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            <title>Thomas Gray to Horace Walpole (31 December 1751)</title>
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               <name ref="#AH">Alexander Huber</name>
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                  <institution key="PBCC">Pembroke College, Cambridge</institution>
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                        <title>Correspondence of Thomas Gray</title>, 3 vols. Ed. by the late Paget Toynbee and Leonard Whibley, with corrections and additions by H. W. Starr. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1971 [1st ed. 1935], letter no. 165, vol. i, 356-357
				<ref type="url">http://www.e-enlightenment.com/search/letters/print/?printref_sourceedition=graythOU0084&amp;printref_docnumber=165</ref>
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                        <title>The Correspondence of Gray, Walpole, West and Ashton (1734-1771)</title>, 2 vols. Chronologically arranged and edited with introduction, notes, and index by Paget Toynbee. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1915, letter no. 178, vol. ii, 119-121
				<ref type="url">https://www.thomasgray.org/texts/diglib/primary/TyP_1915ii/1/119</ref>
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                        <title>The Yale Edition of Horace Walpole's Correspondence</title>. Ed. by W. S. Lewis. New Haven, Conn.: Yale UP; London: Oxford UP, 1937-83, vols. 13/14: <title>Horace Walpole's Correspondence with Thomas Gray, Richard West and Thomas Ashton</title> i, 1734-42, <title>Horace Walpole's Correspondence with Thomas Gray</title> ii, 1745-71, ed. by W. S. Lewis, George L. Lam and Charles H. Bennett, 1948, vol. ii, 57-58
				<ref type="url">https://libsvcs-1.its.yale.edu/hwcorrespondence/page.asp?vol=14&amp;page=57</ref>
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               <mentioned n="person">Chute, John, 1701-1776</mentioned>
               <mentioned n="poem">Ode to Adversity</mentioned>
               <mentioned n="literature">Aristotle</mentioned>
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            <p>This letter is part of the correspondence calendar of the complete correspondence of Thomas Gray. The calendar contains detailed bibliographic records for all known original, copied, or published letters written by or to the poet as well as the full-text, where available.  Each record is accompanied by digitised images of the manuscript, where available, or digitised images of the first printed edition.</p>
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            <dateline>C Dec: 31
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         <p>You have probably before now met with the Paper I enclose, itself; tho' when you wrote last, you
					had only heard of it from others. it must not be known on any account, that it came from me, for by that means it might easily be
					discover'd, whom I had it from, wch might be the Ruin of a Gentleman. I do not see any one End it can answer, but that of putting Mr C:
					in a silly Light to such, as do not know him. the Exactness of Dates, Hours, &amp; Minutes with the Observation of his different Tones
					of Voice, betray it to be the Work of a Listener, placed on purpose. I am told, that old H: does not
					deny his Design of getting her for D: W:, after my Ld O: had refused her. he insists he was not once
					at C:rs Chambers, while she was in his Hands, &amp; that the Story of the 10,000£ is a manifest Lye.
					he affects to treat it as a Fact asserted by Mr C:, tho' no such thing appears, even in the Paper itself. I can't find for certain,
					that Et: (tho he has been here a second time with his Budget) has given any Copies of this Paper
					about, yet I do not doubt but He has. this I know; he has shew'd your Letter to him, &amp; his own Answers to a few People here, tho' I
					have not seen them. I am in hast, but shall write again soon. pray tell me, as soon as you receive this.</p>
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