cockerill | preface: D.E | |||||||
6 | The Character of the Late Dr. Samuel Annesley | claimed by D | 1697 | E. Whitlock | preface: D.F. | TC (1703) | Dunton, 17052 | |||||
7 | Some Reflections on ... An Argument Shewing that a Standing Army is Inconsistent with a Free Government | signed | 1697 | E. Whitlock | 2nd ed. preface: D.F. | |||||||
8 | An Argument Shewing, that a Standing Army ... is not Inconsistent... | claimed by D | 1698 | E. Whitlock | TC (1703) | |||||||
9 | An Enquiry into the Occasional Conformity of Dissenters | claimed by D | 1697 [1698] | 2nd ed. preface: D.F. | TC (1703) | |||||||
10 | The Poor Man's Plea | claimed by D | 1698 | 2nd ed. preface: D.F. | TC (1703) | |||||||
11(P) | Lex Talionis | contemporary attribution | 1698 | How 3 (1703) | Pittis (?), 17044 | discussion analogous to 62; description like 228 | ||||||
12(P) | A Brief Reply to the History of Standing Armies in England | deduced-content | 1698 | Trent (CHEL) | cites 8; quotes line from 4; favorite Dryden quotation | |||||||
13(P) | An Encomium upon a Parliament | deduced-context | [1699] | Ellis 5 | quoted in Review;6 similar style to 56; consonant with thinking in 8 and 10 | |||||||
14 | The Pacificator | claimed by D | 1700 | J. Nutt | SV (1705) | |||||||
15 | The Two Great Questions Consider'd | claimed by D | 1700 | R. T. for A. Baldwin | TC (1703) | |||||||
16 | The Two Great Questions Further Considered | claimed by D | 1700 | TC (1703) | ||||||||
17 | The True-Born Englishman | claimed by D | 1700 [1701?] | TC (1703) | several7 | |||||||
18 | The Six Distinguishing Characters of a Parliament-Man | claimed by D | 1701 | TC (1703) | ||||||||
19 | The Danger of the Protestant Religion Consider'd | claimed by D | 1701 | TC (1703) | ||||||||
20 | The Free-Holders Plea against Stock-Jobbing ... | claimed by D | 1701 | TC (1703) | lengthy excerpts in 202(P) | |||||||
21 | A Letter to Mr. How | claimed by D | 1701 | TC (1703) | ||||||||
22(P) | The Livery Man's Reasons | deduced-content | 1701 | TC (1703) | Trent (Biblio) | reflects known hostility and present concerns; quotes couplet from 17 | ||||||
23 | The Villainy of Stock-Jobbers Detected | claimed by D | 1701 | TC (1703) | ||||||||
24 | The Succession to the Crown of England, Considered | contemporary attribution | 1701 | 17018 | ||||||||
25 | [Legion's Memorial] | contemporary attribution | [1701 ] | several9 | ||||||||
26(P) | [Υe True-Born Englishmen Proceed] | contemporary attribution | [1701] | 170310 | Stace | thematically consonant with 25; similar style to 56 | ||||||
27 | The History of the Kentish Petition | contemporary attribution | 1701 | several11 | Stace | four lines used in Review; two lines used in 81 | ||||||
28 | The Present State of Jacobitism Considered | signed | 1701 | A. Baldwin | preface: D.F. | Ralph, 1744–4612 | ||||||
29 | Reasons against a War with France | claimed by D | 1701 | TC (1703) | ||||||||
30(P) | Legion's Mew Paper 13 | deduced-context | 1702 [1701] | connection to 25 | ||||||||
31 | The Original Power of the ... People of England | claimed by D | 1702 [1701] | preface: D.F. | TC (1703) | 171014 | repr. at the end of 1790 ed. of 201 | |||||
32 | The Mock Mourners | claimed by D | 1702 | TC (1703) | TBE | |||||||
33 | A New Test of the Church of England's Loyalty | claimed by D | 1702 | TC (1703) | ||||||||
34 | Reformation of Manners | claimed by D | 1702 | TC (1703) | ||||||||
35 | An Enquiry into Occasional Conformity | claimed by D | 1702 | TC (1703) | 1704: TBE15 | |||||||
36(P) | The Opinion of a Known Dissenter on the Bill for Preventing Occasional Conformity | deduced-content | 1703 [1702?] | J. Nutt | Moore | arguments similar to other works; repeats phrase and passages from 35; repeats phrase from 9 | ||||||
37 | The Shortest-Way with the Dissenters | claimed by D | 1702 | TC (1703) | repr.: TBE | several16 | D arrested | |||||
38 | The Spanish Descent | claimed by D | 1702 | TC (1703) | TBE | |||||||
39 | A Brief Explanation of ... The Shortest Way with the Dissenters | claimed by D | [1703] | TC (1703) | repr. with 37 | |||||||
40(P) | A Dialogue between a Dissenter and the Observator | contemporary attribution | 1703 | How17 (1703) | Moore | clever "strategies on Defoe's personal behalf" | ||||||
41 | More Reformation18 | claimed by D | 1703 | SV (1705) | TBE | |||||||
42 | The Shortest Way to Peace and Union | claimed by D | 1703 | TC (1703) | SW; TBE | |||||||
43 | A Hymn to the Pillory | claimed by D | 1703 | SV (1705) | Thomas Brown, 170319 | |||||||
44(P) | The Sincerity of the Dissenters Vindicated | late attribution | 1703 | Chalmers20 | consonant with D's arguments and polemical tendencies | |||||||
45(P) | A Hymn to the Funeral Sermon | contemporary attribution | [1703] | 170321 | Moore | in style of 43 | ||||||
46 | An Enquiry into the Case of Mr. Asgil's General Translation | signed | 1704 [1703] | Nutt | preface: D.F.22 | TBE | ||||||
47 | A Challenge of Peace, Address'd to the Whole Nation | claimed by D | 1703 | SV (1705) | ||||||||
48(F) | Some Remarks on the First Chapter in Dr. Davenant's Essays | deduced-content | 1704 [1703] | A. Baldwin | Wilson | similar to 31, which is quoted at length and by same author | ||||||
49 | Peace without Union | claimed by D | 1703 | 4th ed. preface: De Foe | SV (1705) | |||||||
50 | The Dissenters Answer to the High-Church Challenge | claimed by D | 1704 | SV (1705) | ||||||||
51(P) | An Essay on the Regulation of the Press | deduced-context | 1704 | Chalmers | D acknowledges "several Tracts" on the subject; arguments similar to Review | |||||||
52 | A Serious Inquiry into this Grand Question | claimed by D | 1704 | SV (1705) | ||||||||
53(P) | The Lay-Man's Sermon upon the Late Storm | deduced-content | 1704 | Wilson | remark on a theme D is preoccupied with; favorite allusion | |||||||
54 | Royal Religion | claimed by D | 1704 | SV (1705) | ||||||||
55 | To the Honourable, the C[ommon]s of England | deduced-context | [1704] | pub. privately | Downie23 | |||||||
56 | The Address | contemporary attribution | 1704 | 1703–424 | first line quoted in 60 | |||||||
57 | More Short-Ways with the Dissenters | claimed by D | 1704 | SV (1705) | ||||||||
58 | A New Test of the Church of England's Honesty | claimed by D | 1704 | SV (1705) | 1705: TBE | |||||||
59(P) | The Storm: or, a Collection of the ... Late Dreadful Tempest | late attribution | 1704 | J. Nutt for G. Sawbridge | Chalmers | quotes four lines of verse from 60 | ||||||
60 | An Elegy on the Author of the True-Born-English-Man | claimed by D | 1704 | SV (1705) | Hymn to Pillory | ten lines quoted in Review | ||||||
61 | A Hymn to Victory | claimed by D | 1704 | J. Nutt | dedication signed | SV (1705) | 1704: TBE | |||||
62 | Giving Alms no Charity | claimed by D | 1704 | SV (1705) | ||||||||
63 | Queries upon the Bill against Occasional Conformity | contemporary attribution | [1704] | 170525 | Trent (CHEL) | |||||||
64 | The Dissenter Misrepresented and Represented | claimed by D | [1704?]26 | SV (1705) | ||||||||
65 | The Double Welcome | claimed by D | 1705 | B. Bragg | SV (1705) | |||||||
66 | The Consolidator | signed | 1705 | Benj. Bragg | TBE | frequent use of lunar fantasy in the Review | ||||||
67 | The Experiment: or, The Short est Way with the Dissenters Exemplified | claimed by D | 1705 | B. Bragg | several27 | claimed in Review | ||||||
68 | Advice to All Parties | signed | 1705 | Benj. Bragg | TBE | Chalmers | ||||||
69 | The Dyet of Poland | claimed by D | 1705 | preface allusion | Chalmers | claimed in Letters (P.19) | ||||||
70 | The Paralel [sic] | claimed by D | 1705 | Dublin | SV (1705) | |||||||
71 | The High-Church Legion 28 | claimed by D | 1705 | 170529 | Chalmers | probable reference in Letters (p.93); see note to 101(P) | ||||||
72(P) | A Hint to the Blackwell-Hall Factors | deduced-content | 1705 | Moore | "Defoesque character"; a favorite allusion30 | |||||||
73(P) | Party-Tyranny | deduced-context | 1705 [1706?] | Wilson | discussion of "Party-Tyranny" in Review; adaptation of lines of 17; favorite sentiment | |||||||
74 | A Hymn to Peace | signed | 1706 | John Nutt | TBE | Chalmers | ||||||
75 | A Reply to ... L[or]d H[aversham]’s Vindication of his Speech | signed | 1706 | Review | Chalmers | |||||||
76 | Remarks on the Letter to the Author of the State-Memorial | deduced-context | 1706 | Trent (Nation) | probable reference in Letters (p. 115); favorite Butler quotation31 | |||||||
77 | Remarks on the Bill to Prevent Frauds Committed by Bankrupts | contemporary attribution | 1706 | 170632 | Wilson | thematically similar to Review; refers to author's part in promoting bill acknowledged in Review | ||||||
78 | An Essay at Removing National Prejudices against a Union, pt. I | claimed by D | 1706 | acknowledged in Review | ||||||||
79 | An Essay at Removing National Prejudices against a Union, pt. II | claimed by D | 1706 | acknowledged in Review | ||||||||
80(P) | A True Relation of the Apparition of one Mrs. Veal33 | late attribution | 1706 | B. Bragg | Chalmers | |||||||
81 | Jure Divino | claimed by D | 1706 | TBE | several34 | discussed in Review | ||||||
82 | An Essay, at Removing National Prejudices, pt. III | claimed by D | 1706 | [Edinb.] | the two first parts | acknowledged in Review | ||||||
83 | A Fourth Essay, at Removing National Prejudices | claimed by D | 1706 | [Edinb.] | acknowledged in Review | |||||||
84 | The Vision, A Poem | claimed by D | [1706] | [Edinb.] | 170635 | Trent (CHEL) | holograph exists; implicitly claimed in a letter36 | |||||
85 | Observations on the Fifth Article of the Treaty of Union | deduced-context | [1706] | [Edinb.] | Wodrow37 | probable reference in a letter38 | ||||||
86 | A Reply to the Scots Answer, to the British Vision | deduced-context | [1706] | [Edinb.] | Trent(CHEL) | vague reference in Letters (p. 162) | ||||||
87 | Caledonia, &c. | signed | 1706 | Edinb. | dedication signed | 1707 London repr. advert, in Review | ||||||
88 | A Short Letter to the Glasgow-Men | claimed by D | [1706] | [Edinb.] | unambiguously claimed in a letter39 | |||||||
89(P) | An Enquiry into the Disposal of the Equivalent | contemporary attribution | [1706?] | [Edinb.] | Wodrow40 | Trent (CHEL) | passage and remarks similar to Review | |||||
90 | A Fifth Essay, at Removing National Prejudices | claimed by D | 1707 | [Edinb.] | acknowledged in Review | |||||||
91 | Two Great Questions Considered ... a Sixth Essay at Removing National Prejudices | deduced-context | 1707 | [Edinb.] | vague reference in a letter41 | |||||||
92 | The Dissenters in England Vindicated | deduced-context | [1707] | [Edinb.] | Chalmers | self-exposure in a related pamphlet?; apparently claimed in a letter42 | ||||||
93 | Passion and Prejudice | deduced-context | 1707 | Edinb. | Moore | quotes letters signed "D.E"; see note to 92 | ||||||
94 | A Short View of the ... Protestant Religion in Britain | deduced-context | 1707 | Edinb. | Toland, 171743 | Chalmers | see note to 92 | |||||
95 | A Voice from the South | deduced-context | [1707] | [Edinb.] | repr. in Review | |||||||
96(P) | An Historical Account of the Bitter Sufferings ... of the Episcopal Church in Scotland | deduced-context | 1707 | Edinb. | Wodrow, 1711?44 | Chalmers (supposed) | argumentation "strongly suggests" D | |||||
97 | Dyers News Examined as to his ... Memorial against the Review | deduced-context | [1707] | [Edinb.] | Trent (CHEL) | paragraphs repr. in Review | ||||||
98 | De Foe’s Answers, to Dyer’s Scandalous News Letter | signed | [1707] | [Edinb.] | in title | Lee | ||||||
99(P) | Reflections on the Prohibition Act | deduced-content | 1708 | Crossley | arguments similar to those in Review and 254 | |||||||
100(P) | An Answer to a Paper Concerning Mr. De Foe | contemporary attribution | 1708 | Edinb. | 170945 | Wilson | ||||||
101(P) | A Memorial to the Nobility of Scotland | deduced-context | 1708 | Edinb. | Moore | probable reference in a letter46 | ||||||
102 | The Scot’s Narrative Examin’d | contemporary attribution | 1709 | I70947 | Wilson | arguments similar to Review | ||||||
103(P) | A Letter to Mr. Bisset | deduced-content | 1709 | J. Baker | Moore | typical of D’s polemical strategies; favorite allusion | ||||||
104 | The History of the Union of Great Britain | claimed by D | 1709 [1710?] | Edinb. | 171248 | referred to in Review as in progress | ||||||
105 | Advertisement from Daniel De Foe, to Mr. Clark | signed | [1710] | [Edinb.] | in title | signed "D.F." | ||||||
106(P) | A Letter from Captain Tom to the Mobb | deduced-content | 1710 | J. Baker | Wilson: not improbable | close to D's "attitude towards the 'Mob' in the Review at this time" | ||||||
107(P) | Greenshields out of Prison and Toleration Settled in Scotland | deduced-content | 1710 | N. Cliff | Trent (Biblio) | similar approach to that in the Review and in 102 | ||||||
108 | An Essay upon Publick Credit | claimed by D | 1710 | Chalmers (supposed) | claimed in a letter49 | |||||||
109(P) | Counter Queries | deduced-content | [1710] | Healey | "reminiscent of" a letter (Letters, p. 286) | |||||||
110 | An Essay upon Loans | claimed by D | 1710 | Wilson | named in a letter50 | |||||||
111(P) | A Word against a New Election | deduced-content | 1710 | Chalmers (supposed) | echoes passage from Letters (p. 266); favorite allusion | |||||||
112(P) | A New Test of the Sence of the Nation | deduced-content | 1710 | Chalmers (supposed) | Wilson | two passages similar to Review | ||||||
113(P) | Queries to the New Hereditary Right-Men | deduced-content | 1710 | Moore | similar discussion in Review; praises a work (not by D) here and in Review | |||||||
114(P) | A Letter to the Whigs | deduced-content | 1711 | Trent (CHEL) | pp. 7–16 "more or less identical with" 115(P); probably by same author | |||||||
115(P) | A Spectators Address to the Whigs | deduced-content | 1711 | Trent (Nation) | see 114(P); reflections similar to Review; favorite Butler quotation | |||||||
116(P) | Captain Tom’s Remembrance to his Old Friends the Mobb | deduced-content | [1711] | Halkett and Laing51 | consonant with D's thinking in Review, but not as consonant as 106(P)52 | |||||||
117(P) | The Secret History of the October Club | contemporary attribution53 | 1711 | Pittis, 171154 | Lee | several close similarities to Review | ||||||
118(P) | The British Visions: or, Isaac Bickerstaff, Sen. Being Twelve Prophecies ... | deduced-context | 1711 | J. Baker | Trent (CHEL) | D knowledgeable and corresponding about it55 | ||||||
119(P) | The Succession of Spain Consider’d | deduced-content | 1711 | J. Baker | Trent (CHEL) | makes claim made on other occasions; remark and analysis similar to Review | ||||||
120(P) | A Seasonable Caution to the General Assembly | contemporary attribution | 1711 | [Edinb.?] | Wodrow56 | Trent (Biblio) | thematically consonant with Review; probable reference in letter57 | |||||
121(P) | Eleven Opinions about Mr. H[arle]y | deduced-content | 1711 | J. Baker | Wilson | "one or two" favorite allusions; consonant with D’s thinking | ||||||
122(P) | Atalantis Major | deduced-context | 1711 | false imprint | Lee | ambiguous reference in a letter;58 consonant with D’s thinking | ||||||
123(P) | An Essay upon the Trade to Africa | deduced-content | 1711 | Crossley | arguments also in Review; biographical evidence59 | |||||||
124(P) | The Secret History of the October-Club, pt. II | deduced-context | 1711 | J. Baker | continues 117 (P); favorite allusion; known pre-occupations; advert, in Review | |||||||
125(P) | The Representation Examined | deduced-context | 1711 | A. Baldwin | Moore | discusses "Representation" in Review; consonant with D’s thinking; advert, in Review | ||||||
126 | An Essay on the South-Sea Trade | signed | 1712 [1711] | J. Baker | Review | |||||||
127(P) | The True State of the Case between the Government and the Creditors of the Navy | deduced-content | 1711 | J. Baker | Crossley | arguments close to 126; approach similar to Review | ||||||
128(P) | Reasons why this Nation Ought to Put a Speedy End to this ... War | deduced-content | 1711 | J. Baker | several close resemblances to and echoes of Review60 | |||||||
129 | An Essay at a Plain Exposition of that... Phrase A Good Peace | claimed by D | 1711 | J. Baker | Review | claimed in Review | ||||||
130 | The Felonious Treaty | signed | 1711 | J. Baker | Review | |||||||
131(P) | An Essay on the History of Parties | deduced-content | 1711 | J. Baker | Wilson | several suggestive pieces of internal evidence61 | ||||||
132(P) | [A Speech of a Stone Chimney-Piece] | deduced-context | [1711] | not pub. | Moore | extract pub. in Review; fuller version in 139(P); possible reference in Review | ||||||
133(P) | The Conduct of Parties in England | deduced-content | 1712 | Wilson | line of argument similar to and echoes from Review | |||||||
134(P) | The Case of the Poor Skippers and Keel-Men of Newcastle | claimed by D | [1712?] | Moore | current preoccupation; D offers to write this in a letter62 | |||||||
135(P) | A Farther Case Relating to the Poor Keel-men of Newcastle | deduced-context | [1712?] | Moore | see 134(P) | |||||||
136(P) | Imperial Gratitude | deduced-content | 1712 | Moore | close parallels and "Verbally similar discussion" in Review | |||||||
137(P) | The Highland Visions | deduced-context | 1712 | J. Baker | Trent (CHEL) | accepted if 118(P) is | ||||||
138(P) | Wise as Serpents | deduced-content | 1712 | J. Baker | Crossley | favorite allusion; similar to Review; likely by same author as 139(P) | ||||||
139(P) | The Present State of the Parties in Great Britain 63 | deduced-content | 1712 | J. Baker | Wilson | features D's own career and works; verbatim extract from 104 | ||||||
140(P) | Reasons against Fighting 64 | deduced-context | 1712 | Lee | probable reference in a letter;65 favorite allusion; phrase used in Review | |||||||
141(P) | A Further Search into the Conduct of the Allies | deduced-context | 1712 | John Morphew | Crossley | probable reference in a letter; see note for 140(P) | ||||||
142(P) | The Validity of the Renunciations of Former Powers | deduced-content | 1712 | J. Morphew | Trent (Nation) | consonant with D’s thinking; favorite allusion; favorite topic | ||||||
143(P) | An Enquiry into the Danger ... of a War with the Dutch | deduced-content | 1712 | J. Baker | Trent (CHEL) | consonant with D’s views and style; approval of Review; see note for 140(P) | ||||||
144 | A Seasonable Warning... against the Insinuations of Papists and Jacobites | claimed by D | 1712 | J. Baker | Chalmers | claimed in Appeal to Honour and Justice | ||||||
145(P) | A Brief Account of the Present State of the African Trade | deduced-content | 1713 | J. Baker | Crossley | consonant with argument in Review | ||||||
146 | Reasons against the Succession of the House of Hanover | claimed by D | 1713 | J. Baker | D prosecuted; acknowledged authorship | |||||||
147(P) | The Second-Sighted Highlander: or, Predictions and Foretold Events | deduced-context | [1713] | J. Baker | Trent (CHEL) | possibly claimed in the Review; successor to 118(P) and 137(P) | ||||||
148 | And What if the Pretender should come? | claimed by D | 1713 | J. Baker | D prosecuted | |||||||
149 | An Answer to a Question that No Body thinks of, viz. But what if the Queen should die? | claimed by D | 1713 | J. Baker | D prosecuted | |||||||
150(P) | An Essay on the Treaty of Commerce with France | deduced-content | 1713 | J. Baker | Wilson | "general thrust" of arguments like Review | ||||||
151(P) | Union and No Union | contemporary attribution | 1713 | John Baker | Wodrow66 | Crossley | deals with D’s concerns at the time; "Defoe-like quality" | |||||
152(P) | Considerations upon the Eighth and Ninth Articles of the Treaty of Commerce and Navigation | deduced-content | 1713 | J. Baker | Lee | consonant with Mercator and with proposal in Letters (p. 420) | ||||||
153(P) | A View of the Real Dangers of the Succession | deduced-content | 1713 | J. Baker | Lee | similar to 3 remarks in Review | ||||||
154(P) | A General History of Trade | late attribution | 1713 | J. Baker | Chalmers | many echoes of D’s works; anecdote and discussion similar to Review | ||||||
155(P) | Memoirs of Count Tariff | deduced-context | 1713 | John Morphew | Trent (Nation) | grand praise and lengthy quotation in Mercator;67 favorite allusion | ||||||
156(P) | Reasons Concerning the Immediate Demolishing of Dunkirk | deduced-content | 1713 | John Morphew | Trent (Biblio) | argument similar to Mercator; reference close to one in Review68 | ||||||
157 | Some Thoughts upon the Subject of Commerce with France | signed | 1713 | J. Baker | Review | |||||||
158 | A Letter to the Dissenters | claimed by D | 1713 | John Morphew | Old-mixon,171469 | Wilson: tentative | claimed by name in a letter70 | |||||
159(P) | A Letter to the Whigs, Expostulating with them upon their Present Conduct | deduced-content | E. Smith | Crossley | "closeness in drift" to letters to Harley at same time; "striking verbal echo" of a letter | |||||||
160(P) | The Scots Nation and Union Vindicated | deduced-content | 1714 | J. Baker for A. Bell | Lee | Defoean style; favorite allusion; refers to same MS here and in Review | ||||||
161 | Reasons for Im[peaching] the L[or]d H[igh] T[reasure]r71 | contemporary attribution | [1714] | J. Moore | Dunton, 171472 | Lee | ||||||
162(P) | A Brief Survey of the Legal Liberties of the Dissenters | deduced-content | 1714 | J. Baker | Crossley | wordplay similar to 1706 discussion in Review; favorite allusion | ||||||
163(P) | The Weakest Go to the Wall | deduced-context | 1714 | J. Baker | Trent (CHEL) | possible reference in Letters (p. 441); parallels to works and letters; favorite allusion | ||||||
164(P) | Advice to the People of Great Britain | contemporary attribution | 1714 | J. Baker | Boyer, 171773 | Lee | corresponds closely with D’s views; see note to 161 | |||||
165 | The Secret History of the White-Staff | contemporary attribution | 1714 | J. Baker | several74 | probable reference in Letters;75 see note to 161 | ||||||
166 | The Secret History of the White Staff, pt. II | deduced-context | 1714 | J. Baker | continuation of 165 | |||||||
167 | The Secret History of the Secret History of the White Staff | contemporary attribution | 1715 | S. Keimer | Pittis (?), 171576 | Trent (Nation) | claims (as in Appeal) that he did not write 165 but made amendments77 | |||||
168 | The Secret History of the White Staff, pt. Ill | deduced-context | 1715 | J. Baker | a continuation of 165 | |||||||
169 | The Family Instructor | contemporary attribution | 1715 | Eman. Matthews and Jo. Button | 171878 | Cibber/Shiels | Button a friend of D’s | |||||
170 | A Friendly Epistle by way of Reproof | contemporary attribution | 1715 | S. Keimer | Gildon, 171979 | Wilson | see note to 161 | |||||
171 | An Appeal to Honour and Justice | claimed by D | 1715 | J. Baker | TP: Daniel De Foe | Chalmers | clearly autobiographical | |||||
172 | A Sharp Rebuke from one of the People called Quakers | contemporary attribution | 1715 | S. Keimer | Gildon, 1719 | Wilson | same charges against Sacheverell as made elsewhere | |||||
173(P) | The Second-Sighted Highlander | deduced-context | 1715 | J. Baker | Crossley | related to 118(P), 137(P). 147(P) | ||||||
174 | A Seasonable Expostulation with ... James Butler | contemporary attribution | 1715 | S. Keimer | Gildon, 1719 | Wilson | ||||||
175(P) | An Account of the Conduct of Robert Earl of Oxford | contemporary attribution | 1715 | Boyer, 171780 | Trent (Nation) | quotation identical to Review; reference similar to Review; see note to 161 | ||||||
176(P) | A Hymn to the Mob | deduced-context | 1715 | S. Popping, J. Fox, et al. | Wilson | wants to write a "Hymn to the Rabble"; similar style to 43; echoes of other works | ||||||
177(P) | A View of the Present Management of the Court of France | deduced-content | 1715 | J. Baker | Trent (Biblio) | favorite saying; highly distinctive discussion81 | ||||||
178(P) | An Account of the Great and Generous Actions of James Butler | deduced-content | [1715] | J. Moore | Lee | favorite allusion; favorite remark | ||||||
179(P) | A View of the Scots Rebellion | deduced-content | 1715 | R. Burleigh | Lee | similar description and one instance of similar phrasing to Review | ||||||
180 | A Trumpet Blown in the North | deduced-content | 1716 [1715] | S. Keimer | Lee | Keimer "connects it with the 'Quaker's' previous writings"; favorite story | ||||||
181(P) | Some Thoughts of an Honest Tory in the Country | deduced-content | 1716 | R. Burleigh | Trent (Nation) | two favorite allusions, one of them used in 81 and often in Review | ||||||
182(P) | Some Considerations on a Law for Triennial Parliaments | deduced-context | 1716 | J. Baker, T. Warner | Crossley82 | D claims to have written a tract of this sort; favorite allusion83 | ||||||
183(P) | An Essay upon Buying and Selling of Speeches | deduced-content | 1716 | J. Baker, T. Warner | Trent (Nation) | reflects known hostility; favorite allusion; Marvell quotation also in Review | ||||||
184(P) | The Layman’s Vindication of the Church of England | deduced-content | 1716 | J. Baker for A. and W. Bell | Trent (CHEL) | wordplay parallel to 228; consonant with D’s thinking | ||||||
185 | Secret Memoirs of a Treasonable Conference at S— House | contemporary attribution | 1717 [1716] | J. More | Boyer, 171784 | Trent (Nation)85 | description similar to 69; remark about Harley used frequently byD | |||||
186(P) | The Danger of Court Differences | deduced-content | 1717 | J. Baker, T. Warner | Crossley | variant on Dryden line;86 phrase used elsewhere; an axiom paralleled in Review | ||||||
187(P) | The Quarrel of the School-Boys at Athens | deduced-context | 1717 | J. Roberts | Trent (CHEL) | praised in Mercurius Politicus; MP quotes extra verses; remark recalls 185 | ||||||
188(P) | An Argument Proving that the Design of Employing and En[n]obling Foreigners ...87 | contemporary attribution | 1717 | Boyer, 171788 | Trent (Nation) | |||||||
189 | Fair Payment No Spunge | contemporary attribution | 1717 | J. Brotherton, W. Meddows, J. Roberts | 171789 | Crossley90 | favorite maxim; praised in Mercurius Politicus | |||||
190(P) | What if the Swedes should Come? | deduced-content | 1717 | J. Roberts | Wilson | several different kinds of internal evidence91 | ||||||
191(P) | The Question Fairly Stated, whether Now is not the Time to do Justice to the Friends of the Government ... | contemporary attribution | 1717 | J. Roberts, J. Harrison, A. Dodd | 171792 | Crossley | reproduces "some dozen paragraphs" from 70 without acknowledgment; favorite simile; favorite allusion | |||||
192(P) | Memoirs of the Church of Scotland | deduced-content | 1717 | Eman. Matthews and T. Warner | Wodrow93 | Stace | consonant with D’s thinking; advert, in 204 | |||||
193(P) | A Farther Argument against Ennobling Foreigners | deduced-context | 1717 | E. Moore | complains that 188(P) has been wrongly attrib. to D;94 epigraph adapted from 20(P); see note to 188(P) | |||||||
194 | Minutes of the Negotiations of Monsr. Mesnager | contemporary attribution | l7l7 | S. Baker | Oldmixon (1732)95 | Wilson 96 | reference to 128(F);97 see note to 161 | |||||
195 | A Declaration of Truth to Benjamin Hoadly | contemporary attribution | 1717 | E. More | Gildon, 171998 | Wilson | ||||||
196(P) | The Conduct of Christians made the Sport of Infidels | deduced-context | l7l7 | S. Baker | Trent (CHEL) | praised in Mercurius Politicus; two favorite themes; reference also in 209 | ||||||
197(P) | The Old Whig and Modern Whig Revived | deduced-content | l7l7 | S. Baker | Trent (CHEL) | consonant with D’s thinking and style; two favorite verse quotations | ||||||
198(P) | A Continuation of Letters written by a Turkish Spy at Paris | deduced-content | 1718 | W. Taylor | Crossley | parallels to D works; favorite allusion; story and quote also in 210; quote also in 201 | ||||||
199 | The Family Instructor, vol. II | deduced-context | 1718 | Eman. Matthews | continuation of 169 | |||||||
200(P) | A Friendly Rebuke to one Parson Benjamin | deduced-content | 1719 | E. Moore | Lee | similar to 195; consonant with D’s thinking; favorite quotation | ||||||
201 | The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe | contemporary attribution | 1719 | W. Taylor | Gildon, 171999 | |||||||
202(P) | The Anatomy of Exchange-Alley | deduced-content | 1719 | E. Smith | Lee | several suggestive pieces of internal evidence100 | ||||||
203(P) | The Just Complaint of the Poor Weavers truly Represented | deduced-content | 1719 | W. Boreham | Crossley | similar style and approach to 254; favorite anecdote | ||||||
204 | The Farther Adventures of Robinson Crusoe | contemporary attribution | 1719 | W. Taylor | Gildon, 1719 101 | Chalmers | "sequel" to 201; often pub. with it | |||||
205 | A Brief State of the Question, between the Printed and Painted Callicoes | deduced-context | 1719 | W. Boreham | Lee | author of 254 links it with this work; intro repr. in Mercurius Politicus; lengthy quotes in MP | ||||||
206(P) | The Chimera: or, the French way of Paying National Debts, laid open | deduced-content | 1720 [1719] | T. Warner | Lee | favorite saying; favorite conceit; possible lifetime attribution102 | ||||||
207(P) | The Trade to India Critically and Calmly Consider’d | deduced-content | 1720 | W. Boreham | Crossley | arguments similar to 254; quotation from 205 | ||||||
208(P) | Memoirs of a Cavalier | late attribution | [1720] | W. Taylor, T. Warner, et al. | Noble, 1784 | Wilson | reference similar to Review; Defoean plan; claimed to possess relevant document103 | |||||
209 | The Life, Adventures, and Pyracies, of the Famous Captain Singleton | late attribution | 1720 | J. Brotherton, T. Warner, et al. | 1767104 | extant copy with "emendations in a hand closely resembling" D’s105 | ||||||
210 | Serious Reflections during the Life ... of Robinson Crusoe | deduced-context | 1720 | W. Taylor | Chalmers | "sequel" to 201 | ||||||
211(P) | Brief Observations on Trade and Manufactures | deduced-content | 1721 | Trent (CHEL) | D made similar arguments to Harley; favorite allusion; remark consonant with 233 | |||||||
212(P) | The Case of Mr Law, Truly Stated | deduced-content | 1721 | A. Moore | Trent (Biblio) | verse quotation also in Review in 1705106 | ||||||
213 | The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders | late attribution | 1721 [1722] | W. Chetwood, T. Edling | Noble, 1776 | |||||||
214(P) | Due Preparations for the Plague | deduced-content | 1722 | E. Matthews, J. Batley | Crossley107 | style and theme similar to 216; favorite allusion | ||||||
215 | Religious Courtship | late attribution | 1722 | E. Matthews, W. Meadows, et al. | Cibber/ Shiels | style and approach very close to 169 | ||||||
216 | A Journal of the Plague year | late attribution | 1722 | E. Nutt, J. Roberts, et al. | Cibber/xsShiels | |||||||
217 | The History and Remarkable Life of ... Col. Jacque | contemporary attribution | 1723 [1722] | J. Brotherton, T. Payne, et al. | 4th ed. (1738) | |||||||
218 | The Fortunate Mistress: or, a History of the Fortunes of... Lady Roxana | late attribution | 1724 | T. Warner, W. Meadows, et al. | Noble, 1775 | |||||||
219 | The Great Law of Subordination Consider’d | contemporary attribution | 1724 | S. Harding, W. Lewis, et al. | 1725108 | Chalmers | couplet adapted from 17; favorite anecdote and saying | |||||
220 | A Tour thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain 109 | late attribution | 1724 | G. Strahan, W. Mears, et al. | "7th ed." (1769) | |||||||
221 | A New Voyage Round the World | late attribution | 1725 [1724] | A. Bettesworth, W. Mearsxs | 1786–87110 | |||||||
222 | Every-Body’s Business, is No-Body’s Business | signed | 1725 | T. Warner, A. Dodd, E. Nutt | Moreton111 | Chalmers (supposed) | ||||||
223 | A Tour thro’ the Whole Island of Great Britain, vol. II | deduced-context | 1725 | G. Strahan, W. Mears, et al. | continuation of 220 | |||||||
224 | The Complete English Tradesman | contemporary attribution | 1726 [1725] | Charles Rivington | 1738 ed.; Cibber/Shiels | |||||||
225(P) | A General History of Discoveries and Improvements | deduced-content | [1725-6] | J. Roberts | Crossley | consonant with other works; quote used here and in 210; proposal akin to one in a letter | ||||||
226(P) | A Brief Case of the Distillers | deduced-content | 1726 | T. Warner | Crossley | two close parallels in Review | ||||||
227 | An Essay upon Literature | late attribution | 1726 | Tho. Bowles, John Clark, John Bowles | I759?112 | Wilson | passage similar to 233; one favorite saying | |||||
228 | The Political History of the Devil | late attribution | 1726 | T. Warner | Gibber/ Shiels | "abounds in favourite allusions and quotations," including from 17 and 81 | ||||||
229(P) | Mere Mature Delineated | deduced-content | 1726 | T. Warner | Wilson | several suggestive pieces of internal evidence113 | ||||||
230 | A Tour thro' the Whole Island of Great Britain, vol. III | deduced-context | 1727 [1726] | G. Strahan, W. Mears, J. Stagg | continuation of 220 | |||||||
231 | A Supplement to the Complete English Tradesman | deduced-context | 1727 [1726] | Charles Rivington | supplement to 224 | |||||||
232 | The Protestant Monastery 114 | signed | 1727 [1726] | W. Meadows, J. Roberts, et al. | Moreton | Chalmers (supposed) | ||||||
233 | A System of Magick | signed | 1727 [1726] | J. Roberts | 2nd ed.: Moreton | Cibber/ Shiels | ||||||
234(P) | The Evident Approach of a War | deduced-content | 1727 | J. Roberts, A. Dodd | Lee | one favorite allusion; one passage similar to Review; author refers to 236(P) | ||||||
235(P) | Conjugal Lewdness | late attribution | 1727 | T. Warner | Chalmers | several significant parallels; two favorite quotations; favorite saying | ||||||
236(P) | The Evident Advantages to Great Britain and its Allies from the Approaching War | deduced-content115 | 1727 | J. Roberts, A. Dodd | Crossley | continuation of 234(P) by the same author; suggestion parallel to Review | ||||||
237(P) | A Brief Deduction of the ... British Woollen Manufacture | deduced-content | 1727 | J. Roberts, A. Dodd | Crossley | account closely connects to that given in the Review | ||||||
238 | An Essay on the History and Reality of Apparitions | signed | 1727 | J. Roberts | 1729 repr.: Moreton | Cibber/Shiels | see note to 222 | |||||
239 | The Compleat English Tradesman, vol. II | deduced-context | 1727 | Charles Rivington | continuation of 224 | |||||||
240 | A New Family Instructor | signed | 1727 | T. Warner | Family Instructor | related to 169 | ||||||
241 | Parochial Tyranny | signed | [1727] | J. Roberts | Moreton | Chalmers (supposed) | see note to 222 | |||||
242 (P) | Some Considerations on the Reasonableness and Necessity of Encreasing ... the Seamen ... | deduced-context | 1728 | J. Roberts | Crossley | similar to argument in Review (1705) and to 1705 proposal made to the House of Lords 116 | ||||||
243 | Augusta Triumphans | signed | 1728 | for J. Roberts; by E. Nutt et al. | 2nd ed.: Moreton | Chalmers (supposed) | see note to 222 | |||||
244 | A Plan of the English Commerce | contemporary attribution | 1728 | Charles Rivington | 1737 ed.; Cibber/Shiels | |||||||
245 | Second Thoughts are Best | signed | 1729 [1728] | for W. Meadows; by J. Roberts | Moreton | Chalmers (supposed) | expands on 243 (opening pages almost verbatim); see note to 222 | |||||
246 | An Humble Proposal to the People of England, for the Encrease of their Trade | signed | 1729 | Charles Rivington | Compleat Tradesman | connected to 244 | ||||||
247 (P) | The Advantages of Peace and Commerce | deduced-content | 1729 | for J. Brotherton and Tho. Cox; by A. Dodd | Crossley | various favorite themes; one favorite saying | ||||||
248(P) | Some Objections Humbly Offered ... relating to the ... Relief of Prisoners | deduced-content | 1729 | R. Walker, E. Nutt | Crossley | one argument similar to Review (of 1707 and 1709); passage similar to 224117 | ||||||
249(P) | A Brief State of the Inland or Home Trade, of England | deduced-content | 1730 | Tho. Warner | Crossley | several passages similar to 224; one favorite saying | ||||||
Periodicals | ||||||||||||
250 | The Review 118 | claimed by D | Feb 1704-June 1713 | several119 | claimed by D120 | |||||||
250a | An Answer to the L[or]d H[aver]-sham’s Speech | claimed by D | 1705 | TP: Daniel D’Foe | repr. from Review | |||||||
250b | An Essay on the Great Battle at Ramellies | claimed by D | [1706] | repr. from Review | ||||||||
250c | A Sermon Preach’d by Mr. Daniel Defoe | claimed by D | 1706 | title | repr. from Review | |||||||
250d | Daniel Defoe’s Hymn for the Thanksgiving | claimed by D | 1706 | title | repr. from Review | |||||||
250e | The Trade of Britain Stated | claimed by D | [1707] | [Edinb.] | repr. from Review | |||||||
250f | One of Mr. Foe’s Weekly Reviews | claimed by D | [1707] | [Edinb.?] | title | repr. from Review | ||||||
250g | New Fashion’d Advice about Choosing a Parliament ... taken out of Daniel De Foe’s Reviews | claimed by D | 1708 | Edinb. | title | repr. from Review | ||||||
250h | Scotland in Danger | claimed by D | 1708 | Edinb. | repr. from Review; see note to 101 (P) | |||||||
250i | A Commendatory Sermon Preach’d November the 4th, 1709 | claimed by D | [1709] | J. Dutton | TP: Daniel de Foe | repr. from Review | ||||||
250j | A Vindication of Dr. Henry Sacheverell | claimed by D | [1710] | TP: D. D’F. | repr. from Review | |||||||
250k | News from the Moon | claimed by D | [1721] | [Boston] | repr. from Review | |||||||
250l | The Banbury Convert: Or, Daniel De Foe’s Address to Her Majesty | claimed by D | 1710 | J. Baker | title | repr. from Review | ||||||
250m | The State of the British Nation | claimed by D | [1711] | Dublin | repr. from Review | |||||||
251 | The Master Mercury | contemporary attribution | Aug-Sept 1704 | Luttrell, 1704121 | MS ascription; favorite quotation; "Defoean" theme and style; refers to Review | |||||||
252 | Mercator | contemporary attribution | May 1713-July 1714 | Benj. Tooke, John Barber | Boyer, 1713122 | possible claim in a letter; by same author as The Manufacturer (see 254)123 | ||||||
253(P) | The Monitor | contemporary attribution | Apr-Aug 1714 | John Morphew | 1714124 | Trent (CHEL) | several suggestive pieces of internal evidence125 | |||||
254 | The Manufacturer | deduced-context | Oct 1719-Mar 1721 | W. Boreham | D commissioned by the London Company of Weavers; by author of 252126 | |||||||
255(P) | The Commentator | contemporary attribution | Jan-Sep 1720 | J. Roberts | 1720127 | Moore | several suggestive pieces of internal evidence128 | |||||
256(P) | The Director | deduced-content | Oct 1720-Jan 1721 | for W. Boreham; by A. Dodd | Lee | several favorite quotations and allusions; similar polemical style to Review | ||||||
Contributions to Books and Periodicals | ||||||||||||
257 | To the Athenian Society 129 | signed | [1692] | for James Dowley | ode: D.F. | Dunton130 | ||||||
258 | Preface to De Laune’s Plea ... With a Preface by the Author of the Review | signed | 1706 | William and Joseph Marshall | signed D. Foe | advert, in Review | ||||||
259 | Statement in St. James’s Post, repr. in Mercurius Politicus | signed | 1717 | signed D.F. | ||||||||
260 | Letter in Weekly Journal signed "Sir Andrew Politick" | contemporary attribution | 1718 | 1718131 | ||||||||
261 | Letter in Applebee’s Original Weekly Journal signed "Andrew Moreton" | signed | 1728 | Moreton | ||||||||
262 | Essay in first number of Universal Spectator | contemporary attribution | 1728 | Henry Baker132 | ||||||||
Translations and Compilations | ||||||||||||
263 | An Appendix to the Review | deduced-context | 1705 | includes Review indices; advert, in Review | ||||||||
264 | A Collection of the ... Addresses in ... King James’s Time | deduced-context | [1710] | D seems to promise to write this in the Review | ||||||||
Works Left in Manuscript | ||||||||||||
266 | Meditacons | claimed by D | [1681] | MS in D’s hand, signed with his name and initials | ||||||||
267 | Historicall Colleccons | claimed by D | [1682] | MS in D’s hand | ||||||||
268 | Humanum est Errare[:] Mistakes On all Sides | claimed by D | [1704?] | partially in D’s hand133 | ||||||||
269 | Par—n Pl—ton of Barwick | contemporary attribution | [1709?] | 00000 | 1709134 | |||||||
270 | The Compleat English Gentleman | claimed by D | [1728–29?] | claimed in Letters (p. 473) | ||||||||
271 | Of Royall Educacion | claimed by D | [1698?-1727?] | included with MS of 270 |
A "second edition" of the True Collection appeared in 1705 (including the same items as the first). This Collection and the Second Volume were reissued in two parts as A True Collection ... The Third Edition in 1710, and again in 1711 as the two-volume Collection of the Writings of the Author of the True-Born Englishman. Forty items were reprinted in the two-volume The Genuine Works of Daniel D’Foe, Author of The True-born English-Man ([1721]), perhaps an unauthorized collection (and an expensive one at 12 shillings). All of the items included in these collections were printed either in the original True Collection or in the Second Volume.
The How collection was unauthorized, and Defoe excluded 11 (P) and 40(F) from his True Collection.
Poems on Affairs of State: Augustan Satirical Verse, 1660–1714, vol. 6, ed. Frank H. Ellis (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1970). Ellis says that "The evidence for Defoe's authorship ... lies mainly in his quotation of the poem in" issues of the Review (48).
Four stanzas were also "quoted in Cursory Remarks upon Some Late Disloyal Proceedings in Several Cabals (1699)," a volume not associated with Defoe (CB, 16).
Animadversions on the Succession to the Crown of England, Consider'd (1701), 1. Also in two 1703 pamphlets (CB, 26).
Furbank and Owens observe that this item was "widely attributed" to Defoe by contemporaries (including Tutchin), though Defoe (almost certainly disingenuously) denied authorship (CB, 27).
This is probably the piece James Drake attributes to "Legion" in The Source of our Present Fears Discover'd (1703), 32.
This pamphlet was "widely attributed" to Defoe, including by Pittis (?) in The True-Born Hugonot, p. 10 (CB, 29).
Ralph, History of England: During the Reigns of K. William, Q. Anne, and K. George I, 2 vols. (1744–46), 2:999.
Reprinted in A Collection of Scarce and Valuable Tracts, 4 vols. (1748), 3:114–124, attributed to "T.G." (Thomas Gordon?).
Extracts adapted and reprinted in The Modern Addresses Vindicated ... by D. De Foe (1710), which has sometimes been mistakenly attributed to Defoe (CB, 32).
See for example The Shortest-Way with the Dissenters ... with its Author's Brief Explication Consider'd, his Name Expos'd... and The Fox with his Firebrand Unkennell'd and Insnar'd (both 1703).
"Defoe's authorship is made clear in an 'advertisement' on the verso of the title-page" of the first edition (CB, 41).
The author of Remarks on the Author of the Hymn to the Pillory assumes that this item was written by Defoe (CB, 43).
Furbank and Owens note that, in addition to the preface being signed "D.F.," one part of item 46 is signed "Daniel de Foe" (CB, 44).
23. "An Unknown Defoe Broadsheet on the Regulation of the Press?", The Library, 5 th ser., 33 (1978): 51–58. Downie explains that an anonymous informer sent this piece to Harley and attributed it to Defoe.
An anonymous writer attributed this poem to "our Legionite" in the preface to The Whig's Scandalous Address Answered Stanza by Stanza (1703). John Dyer's News-Letter in October 1704 implied Defoe's authorship. Furbank and Owens point out, however, that in a 1710 letter, Defoe "reproaches Dyer for having reported him as fled from justice, when in fact he was on a journey, and there was not 'the least Charge Against me for being Concern'd in it' (Letters, p. 269)" (CB, 51–52). Elsewhere, they explain that they "are inclined to think that Defoe was its author, on the (admittedly slender) grounds that the first line from it is quoted in An Elegy on the Author of the True-Born Englishman ... and that Sammen who dispersed it was evidently a friend of Defoe's." See their "New Light on John Pierce, Defoe's Agent in Scotland," Edinburgh Bibliographical Society Transactions 6 (1998): 134–143, at 136.
The author of Stockings out at Heel (1705) attributes this piece to "A Dislocated Hosier" (CB, 58).
"No independently published edition of this work has been found" (CB, 59). The item was first published in SV.
Charles Leslie and others attributed this to Defoe by 1708 (when he openly acknowledged authorship); see CB, 62.
Defoe does not claim this piece by name, but his advertising it in the Review as by the author of The True-Born Englishman provides a tacit admission of authorship.
Furbank and Owens also point out that "Defoe later [in 1711] became a vociferous champion for the firm of Brooke and Hellier, when they tried to break into the retail trade in Portugese wine" (CB, 67).
Furbank and Owens refer to another work that includes the same Buder quotation, concluding in that instance that "Although this line is sometimes quoted by Defoe ... there is little reason to think that he was the author" of the work at issue (CB, 64).
Rodney M. Baine quotes a 1734 essay in The Universal Spectator, whose author suggests that the same person was responsible for both this item and An Essay on the History and Reality of Apparitions. "This reference," Baine concludes, "gives us our first evidence that Defoe wrote A True Relation of the Apparition of Mrs. Veal" See Daniel Defoe and the Supernatural (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1968), 93.
Jure Divino Toss'd in a Blanket: or, Daniel De Foe's Memorial (in POAS, 1707) and elsewhere (see CB, 76).
See Frank H. Ellis, "Notes for an Edition of Defoe's Verse," The Review of English Studies, n.s., 32 (1981): 398–407. What Defoe says in his 28 November 1706 letter to Harley is "I Gould not Refrain sending you a peice of my Ld Beilhavens Poetry in Answer to the Ballad" (Letters, 162).
Robert Wodrow (1679–1734), an eighteenth-century collector of books and manuscripts, often wrote what he believed to be the author's name on title pages of pieces he acquired; Furbank and Owens do not accept all of the pieces that were first attributed by Wodrow. See Defoe De-Attributions, xv-xvi, and CB, xiv. Because these annotations were made over a period of time, I have not given a precise date of his ascription of the relevant items.
What Defoe writes to Harley is this: "They go to morrow on the 5th Article. They have been Debateing it last sitting, and here is a mighty popular Objection against on Account of their shipping. The Enclosed will Explain it more particularly, which I Wrot at the Desire of the E's of Abercorn, Sutherland, and some Members of the Commons, to prepare them against to morrows Debate" (Letters, 154). That the "Enclosed" is item 85 is highly likely, but the allusion is not as unambiguous as (for example) in the case of 134(P).
On 9 December 1706, Defoe writes to Harley, "I am printing a Single sheet Entituled a Letter to the Glasgow men," and on 12 December he says, "The paper I mentioned in my last About the Glasgow men I send you Enclosed. Tis a plain but Course Expostulation and they Flatter me it has done a great Deal of service here" (Letters, 169, 170).
What Defoe says to Harley (17 January 1707) is this: "Since the papers I lately sent you I have printed here Two Essayes. One I Enclose you here; The Other shall be sent The Next post" (Letters, 194). Furbank and Owens, following Healey, believe the "One" to be item 90, and the "Other" to be item 91.
Pamphlets nos. 92, 93, and 94 are part of a controversy with the Rev. James Webster. Furbank and Owens: "The second of the three pamphlets addressed to Webster makes it plain that the author is, and is known by Webster to be, Defoe" (CB, 84). In a 27 January 1707 letter to Harley, Defoe says, "I sent you the last letter The Attempt of One Webster, a minister, against the Dissenters, I here Send my Answer to him" (Letters, 196).
I have labeled item no. 94 "deduced-context" instead of "contemporary attribution" because in this case the contextual evidence (for which see previous note) is more persuasive than the contemporary attribution. A second edition appeared the same year under the title The Dissenters Vindicated; or, A Short View of the Present State of the Protestant Religion in Britain. Toland attributes The Dissenters Vindicated to Defoe in his Second Part of the State Anatomy (1717), p. 46.
"It seems likely that Robert Wodrow was referring to it in a letter ... of 13 March 1711, where he remarked that 'the foolish plea of persecution' by Episcopal pamphleteers 'is fully answered by ... Defoe' (CB, 87).
45. Just Reprimand to Daniel De Foe, the author (Defoe's target, James Clark) "takes it for granted that [the piece] is by Defoe himself" (CB, 90).
The letter is dated 29 June 1708, and printed in Furbank and Owens, "Defoe as Secret Agent." What Defoe says to Godolphin is this: "Enclosed I send your Ldpp the printed paper I promised (in my Last but one) should Come last post, but Could not be ready; your Ldpp will see by it The steps I am Taking. It would be a most usefull Encouragement to kno' if your Ldpp approves Thi, and My Design of Dispersing it over the wholl Island, in a Method I noted to your Ldpp was formally Done in the Case of the reply to the Memoriall. It is but a short piece, but I am perswaded it may be usefull, and I shall Follow it with Another, and perhaps a Third, to expose the Conjunction of These men with the Enemies of the Government. I have sent this up this post to be printed in England; your Ldpp will perceive I have Disguised the Stile, and I am perswaded no body will so much as guess it is mine" (150). Furbank and Owens suggest that the "reply to the Memoriall" to which Defoe refers is likely to be The High-Church Legion, and the "Another" he anticipates is probably Scotland in Danger, item no. 250h (see notes 37 and 38).
The pamphlet was attributed to "the Author of the Reviews" in the Edinburgh edition of the Review (CB, 92). Also see the note to no. 85 for Wodrow's ascription of it to Defoe.
In a 5 September 1710 letter to Harley, Defoe boasts, "I am Vain of Saying Sir The first Step I Took has been Successfull and has done More Service Than I Expected, in which The Town does me too much Honour, in Supposeing it well Enough done to be your Own. I Mean the Essay Upon Credit" (Letters, 276-277). The Essay is attributed to Harley in A Collection of Scarce and Valuable Tracts, 2:1–9. So is no. no (2:10–18).
In a 5 September 1710 letter to Harley, Defoe says, "If you Think it proper, I would Offer Another Piece of The Same kind [as An Essay upon Publiek Credit]; which I would Call an Essay Upon Loans" (Letters, 277). Item no. no appeared later the same month.
The reference is in volume six of Samuel Halkett and John Laing's Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous English Literature, as enlarged by James Kennedy, W. A. Smith, and A. F. Johnson (Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd, 1932), p. 304 (under the tide "Captain Tom's ballad; or, Captain Tom's lamentation for his mob's tribulation").
Furbank and Owens admit that "With a fraction more hesitation, since there are no 'Captain Tom' allusions in the Review at this time, and the style is more demotic ... one can apply the same argument in support of Defoe's authorship as with item 106(P)" (CB, 104–105).
Defoe denied his authorship of this piece, attributing it to someone else. "Nevertheless," Furbank and Owens conclude, "internal evidence strongly suggests his authorship" (CB, 106).
The bookseller Joseph Button wrote to Defoe about this pamphlet c. 25 December 1710: "When you do Bickerstaff I wou'd not ha' you fright all people as you say you will" (Letters, 305).
"Robert Wodrow, in a letter to his wife of 10 May 1711, writes that he is enclosing 'a pamphlet, "Counsel to the Assembly" by Defoe"' (CB, 109).
In a 3 March 1711 letter to Harley, Defoe asks "whether if a Small pamphlett ... were written to Allay the feares and Lessen the Surprize of the people There, to Dispose Them to Consider Calmly of Things, and a Little Encourage Them–whether you may not Think it Usefull at Such a Juncture as This" (Letters, 320).
Defoe refers to this pamphlet as a "Vile Ill Natur'd Pamphlet" and "a Bitter Invective" not by him: "It is Certainly Written by Some English man, and I have Some Guess at the Man, but dare not be positive" (Letters, 306–307). Furbank and Owens (not unwisely) disbelieve him, "above all because [Atalantis Major] corresponds so closely to what he had written earlier to Harley" (CB, 111).
"Defoe was friendly with Dalby Thomas, a governor of the African Company, and was widely believed to be a hired advocate for the company" (CB, 112).
Furbank and Owens also observe that this pamphlet refers to "a writer of much penetration who continually warned the Whigs of the danger of running down credit ... almost certainly an allusion to Defoe." The piece does criticize the Review, but they conclude that such criticism "can probably be taken as a ruse" (CB, 117).
"The tone and complex line of argument as regards Occasional Conformity are very close to those of Defoe's known writings on the subject"; a favorite allusion; reference that suggests "that the author has the backing of fellow Dissenters" (CB, 119). It was also advertised in the Review.
In a 14 February 1712 letter to Harley, Defoe says, "I Reproach my Self with The Answer I gave your Ldpp when you were pleased to Ask me if I had any thing Perticular to Offer, Because I Fully purposed to have Represented a Perticular Case of the Poor keel men of New Castle. ... There is So Much Justice ... in The Case That I Perswade my Self your Ldpp will be pleased with Appearing in behalf of a Thousand Families of poor and Injured Men, who None but God and your Ldpp can Now Deliver; If your Ldpp pleases to give me Leav I would Gladly Lay an Abstract of The Case before you" (Letters, 369).
Although this attribution is deduced from content, and regarded as merely "highly 'probable'" by Furbank and Owens, the detailed reference to Defoe and his career seem to me virtually to constitute a claimed authorship.
In "Defoe and the Dutch Alliance: Some Attributions Examined," BJECS 9 (1986): 169–182, Furbank and Owens argue that, of the six pamphlets on 1710–1712 Anglo-Dutch peace negotiations attributed to Defoe by earlier bibliographers, only three are legitimate: 140(P), 141(P), and 143(P). They contend that the Enquiry's "telling rhetorical organization" is "suggestive of Defoe," and that the argument corresponds "with Defoe's position in the Review," which leads them to conclude that "the attribution is correct, and that the pamphlet is by Defoe" (176). Given the certitude reflected in this verdict, one might wonder why they label the pamphlet merely "probable" in the Bibliography. The case for Defoe's authorship of Reasons against Fighting and A Further Search is strengthened, Furbank and Owens argue, by circumstantial evidence. In a letter to Harley, Defoe seems to promise to write a pamphlet that fits the description of Reasons against Fighting, and there is a similarly suggestive epistolary reference to a work that might be A Further Search. The style of A Further Search, moreover, "has here and there an edge and neat turn of phrase-making that seem reasonably Defoean" (180).
The reference is in a 5 June 1712 letter to Harley, where Defoe says that he is enclosing "books," presumably nos. 140(P) and 141 (P), though the references are vague. Of the first, he explains, "It is written without Doores, and for The Use of Those Cheifly, who kno' Nothing but without Doores. I hope it May be Usefull to Undeciev an abused people, and Let Them see How The wholl Nation was Forming into One Tribe of Issachar, and Taught to Couch Under The Tyranny of Our Neighbours." He goes on to explain that he is sending "another book ... in Answer to The Dutch Memorialls." He insists that he is "farr from Exciting the people against The Dutch, and believ it is not the Governments View to Injure or Break with The Dutch; but it Seems Necessary ... to have the Dutch Friends and Not Masters" (Letters, 376, 377).
Furbank and Owens say that, "since the persona of 'Count Tariff' was directly associated with Mercator by Addison," this praise "is strongly suggestive of Defoe's authorship" (CB, 140).
As further "evidence," Furbank and Owens explain that Defoe had, in a letter to Harley, encouraged him "to get Steele expelled from Parliament." They conclude that "Out of these circumstantial facts a 'probable' attribution seems to emerge" (CB, 141).
To Harley, Defoe writes, "I have also Compil'd a Letter to The Dissenters, of which I had a hint from your Ldpp" (Letters, 424).
The attribution of items 161, 164(P), 165, 166, 167, 168, 170, 175(P), and 194 are addressed in more detail in Furbank and Owens, "The Lost Property Office: Some Defoe Attributions Reconsidered," PBSA 86 (1992): 245–67. Furbank and Owens sort 24 "Harley" pamphlets attributed to Defoe by Moore into "Defoe's," "probably Defoe's," and unlikely to be Defoe's. They list no. 161 as merely "probable" in this article, and (without explanation) upgrade it to "definite" in CB.
Some people attributed this to Harley; both Harley and Defoe (in an Appeal to Honour and Justice) denied authorship (CB, 148). Either we disbelieve Defoe's passionate defense of himself or we deprive him of authorship.
Defoe explains "why I have not Persued what I was upon for Vindicateing your Ldpps person and Conduct and Exposeing your Enemyes as I had proposed to your Ldpp and which was actually in the Press and part of it Printed off" (Letters, 444). Furbank and Owens conclude that "it is hard to doubt that this was the promised pamphlet he referred to in a letter to Harley of 3 August 1714" (CB, 148–49).
Furbank and Owens argue that "it is difficult not to conclude that he wrote [this pamphlet] and that it is a work of fiction" (CB, 151).
In The Life And Strange Surprizing Adventures of Mr. D[aniel] De F[oe], Gildon has "Defoe" say, "I have written against my old Teachers in the Shape and Form of a Quaker, as in a Pamphlet to T. B. a Dealer in many Words; and in the same Form I have attack'd the B...of B..., one who is equally hated by them" (xv). The "Pamphlet to T. B." is evidently item no. 170, the full tide of which is A Friendly Epistle by way of Reproof from one of the People called Quakers, to Thomas Bradbury, a Dealer in many Words. Nos. 172 and 174 are related to 170 (the title pages of both announce that the work is "By the same Friend that wrote to Thomas Bradbury), which is presumably why Furbank and Owens use Gildon to support the attribution of these items as well as of no. 170. The same is true for no. 195, attributed on the title page to "a Ministring Friend, who writ to Tho. Bradbury, a Dealer in many Words." Items 172, 174, and 195 are labeled "contemporary attribution" here because Gildon clearly associated Defoe with a group of related pamphlets.
Furbank and Owens suggest that "the discriminating and provocative tribute to the genius of Louis XIV ... seems particularly characteristic and has many parallels in the Review" (CB, 160).
James Crossley, "Defoe's Pamphlet on the Septennial Bill," Notes and Queries, 1st ser., 5 (1852): 577–579.
Defoe's claim appears in an article in the St. James's Post, reprinted in Mercurius Politicus (July 1717). Furbank and Owens explain that "Boyer, in the Political State for April 1716, accuses Defoe of writing an attack on the bill to extend the life of Parliament... and mentions the present tract as one of seven written in favour of the bill and therefore as not by Defoe" (CB, 164).
Furbank and Owens listed this item as a doubtful attribution in Defoe De-Attributions (pp. 95–96), but "new light on Defoe's political stance at this period now inclines us to accept it as probable" (CB, 171). They also accept the successor to this pamphlet, no. 193(P) (p. 100 in Defoe De-Attributions).
Boyer, Political State for June 1717. As Furbank and Owens point out, "Toland, who was an old enemy of Defoe, went along with the attribution, gleefully exploiting the chance to score off him" (CB, 170). "Toland, in The Second Part of the State-Anatomy, answered [this pamphlet], making merciless fun of the paradox of the author of The True-Born Englishman (of all people) extolling the English nobility and whipping up prejudice against foreigners" (CB, 176). Defoe flatly denies authorship of this piece in 193(P), but perhaps disingenuously.
The author of The Conduct of Robert Walpole Esq. reports that "Fair Payment no Spunge ... was also said to be written by the Order of the first Contrivers: Some said it was written by the aforesaid Paterson; others, who pretended to speak from better Information, said it was done by Daniel de Foe" (p. 59; quoted in CB, 172).
James Crossley, "'Inquiry into the State of the Union, by the Wednesday Club in Friday Street,"' Notes and Queries, 1st ser., 7 (1853): 576.
The piece expresses sentiments similar to those in no. 189; includes a remark also found in nos. 7 and 8; its title may recall no. 148; there are possible reference to no. 148; a "classic Defoe formulation" and a "very Defoean homily." Also, "the absurd prejudice of supposing that anyone who finds things to praise in an enemy must be a traitor [is] frequently echoed in the Review" (CB, 173).
A Presbyterian Getting on Horse-Back, 3–4. From Furbank and Owens's point of view, however, the author of this piece is half wrong: the author says that no. 191(P) must be by the same author as The Repeal of the Act against Occasional Conformity Considered, and "I should suspect De Foe to be the Author." Furbank and Owens do not attribute The Repeal of the Act to Defoe (CB, 174), which means that we cannot count this contemporary's testimony as reliable external evidence.
"Wodrow, in the preface to his The History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland, 2 vols (Edinburgh, 1721–22), discusses this work and says that it is generally believed to be by the author of the History of the Union. He makes a more explicit attribution to Defoe in a letter to James Fraser (undated, but about November 1720)" (CB, 175).
"The present tract's denial that Defoe wrote [188(P)] ... carries little conviction in the face of so much external evidence" (CB, 177). The external evidence to which they refer is presumably the Boyer and Toland attributions of no. 188(P) to Defoe (both hostile).
Oldmixon, A Reply to the Late Bishop Atterbury's Vindication, 7. Boyer's statements in the Political State (June 1717) implies that this tract is Defoe's. Defoe replied to Boyer (in a letter signed "D.F." in St James's Post, reprinted in Mercurius Politicus, July 1717), challenging him to "produce some Proof" that he had written it. The Post Boy advertisement attributes it to someone else (CB, 178).
As Furbank and Owens point out, however, Wilson admitted "that there was probably 'no solid foundation' for the attribution" (CB, 179).
"Despite his disclaimers and the Post Boy advertisement the ascription to Defoe is convincing, and one passage in particular helps support the theory that he wrote it and constitutes a complicated private joke" (CB, 178).
This piece includes lengthy quotations from no. 20 and cites no. 23; it includes a favorite "dog-Latin tag" of Defoe's; and its approach is similar to Defoe's known writings (CB, 187).
Furbank and Owens do not mention that Gildon attributed this to Defoe in the "postscript" to The Life And Strange Surprizing Adventures of Mr. D[aniel] De F[oe]: "Having just run thro' the first Volume and clos'd my Letter, I was told that the second Volume was at last come out" (29).
"There could be thought to be the hint of an attribution to Defoe in a passage from a pamphlet Considerations on the Consequences of the French settling Colonies on the Mississippi excerpted in the Political State for April 1720: '... all your heavy Fellows, who pass for wise ... have thought it the shortest Way [our italics] to tell us gravely it will certainly come to nothing, and to treat it as a meer Chimaera' [our italics]" (CB, 191). They point out that passages from The Chimera (206(P)) had been reprinted in the Political State the previous January.
As Furbank and Owens point out, "Defoe claimed more than once to have ... a manuscript by an English gentleman who served under Gustavus Adolphus" (CB, 194).
Furbank and Owens suggest that Noble's 1784 edition of Captain Singleton "is, perhaps, the first ascription of it to Defoe" (CB, 196). I have found additional evidence suggested a significantly earlier first attribution: a 17 67 edition of Captain Singleton sold by Francis Noble (and others) is advertised as "Published originally from the Captain's Manuscript, by the celebrated Daniel Defoe." See The London Chronicle, 23–25 June 1767. The tide page of this edition (labeled the "third") says 1768, but the advertisement announces it as appearing on that day.
The connection with Defoe is, however, tenuous. The appearance of this verse passage in the Review is sixteen years earlier than the publication of The Case of Mr Law, and the same passage is quoted at p. 22 of A Letter from a Gentleman at the Bath, to his Friend in London (1722), a work never associated with Defoe.
This attribution was made by Crossley in a letter to the Gentleman's Magazine 10 (1838): 370–371.
Furbank and Owens point out that "Several passages from the Tour are reproduced without acknowledgment in ... Atlas Maritimus (1728)" (CB, 210–211)—an illustration of the fact that the appearance of passages from a "Defoe" work does not constitute solid evidence for an item's authorship.
J. R. Forster, History of Voyages ... Made in the North (1786); Noble's edition of Daniel De Foe's Voyage Round the World (1787).
Furbank and Owens argue that Defoe was suspected of being Moreton in his lifetime, citing the anonymous Villany Exploded (1728) as an example (CB, 214). I have, however, found no other association of Defoe with Moreton in his lifetime. In the "Cibber" list of 1753, Shiels includes nos. 233 (as "History of Magic") and 238, the latter as "under the name of Moreton," but does not attribute the other Moreton pamphlets to Defoe (see p. 323). Chalmers (1790) included 233 and 238 as Defoe's (pp. 82, 83), but he regarded the other "Moreton" works (nos. 222, 232, 241, 243, and 245) as merely "supposed to be De Foe's" (see p. 86). Nos. 233 and 238 are not in fact part of the Moreton series, as Furbank and Owens point out, but 238 was reissued (as The Secrets of the Invisible World Disclos'd) with "Andrew Moreton" on the title page, and a second edition of 233 also includes that name (CB, 213).
As Furbank and Owens point out, Trent "cites a manuscript note [dated 1759] in one of his copies: 'I was told by Mr. Bowles, print-seller ... that it was composed by Daniel Defoe"' (CB, 220).
The piece includes a favorite allusion; a reference that appears in no. 227; a claim also made in no. 223; and a line of verse also in no. 233.
Furbank and Owen note that an abridgment entitled Chickens feed Capons (1731 [for 1730]) reproduced some of no. 232, though they doubt Defoe's participation in or authorization of it.
Items included in the Critical Bibliography chiefly because they are continuations of earlier "Defoe" works are labeled here "deduced-context." 236(P) is "deduced from content" because both it and the work to which it is connected are attributed on the grounds of internal evidence.
A 30 January 1705 letter to "The Select Committee of the House of Lords" is printed in Letters (pp. 73-77). The author of no. 242(P), Furbank and Owens explain, gives "an approving account of a similar long and intricate proposal 'laid before a Committee of Parliament' some years ago" (CB, 234).
Furbank and Owens retain Some Objections as a "probable" attribution, while de-attributing two other pamphlets on imprisonment for debt (all three were treated as certain by Moore). See "Defoe and Imprisonment for Debt: Some Attributions Reviewed," The Review of English Studies, n.s., 37 (1986): 495-502.
Furbank and Owens point out that "There was much anonymous verse, in the main most probably by Defoe himself" in the Review [CB, 244). They also explain that "Occasionally, Defoe reprinted previously published pamphlets in the Review. ... More usually, though, articles from or issues of the Review were reprinted as pamphlets. It is often difficult to tell whether this was done with Defoe's authorisation or not" (245).
On which see J. A. Downie, "Mr. Review and His Scribbling Friends: Defoe and the Critics, 1705-1706," Huntington Library Quarterly 41 (1978): 345-366.
As, for example, in the Review for 30 January 1707, where he insists "no Person whatsoever has or ever had any Concern in writing the said Paper Entitled the REVIEW, than the known Author D. F. "... and that "wherever the Author may be, the Papers are wrote with his own Hand."
Narcissus Luttrell reports that "de Foe is ordered to be taken into custody for reflecting on admiral Rooke, in his Master Mercury" (quoted in CB, 249).
Boyer's ascription is in the Political State for May 1713. Furbank and Owens point out that "Various suggestions were made as to the authorship of Mercator" (CB, 250).
In the Review,Furbank and Owens report, Defoe "speaks as if the Mercator were by another author," and in An Appeal to Honour and Justice, he admits to having some part in it, but insists that he "neither was the Author of it, had the Property of it, the Printing of it, or the Profit by it." In a cryptic passage in a 21 May 1714 letter to Harley, Defoe seems to claim sole authorship (see Letters, 441).
The Flying-Post for 26-29 June 1714 includes criticism of the Monitor: ...you are to remember, that if D.F. be the Author (as 'tis generally suppos'd) he is famous for Irony ..." (CB, 252).
One issue includes a story for which there are "several analogues ... in known Defoe writings"; another issue includes a discussion of Steele very similar to one in a letter to Harley. A passage in yet another issue "corresponds closely, and at one point word-for-word, with a letter of Defoe's to Harley on the same subject" (CB, 252-253).
A passage in the 5 August 1720 Commentator (255(P)) attributes The Manufacturer to "Daniel" (CB, 254).
"An attack on [The Commentator] in the Weekly Medley for 16-23 January 1720 ('composed equally of Ignorance and Malice, and like a common FOE to all ingenious and learned men') might be hinting at Defoe as author" (CB, 255).
This paper includes several parallels to other Defoe writings: an anecdote used in no. 216 and another used in the Review; a quotation from no. 34; a comment very similar to one in no. 267 and the Review; a bit of wordplay paralleled in no. 224; a discussion akin to one in the Review; a Rochester quotation also found in the Review; and a discussion of credit that "is very much in Defoe's style upon this favourite topic." One issue includes an epigraph similar to the opening lines of no. 271 (CB, 256).
"The letter was declared treasonable, as a result of which Mist's offices were raided and searched and the staff taken into custody; and under questioning Mist testified that the letter was the work of Defoe, as did the bookseller Thomas Warner and a certain Jonathan Marshall, who said it had been delivered to him by Defoe's gardener" (CB, 259–60).
"The Universal Spectator was edited by Defoe's son-in-law Henry Baker, and in his set of copies of this journal ... Baker has written Defoe's name against this essay" (CB, 260).
BEYOND FURBANK AND OWENS: A NEW CONSIDERATION OF THE EVIDENCE
FOR THE "DEFOE" CANON
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