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Four parts bound together, folio, pp. 28; 28; 25, [1] advertisement; 25, [1] errata, [5] notes to all four parts; disbound. First edition of Parts II-IV. There are two quite distinct printings of the first part, one of them no doubt a reprint to make up complete sets, but it has thus far been impossible to determine which came first; in this set signature C appears below the word 'the'. The preliminary leaves printed with Part IV remain in place, having not been transferred to follow the title-page of Part I, as requested by the instructions to the binder. This was Trapp's last major publication in verse. A preliminary 'Advertisement to the Reader' expresses vividly the sense of frustration felt by high-church Tories after years of Whig ascendancy, following the Hanoverian succession: 'However dull, and trite it may be, to declaim against the Corruptions of the Age One lives in; I presume it will be allow'd me by Everybody, that all manner of Wickedness, both in Principles, and Practice, abounds among us at present to a degree unheard of in any Christian State, or Kingdom, since Christianity was in Being. We have been bad enough, God knows, ever since my Remembrance; and I have liv'd in six Reigns: but for about the twenty Years last past, the English Nation has been, and is, so prodigiously debauch'd; its very Nature and Genius so chang'd; that I scarce know it to be the English Nation, and am almost a Foreigner in my own Country.' Foxon T457, T458, T459, and T460.
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