Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 07.djvu/370

 the revision was completed, and some connecting gags supplied by his friends.  The Fourth Letter on the Regicide Peace, fragmentary, is addressed to Lord Fitzwilliam, and begins with an answer to Lord Auckland's pamphlet, ‘Remarks on the Apparent Circumstances of the War,’ 1795. It was Written in December 1795, and was printed in 4to and 16 vol. octavo editions, 1812, being the first article in vol. v. of 4to, sometimes called the second posthumous volume, in vol. ix. of 8vo edition.  A Letter to the Empress of Russia, dated 1791.  A Letter to Sir Charles Bingham, dated 1773.  A Letter to the Hon. C. J. Fox, dated 1777.  A Letter to the Marquis of Rockingham, dated 1777.  An Address to the King (sent with 36).  An Address to the British colonists in America.  A Letter to the Right Hon. E. Pery, 1778.  A Letter to T. Burgh, Esq., with title ‘A Letter from Edmund Burke, Esq., in vindication of his conduct with regard to the affairs of Ireland; London and Dulimlin, 1780.  A Letter to J. Merlott, Esq., 1780.  Letters and Reflections on the Execution of the Rioters in 1780.  A Letter to the Right Hon. H. Dundas, with the sketch of a Negro Code, drawn up 1780, 1792.  A Letter on the Duration of Parliaments, to the Chairman of the Buckinghamshire Meeting, 1780.  Tracts relative to the Popery Laws in Ireland.  A Letter to Sir W. Smith, 1795. <li> Second Letter to Sir Hercules Langrishe (cf. 21 above), 1795. <li> A Letter to R. Burke, Esq. (n. d.) <li> A Letter on the Affairs of Ireland, 1797. <li> ‘Fragments and Notes of Speeches.’ <li> ‘Hints for an Essay on the Drama.’ <li> ‘An Essay towards an Abridgement of the English History.’ <li> ‘Reports IX. and XI. from the Select Committee on the East India Company,' 1783. <li> ‘Articles of Charge against Warren Hastings, presented 4 April 1786, published in four parts, 1786. <li> Speeches on the Impeachment, published, with Introduction, 17752, 8vo. <li> ‘Report from the Committee appointed to inspect the Lords' Journals, printed 1794. <li> Speeches on the Impeachment. Reply. Sundry fragments, notes, &c. The titles of the foregoing have in some cases been abbreviated.</ol> A satisfactory edition of Burke's works is still a want. Many of his letters are scattered through various printed books, such as Parkes’s ‘Memoirs of Sir P. Francis’ and Hardy’s ‘Memoirs of Lord Charlemont;' some few are in periodical publications, in the ‘Morning Herald’ and other papers, and a large number probably are still imprinted and in private hands. Almon declares that 'some at least of the letters signed Valens, which appeared at intervals, and especially, in 1775-6, in the ‘Evening Post,’ were partly written by Burke. That he looked over them is likely enough, but they probably were the work of William Burke, to whom, indeed, Almon ascribes a share in them; they are by no means equal to Burke's own productions. ‘A new edition of the Works might contain some speeches not hitherto separately printed or in the collective editions, some of the surveys of the events of each year contributed to the ‘Annual Register,” and at least those during the seven years’ war, reprinted in a separate form as ‘A Compleat History of the Late War; or Annual Register of its Rise, Progress, and Events in Europe, Asia, Africa, and America,’ 1763, 8vo. The protest of the Rockingham lords against the Dividend Bill should be given as a. specimen of the terse and lucid style which Burke used in drawing up such documents, and along with his reports and speeches on Indian affairs should be printed 'Heads of Objections to be Enquired into before it will be advisable to take P. Benfield again into the Company's service. &hellip;’ 1780, 4to. [Memoirs of Burke have been published by Charles MacCormick, 1798, 4to, a coarse and badly written party attack, by Robert Basset, A Life of E. B., comprehending an impartial an account of his Literary and Political Efforts, 1798, revised 1800, 8vo, hasty and uncritical; by Sir James Prior, second edition enlarged, 1826, fifth edition revised, 2 vols., companion to Works in Bohn’s British Classics, 1854—this, the first biography of any real value, still remains, on the whole, the best; by George Croly, 1840, 8vo, a political life, republished from Blackwoods Magazine, by P. Burke, 1851, 8vo, utterly valueless; by Macknight, History of the Life and Times E.B., 1858, 3 vols. 8vo, prolix, pompous, and uncritical, but containing a large amount of information; by Sir Joseph Napier, A Lecture, Dublin, 1863, 8vo, by John Morley in English Men of Letters series, 1879, a short and admirable sketch, also by the same author Burke, a Historical Study, 1867, 8vo, the best estimate of Burke’s political position; The Papers of a critic, by C. W. Dilke, 1875, 8vo, chiefly from the Athenæum, contain it searching investigation into Burke’s money affairs. A brilliant review of Burke's intellectual powers and of the place he fills in the history of social progress will be found in Buckle's History of Civilization in England, i. 455-76, ed, 1873, Burke’s Works and Correspondence, ed. 1852, Graduates of Trinity College, Dublin; Sir Philip Francis’s Letter Missive to Lord Holland; Memoirs of F. Horner, ed. L. Horner, 2nd ed.; Mrs. Elizabeth Montagu's Diary and Letters, ed. Matthew Montagu; Boswell's Life of Johnson, ed. 1835; Letters to Rev. J. W. Temple, 1857, Emin's Life and Adven-