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A collection of poems in six volumes. By several hands. [Vol 4] [T144724] [ECCO] [OCTAVO]

DMI number:
1101
Publication Date:
1775
Volume Number:
4 of 6
ESTC number:
T144724
EEBO/ECCO link:
CW3315185054
Full Title:
A | COLLECTION | OF | POEMS | IN SIX VOLUMES. | BY | SEVERAL HANDS. | [Ornament] | LONDON: Printed for J. DODSLEY, in PALL-MALL. | M DCC LXVI.
Place of Publication:
London
Format:
Octavo
Other matter:
Index, pp.358-360
Related Miscellanies
Title:
A collection of poems in six volumes. By several hands. [Vol 6] [T144724] [ECCO] [OCTAVO]
Publication Date:
1775
ESTC No:
T144724
Volume:
6 of 6
Relationship:
Volume from the same edition
Comments:
Title:
A collection of poems in six volumes. By several hands. [Vol 3] [T144724] [OCTAVO]
Publication Date:
1775
ESTC No:
T144724
Volume:
3 of 6
Relationship:
Volume from the same edition
Comments:
Title:
A collection of poems in six volumes. By several hands. [Vol 5] [T144724] [ECCO] [OCTAVO]
Publication Date:
1775
ESTC No:
T144724
Volume:
None
Relationship:
Volume from the same edition
Comments:
Related People
Publisher:
James Dodsley
Confidence:
Absolute (100%)
Comments:
Content/Publication
First Line:
The curfew tolls the knell of parting day
Page No:
pp.1-6
Poem Title:
An Elegy. Written In A Country Church Yard.
Attribution:
By Mr. Gray
Attributed To:
Thomas Gray
First Line:
Daughter of Jove relentless power
Page No:
pp.7-8
Poem Title:
Hymn to Adversity.
Attribution:
By the Same [i.e. Gray]
Attributed To:
Thomas Gray
First Line:
O goodly discipline from heaven y-sprong
Page No:
pp.9-49
Poem Title:
Education. A Poem: in Two Cantos. Written in Imitation of the Style and Manner of Spenser's Fairy Queen. Inscribed to Lady Langham, Widow of Sir John Langham, Bart.
Attribution:
By Gilbert West, Esq;
Attributed To:
Gilbert West
First Line:
Genius of Penshurst old
Page No:
pp.50-61
Poem Title:
Penshurst. Inscribed to William Perry, Esq; and The Honourable Mrs. Elizabeth Perry.
Attribution:
By the late Mr F. Coventry.
Attributed To:
Francis Coventry
First Line:
Ye distant realms that hold my friend
Page No:
pp.61-63
Poem Title:
To the Hon. Wilmot Vaughan, Esq; in Wales.
Attribution:
By the Same [i.e. Mr. Francis Coventry]
Attributed To:
Francis Coventry
First Line:
Sir | While born to bring the muse's happier days
Page No:
pp.64-70
Poem Title:
An Epistle Address'd to Sir Thomas Hanmer, On his Edition of Shakespeare's Works.
Attribution:
By Mr. William Collins.
Attributed To:
William Collins
First Line:
To fair Fidele's grassy tomb
Page No:
pp.71-72
Poem Title:
A Song from Shakespear's Cymbelyne. Sung by Guiderus and Arviragus over Fidele, supposed to be dead.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. William Collins]
Attributed To:
William Collins
First Line:
O say thou dear possessor of my breast
Page No:
pp.73-75
Poem Title:
Elegy To Miss D---W---D. In the Manner of Ovid.
Attribution:
By the late Mr. Hammond.
Attributed To:
James Hammond
First Line:
Too well these lines that fatal truth declare
Page No:
pp.75-78
Poem Title:
Answer to the foregoing Lines.
Attribution:
By the late Lord Hervey.
Attributed To:
John Hervey
First Line:
Since language never can describe my pain
Page No:
pp.78-85
Poem Title:
Epistles In the Manner of Ovid. Monimia to Philocles.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the late Lord Hervey]
Attributed To:
John Hervey
First Line:
Ere death these closing eyes for ever shade
Page No:
pp.86-90
Poem Title:
Flora to Pompey.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the late Lord Hervey]
Attributed To:
John Hervey
First Line:
Of all I valued all I loved bereft
Page No:
pp.91-97
Poem Title:
Arisbe to Marius Junior. From Fontenelle.
Attribution:
By the Same [i.e. the late Lord Hervey]
Attributed To:
John Hervey
First Line:
Think not I write my innocence to prove
Page No:
pp.98-102
Poem Title:
Roxana to Usbeck. From Les Lettres Persannes.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the late Lord Hervey]
Attributed To:
John Hervey
First Line:
Before you sign poor Sophonisba's doom
Page No:
pp.103-104
Poem Title:
Epilogue design'd for Sophonisba, And to have been spoken by Mrs. Oldfield.
Attribution:
By the Same [i.e. the late Lord Hervey]
Attributed To:
John Hervey
First Line:
Forbear my dear Stephen with a fruitless desire
Page No:
p.105
Poem Title:
An imitation of the eleventh Ode of the First Book of Horace.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the late Lord Hervey]
Attributed To:
John Hervey
First Line:
What shall I say to fix thy wavering mind
Page No:
pp.106-108
Poem Title:
A Love Letter.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the late Lord Hervey]
Attributed To:
John Hervey
First Line:
When as of old the earth's bold children strove
Page No:
pp.109-110
Poem Title:
Verses to Dr. George Rogers, on his taking the Degree of Doctor of Physic at Padua, in the Year 1664.
Attribution:
By Mr. Waller.
Attributed To:
Edmund Waller
First Line:
I came great bard to gaze upon thy shrine
Page No:
pp.110-115
Poem Title:
Virgil's Tomb. Naples 1741.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Ye ladies that live in the city or town
Page No:
pp.115-117
Poem Title:
The Link. A Ballad.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Hard is the heart that never knew to love
Page No:
p.118-150
Poem Title:
The Squire of Dames. A Poem. In Spenser's Stile.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
The owl expires death gave the dreadful word
Page No:
pp.151-152
Poem Title:
On the Death of a Lady's Owl.
Attribution:
By the Same. [Preceding poem unattributed]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Let observation with extensive view
Page No:
pp.152-166
Poem Title:
The Vanity of Human Wishes. The Tenth Satire of Juvenal. Imitated
Attribution:
By Mr. Samuel Johnson.
Attributed To:
Samuel Johnson
First Line:
Led by the jocund train of vernal hours
Page No:
pp.166-171
Poem Title:
The Tears of Old May-Day.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Ye belles and ye flirts and ye pert little things
Page No:
pp.172-173
Poem Title:
Song for Ranelagh.
Attribution:
By Mr. W. Whitehead.
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
Ye works of god on him alone
Page No:
pp.173-180
Poem Title:
The Benedicite Paraphrased.
Attribution:
By the Rev. Mr. Merrick.
Attributed To:
James Merrick
First Line:
Fancy whose delusions vain
Page No:
pp.181-185
Poem Title:
An Ode to Fancy.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. the Rev. Mr. Merrick]
Attributed To:
James Merrick
First Line:
Whoever with curious eye has ranged
Page No:
pp.186-187
Poem Title:
The Monkies, a Tale.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. the Rev. Mr. Merrick]
Attributed To:
James Merrick
First Line:
Thee Paeta death's relentless hand
Page No:
p.188
Poem Title:
Thus Translated.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. the Rev. Mr. Merrick]
Attributed To:
James Merrick
First Line:
You've read Sir in poetic strain
Page No:
pp.189-191
Poem Title:
Verses sent to Dean Swift on his Birth-day, with Pine's Horace finely bound.
Attribution:
Written by Dr. J. Sican.
Attributed To:
J. Sican
First Line:
See how that pair of billing doves
Page No:
p.192
Poem Title:
Verses written in a Garden.
Attribution:
By Lady M. W. M.
Attributed To:
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu [nee Pierrepont]
First Line:
Is it to me this sad lamenting strain
Page No:
pp.193-194
Poem Title:
An Answer to a Love-Letter.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Lady M.W.M.]
Attributed To:
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu [nee Pierrepont]
First Line:
You little know the heart that you advise
Page No:
p.195
Poem Title:
In Answer to a Lady who advised Retirement.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Lady M.W.M.]
Attributed To:
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu [nee Pierrepont]
First Line:
From every muse and every art thy own
Page No:
pp.196-197
Poem Title:
An Adress of the Statues at Stowe, to Lord Cobham, on his return to his Gardens.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Let others hail the rising sun
Page No:
pp.198-202
Poem Title:
An Ode on the Death of Mr. Pelham.
Attribution:
By Mr. Garrick.
Attributed To:
David Garrick
First Line:
Tarn how delightful wind thy willowed waves
Page No:
pp.203-204
Poem Title:
Verses Written at Montauban in France, 1750.
Attribution:
By the Rev. Mr. Joseph Warton.
Attributed To:
Joseph Warton
First Line:
When fierce Pisarro's legions flew
Page No:
pp.204-205
Poem Title:
The Revenge of America.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the Rev. Mr. Joseph Warton.]
Attributed To:
Joseph Warton
First Line:
The dart of Izdabel prevails twas dipped
Page No:
pp.205-206
Poem Title:
The Dying Indian.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the Rev. Mr. Joseph Warton.]
Attributed To:
Joseph Warton
First Line:
Albion exult thy sons a voice divine have heard
Page No:
pp.207-209
Poem Title:
Ode occasion'd by Reading Mr. West's Translation of Pindar.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the Rev. Mr. Joseph Warton.]
Attributed To:
Joseph Warton
First Line:
Mother of musings contemplation sage
Page No:
pp.210-221
Poem Title:
The Pleasures of Melancholy. Written in the Year 1745.
Attribution:
By Mr. Thomas Warton.
Attributed To:
Thomas Warton
First Line:
W---de thy beechen slopes with waving grain
Page No:
pp.221-222
Poem Title:
A Sonnet; written at W---de in the absence of ---.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Mr. Thomas Warton]
Attributed To:
Thomas Warton
First Line:
When late the trees were stripped by winter pale
Page No:
pp.222-223
Poem Title:
On Bathing. A Sonnet.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Thomas Warton]
Attributed To:
Thomas Warton
First Line:
All hail auspicious day whose wished return
Page No:
pp.223-224
Poem Title:
On Sir Robert Walpole's Birth-day, August the 26th.
Attribution:
By the Honourable Mr. D----ton.
Attributed To:
George Bubb Dodington
First Line:
H---y would you know the passion
Page No:
p.223
Poem Title:
To Lady H---y.
Attribution:
By Mr. de Voltaire.
Attributed To:
Francois-Marie Arouet de Voltaire
First Line:
As by some tyrant's stern command
Page No:
pp.224-228
Poem Title:
The Lawyer's Farewell to his Muse. Written in the Year 1744.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
O thou who labourst in this rugged mine
Page No:
pp.228-229
Poem Title:
By Miss Cooper, (now Mrs. Madden) in her Brother's Coke upon Littleton.
Attribution:
By Miss Cooper, (now Mrs. Madden)
Attributed To:
Judith Madan [nee Cowper]
First Line:
O solitude romantic maid
Page No:
pp.229-239
Poem Title:
Solitude. An Ode.
Attribution:
By Dr. Grainger.
Attributed To:
James Grainger
First Line:
Whilst William's deeds and William's praise
Page No:
pp.239-242
Poem Title:
An Ode to the Right Honourable Stephen Poyntz, Esq; &c. &c.
Attribution:
By the Honourable Sir Charles Han. Williams, Kt. of the Bath.
Attributed To:
Sir Charles Hanbury Williams
First Line:
Try not my St---e tis in vain
Page No:
pp.243-244
Poem Title:
Ode on the Death of Matzel, a favourite Bull-finch, address'd to Mr. St---pe, to whom the Author had given the Reversion of it when he left Dresden.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Sir Charles Han. Williams]
Attributed To:
Sir Charles Hanbury Williams
First Line:
Come Chloe and give me sweet kisses
Page No:
pp.245-246
Poem Title:
Martialis Epigramma. Lib. 6. Ep. 34. Imitated.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Charles Hanbury Williams]
Attributed To:
Sir Charles Hanbury Williams
First Line:
When now mature in classic knowledge
Page No:
pp.246-251
Poem Title:
The Progress of Discontent. Written at Oxford in the Year 1746.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Dear Chloe while the busy crowd
Page No:
pp.251-254
Poem Title:
The Fire-side.
Attribution:
By Dr. Cotton.
Attributed To:
Nathaniel Cotton
First Line:
Tomorrow didst thou say
Page No:
pp.255-256
Poem Title:
To-Morrow.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Dr. Cotton]
Attributed To:
Nathaniel Cotton
First Line:
It puzzles much the sages' brains
Page No:
pp.256-257
Poem Title:
On Lord Cobham's Gardens.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Cotton]
Attributed To:
Nathaniel Cotton
First Line:
Fairest flower all flowers excelling
Page No:
p.257
Poem Title:
To a Child of Five Years old.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Dr. Cotton]
Attributed To:
Nathaniel Cotton
First Line:
Ne gay attire ne marble hall
Page No:
pp.258-259
Poem Title:
Father Francis's Prayer. Written in Lord Westmorland's Hermitage.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Beneath these moss grown roots this rustic cell
Page No:
p.259
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Sweet bird that singest on yonder spray
Page No:
p.259
Poem Title:
An Inscription in the Cell.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Sheweth | That your honour's petitioners dealers in rhymes
Page No:
pp.260-261
Poem Title:
To the Right Hon. Henry Pelham, Esq;
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Here all thy active fires diffuse
Page No:
pp.262-266
Poem Title:
An Ode Performed in the Senate-House at Cambridge July 1, 1749, At the Installation of his Grace Thomas Holles Duke of Newcastle, Chancellor of the University.
Attribution:
By Mr. Mason, Fellow of Pembroke-Hall.
Attributed To:
William Mason
First Line:
Yes magic lyre now all complete
Page No:
pp.267-268
Poem Title:
Ode to an Aeolus's Harp. Sent to Miss Shepheard.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Mr. Mason]
Attributed To:
William Mason
First Line:
Health to thee thy votary owes
Page No:
pp.268-271
Poem Title:
Ode to Health.
Attribution:
By Mr. Duncombe, Fellow of Corpus Christi Col. Cambridge.
Attributed To:
John Duncombe
First Line:
Bright god of day whose genial power
Page No:
pp.271-272
Poem Title:
A Vernal Ode. Sent to his Grace the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, March 12, 1754.
Attribution:
By Francis Fawkes, A.M.
Attributed To:
Francis Fawkes
First Line:
Yet once more glorious god of day
Page No:
pp.273-274
Poem Title:
An Autumnal Ode.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Francis Fawkes]
Attributed To:
Francis Fawkes
First Line:
Away let naught to love displeasing
Page No:
pp.275-276
Poem Title:
A Song.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Awful hero Marlborough rise
Page No:
pp.276-278
Poem Title:
The Genius. An Ode, written in 1717, on occasion of the Duke of Marlborough's Apoplexy.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Oft Faunus leaves Arcadia's plain
Page No:
pp.278-279
Poem Title:
Book I. Ode XVII. Invitation to his Mistress.
Attribution:
By Mr. Marriott, of Trinity-Hall, Cambridge.
Attributed To:
James Marriott
First Line:
Bevil that with your friend would roam
Page No:
p.280
Poem Title:
Book II. Ode VI. Imitated.
Attribution:
By Mr. Marriott, of Trinity-Hall, Cambridge [p. 278]
Attributed To:
James Marriott
First Line:
The wars of Numantia and Hannibal dire
Page No:
pp.281-282
Poem Title:
Book II. Ode XII. Translated.
Attribution:
By Mr. Marriott, of Trinity-Hall, Cambridge. [p.278]
Attributed To:
John Marriott
First Line:
While objects of a parent's care
Page No:
pp.282-283
Poem Title:
To a Lady Making a Pin Basket.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Mr. Marriott]
Attributed To:
James Marriott
First Line:
Erst in Cythera's sacred shade
Page No:
pp.284-285
Poem Title:
Captain Cupid.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Marriott.]
Attributed To:
James Marriott
First Line:
The mariner when first he sails
Page No:
pp.285-287
Poem Title:
Ode on Ambition.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Marriott.]
Attributed To:
James Marriott
First Line:
Gilding with brighter beams the vernal skies
Page No:
pp.287-293
Poem Title:
Ode to Fancy.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Marriott.]
Attributed To:
James Marriott
First Line:
My dear companion and my faithful friend
Page No:
pp.293-295
Poem Title:
An Address to his Elbow-chair, new cloath'd.
Attribution:
By the late W. Somervile, Esq; Author of the Chace.
Attributed To:
William Somervile
First Line:
As over Asteria's fields I rove
Page No:
pp.295-296
Poem Title:
Song.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. By the late W. Somervile, Esq;]
Attributed To:
William Somervile
First Line:
How long shall tyrant custom bind
Page No:
pp.296-298
Poem Title:
Ode to a Friend wounded in a Duel.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
The busy cares of day are done
Page No:
pp.299-301
Poem Title:
Ode to Night.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
The winds were loud the clouds deep hung
Page No:
pp.302-303
Poem Title:
Written upon leaving a Friend's House in Wales.
Attribution:
By the Rev. Dr. M.
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Reflecting on thy worth methinks I find
Page No:
p.304
Poem Title:
Dennis to Mr. Thomson, Who had procured him a Benefit Night.
Attribution:
Dennis
Attributed To:
John Dennis
First Line:
How easy was Colin how blithe and how gay
Page No:
pp.305-306
Poem Title:
Song. 1753.
Attribution:
I.S.H.
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Hark to the blackbird's pleasing note
Page No:
pp.306-307
Poem Title:
The Bullfinch in Town.
Attribution:
By a Lady of Quality.
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
The sun his gladsome beams withdrawn
Page No:
pp.307-309
Poem Title:
Song. Written in Winter 1745.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. a Lady of Quality]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
You bid my muse not cease to sing
Page No:
pp.309-310
Poem Title:
Written to a near Neighbour in a tempestuous Night 1748.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. a Lady of Quality]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Tis nature here bids pleasing scenes arise
Page No:
pp.310-311
Poem Title:
Written at a Ferme Ornee near Birmingham; August 7th, 1749.
Attribution:
By the same. [ie. a Lady of Quality]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
To you whose groves protect the feathered choirs
Page No:
pp.311-314
Poem Title:
The Goldfinches. An Elegy.
Attribution:
By Mr. Jago.
Attributed To:
Richard Jago
First Line:
The sun had chased the mountain snow
Page No:
pp.315-318
Poem Title:
The Blackbirds. An Elegy.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Mr. Jago]
Attributed To:
Richard Jago
First Line:
An open heart a generous mind
Page No:
pp.318-319
Poem Title:
The Rake.
Attribution:
By a Lady in New England.
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Let sages with superfluous pains
Page No:
pp.320-322
Poem Title:
Flowers.
Attribution:
By Anthony Whistler, Esq;
Attributed To:
Anthony Whistler
First Line:
While Strephon thus you tease one
Page No:
p.322
Poem Title:
Song.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Anthony Whistler]
Attributed To:
Anthony Whistler
First Line:
Lo the rich casket's mimic dome
Page No:
pp.323-326
Poem Title:
The Cabinet. Or, Verses on Roman Medals. To Mr. W.
Attribution:
By Mr. Graves.
Attributed To:
Richard Graves
First Line:
Welcome to Baiae's streams ye sons of spleen
Page No:
pp.326-327
Poem Title:
Panacea: Or, The Grand Restorative.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Graves.]
Attributed To:
Richard Graves
First Line:
In ancient times some hundred winters past
Page No:
p.328
Poem Title:
The Heroines, or Modern Memoirs.
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Mr. Graves]
Attributed To:
Richard Graves
First Line:
The rising sun through all the grove
Page No:
pp.329-330
Poem Title:
The Parting...Written some Years after Marriage.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Mr. Graves]
Attributed To:
Richard Graves
First Line:
O memory celestial maid
Page No:
pp.330-332
Poem Title:
Ode to Memory. 1748.
Attribution:
By William Shenstone, Esq;
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Will you hear how once repining
Page No:
pp.333-335
Poem Title:
The Princess Elizabeth: A Ballad alluding to a Story recorded of her, when she was a Prisoner at Woodstock 1554.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Survey my fair that lucid stream
Page No:
pp.335-336
Poem Title:
Ode to a Young Lady, Somewhat too sollicitous about her manner of expression.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
How blithely passed the summer's day
Page No:
pp.337-340
Poem Title:
Verses written towards the close of the Year 1748. to Wm. Lyttelton, Esq;
Attribution:
By the Same. [ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
In a vale fringed with woodland where grottos abound
Page No:
pp.340-341
Poem Title:
I.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Ye birds for whom I reared the grove
Page No:
pp.341-342
Poem Title:
II. Daphne's Visit.
Attribution:
By the Same [p. 340; ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
See Flavia see that budding rose
Page No:
pp.342-343
Poem Title:
III. The Rose-Bud.
Attribution:
By the Same [p. 340; ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Adieu ye jovial youths who join
Page No:
pp.343-344
Poem Title:
IV. Written in a Collection of Bacchanalian Songs.
Attribution:
By the Same [p. 340; ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Yes these are the scenes where with Iris I strayed
Page No:
p.344
Poem Title:
V. Imitated from the French.
Attribution:
By the Same [p. 340; ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Here in cool grot and mossy cell
Page No:
pp.345-346
Poem Title:
I. On a Root-House.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
O let me haunt this peaceful shade
Page No:
pp.346-347
Poem Title:
II. In a shady Valley, near a running Water.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. William Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
O you that bathe in courtly blysse
Page No:
p.347
Poem Title:
III. On a small Building in the Gothick Taste.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Ye shepherds so cheerful and gay
Page No:
pp.348-357
Poem Title:
A Pastoral Ballad, in Four Parts. Written 1743.
Attribution:
By the Same [ie. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone