Blacklight

A collection of poems in six volumes. By several hands. With Notes [Vol 6] [T116246] [ECCO]

DMI number:
1141
Publication Date:
1782
Volume Number:
6 of 6
ESTC number:
T116246
EEBO/ECCO link:
CW3312608206
Full Title:
A | COLLECTION | OF | POEMS | IN SIX VOLUMES. | BY | SEVERAL HANDS. | WITH NOTES. | [Ornament] | LONDON: Printed for J. DODSLEY, in PALL-MALL. | M DCC LXXXII.
Place of Publication:
London
Format:
Octavo
Other matter:
Postscript, p. 377. Index, pp. 378-380.
Related People
Publisher:
James Dodsley
Confidence:
Absolute (100%)
Comments:
Content/Publication
First Line:
Over yonder eastern hill the twilight throws
Page No:
p.pp.3-24
Poem Title:
Hymn to the Naiads.
Attribution:
By Dr. Akenside.
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
The wise and great of every clime
Page No:
pp.25-37
Poem Title:
Ode To the Right Honourable Francis Earl of Huntingdon. M DCC XLVII.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Akenside.]
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
For toils which patriots have endured
Page No:
pp.38-42
Poem Title:
Ode to the Right Reverend Benjamin Lord Bishop of Winchester.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Akenside.]
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
To me whom in their lays the shepherds call
Page No:
p.43
Poem Title:
I. For a Grotto.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Akenside.]
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
Such was old Chaucer such the placid mien
Page No:
p.44
Poem Title:
II. For a Statue of Chaucer at Woodstock.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Akenside.]
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
Whoever thou art whose path in summer lies
Page No:
pp.44-45
Poem Title:
III.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Akenside.]
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
O youths and virgins o declining eld
Page No:
p.46
Poem Title:
IV.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Akenside.]
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
Thou who the verdant plain dost traverse here
Page No:
pp.47-48
Poem Title:
VI. For a Column at Runnymede.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Akenside]
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
If rightly tuneful bards decide
Page No:
pp.48-49
Poem Title:
Ode.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Dr. Akenside]
Attributed To:
Mark Akenside
First Line:
Hail sacred stream whose waters roll
Page No:
pp.50-54
Poem Title:
Ode to the Tiber. Written Abroad. On entering the Campania of Rome, at Otricoli, M DCC LV.
Attribution:
By William Whitehead, Esq;
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
Silent and clear through yonder peaceful vale
Page No:
pp.54-57
Poem Title:
Elegy I. Written at the Convent of Haut Villers in Champagne, 1754.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Whitehead, Esq;]
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
Amid these mouldering walls this marble round
Page No:
pp.57-60
Poem Title:
Elegy II. On the Mausoleum of Augustus. To the Right Honourable George Bussy Villiers, Viscount Villiers. Written at Rome. 1756.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Whitehead, Esq;]
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
Yes noble youth tis true the softer arts
Page No:
pp.60-62
Poem Title:
Elegy III. To the Right Honourable George Simon Harcourt, Visc. Newnham. Written at Rome. 1756.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Whitehead, Esq;]
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
From Latian fields the mansions of renown
Page No:
pp.63-66
Poem Title:
Elegy IV. To an Officer. Written at Rome. 1756.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Whitehead, Esq;]
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
Twas in this isle o Wright indulge my lay
Page No:
pp.67-69
Poem Title:
Elegy V. To a Friend Sick. Written at Rome, 1756.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Whitehead, Esq;]
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
Behold my friend to this small orb confined
Page No:
pp.69-71
Poem Title:
Elegy VI. To another Friend. Written at Rome 1756.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Whitehead, Esq;]
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
Mason snatch the votive lyre
Page No:
pp.71-73
Poem Title:
The Lyric Muse to Mr. Mason. On the Recovery of the Right Honourable the Earl of Holdernesse from a dangerous Illness.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Whitehead, Esq;]
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
To all inferior animals 'tis given
Page No:
pp.74-104
Poem Title:
On the Immortality of the Soul. Translated From the Latin of Isaac Hawkins Brown, Esq;
Attribution:
By Soame Jennyns, Esq;
Attributed To:
Soame Jenyns
First Line:
To these lone shades where peace delights to dwell
Page No:
pp.105-111
Poem Title:
The Arbour: An Ode to Contentment.
Attribution:
By Mr. Thomas Cole.
Attributed To:
Thomas Cole
First Line:
Come musing silence nor refuse to shed
Page No:
pp.111-114
Poem Title:
The Grotto: An Ode to Silence.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Thomas Cole.]
Attributed To:
Thomas Cole
First Line:
While Saturn's fane with solemn step we trod
Page No:
pp.114-138
Poem Title:
The Picture of Human Life. Translated from the Greek of Cebes the Theban.
Attribution:
By Mr. T. Scott.
Attributed To:
Thomas Scott
First Line:
A jolly brave toper who could not forbear
Page No:
p.139
Poem Title:
The Dropsical Man.
Attribution:
By Mr. W. Taylor.
Attributed To:
William Taylor
First Line:
Seek not for paradise with curious eye
Page No:
pp.140-143
Poem Title:
Paradise Regain'd.
Attribution:
By H. T.
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Though strength of genius by experience taught
Page No:
pp.143-149
Poem Title:
To the Right Hon. Sir Robert Walpole.
Attribution:
By the Honourable Mr. Dodington, afterwards Lord Melcombe.
Attributed To:
George Bubb Dodington
First Line:
Behold the magic of Theresa's hand
Page No:
pp.149-151
Poem Title:
To a Lady on a Landscape of her Drawing.
Attribution:
By Mr. Parrat.
Attributed To:
Charles Parrott
First Line:
Come thou rosy dimpled boy
Page No:
pp.151-152
Poem Title:
Ode to Cupid on Valentine's Day.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Parrat]
Attributed To:
Charles Parrott
First Line:
In frolic's hour ere serious thought had birth
Page No:
pp.153-156
Poem Title:
To the Worthy, Humane, Generous, Rev. and Noble, Mr. F. C. Now Lord Bishop of Litchfield. [...] Written in the year 1743.
Attribution:
By Dr. Sneyd Davies.
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
French power and weak allies and war and want
Page No:
pp.157-163
Poem Title:
To His Friend and Neighbour Dr. Thomas Taylor. 1744.
Attribution:
By the Same [i.e. Dr. Sneyd Davies.]
Attributed To:
Sneyd Davies
First Line:
Hence sage mysterious law
Page No:
pp.163-169
Poem Title:
Vacation.
Attribution:
By --- --- Esq;
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Prithee why so fantastic and vain
Page No:
pp.170-171
Poem Title:
To a Lady very handsome, but too fond of Dress.
Attribution:
By the Same. [Not attributed]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
In the dead of the night when with labour oppressed
Page No:
pp.172-173
Poem Title:
Anacreon. Ode III.
Attribution:
Translated by the Same. [Not attributed]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
He that would great in science grow
Page No:
pp.173-174
Poem Title:
An Imitation of Horace, Book III. Ode II. Augustam amice, &c. [...] to Dr. Bentley.
Attribution:
By Mr. Titley
Attributed To:
Walter Titley
First Line:
Who strives to mount Parnassus hill
Page No:
pp.175-176
Poem Title:
A Reply to a Copy of Verses made in Imitation of Book III. Ode 2. of Horace, Augustam amice pauperim pati, &c. And sent by Mr. Titley to Dr. Bentley.
Attribution:
By Dr. Bentley.
Attributed To:
Richard Bentley
First Line:
So much this building entertains my sight
Page No:
p.177
Poem Title:
Verses occasioned by seeing a Grotto built by Nine Sisters.
Attribution:
By N. Herbert, Esq.
Attributed To:
Nicholas Herbert
First Line:
Here shunning idleness at once and praise
Page No:
p.177
Poem Title:
Inscription on a Grotto of Shells at Crux-Easton, the Work of Nine young Ladies.
Attribution:
By Mr. Pope.
Attributed To:
Alexander Pope
First Line:
When Phoebus's beams are withdrawn from our sight
Page No:
pp.178-179
Poem Title:
An Excuse for Inconstancy, 1737.
Attribution:
By the Rev. Dr. Lisle.
Attributed To:
Thomas Lisle
First Line:
O Goddess most revered above
Page No:
pp.179-181
Poem Title:
To Venus. A Rant, 1732. Set to Music by Dr. Hayes.
Attribution:
By the Same. [Rev. Dr. Lisle]
Attributed To:
Thomas Lisle
First Line:
When Orpheus went down to the regions below
Page No:
pp.181-182
Poem Title:
The Power of Music. A Song. Imitated from the Spanish...Set to Music by Dr. Hayes.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the Rev. Dr. Lisle]
Attributed To:
Thomas Lisle
First Line:
The hero who to Smyrna bay
Page No:
pp.182-188
Poem Title:
Letter from Smyrna to his Sisters at Crux-Easton, 1733.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. the Rev. Dr. Lisle]
Attributed To:
Thomas Lisle
First Line:
While you my dear girls in your paradise stray
Page No:
pp.188-189
Poem Title:
Part of a Letter to my Sisters at Crux-Easton, wrote from Cario in Egypt, August 1734.
Attribution:
By the Same. [Rev. Dr. Lisle]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Lord sister here's the butcher come
Page No:
pp.190-193
Poem Title:
Letter from Marseilles to my Sisters at Crux-Easton, May 1735.
Attribution:
By the Same. [Rev. Dr. Lisle]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
In Russia's frozen clime some ages since
Page No:
pp.194-226
Poem Title:
The History of Porsenna, King of Russia. In Two Books.
Attribution:
By the Same. [Rev. Dr. Lisle]
Attributed To:
Thomas Lisle
First Line:
When tepid breezes fanned the air
Page No:
pp.227-228
Poem Title:
The Evergreen.
Attribution:
By William Shenstone, Esq.
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Too timorous maid can time or chance
Page No:
p.228
Poem Title:
Answer
Attribution:
By The Same [i.e. Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
The warmest friend I ever proved
Page No:
p.229
Poem Title:
Candour.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Tis true my wish will never find
Page No:
pp.230-231
Poem Title:
Lysander to Cloe.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Of vagrant loves and fickle flames
Page No:
pp.231-232
Poem Title:
Cloe to Lysander.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. William Shenstone]
Attributed To:
William Shenstone
First Line:
Twas always held and ever will
Page No:
pp.232-233
Poem Title:
To the Memory of an agreeable Lady bury'd in Marriage to a Person undeserving her.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Hark through the sacred silence of the night
Page No:
pp.233-237
Poem Title:
An Elegy, written on Valentine Morning.
Attribution:
By * * * *
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Where aged elms in many a goodly row
Page No:
pp.237-241
Poem Title:
The Dowager.
Attribution:
By the Same. [By * * * *]
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Now Britain's senate far renowned
Page No:
pp.242-243
Poem Title:
Ode to the Honourable * * * *
Attribution:
By the Mr. F. Coventry.
Attributed To:
Francis Coventry
First Line:
The midnight moon serenely smiles
Page No:
pp.244-246
Poem Title:
To Miss * * * *.
Attribution:
By Miss Elisa Carter.
Attributed To:
Elizabeth Carter
First Line:
Dear Colin prevent my warm blushes
Page No:
pp.246-247
Poem Title:
Lady Mary Wortley Montague to Sir William Yonge
Attribution:
Lady Mary Wortley Montague,
Attributed To:
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu [nee Pierrepont]
First Line:
Good madam when ladies are willing
Page No:
p.247
Poem Title:
Sir William Yonge's Answer.
Attribution:
Sir William Yonge
Attributed To:
Sir William Yonge
First Line:
In vain mistaken maid you'd fly
Page No:
p.248
Poem Title:
Miss Soper's Answer to a Lady, who invited her to retire into a monastic Life at St. Cross, near Winchester.
Attribution:
Miss Soper
Attributed To:
Miss Soper
First Line:
All attendants apart
Page No:
pp.249-250
Poem Title:
Repentance.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Miss Soper]
Attributed To:
Miss Soper
First Line:
O Nancy wilt thou go with me
Page No:
pp.250-251
Poem Title:
A Song.
Attribution:
By T. Percy.
Attributed To:
Thomas Percy
First Line:
Beneath an aged oak's embowering shade
Page No:
pp.253-256
Poem Title:
Cynthia, an Elegiac Poem.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. T. Percy.]
Attributed To:
Thomas Percy
First Line:
Cease Chlorinda cease to chide me
Page No:
pp.256-259
Poem Title:
Dialogue to Chlorinda.
Attribution:
By Mr. Alsop.
Attributed To:
Anthony Alsop
First Line:
See Strephon what unhappy fate
Page No:
pp.259-260
Poem Title:
To Chlorinda.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Alsop]
Attributed To:
Anthony Alsop
First Line:
Ixion as the poets tell us
Page No:
pp.261-264
Poem Title:
The Fable of Ixion. To Chlorinda.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Alsop]
Attributed To:
Anthony Alsop
First Line:
Dame Venus a daughter of Jove's
Page No:
pp.265-268
Poem Title:
A Tale. To Chlorinda.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Alsop]
Attributed To:
Anthony Alsop
First Line:
Inmate of smoking cots whose rustic shade
Page No:
pp.269-272
Poem Title:
Ode on Lyric Poetry.
Attribution:
By Mr. Marriot.
Attributed To:
James Marriott
First Line:
Queen of each sacred sound sweet child of air
Page No:
pp.272-274
Poem Title:
Arion, an Ode.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Marriot.]
Attributed To:
James Marriott
First Line:
Never dear Faz torment thy brain
Page No:
pp.275-278
Poem Title:
Horace, Book II. Ode II. [...] --Paul to Faz.
Attribution:
Imitated by Lord Bath.
Attributed To:
William Pulteney
First Line:
Balm of my cares sweet solace of my toils
Page No:
pp.279-283
Poem Title:
A Panegyric on Ale.
Attribution:
By T. Warton.
Attributed To:
Thomas Warton
First Line:
O thou that on a pointless spear reclined
Page No:
pp.284-286
Poem Title:
Ode to the Genius of Italy, occasioned by the Earl of Corke's going Abroad.
Attribution:
By Mr. J. Duncombe.
Attributed To:
John Duncombe
First Line:
From friendship's cradle up the verdant paths
Page No:
pp.286-288
Poem Title:
To Charles Pratt, Esq; now Lord Camden. Written in 1743.
Attribution:
By Dr. Davies.
Attributed To:
Sneyd Davies
First Line:
Dear thoughtless Clara to my verse attend
Page No:
pp.289-290
Poem Title:
Epistle from Henry St. John Lord Viscount Bolingbroke to Miss Lucy Atkins. Written when he was young.
Attribution:
Bolingbroke
Attributed To:
Henry St John
First Line:
Look round the wide world each profession you'll find
Page No:
pp.291-292
Poem Title:
The Cheat's Apology.
Attribution:
By Mr. Ellis.
Attributed To:
John Ellis
First Line:
As Chloe plied her needle's art
Page No:
p.293
Poem Title:
Song.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Ellis]
Attributed To:
John Ellis
First Line:
A wretch tired out with fortune's blows
Page No:
pp.294-295
Poem Title:
To Mr. Grenville on his intended Resignation.
Attribution:
By Richard Berenger, Esq;
Attributed To:
Richard Berenger [Beranger]
First Line:
Sue venal Belinda to grant you the blessing
Page No:
p.294
Poem Title:
Another.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Ellis]
Attributed To:
John Ellis
First Line:
Where yonder trees rise high in cheerful air
Page No:
pp.296-298
Poem Title:
To Mr. Garrick, on his erecting a Temple and Statue to Shakespear.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Richard Berenger, Esq;]
Attributed To:
Richard Berenger [Beranger]
First Line:
Peace to this meeting
Page No:
pp.298-299
Poem Title:
On the Birth-Day of Shakespear. A Cento. Taken from his Works.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Richard Berenger, Esq;]
Attributed To:
Richard Berenger [Beranger]
First Line:
Led by the muse my step pervades
Page No:
pp.300-304
Poem Title:
An Ode to Sculpture.
Attribution:
By James Scot, D. D.
Attributed To:
James Scott
First Line:
When Colin's good dame who long held him a tug
Page No:
pp.304-305
Poem Title:
True Resignation.
Attribution:
By Mr. Hylton.
Attributed To:
John Scott Hylton
First Line:
Voltaire believe me were I now
Page No:
pp.307-309
Poem Title:
An Epistle from the King of Prussia to Monsieur Voltaire, 1757. Translated into English.
Attribution:
By John Gilbert Cooper, Esq;
Attributed To:
John Gilbert Cooper
First Line:
In that remote and solitary place
Page No:
pp.309-311
Poem Title:
On seeing Archbishop Williams's Monument in Carnarvonshire.
Attribution:
By Dr. Davies.
Attributed To:
Sneyd Davies
First Line:
Long was the great Figg by the prize-fighting swains
Page No:
pp.312-315
Poem Title:
Extempore Verses upon a Trial of Skill between two great Masters of Defence, Messieurs Figg and Sutton.
Attribution:
By Dr. Byrom.
Attributed To:
John Byrom
First Line:
Though plagued with algebraic lectures
Page No:
pp.316-320
Poem Title:
A Letter from Cambridge to a young Gentleman at Eton School.
Attribution:
By Dr. Littleton.
Attributed To:
Edward Littleton
First Line:
What self sufficiency and false content
Page No:
p.321
Poem Title:
The Indolent.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Tis enough the hour is come
Page No:
Poem Title:
The Song of Simeon paraphrased.
Attribution:
By Mr. Merrick.
Attributed To:
James Merrick
First Line:
Tell me what genius did the art invent
Page No:
p.323
Poem Title:
On the Invention of Letters.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
The noble art to Cadmus owes its rise
Page No:
p.323
Poem Title:
The Answer.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
True wit is like a brilliant stone
Page No:
p.324
Poem Title:
On Wit.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Artist who underneath my table
Page No:
pp.324-325
Poem Title:
On a Spider.
Attribution:
By Dr. Littleton.
Attributed To:
Edward Littleton
First Line:
Kitty's charming voice and face
Page No:
p.326
Poem Title:
The Play-Thing Changed.
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Old Plumb who though blessed in his Kentish retreat
Page No:
pp.327-329
Poem Title:
The Fable of Jotham: To the Borough-Hunters.
Attribution:
By Richard Owen Cambridge, Esq;
Attributed To:
Richard Owen Cambridge
First Line:
In scenes where Hallet's genius has combined
Page No:
pp.330-334
Poem Title:
An Elegy written in an empty Assembly-Room.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Richard Owen Cambridge.]
Attributed To:
Richard Owen Cambridge
First Line:
A fakeer a religious well known in the east
Page No:
pp.334-336
Poem Title:
The Fakeer: A Tale.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Richard Owen Cambridge.]
Attributed To:
Richard Owen Cambridge
First Line:
Tis so though we're surprised to hear it
Page No:
pp.337-339
Poem Title:
To Mr. Whitehead, On his being made Poet Laureat. 1757.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Richard Owen Cambridge.]
Attributed To:
Richard Owen Cambridge
First Line:
The muse disgusted at an age and clime
Page No:
pp.339-340
Poem Title:
Verses on the Prospect of planting Arts and Learning in America.
Attribution:
By the late Dr. Berkeley, Bishop of Cloyne.
Attributed To:
George Berkeley
First Line:
Believe me Mason tis in vain
Page No:
pp.341-344
Poem Title:
To Mr. Mason.
Attribution:
By William Whitehead, Esq;
Attributed To:
William Whitehead
First Line:
Here on my native shore reclined
Page No:
pp.344-347
Poem Title:
Ode. To Independency.
Attribution:
By Mr. Mason.
Attributed To:
William Mason
First Line:
Ah cease this kind persuasive strain
Page No:
pp.348-350
Poem Title:
Ode. On Melancholy. To a Friend.
Attribution:
By the Same. [i.e. Mr. Mason]
Attributed To:
William Mason
First Line:
Awake aeolian lyre awake
Page No:
pp.351-362
Poem Title:
Ode.
Attribution:
By Mr. Gray.
Attributed To:
Thomas Gray
First Line:
Ruin seize thee ruthless king
Page No:
pp.363-375
Poem Title:
Ode.
Attribution:
By the same [i.e. Gray].
Attributed To:
Thomas Gray