The poems of Horace [ESTC R712]
- DMI number:
- 1656
- Publication Date:
- 1680
- Volume Number:
- 1 of 1
- ESTC number:
- R712
- EEBO/ECCO link:
- http://gateway.proquest.com/openurl?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2003&res_id=xri:eebo&rft_id=xri:eebo:citation:13065056
- Shelfmark:
- EEBO - BL
- Place of Publication:
- London
- Genres:
- Collection of 17th century verse and Collection of translations/imitations
- Format:
- Octavo
- Comments:
- CHECK: title page imperfect in EEBO facsimile; engraved title page and frontispiece missing. CONTENTS: (1) Odes, Books 1-4: pp. 1-158, (2) Epodes: pp. 159-89, (3) Satires, Books 1-2: pp. 190-309, (4) Epistles: pp. 310-92, (5) Art of Poetry: pp. 393-408.
- Other matter:
- Prefatory matter: (1) Dedicatory epistle in prose 'To his honoured Friend and Patron, Sir William Backhouse, Baronet', signed 'Alex. Brome', sigs A3r-A5r. (2) Prose 'Life Of Horace', sigs A5v-A7v. (3) Prose address 'To The Reader', sig. A8r-v.
- References:
- NCBEL 333 (1680). Harold F. Brooks, 'Contributors to Brome's Horace', Notes and Queries, 174 (1938), 200-1. W. J. Cameron, 'Brome's "Horace", 1661 and 1671', Notes and Queries, 202 (1957), 70-1.
- Dedicatee:
- Sir William Backhouse
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Dedicatory epistle addressed by Brome 'To his honoured Friend and Patron, Sir William Backhouse, Baronet' (sig. A3r).
- Editor:
- Alexander Brome
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Dedicatory epistle signed 'Alex. Brome' (sig. A5r); address 'To The Reader' refers to Brome as 'the dead Collector of these Translations' (sig. A8r).
- Publisher:
- Henry Brome
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- 'Printed [...] for H. Brome at the Gun at the West-end of St. Pauls'.
- First Line:
- This end had Priam's destinies all this chance him fortune sent
- Page No:
- sig. A4v (unpaged)
- Poem Title:
- [no title: embedded quotation]
- Attribution:
- these Lines of Phaer
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Phaer [Phayer]
- First Line:
- Then fell the king who yet survived the state
- Page No:
- sig. A4v (unpaged)
- Poem Title:
- [no title: embedded quotation]
- Attribution:
- done by Sir John Denham
- Attributed To:
- Sir John Denham
- First Line:
- Maecenas Thuscan kings descent
- Page No:
- pp.1-2
- Poem Title:
- Ode I. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. Fanshaw.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Maecenas sprung from royal blood
- Page No:
- pp.2-4
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase upon the same Ode ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- by S. W. Esq;
- Attributed To:
- Samuel Woodford
- First Line:
- Enough of hail and cruel snow
- Page No:
- pp.4-6
- Poem Title:
- Ode II. ... To Augustus Caesar.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Storms long enough at length have blown
- Page No:
- pp.6-7
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode ... To Augustus.
- Attribution:
- by S. W.
- Attributed To:
- Samuel Woodford
- First Line:
- Ship that to us sweet Virgil owest
- Page No:
- pp.8-9
- Poem Title:
- Ode III.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Sharp winter's thawed with spring and western gales
- Page No:
- pp.9-10
- Poem Title:
- Ode IV. ... To L. Sextius a Consular Man.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- What stripling now thee discomposes
- Page No:
- pp.10-11
- Poem Title:
- Ode V. ... To Pyrrha.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Though Varius in heroic style
- Page No:
- p.12
- Poem Title:
- Argument.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- To whom now Pyrrha art thou kind
- Page No:
- pp.11-12
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by Dr. C.
- Attributed To:
- Abraham Cowley
- First Line:
- Varius in living annals may
- Page No:
- pp.12-13
- Poem Title:
- Ode VI. ... To Agrippa.
- Attribution:
- By C. C. Esq;
- Attributed To:
- Charles Cotton
- First Line:
- Some Rhodes some Mytilene Ephesus doth please
- Page No:
- pp.14-15
- Poem Title:
- Ode VII. ... To Munatius Plancus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Lydia in heaven's name
- Page No:
- pp.15-16
- Poem Title:
- Ode VIII. ... To Lydia.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Thou seest the hills candied with snow
- Page No:
- pp.16-17
- Poem Title:
- Ode IX. ... To Thaliarchus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Thou sweet-tongued god the son of Jove and May
- Page No:
- pp.17-18
- Poem Title:
- Ode X. ... Paraphras'd. To Mercury. In praise of Mercury.
- Attribution:
- By R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Strive not Leuconoe to know what end
- Page No:
- p.18
- Poem Title:
- Ode XI. ... To Leuconoe.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Never strive Leuconoe never strive to know
- Page No:
- pp.18-19
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode ... To Leuconoe.
- Attribution:
- by S. W.
- Attributed To:
- Samuel Woodford
- First Line:
- What man or hero Clio wilt thou praise
- Page No:
- pp.19-21
- Poem Title:
- Ode XII. ... To Augustus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- The arms that wax-like bend
- Page No:
- pp.21-22
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIII. ... To Lydia. He complains that Telephus is preferred before him.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- O ship what dost fresh storms again
- Page No:
- pp.22-23
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIV. ... To the Commonwealth preparing afresh for Civil War.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- When in Idaean ships the treacherous swain
- Page No:
- pp.23-24
- Poem Title:
- The Prophecy of Nereus, concerning the destruction of Troy.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Daughter than thy fair mother much more fair
- Page No:
- pp.24-25
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVI. ... To a Friend.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- So sweetly seated is my country farm
- Page No:
- pp.25-26
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVII. ... The Conveniencies of his Country Farm.
- Attribution:
- By R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Of all the trees plant me the sacred vine
- Page No:
- p.27
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVIII. ... To Quintilius Varus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- To her again I must 'tis true I swore
- Page No:
- pp.28-29
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIX. ... Of Glycera. How he is besotted with love of her.
- Attribution:
- By R. T.
- Attributed To:
- Robert Thompson
- First Line:
- I pray sir with me to my chamber go
- Page No:
- p.29
- Poem Title:
- Ode XX. ... To Maecenas. Whom he invites to a small Treat.
- Attribution:
- By R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- You tender virgins sound Diana's name
- Page No:
- p.30
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXI. ... Of Diana and Apollo. He exhorteth Youths and Virgins to sing forth their Praises.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Who lives upright and pure of heart
- Page No:
- pp.31-32
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXII. ... To Aristius.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- The just man needs nor sword nor bow
- Page No:
- pp.32-33
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode ... To Fuscus Aristius.
- Attribution:
- by S. W.
- Attributed To:
- Samuel Woodford
- First Line:
- So flies the timorous fawn her mother gone
- Page No:
- p.33
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXIII. ... To Chloe. That she hath no reason to be so coy.
- Attribution:
- By R. T.
- Attributed To:
- Robert Thompson
- First Line:
- Melpomene whom Jove our father deigns
- Page No:
- p.34
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXIV. ... To Virgil. Who immoderately bewailed the death of Quintilius.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- What shame or stint in mourning over
- Page No:
- p.35
- Poem Title:
- The same ... To Virgil. Who lamenteth immoderately the death of Quintilian.
- Attribution:
- by Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Why how now Lydia what's the matter
- Page No:
- p.36
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXV. ... To Lydia. Insulting over her being grown old.
- Attribution:
- Paraphras'd by R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- I who the muses love sadness and fear
- Page No:
- p.37
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXVI. ... To his Muse concerning Aelius Lamia.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- With goblets made for mirth to fight
- Page No:
- pp.37-38
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXVII. ... To his Companions.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- What quarrel in your drink my friends you abuse
- Page No:
- pp.38-39
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by Dr. P.
- Attributed To:
- Walter Pope
- First Line:
- The poor gift of a little dust confines
- Page No:
- pp.39-41
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXVIII.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Iccius thou now the Arabs dost envy
- Page No:
- p.41
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXIX. ... To Iccius.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. A.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- What does the poet Phoebus pray
- Page No:
- pp.42-43
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXXI. ... To Apollo.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- To Glicera on the old pilgrimage I'm going
- Page No:
- p.42
- Poem Title:
- Ode 30 ... To Venus. Whom he desires to assist him in his Woing. [sic]
- Attribution:
- By R. T. Paraphras'd.
- Attributed To:
- Robert Thompson
- First Line:
- What doth thy poet ask Phoebus divine
- Page No:
- p.43
- Poem Title:
- The same
- Attribution:
- by Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- If in my loved retirement when
- Page No:
- pp.44-45
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXXII. ... To his Lyre.
- Attribution:
- Paraphras'd by R. T.
- Attributed To:
- Robert Thompson
- First Line:
- Away away fond fool what dost thou sigh
- Page No:
- pp.45-46
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXXIII. ... To Albius Tibullus.
- Attribution:
- Paraphras'd by R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- I that have seldom worshipped heaven
- Page No:
- p.46
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXXIV. ... To himself.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- You that so seldom to the temples go
- Page No:
- p.47
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- O goddess which beloved Antium sways
- Page No:
- pp.48-49
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXXV. ... To Fortune.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Blessed be those powers above those deities
- Page No:
- pp.49-50
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXXVI. ... To Pomponius Numida. He welcomes him home from Spain.
- Attribution:
- Paraphras'd by R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Now let us drink now dance companions now
- Page No:
- pp.50-51
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXXVII. ... To his Companions. Whom he exhorteth to be merry upon the News of the Actiaque Victory.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Boy take away my gown I hate those shows
- Page No:
- pp.51-52
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXXVIII. ... To his Servant.
- Attribution:
- Paraphras'd by R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- The civil war from the first seeds
- Page No:
- pp.53-54
- Poem Title:
- Ode I. ... To C. Asinius Pollio.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Salust thou enemy of gold
- Page No:
- p.55
- Poem Title:
- Ode II. ... To C. Salustius Crispus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Keep still an equal mind not sunk
- Page No:
- pp.65[i.e. 56]-57
- Poem Title:
- Ode III. ... To Dellius.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- To love a serving maid's no shame
- Page No:
- pp.57-58
- Poem Title:
- Ode IV. ... To Xanthia Phoceus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Thy miss alas is yet too young
- Page No:
- pp.58-59
- Poem Title:
- Ode V. ... Upon Lalage.
- Attribution:
- By R. N. Paraphras'd.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Septimius ready bent with me
- Page No:
- pp.59-60
- Poem Title:
- Ode VI. ... To Septimius.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- My dear comrade and chiefest friend
- Page No:
- pp.60-62
- Poem Title:
- Ode VII. ... To Pompeius Varus. Congratulating his Return into his own Country.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Who ever thought to see
- Page No:
- pp.63-64
- Poem Title:
- The same Ode
- Attribution:
- Paraphras'd by R. T.
- Attributed To:
- Robert Thompson
- First Line:
- If any punishment did follow
- Page No:
- pp.64-65
- Poem Title:
- Ode VIII. ... To Barine.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- The swelling clouds not always pours
- Page No:
- pp.65-66
- Poem Title:
- Ode IX. ... To Valgius.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- The safest way of life is neither
- Page No:
- pp.66-67
- Poem Title:
- Ode X. ... To Licinius.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Would you a constant fortune keep
- Page No:
- pp.67-68
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by S. W:
- Attributed To:
- Samuel Woodford
- First Line:
- What the Cantabrian stout or Scythian think
- Page No:
- pp.68-69
- Poem Title:
- Ode XI. ... To Quintus Hirpinus. Cares laid aside, let us live merrily.
- Attribution:
- By T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- He that in verse would to the world declare
- Page No:
- pp.69-70
- Poem Title:
- Ode XII. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- A planter with a was he
- Page No:
- pp.71-72
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIII. ... To a Tree, by whose fall in his Sabine Villa, he was like to have been slain.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Ah Posthumus the years of man
- Page No:
- pp.72-73
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIV. ... To Posthumus. That Death cannot be avoided.
- Attribution:
- By R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Time Posthumus goes with full sail
- Page No:
- pp.73-74[i.e. 75]
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by S W.
- Attributed To:
- Samuel Woodford
- First Line:
- Our princely piles will shortly leave
- Page No:
- pp.74[i.e. 75]-76
- Poem Title:
- Ode XV. ... Against the Luxury of his Age.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Quiet the trembling merchant cries
- Page No:
- pp.76-77
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVI. ... To Grosphus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Why dost thou talk of dying so
- Page No:
- pp.78-79
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVII. ... To Maecenas sick. That he will not live after him.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- No gilded roof nor ivory fret
- Page No:
- pp.79-80
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVIII.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- In a blind corner jolly Bacchus taught
- Page No:
- pp.80-81
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIX. ... Being half foxt he praiseth Bacchus.
- Attribution:
- Paraphras'd by T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- A two-fold poet through the liquid sky
- Page No:
- p.82
- Poem Title:
- Ode XX.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Excellent poetry whose noble flight
- Page No:
- pp.83-85
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same
- Attribution:
- By R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- I hate lay vulgar make no noise
- Page No:
- pp.86-88
- Poem Title:
- Ode I.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Let the able youth himself enure
- Page No:
- pp.88-89
- Poem Title:
- Ode II. ... To his Friends.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- An honest and resolved man
- Page No:
- pp.89-92
- Poem Title:
- Ode III.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Descend Thalia with a song
- Page No:
- pp.92-94
- Poem Title:
- Ode IV.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Jove governs heaven with his nod
- Page No:
- pp.95-96
- Poem Title:
- Ode V.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Roman resolve thou shalt desertless taste
- Page No:
- pp.97-98
- Poem Title:
- Ode VI. ... To the Romans. Of the corrupt manners of that Age.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Asterie why dost thou mourn
- Page No:
- pp.99-100
- Poem Title:
- Ode VII. ... To Asterie.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Learned Maecenas wonder not that I
- Page No:
- pp.100-101
- Poem Title:
- Ode VIII. ... Paraphrased. To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Whilst I possessed thy love free from alarms
- Page No:
- pp.101-102
- Poem Title:
- Ode IX. ... A Dialogue of Love and Jealousie, betwixt Horace and Lydia.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Whilst I alone was dear to thee
- Page No:
- p.102
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by J. W. Esq.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- While I was lovely in thine eye
- Page No:
- p.103
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- See madam see how your poor lover lies
- Page No:
- p.104
- Poem Title:
- Ode X. ... Paraphrased.
- Attribution:
- By R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- O Mercury for taught by you
- Page No:
- pp.105-107
- Poem Title:
- Ode XI. ... To Mercury.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- A pleasant spring doth rise within my grove
- Page No:
- pp.107-108
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIII. ... Paraphrased. To the Fountain of Blandusia.
- Attribution:
- By R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- No more love's subjects but his slaves they be
- Page No:
- p.107
- Poem Title:
- Ode XII. ... Paraphrased. To Neobule.
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Great Caesar who is said to go
- Page No:
- pp.108-109
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIV. ... To the Roman people.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- For shame for shame give over
- Page No:
- p.110
- Poem Title:
- Ode XV. ... Paraphrased. Against Chloris.
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Danae in a brazen tower immured
- Page No:
- pp.110-112
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVI. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Brave Aelius sprung from an heroic line
- Page No:
- p.112
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVII. ... Paraphrased. To Aelius Lamia.
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Faunus who after nymphs dost range
- Page No:
- p.113
- Poem Title:
- Ode XVIII. ... To Faunus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Thou porest on Helvicus and studiest in vain
- Page No:
- pp.114-115
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIX. ... Paraphrased To Telephus.
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Dry Pyrrhus little dost thou know
- Page No:
- p.115
- Poem Title:
- Ode XX. ... Paraphrased. To Pyrrhus.
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Kind brother butt as old and brisk as I
- Page No:
- p.116
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXI. ... Paraphrased. To his Wine-Vessels.
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Gentle Diana goddess bright
- Page No:
- p.117
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXII. ... Paraphrased. Upon Diana.
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- If rural Phidile at the moon's arise
- Page No:
- pp.117-118
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXIII. ... To Phidile.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Though richer than unpolled
- Page No:
- pp.118-120
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXIV.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Bacchus whither hurriest thou me
- Page No:
- pp.120-123
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXV. ... Paraphrased. To Bacchus.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Tis true I was a sturdy soldier once
- Page No:
- p.123
- Poem Title:
- Ode III. ... Paraphrased. To Venus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Let ill presages guide the ill
- Page No:
- pp.124-126
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXVII. ... To Galatea going to Sea. He deters her principally by the example of Europa.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- On Neptune's feasts what else do we
- Page No:
- p.127
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXVIII. ... To Lyde.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Offspring of Tyrrhene kings I have
- Page No:
- pp.128-130
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXIX. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- A work outlasting brass and higher
- Page No:
- p.130
- Poem Title:
- Ode XXX.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- No more of war dread Cytherea cease
- Page No:
- pp.131-132
- Poem Title:
- Ode I. ... To Venus.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Who thinks to equal Pindar tries
- Page No:
- pp.133-134
- Poem Title:
- Ode II. ... To Antonius Iulus, the Son of Mark Anthony, the Triumvir. That it is dangerous to imitate the ancient Poets.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Pindar is imitable by none
- Page No:
- pp.135-136
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by A. C.
- Attributed To:
- Abraham Cowley
- First Line:
- Whom thou Melpomene
- Page No:
- p.137
- Poem Title:
- Ode III. ... To Melpomene.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- As the armour bearer of great Jove
- Page No:
- pp.138-140
- Poem Title:
- Ode IV.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Heaven's choicest gift Rome's greatest stay
- Page No:
- pp.140-142
- Poem Title:
- Ode V. ... To Augustus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- God whose revenge for boasts the crew
- Page No:
- pp.142-143
- Poem Title:
- Ode VI. To Apollo and Diana.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- He doth in secularian verse
- Page No:
- p.142
- Poem Title:
- Argument.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- The snows are thawed now grass new clothes the earth
- Page No:
- pp.144-145
- Poem Title:
- Ode VII. ... To L. Manlius Torquatus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- The snow is gone the grass returns
- Page No:
- pp.145-146
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- My friends I would accommodate
- Page No:
- pp.146-147
- Poem Title:
- Ode VIII. ... To Marianus Censorinus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Lest thou shouldst think the words which I
- Page No:
- pp.148-149
- Poem Title:
- Ode IX. ... To Lollio.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Fond lad who in thy youthful bloom
- Page No:
- p.150
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- by R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Tis true thou yet art fair my Ligurine
- Page No:
- p.150
- Poem Title:
- Ode X. ... To Ligurinus, a beauteous Youth.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Come Phillis gentle Phillis prithee come
- Page No:
- pp.151-152
- Poem Title:
- Ode XI. ... To Phillis.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- South winds the spring attending still
- Page No:
- pp.152-153
- Poem Title:
- Ode XII. ... To Virgil.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- The gods have Lyce heard my vow
- Page No:
- pp.153-154
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIII. ... Against Lyce. Who being old, is become a scorn to young men.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- My prayers are heard O Lyce now
- Page No:
- pp.154-155
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same Ode
- Attribution:
- By W. C.
- Attributed To:
- William Cartwright
- First Line:
- What care of senators or Roman state
- Page No:
- pp.156-157
- Poem Title:
- Ode XIV. ... To Augustus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- My muse by Phoebus was rebuked of late
- Page No:
- pp.157-158
- Poem Title:
- Ode XV. ... The praise of Augustus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Thou goest now our fleets general
- Page No:
- pp.159-160
- Poem Title:
- Epode I. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Happy is he that free from mental toil
- Page No:
- pp.160-162
- Poem Title:
- Epode II.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- That man is blessed who void of care
- Page No:
- pp.163-165
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the same.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- In time to come if such a crime should be
- Page No:
- pp.165-166
- Poem Title:
- Epode III. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- That disaccord between us two I find
- Page No:
- p.166
- Poem Title:
- Epode IV. ... To Volteius Mena, Pompey's freed-man.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- O God who ever in heaven dost guide
- Page No:
- pp.167-170
- Poem Title:
- Epode V.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- Thou village cur why dost thou bark at me
- Page No:
- pp.170-171
- Poem Title:
- Epode VI. ... Against Cassius Severus, a revileful and wanton Poet.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Why why your sheathed swords drawn again
- Page No:
- pp.171-172
- Poem Title:
- Epode VII. ... To the People of Rome.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- To me thou superannuated bitch
- Page No:
- p.172
- Poem Title:
- Epode VIII. ... To an Old Woman courting him.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- When shall I Caecube wines that stored lie
- Page No:
- pp.173-174
- Poem Title:
- Epode IX. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- And art thou shipped friend Doggerel get thee gone
- Page No:
- pp.174-175
- Poem Title:
- Epode X. ... Against Maetius a Poet.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Ah Pettius I have done with poetry
- Page No:
- pp.175-176
- Poem Title:
- Epode XI. ... To Pettius his Chamber-fellow.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Why dost thou me with gifts and letters
- Page No:
- p.177
- Poem Title:
- Epode XII. ... Against a libidinous old Woman.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Rough tempests have the brow of heaven bent
- Page No:
- p.178
- Poem Title:
- Epode XIII. ... To his merry Friends, that they should pass the Winter pleasantly.
- Attribution:
- By Sir T. H.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Thomas Hawkins
- First Line:
- It was a lovely melancholy night
- Page No:
- pp.179-180
- Poem Title:
- Epode XV. ... To his Sweet-heart Neaera.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Tis death my sweet Maecenas when so oft
- Page No:
- p.179
- Poem Title:
- Epode XIV. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Now civil wars a second age consume
- Page No:
- pp.180-182
- Poem Title:
- Epode XVI. ... To the People of Rome. Commiserating the Commonwealth in respect of the Civil Wars.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- I yield Canidia to thy art
- Page No:
- pp.183-185
- Poem Title:
- Epode XVII. ... To Canidia.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Paraphrased.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Go hang thy self I will not hear
- Page No:
- pp.185-186
- Poem Title:
- Canidia's Answer
- Attribution:
- By T. F.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- Phoebus and Dian grovy queen
- Page No:
- pp.186-189
- Poem Title:
- Verses sung in the Secular Games every Century of years, pronounced for the safety of the Roman Empire.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- How comes it great Maecenas that there's not
- Page No:
- pp.190-195
- Poem Title:
- Satyr I. ... That men are not contented with their conditions.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- The players empirics beggars and the noise
- Page No:
- pp.196-203
- Poem Title:
- Satyr II. ... That while foolish men shun one Vice, they run into another.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- All songsters have this humour that among
- Page No:
- pp.203-210
- Poem Title:
- Satyr III. ... That men are quick-sighted to pry into other mens infirmities, and connive at their own.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- The old Greek poets Aristophanes
- Page No:
- pp.211-218
- Poem Title:
- Satyr IV. ... A Discourse concerning Poetry.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- From spacious Rome to Aris once went I
- Page No:
- pp.218-223
- Poem Title:
- Satyr V. ... A Journey from Rome to Brundusium.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Not that the Tuscans who from Lydia came
- Page No:
- pp.224-228
- Poem Title:
- Satyr VI. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- The venomous railing of that black-mouthed thing
- Page No:
- pp.229-231
- Poem Title:
- Satyr VII. ... A Braul between two railing Buffoons.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Of an old fig-tree once the trunk was I
- Page No:
- pp.231-234
- Poem Title:
- Satyr VIII. ... A Discovery of Witchcraft.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Of late along the streets I musing walked
- Page No:
- pp.234-238
- Poem Title:
- Satyr IX. A description of an impertinent prating Fool.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- I said indeed the verse Lucilius writ
- Page No:
- pp.238-243
- Poem Title:
- Satyr X. ... Another Discourse of Poetry.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Some think I am too sharp a satirist
- Page No:
- pp.244-247
- Poem Title:
- Satyr I.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- How great a virtue tis and how it tends
- Page No:
- pp.247-254
- Poem Title:
- Satyr II. ... The benefits of Temperance and Frugality.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Thou writest so seldom that there does appear
- Page No:
- pp.255-274
- Poem Title:
- Satyr III. ... That every man is in something or other mad. Damasippus and Horace.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Whence brother Catius and whither bound so fast
- Page No:
- pp.274-278
- Poem Title:
- Satyr IV. ... A Character of a Belly-god. Catius and Horace.
- Attribution:
- By T. F. Esq.
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Flatman
- First Line:
- To all that thou hast told me heretofore
- Page No:
- pp.279-285
- Poem Title:
- Satyr V. ... A way to grow Rich. Ulysses and Tiresias.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- This was my wish a moderate scope of land
- Page No:
- pp.286-290
- Poem Title:
- Satyr VI.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- This this the sum of all my wishes was
- Page No:
- pp.290-295
- Poem Title:
- The same by another hand.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- At the large foot of a fair hollow tree
- Page No:
- pp.295-298
- Poem Title:
- [no title]
- Attribution:
- By Mr. A. Cowley.
- Attributed To:
- Abraham Cowley
- First Line:
- I've overheard you and a mind I have
- Page No:
- pp.298-305
- Poem Title:
- Satyr VII. ... Horace and Davus. The miseries of a Debauched Life.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- How liked ye wealthy Nasidenus' feast
- Page No:
- pp.305-309
- Poem Title:
- Satyr VIII. ... A Description of an unhandsome Treat. Horace and Fundanus.
- Attribution:
- By J. W. Esq;
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Maecenas mentioned in my odes to be
- Page No:
- pp.310-314
- Poem Title:
- Epistle I. ... To Maecenas.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Whilst thou great Lollio in Rome dost plead
- Page No:
- pp.314-317
- Poem Title:
- Epistle II. ... To Lollio.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- While you at Rome my honoured Lollius plead
- Page No:
- pp.317-319
- Poem Title:
- The same
- Attribution:
- by Dr. W.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- In what part of the world Claudius fights now
- Page No:
- pp.320-321
- Poem Title:
- Epistle III. ... To Julius Florus. Advice to follow his Studies.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Tell me Tibullus thou that dost so far
- Page No:
- p.322
- Poem Title:
- Epistle IV. ... To Tibullus. That he should live comfortably, and without Cares.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- If thou a guest on a joined-stool canst sup
- Page No:
- pp.323-324
- Poem Title:
- Epistle V. ... To Torquatus.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Numicius to admire nothing at all
- Page No:
- pp.324-327
- Poem Title:
- Epistle VI. ... To Numicius. Not to trouble himself with worldly matters.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- If then wealth only makes and keeps man blessed
- Page No:
- pp.327-328
- Poem Title:
- The same
- Attribution:
- by J. W. Esq;
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- I promised when I left you last tis true
- Page No:
- pp.328-335
- Poem Title:
- Epistle VII. ... To Maecenas. That Liberty is more acceptable to a Friend, than costly Entertainment.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- I promised but five days from you to stay
- Page No:
- pp.335-340
- Poem Title:
- The same
- Attribution:
- by S. W.
- Attributed To:
- Samuel Woodford
- First Line:
- Go when I bid thee muse and wish my friend
- Page No:
- pp.340-341
- Poem Title:
- Epistle VIII. ... To Celsus. That preferment should not transport him.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Great sir Septimius understands how vast
- Page No:
- pp.341-342
- Poem Title:
- Epistle IX. ... To Claudius Nero. On behalf of a Friend.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- To Fuscus the town's lover health I wish
- Page No:
- pp.342-344
- Poem Title:
- Epistle X. ... To Fuscus Aristius.
- Attribution:
- By Sir R. F.
- Attributed To:
- Sir Richard Fanshawe
- First Line:
- Now you have Lesbos and fair Samos seen
- Page No:
- pp.344-346
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XI. ... To Bullatius.
- Attribution:
- By S. W.
- Attributed To:
- Samuel Woodford
- First Line:
- Why dost thou murmur Iccius and repine
- Page No:
- pp.346-348
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XII. ... To Iccius. That the use of Estates makes men rich.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- As I have oftentimes and long since too
- Page No:
- pp.348-349
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XIII. ... To Vinius Asella. Instructions for presenting his Poems to Augustus.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Thou bailiff of my woods and pleasant field
- Page No:
- pp.349-351
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XIV. ... To his Bailiff. The difference betwixt a Country life and a City life.
- Attribution:
- By R. T.
- Attributed To:
- Robert Thompson
- First Line:
- Prithee good Vala write what kind of air
- Page No:
- pp.351-353
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XV. ... To Vala. The pleasure of Travelling.
- Attribution:
- By R. N. Gent.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Ask me no more my Quintius whether I
- Page No:
- pp.353-357
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XVI. ... To Quintius. A Description of a Good Man.
- Attribution:
- By R. T.
- Attributed To:
- Robert Thompson
- First Line:
- Scaeva thou art wise enough to tell
- Page No:
- pp.357-360
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XVII. ... To Scaeva. The way to get Great mens Favour.
- Attribution:
- By R. N.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- My blunt friend Lollius if I know thee right
- Page No:
- pp.360-366
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XVIII. ... To Lollius. How to be a good Companion.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Learned Mecaenas if you'll credit give
- Page No:
- pp.367-370
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XIX. ... To Mecaenas. A Discourse of Poetry.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- Well book thou on the stationer's stall wilt lie
- Page No:
- pp.370-371
- Poem Title:
- Epistle XX. ... To his Book. A Character of himself.
- Attribution:
- By A. B.
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Brome
- First Line:
- When you alone so many and so great
- Page No:
- pp.372-382
- Poem Title:
- Epistle I. ... To Augustus. A Discourse of Poetry.
- Attribution:
- By Sir W. P.
- Attributed To:
- Sir William Petty
- First Line:
- Brave Nero's favourite my Julius
- Page No:
- pp.383-392
- Poem Title:
- Epistle ult. ... To Julius Florus. Another Discourse of Poetry.
- Attribution:
- By J. D.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- If that some painter in a piece should place
- Page No:
- pp.393-408
- Poem Title:
- Horace His Art of Poetry.
- Attribution:
- Englished by S. P. Esquire.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
Related People
Content/Publication