Abstract
The entries are arranged alphabetically, under authors, for each year. A list of the abbreviations used is given on p. xxi. I wish to acknowledge the invaluable assistance of Peter J. Schakel of Wisconsin in the compilation of this checklist. C.L.
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Notes
Babcock, R. W. ‘A Pilgrimage to Moor Park.’ Dalhousie Review, xxv (1945), pp. 39–45.
Bergh, Gerhard van den. Der Pessimismus bei Thomas Hardy, George Crabbe und Jonathan Swift. Baumann, Menziken, 1945, pp. 247.
Case, Arthur E. Four Essays on ‘Gulliver’s Travels’. Princeton University Press, 1945, pp. 4–133.
Case, Arthur E. ‘Swift and Sir William Temple — a Conjecture.’ MLN, LX (1945), pp. 259–65.
Clewes, Winston. The Violent Friends. Appleton-Century, New York, 1945, pp. 225.
Connolly, Cyril. ‘Sterne and Swift.’ Atlantic Monthly, CLXXV (1945), pp. 94–96.
Davies, Godfrey. ‘A New Edition of Swift’s The Story of an Injured Lady.’ HLQ, VIII (1945), pp. 388–92.
Davis, Herbert. ‘The Conciseness of Swift.’ Essays on the Eighteenth Century presented to David Nichol Smith. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1945, pp. 15–32.
Davis, Kathryn. ‘A Note on the Spectator 469.’ MLN, LX (1945), p. 274.
Gould, S. H. ‘Gulliver and the Moons of Mars.’ JHI, VI (1945), pp. 91–101.
Grennan, Margaret R. ‘Lilliput and Leprecan: Gulliver and the Irish Tradition.’ ELH, XII (1945), pp. 188–202.
Hogan, J. J. ‘Bicentenary of Jonathan Swift, 1667–1745.’ Studies, XXXIV (1945), pp. 501–10.
Jackson, R. Wyse. ‘Stella’s Signatures.’ TLS, 29 Dec. 1945, p. 624.
Jackson, R. Wyse. Swift and his Circle: a book of essays. Talbot Press, Dublin, 1945, pp. xii 4–112.
Kliger, Samuel. ‘The Unity of Gulliver’s Travels.’ MLQ, VI (1945), pp. 401–15.
Landa, Louis A. ‘Jonathan Swift and Charity.’ JEGP, XLIV (1945), pp. 337–50.
Landa, Louis A. ‘Swift, the Mysteries, and Deism.’ Studies in English, 1944. University of Texas Press, Austin, 1945, pp. 239–56.
Landa, Louis A. and Tobin, James Edward. Jonathan Swift: a list of critical studies published from 1895 to 1945, to which is added ‘Remarks on some Swift manuscripts in the United States’, by Herbert Davis. Cosmopolitan Science and Art Service Co., New York, 1945, pp. 62.
O’Hegarty, P. S. ‘Jonathan Swift: Irishman.’ Bell, x (1945), pp. 478–83.
Scouten, A. H. ‘Swift at the Moving Pictures.’ N&Q, CLXXXVIII (1945), pp. 38–39.
Williams, Harold. ‘Deane Swift, Hawkesworth, and The Journal to Stella.’ Essays on the Eighteenth Century presented to David Nichol Smith. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1945, pp. 33–48.
Williams, Harold. ‘Old Mr. Lewis.’ RES, XXI (1945), pp. 56–57.
Williams, Harold. ‘Swift Exhibition at Cambridge.’ TLS, 20 Oct. 1945, p. 504.
Briggs, H. E. ‘Swift and Keats.’ PMLA, LXI (1946), pp. 1101–8.
Churchill, R. C. He Served Human Liberty: An Essay on the Genius of Jonathan Swift. Allen and Unwin, London, 1946, pp. 56.
Jaggard, W. ‘“The Cheshire Sheaf”: Swift’s lodging in Chester.’ N&Q, CXC (1946), p. 18.
Neumann, J. H. ‘Eighteenth-century Linguistic Tastes as exhibited in Sheridan’s Edition of Swift.’ American Speech, XXI (1946), pp. 253–63.
Redinger, Ruby Virginia. ‘Jonathan Swift, the Disenchanter.’ American Scholar, XV (1946), pp. 221–6.
Scott-Thomas, Lois M. ‘The Vocabulary of Jonathan Swift.’ Dalhousie Review, XXV (1946), pp. 442–7.
Webb, D. A. ‘Broadsides relating to Swift.’ Annual Bulletin, Friends of the Library of Trinity College, Dublin, 1946, pp. 8–11.
Wiley, Autrey Nell. ‘Jonathan Swift: a Bicentennial Exhibition.’ Library Chronicle of the University of Texas, II (1946), pp. 17–20.
Acworth, Bernard. Swift. Eyre and Spottiswoode, London, 1947, pp. xix + 250.
Davis, Herbert. The Satire of Jonathan Swift. Macmillan Co., New York, 1947, pp. 109.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift and Mr. John Temple.’ MLN, LXII (1947), pp. 145–54.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift’s Father.’ N&Q, CXCII (1947), pp. 496–8.
Fink, Z. S. ‘Political Theory in Gullivers Travels.’ ELH, XIV (1947), pp. 151–61.
Griffith, R. H. ‘Swift’s Contests, 1701: two editions.’ N&Q, CXCII (1947), pp.114–17.
Landa, Louis A. ‘Jonathan Swift.’ English Institute Essays, 1946. Columbia University Press, New York, 1947, pp. 20–40.
Teerink, H. ‘Swift’s Ordination, 1694–5.’ Dublin Magazine, XXII, no. 2 (1947), pp. 7–9.
Ussher, Arland. ‘Swift and Mankind.’ Dublin Magazine, XXII, no. 4 (1947), pp.7–11.
White, H. O. ‘The Art of Swift.’ Hermathena, LXIX (1947), pp. 1–8.
Craig, Maurice James (ed.). The Legacy of Swift. A Bi-Centenary Record of St. Patrick’s Hospital, Dublin. At the Sign of the Three Candles, Dublin, 1948, pp. xii + 70.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift’s “Little Language” in the Journal to Stella.’ SP, XLV (1948), pp. 80–88.
Honig, Edwin. ‘Notes on Satire in Swift and Jonson.’ New Mexico Quarterly Review, XVIII (1948), pp. 155–63.
Jacobs, M. Jonathan Swift. Wedding-Verlag, Berlin, 1948, pp. 239.
Limouze, A. Sanford. ‘A Note of Vergil and The Battle of the Books.’ PQ, XXVII (1948), pp. 85–89.
Mackenzie, Aline. ‘Another Note on Gulliver’s Travels (Part I, ch. iii).’ N&Q, CXCIII (1948), pp. 533–8.
Moog, Florence. ‘Gulliver was a Bad Biologist.’ Scientific American, CLXXIX (1948), pp. 52–55.
Mundy, P. D. ‘The Dryden-Swift Relationship.’ N&Q, CXCIII (1948), pp. 470–4.
Quintana, Ricardo. ‘Situational Satire: A Commentary on the Method of Swift.’ UTQ, XVII (1948), pp. 130–6.
Sherburn, George. ‘The Restoration and Eighteenth Century (1660–1789).’ A Literary History of England. Ed. Albert C. Baugh. Appleton-Century-Crofts, New York, London, 1948, pp. 697–1108.
Swift, Jonathan. Gulliver’s Travels. Ed. John F. Ross. Rinehart, New York, 1948, pp. xxiii + 295.
Swift, Jonathan. Irish Tracts 1720–1723 and Sermons. With an Introductory Essay and Notes on the Sermons by Louis A. Landa. (The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, ed. Herbert Davis, vol. IX.) Blackwell, Oxford, 1948, pp. xxx + 386.
Swift, Jonathan. The Portable Swift. Ed. Carl Van Doren. Viking Press, New York, 1948, pp. vi + 601.
Teerink, H. ‘Swift’s Cadenus and Vanessa.’ HLB, II (1948), pp. 254–7.
Wiley, Autrey Nell. ‘A Probable Source of the Text of Sheridan’s “Inventory” as Printed in the Cheltenham Journal.’ N&Q, CXCIII (1948), pp. 186–7.
Williams, Harold. ‘Swift and Shakespeare.’ N&Q, CXCIII (1948), pp. 194–5.
Beckett, J. C. ‘Swift as an Ecclesiastical Statesman.’ Essays in British and Irish History in honour of James Eadie Todd. Ed. H. A. Cronne, T. W. Moody, and D. B. Quinn. Muller, London, 1949, pp. 135–52.
Bracher, Frederick. ‘The Name “Lemuel Gulliver”’ HLQ, XII (1949), pp.409–13.
Case, Arthur E. ‘Swift’s Supposed Ingratitude toward his Uncle Godwin: a Surmise.’ Pope and his Contemporaries: essays presented to George Sherburn. Ed. James L. Clifford and Louis A. Landa. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1949, pp. 129–34.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift’s Enquiry.’ N&Q, CXCIV (1949), p. 360.
Elsoffer-Kamins, Louise. ‘Une Imitateur original de Jonathan Swift: l’Abbé Coyer et ses Bagatelles morales (1745).’ Revue de littérature comparée, XXIII (1949), pp. 469–81.
Hall, F. G. History of the Bank of Ireland. Hodges, Figgis, Dublin; Blackwell, Oxford, 1949. Ch. I, part iii, concerns Swift and the abortive project of 1719–21.
Hardy, Evelyn. The Conjured Spirit — Swift. Hogarth Press, London, 1949, pp. xii + 266.
Johnson, Maurice. ‘The Ghost of Swift in “Four Quartets”.’ MLN, LXIV (1949), p. 273.
Landa, Louis A. ‘Swift’s Deanery Income: a new document.’ Pope and his Contemporaries: essays presented to George Sherburn. Ed. James L. Clifford and Louis A. Landa. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1949, pp. 159–70.
Stone, Edward. ‘Swift and the Horses: Misanthropy or Comedy?’ MLQ, X (1949), pp. 367–76.
Teerink, H. ‘A Source-Book for A Tale of a Tub from Swift’s own Library.’ Irish Book Lover, Oct. 1949, pp. 59–62.
Teerink, H. ‘Swift’s Cadenus and Vanessa again.’ HLB, III (1949), pp. 435–6.
Teerink, H. ‘Swift’s Discourse … contests … Athens and Rome, 1701.’ Library, 5th ser., IV (1949), pp. 201–5.
Williams, Harold. ‘Swift’s Early Biographers.’ Pope and his Contemporaries: essays presented to George Sherburn. Ed. James L. Clifford and Louis A. Landa. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1949, pp. 114–28.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift’s Voyages.’ MLN, LXV (1950), pp. 256–7.
Gogarty, Oliver St. John. ‘Dean Swift as a Human Being.’ Atlantic Monthly, Oct. 1950, pp. 54–56.
Green, David Bonnell. ‘Keats, Swift, and Pliny the Elder.’ N&Q, CXCV (1950), pp. 499–501.
Hone, Joseph M. ‘The Story of the Damer Gold.’ Studies, XXXIX (1950), pp. 419–26.
Jensen, Johannes V. Swift og Oehlenschläger. Gyldendal, Copenhagen, 1950, pp. 64.
Johnson, Maurice. ‘A Love Song. In the Modem Taste.’ Johnsonian News Letter, X, no. 1 (1950), pp. 4–5.
Johnson, Maurice. The Sin of Wit: Jonathan Swift as a Poet. Syracuse University Press, New York, 1950, pp. xvii 4+145.
Joost, Nicholas. ‘Gulliver and the Free-thinker.’ MLN, LXV (1950), pp. 197–9.
Kermode, Frank. ‘Yahoos and Houyhnhnms.’ N&Q, CXCV (1950), pp. 317–18.
Leybum, Ellen Douglass. ‘Certain Problems of Allegorical Satire in Gulliver’s Travels.’ HLQ, XIII (1950), pp. 161–89.
Longe, Arthur. The Old Night-Watchman, the Ghost of Spixworth Hall. Cowell, Ipswich, 1950, pp. 44.
Maxwell, J. C.’A Tale of a Tub: a Correction.’ N&Q, CXCV (1950), p. 249.
Moore, John Robert. ‘The Yahoos of the African Travellers.’ N&Q, CXCV (1950), pp. 182–5.
Mundy, P. D. ‘The Philpott Family: Ancestors of Jonathan Swift.’ N&Q, CXCV (1950), pp. 314–17-
Mundy, P. D. ‘Thomas Swift, “Brother to Dean Swift”.’ N&Q, CXCV (1950), pp. 407, 481–2.
Orwell, George. ‘Politics vs. Literature: an examination of Gulliver’s Travels.’ Shooting an Elephant, and other essays. Secker and Warburg, London, 1950, pp. 57–83.
Savage, D. S. ‘Swift.’ Western Review, XV (1950), pp. 25–36.
Starkman, Miriam Kosh. Swift’s Satire on Learning in ‘A Tale of a Tub’. Princeton University Press, 1950, pp. xix + 159.
Swift, Jonathan. Gulliver’s Travels. Ed. George Sherburn. Harper & Brothers, New Y ork, 1950, pp. xxx + 313.
Swift, Jonathan. Selected Prose Works of Jonathan Swift. Ed. John Hayward. Cresset Press, London, 1950, pp. 483.
Teerink, H. ‘Swifte of Rotherham.’ N&Q, CXCV (1950), pp. 41–42.
Tuveson, Ernest. ‘Swift and the World-Makers.’ JHI, XI (1950), pp. 54–74.
Davis, Herbert. ‘The Conversation of the Augustans.’ The Seventeenth Century: Studies in the History of English Thought and Literature from Bacon to Pope, by Richard Foster Jones and others writing in his honour. Stanford University Press, 1951, pp. 181–97.
Elliott, Robert C. ‘Swift’s Tale of a Tub: an Essay in Problems of Structure.’ PMLA, LXVI (1951), pp. 441–55.
French, David P. ‘The Title of A Tale of a Tub.’ N&Q, CXCVI (1951), pp. 473–4.
Hunting, Robert S. ‘Gulliver among the Brobdingnagians: a Real-life Incident (?).’ N&Q CXCVI (1951), p. 413.
Kelling, H. D. ‘Some Significant Names in Gulliver’s Travels.’ SP, XLVIII (1951), pp. 761–78.
Kulisheck, Clarence L. ‘Hudibrastic Echoes in Swift.’ N&Q CXCVI (1951), Pp. 339.
Leyburn, Ellen Douglass. ‘Swift’s View of the Dutch.’ PMLA, LXVI (1951), pp. 734–45.
Mundy, P. D. ‘The Ancestry of Jonathan Swift.’ N&Q CXCVI (1951), pp. 381–7.
Ravesteyn, W. van. Satyre als medicijn: Jonathan Swift. Slaterus, Arnhem, 1951, pp. 46.
Rivers, Charles L. ‘Swift and Ovid on Hypocrisy.’ N&Q, CXCVI (1951), p. 496.
Sampson, Edward C. ‘Gulliver’s Travels: Book 111.’ N&Q, CXCVI (1951), pp. 474–5.
Swift, Jonathan. The History of the Four Last Years of the Queen. With an Introduction by Harold Williams. (The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, ed. Herbert Davis, vol. VII.) Blackwell, Oxford, 1951, pp. xxviii + 252.
Teerink, H. ‘Swift’s Verses on the Death of Doctor Swift.’ SB, IV (1951) pp. 183–8.
Todd, William B. ‘Another Attribution to Swift.’ PBSA, XLV (1951), pp. 82–83.
Williams, Kathleen M. ‘Gulliver’s Voyage to the Houyhnhnms.’ ELH, XVIII (1951), pp. 275–86.
Wilson, T. G. ‘A Hitherto Undescribed Death-Mask of Dean Swift.’ Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, LXXXI (1951), pp. 107–14.
Brain, Walter Russell. ‘The Illness of Dean Swift.’ Irish Journal of Medical Science, Aug.-Sept. 1952, pp. 337–46.
Burian, Orhan. ‘Da Vinci and Swift.’ N&Q, CXCVII (1952), pp. 451–2.
Calkins, Ernest Elmo. ‘How Small is Lilliput?’ Atlantic Monthly, July 1952, pp. 77–78.
Davie, Donald A. ‘Irony and Conciseness in Berkeley and Swift.’ Dublin Magazine, Oct.-Dec. 1952, pp. 20–29.
Davis, Herbert. ‘Some Free Thoughts of a Tory Dean.’ Virginia Quarterly Review, XXVIII (1952), pp. 258–72.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘The Date of Swift’s Sentiments.’ RES, new ser., III (1952), pp. 272–4.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift and Satire.’ CE, XIII (1952), pp. 309–12.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift on Liberty.’ JHI, XIII (1952), pp. 131–46.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift’s History of England.’ JEGP, LI (1952), pp. 177–85.
Elliott, Robert C. ‘Gulliver as Literary Artist.’ ELH, XIX (1952), pp. 49–63.
Fitzgerald, Brian. The Anglo-Irish, Three Representative Types: Cork, Ormonde, Swift. Staples Press, London, 1952, pp. 369.
Johnson, Maurice. ‘A Literary Chestnut: Dryden’s “Cousin Swift”.’ PMLA, LXVII (1952), pp. 1024–34.
Johnson, Maurice. ‘Swift’s Renunciation of the Muse.’ N&Q CXCVII (1952), pp. 235–6.
Kelling, Harold D. ‘Gulliver’s Travels: a Comedy of Humours.’ UTQ XXI (1952), pp. 362–75.
Leyburn, Ellen Douglass. ‘Swift’s Language Trifles.’ HLQ XV (1952), pp. 195–200.
Longhurst, John E. ‘Fielding and Swift in Mexico.’ Modern Language Journal, XXXVI (1952), pp. 186–7.
Moore, John Robert. ‘Swift as Historian.’ SP, XLIX (1952), pp. 583–604.
Olson, R. C. ‘Swift’s Use of the Philosophical Transactions in Section v of A Tale of a Tub.’ SP, XLIX (1952), pp. 459–67.
Pons, Émile. ‘Swift et Pascal: note complémentaire.’ EA, IV (Nov. 1952), pp. 319–25.
Rosenheim, Edward W., Jr. ‘A “Source” for the Rope-dancing in Gulliver’s Travels.’ PQ XXXI (1952), pp. 208–11.
Sherburn, George. ‘The Swift-Pope Miscellanies of 1732.’ HLB, VI (1952), pp.387–90.
Stephens, John C., Jr. ‘“7 Penny Papers of My Own”.’ N&Q, CXCVII (1952), pp. 139–40.
Williams, Harold. The Text of ‘Gulliver’s Travels’. (Sandars Lectures in Bibliography, 1950.) Cambridge University Press, 1952, pp. vii + 94.
Block, Edward A. ‘Lemuel Gulliver: Middle-class Englishman.’ MLN, LXVIII (1953), pp. 474–7.
Bullitt, John M. Jonathan Swift and the Anatomy of Satire: A Study of Satiric Technique. Harvard University Press, 1953, pp. viii + 214.
Clark, Paul Odell. ‘A Gulliver Dictionary.’ SP, L (1953), pp. 592–624.
Davie, Donald. ‘Academism and Jonathan Swift.’ Twentieth Century, CLIV (1953), pp. 217–24.
Dearing, Vinton A. ‘Jonathan Swift or William Wagstaffe?’ HLB, VII (1953), pp. 121–30.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift’s April Fool for a Bibliophile.’ Book Collector, II (1953), pp. 205–8.
Ferguson, Oliver W. ‘Swift, Tisdall, and A Narrative.’ N&Q, CXCVIII (1953), pp. 485–6.
Johnson, Maurice. ‘Swift and “the Greatest Epitaph in History”.’ PMLA, LXVIII (1953), pp. 814–27.
Landa, Louis A. ‘“The Insolent Rudeness of Dr. Swift”.’ MLN, LXVIII (1953), pp. 223–6.
Moore, John R., and Johnson, Maurice. ‘Dryden’s “Cousin Swift”.’ PMLA, LXVIII (1953), pp. 1232–40.
Preu, James. ‘Jonathan Swift and the Common Man.’ Florida State University Studies, XI (1953), pp. 19–24.
Price, Martin. Swift’s Rhetorical Art: A Study in Structure and Meaning. Yale Studies in English, 123. Yale University Press, 1953, pp. viii + 117.
Quintana, Ricardo. The Mind and Art of Jonathan Swift. First published by the Oxford University Press in 1936. Reprinted by Methuen, with additional Notes and Bibliography, 1953, pp. xviii + 400.
Sherburn, George. ‘Gibberish in 1730–1.’ N&Q, CXCVIII (1953), pp. 160–1.
Sherburn, George. ‘The Swift-Pope Miscellanies of 1732: Corrigendum.’ HLB, VII (1953), p. 248.
Swift, Jonathan. Political Tracts, 1713–1719. Ed. Herbert Davis and Irvin Ehrenpreis. (The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, ed. Herbert Davis, vol. VIII.) Blackwell, Oxford, 1953, pp. xl + 243.
Swift, Jonathan. Swift on his Age: Selected Prose and Verse. Ed. Colin J. Horne. Life, Literature, and Thought Library. Barnes and Noble, New York; Harrap, London, 1953, pp. 283.
Tuveson, Ernest. ‘Swift: the Dean as Satirist.’ UTQ, XXII (1953), pp. 368–75.
Yost, George, Jr. ‘Well-filled Silences: the Case of Swift and Vanessa.’ Florida State University Studies, XI (1953), pp. 25–55.
Baker, Frank. ‘Jonathan Swift and the Wesleys.’ London Quarterly and Holborn Review, October 1954, pp. 290–300.
Brown, James. ‘Swift as Moralist.’ PQ, XXXIII (1954), pp. 368–87.
Clark, J. Kent. ‘Swift and the Dutch.’ HLQ, XVII (1954), pp. 345–56.
Davis, Herbert. ‘The Manuscripts of Swift’s Directions to Servants.’ Studies in Art and Literature for Belle da Costa Greene. Ed. Dorothy Miner. Princeton University Press, 1954, pp. 433–44.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Swift’s First Poem.’ MLR., XLIX (1954), pp. 210–11.
Elliott, Robert C. ‘Swift and Dr. Eachard.’ PMLA, LXIX (1954), pp. 1250–7.
Ewald, William Bragg, Jr. The Masks of Jonathan Swift. Blackwell, Oxford; Harvard University Press, 1954, pp. 203.
Frye, Roland Mushat. ‘Swift’s Yahoo and the Christian Symbols for Sin.’ JHI, XV (1954), pp. 201–17.
Horne, Colin J. ‘An Epitaph attributed to Swift.’ N&Q, CXCIX (1954), pp. 525–7.
Jarrett, James L. ‘A Yahoo versus Jonathan Swift.’ Western Humanities Review, VIII (1954), pp. 195–200.
Johnson, Maurice. ‘“Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift”.’ N&Q, CXCIX (1954), pp. 473–4.
Kelling, Harold D. ‘Reason in Madness: A Tale of a Tub.’ PMLA, LXIX (1954), pp. 198–222.
Kulisheck, Clarence L. ‘Swift’s Octosyllabics and the Hudibrastic Tradition.’ JEGP, LIII (1954), pp. 361–8.
Landa, Louis A. Swift and the Church of Ireland. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1954, pp. xvi + 206.
Leslie, Sir Shane. ‘The Swift Manuscripts in the Morgan Library.’ Studies in Art and Literature for Belle da Costa Greene. Princeton University Press, 1954, pp. 445–8.
Mayhew, George P. ‘A Draft of Ten Lines from Swift’s Poem to John Gay.’ Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, XXXVII (1954), pp. 257–62.
Mayhew, George P. ‘Swift’s Anglo-Latin Games and a Fragment of Polite Conversation in Manuscript.’ HLQ, XVII (1954), pp. 133–59.
Mayhew, George P. ‘Swift’s Games with Language in Rylands English MS. 659.’ Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, XXXVII (1954), pp. 413–48.
Mayhew, George P. ‘Swift’s Manuscript Version of On his own Deafness.’ HLQ, XVIII (1954), pp. 85–87.
Mayhew, George P. ‘Two Burlesque Invitations by Swift.’ N&Q, CXCIX (1954), pp. 55–57.
Moore, John Robert. ‘A Possible Model for the Organization of A Tale of a Tub.’ N&Q, CXCIX (1954), pp. 288–90.
Moore, John Robert. ‘Was Jonathan Swift a Moderate?’ South Atlantic Quarterly, LIII (1954), pp. 260–7.
Mundy, P. D. ‘Jonathan Swift’s Chester Relatives.’ N&Q, CXCIX (1954), pp. 248–9.
Murry, John Middleton. Jonathan Swift: A Critical Biography. Jonathan Cape, London, 1954, pp. 508.
Ong, Walter J. ‘Swift on the Mind: The Myth of Asepsis.’ MLQ, XV (1954), pp. 208–21.
Preu, James. ‘Swift’s Influence on Godwin’s Doctrine of Anarchism.’ JHI, XV (1954), pp. 371–83.
Smith, Roland M. ‘Swift’s Little Language and Nonsense Names.’ JEGP, LIII (1954), pp. 178–96.
Swift, Jonathan. A Letter to a Young Lady on her Marriage. Caxton Press, Christchurch, 1954, pp. 24.
Teerink, H. ‘“Verses on the Death of Doctor Swift” Again.’ SB, vii (1954 for 1955), pp. 238–9.
Todd, W. B. ‘The Text of Gulliver’s Travels.’ Library, 5th ser., IX (1954), pp.135–6.
Welply, W. H. ‘Jonathan Swift’s Chester Relatives.’ N&Q CXCIX (1954), pp. 339–40.
Williams, Kathleen M. ‘“Animal Rationis Capax.”: A Study of Certain Aspects of Swift’s Imagery.’ ELH, XXI (1954), pp. 193–207.
Aden, John M. ‘Dryden and Swift.’ N&Q CC (195 5), pp. 239–40.
Day, Robert A. ‘An Anonymous Attack on Swift.’ N&Q CC (1955), pp. 530–2.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘Four of Swift’s Sources.’ MLN, LXX (1955), pp. 95–100.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. ‘The Pattern of Swift’s Women.’ PMLA, LXX (1955), pp. 706–16.
Ehrenpreis, Irvin. and Clifford, James L. ‘Swiftiana in Rylands English MS. 659 and Related Documents.’ Bulletin of the John Rylands Library, XXXVIII (1955), pp. 368–92.
Elwood, John R. ‘Swift’s “Corinna”.’ N&Q cc (1955), pp. 529–30.
Ferguson, Oliver W. ‘The Authorship of “Apollo’s Edict”.’ PMLA, LXX (1955), pp. 433–40.
Greenacre, Phyllis. Swift and Carroll: A Psychoanalytic Study of Two Lives. International Universities Press, New York, 1955, pp. 306.
Mabbott, Thomas. ‘“Bounce to Fop” by Swift and Pope.’ N&Q, CC (1955), p. 433.
Maxwell, J. C. ‘The Text of A Tale of a Tub.’ English Studies, XXXVI (1955), p. 64.
Milic, Louis T. ‘“Vive la Bagatelle!”’ N&Q, CC (1955), pp. 363–4.
Monk, Samuel H. ‘The Pride of Lemuel Gulliver.’ Sewanee Review, LXIII (1955), pp. 48–71-
Morris, Harry C. ‘The Dialogues of Hylas and Philonous as a Source in Gulliver’s Travels.’ MLN, LXX (1955), pp. 175–7.
Nemser, William. ‘Linguistic Economy in Lagado.’ History of Ideas News Letter, 1, iv (1955), pp. 7–10.
Preu, James Arthur. ‘Antimonarchism in Swift and Godwin.’ Writers and Their Critics: Studies in English and American Literature. Florida State University Studies, xix (1955), pp. 11–28.
Quintana, Ricardo. Swift: An Introduction. Oxford University Press, London, 1955, pp. viii + 204.
Taylor, Aline Mackenzie. ‘Cyrano de Bergerac and Gulliver’s Voyage to Brobdingnag.’ Tulane Studies in English, v (1955), pp. 83–102.
Wahlund, Per Erick. En Gulliver kommentar. Stockholm, 1955, pp. 60.
Wilson, T. G. ‘The Death Masks of Dean Swift.’ Princeton University Library Chronicle, XVI (1955), pp. 107–10.
Allen, Robert J. ‘Swift’s Contests and Dissensions in Boston.’ New England Quarterly, XIX (1956), pp. 73–82.
Baker, Sheridan. ‘Swift, “Lilliputian”, and Catullus.’ N&Q, CCI (1956), pp. 477–9.
Colie, Rosalie L. ‘Gulliver, the Locke-Stillingfleet Controversy, and the Nature of Man.’ History of Ideas News Letter, II (1956), pp. 58–62.
Ferguson, Oliver W. ‘Jonathan Swift, Freeman of Dublin.’ MLN, LXXI (1956), pp. 405–9.
Holloway, John. ‘The Well-Filled Dish: An Analysis of Swift’s Satire.’ Hudson Review, IX (1956), pp. 20–37.
Jarrell, Mackie L. ‘The Proverbs in Swift’s Polite Conversation.’ HLQ, XX (1956), pp. 15–38.
Loomis, C. Grant. ‘Superstitions and Beliefs in Swift.’ Western Folklore, XV (1956), pp. 126–8.
Quinlan, Maurice J. ‘Swift’s Project for the Advancement of Religion and the Reformation of Manners.’ PMLA, LXII (1956), pp. 201–12.
Roberts, Donald R. ‘A Freudian View of Jonathan Swift.’ Literature and Psychology, VI (1956), pp. 8–17.
Swift, Jonathan. An Enquiry into the Behaviour of the Queen’s Last Ministry. Ed. Irvin Ehrenpreis. (Indiana University Publications, Humanities Series, no. 36.) Indiana University Press, 1956, pp. xliii + 109.
Taylor, Aline M. ‘Swift’s Use of the Term “Canary Bird”.’ MLN, LXXI (1956), pp. 175–7.
Watt, Ian. ‘The Ironic Tradition in Augustan Prose from Swift to Johnson.’ Restoration and Augustan Prose; papers delivered by James R. Sutherland and Ian Watt at the third Clark Library Seminar, 14 July 1956. Clark Memorial Library, Los Angeles, 1956, pp. 19–46.
Woodring, Carl R. ‘The Aims, Audience, and Structure of the Drapier’s Fourth Letter.’ MLQ., XVII (1956), pp. 50–59.
Barroll, J. Leeds. ‘Gulliver in Luggnagg: A Possible Source.’ PQ, XXXVI (1957), pp. 504–8.
Benjamin, Edwin B. ‘The King of Brobdingnag and Secrets of State: JHI, XVIII (1957), pp. 572–9.
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Lamont, C. (1967). A Checklist of Critical and Biographical Writings on Jonathan Swift, 1945–65. In: Jeffares, A.N. (eds) Fair Liberty was all his Cry. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-00409-6_19
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