The poetical miscellany consisting of select pieces for the use of schools third edition [ESTC T118166] [ECCO]
- DMI number:
- 1118
- Publication Date:
- 1778
- Volume Number:
- 1 of 1
- ESTC number:
- T118166
- EEBO/ECCO link:
- CW111975459
- Shelfmark:
- ECCO BOD BL
- Full Title:
- THE | Poetical Miscellany; | CONSISTING OF | SELECT PIECES | From the Works of the following Poets, | [i] viz, [/i] | [2 columns] [column 1] MILTON, | DRYDEN, | POPE, | ADDISON, | GAY, | PARNEL, | YOUNG, | THOMSON, [/column 1] | [column 2] AKENSIDE, | PHILIPS, | GRAY, | WHARTON, | SHAKESPEARE, | GOLDSMITH, | WILKIE, | [i] &c. &c. [/i] | [rule] | For the Use of SCHOOLS. | [rule] | The THIRD EDITION, with Improvements. | [double rule] | LONDON: | Printed for W. STRAHAN; and T. CADELL, | in the Strand. 1778.
- Place of Publication:
- London
- Format:
- Duodecimo
- Bibliographic details:
- Half title: THE | Poetical Miscellany. | THE WISH. | [epigraph]
- Other matter:
- Prefatory matter: Preface [2pp.]; Contents, [6pp.] Back matter: Books Printed for T. Cadell in the Strand [4pp.]
- Title:
- Poetical miscellany consisting of select pieces for the use of schools the fourth edition [ESTC T132703]
- Publication Date:
- 1789
- ESTC No:
- T132703
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The poetical miscellany consisting of select pieces [ESTC T175134] [ECCO]
- Publication Date:
- 1769
- ESTC No:
- T175134
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Title:
- The poetical miscellany consisting of select pieces for the use of schools [ESTC T118165] [ECCO]
- Publication Date:
- 1762
- ESTC No:
- T118165
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Another Edition of
- Comments:
- Publisher:
- T. Cadell
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Publisher:
- William Strahan
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- First Line:
- O blest of heaven whom not the languid songs
- Page No:
- Poem Title:
- The Advantages resulting from a well form'd Imagination
- Attribution:
- Akenside
- Attributed To:
- Mark Akenside
- First Line:
- The spacious firmament on high
- Page No:
- pp.1-2
- Poem Title:
- Ode on the Glories of the Heavens
- Attribution:
- Addison
- Attributed To:
- Joseph Addison
- First Line:
- The lord my pasture shall prepare
- Page No:
- pp.2-3
- Poem Title:
- David's Pastoral Hymn on Providence
- Attribution:
- Addison
- Attributed To:
- Joseph Addison
- First Line:
- When all thy mercies O my God
- Page No:
- pp.3-5
- Poem Title:
- Hymn on Gratitude
- Attribution:
- Addison
- Attributed To:
- Joseph Addison
- First Line:
- Say first of God above or man below
- Page No:
- pp.6-8
- Poem Title:
- Of the Nature and State of Man, with respect to the Universe.
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Heaven from all creatures hides the book of fate
- Page No:
- pp.8-9
- Poem Title:
- Hope implanted in the human Breast, as an Earnest of future Bliss
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- What would this man now upward will he soar
- Page No:
- pp.9-10
- Poem Title:
- The Unreasonableness of Man's Complaints against Providence
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Far as creation's ample range extends
- Page No:
- pp.11-13
- Poem Title:
- The Works of God, One entire Whole, where all the Parts have a necessary Dependence on, and Relation to, each other.
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- All are but parts of one stupendous whole
- Page No:
- pp.13-14
- Poem Title:
- The Omnipresence of God, and Submission to his Providence.
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Two principles in human nature reign
- Page No:
- pp.14-22
- Poem Title:
- The Origin, Use, and End of the Passions.
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Look round our world behold the chain of love
- Page No:
- pp.22-24
- Poem Title:
- The whole Universe one System of Society
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- See him from nature rising slow to art
- Page No:
- pp.24-25
- Poem Title:
- Reason instructed by Instinct in the Invention of Arts
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Know then this truth enough for man to know
- Page No:
- pp.25-27
- Poem Title:
- Happiness to be found in Virtue alone.
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Search then the ruling passion there alone
- Page No:
- pp.27-29
- Poem Title:
- Men to be known only by their Ruling Passion
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Ah friend to dazzle let the vain design
- Page No:
- p.29
- Poem Title:
- Advice to the Fair Sex, for their true Interest.
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- As rising from the vegetable world
- Page No:
- pp.30-35
- Poem Title:
- The Passion of the Groves
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Still let my song a nobler note assume
- Page No:
- pp.35-36
- Poem Title:
- The influence of Spring on Man
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- But happy they the happiest of their kind
- Page No:
- pp.36-38
- Poem Title:
- The Joys of virtuous Love
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- When now no more the alternate twins are fired
- Page No:
- pp.39-40
- Poem Title:
- Description of the Dawn, and Sun rising
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Let no presuming impious railer tax
- Page No:
- p.41
- Poem Title:
- The impious Presumption of taxing creative Wisdom.
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Thus up the mount in airy vision rapt
- Page No:
- p.42
- Poem Title:
- A Cataract
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Behold slow settling over the lurid grove
- Page No:
- pp.43-45
- Poem Title:
- A Storm of Thunder and Lightning
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Heavens what a goodly prospect spreads around
- Page No:
- pp.45-52
- Poem Title:
- A Panegyric on Great Britain.
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- These are thy blessings industry rough power
- Page No:
- pp.52-55
- Poem Title:
- The Blessings of Industry
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Defeating oft the labours of the year
- Page No:
- pp.56-57
- Poem Title:
- A Harvest Storm
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Here the rude clamour of the sportsman's joys
- Page No:
- pp.58-60
- Poem Title:
- The Barbarity of Shooting and Hunting
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Give ye Britons then
- Page No:
- pp.60-65
- Poem Title:
- A ludicrous Account of Fox-hunting, with Advice to the Fair Sex
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Oh knew he but his happiness of men
- Page No:
- pp.65-70
- Poem Title:
- A Panegyric on a philosophical Country Life
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- As thus the snows arise and foul and fierce
- Page No:
- pp.70-73
- Poem Title:
- A Man perishing in the Snow, with Reflections on the Miseries of human Life.
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Meantime the village rouzes up the fire
- Page No:
- pp.73-74
- Poem Title:
- A Winter-Evening described, as spent by the Country People, and in the City.
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Tis done dread winter spreads his latest glooms
- Page No:
- pp.74-76
- Poem Title:
- Moral Reflections on a future State
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Ere the radiant sun
- Page No:
- pp.76-79
- Poem Title:
- The Ideas of the divine Mind, the Origin of every Quality pleasing to the Imagination, &c.
- Attribution:
- Akenside
- Attributed To:
- Mark Akenside
- First Line:
- Thus with a faithful aim have we presumed
- Page No:
- pp.80-84
- Poem Title:
- The different Degrees of Beauty in different Species of Objects, &c.
- Attribution:
- Akenside
- Attributed To:
- Mark Akenside
- First Line:
- Inhabitant of earth to whom is given
- Page No:
- pp.84-86
- Poem Title:
- The OEconomy of Providence
- Attribution:
- Akenside
- Attributed To:
- Mark Akenside
- First Line:
- For since the course
- Page No:
- pp.86-88
- Poem Title:
- The Origin of Vice
- Attribution:
- Akenside
- Attributed To:
- Mark Akenside
- First Line:
- Behold the foremost band of slender thought
- Page No:
- pp.88-92
- Poem Title:
- The general Sources of Ridicule in Characters of Men, with the final Cause of the Sense of it.
- Attribution:
- Akenside
- Attributed To:
- Mark Akenside
- First Line:
- By what fine ties hath God connected things
- Page No:
- pp.92-94
- Poem Title:
- The Benevolent Order of the World, illustrated in the arbitray Connection of Pleasure with the Object which excites it.
- Attribution:
- Akenside
- Attributed To:
- Mark Akenside
- First Line:
- Say first for heaven hides nothing from thy view
- Page No:
- pp.97-98
- Poem Title:
- Man's Disobedience - Loss of Paradise - Satan driven out of Heaven
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Thus Satan talking to his nearest mate
- Page No:
- pp.98-100
- Poem Title:
- Satan lying on the burning Lake
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Anon out of the earth a fabric huge
- Page No:
- pp.100-101
- Poem Title:
- Pandemonium
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- O thou that with surpassing glory crowned
- Page No:
- pp.101-104
- Poem Title:
- Satan's Speech to the Sun
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- That day I oft remember when from sleep
- Page No:
- pp.104-105
- Poem Title:
- Eve gives an Account of herself upon her first Creation
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- These are thy glorious works parent of good
- Page No:
- pp.106-108
- Poem Title:
- Adam and Eve, in a morning Hymn, call upon all the Parts of the Creation to join with them in extolling their common Maker.
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Meanwhile the son
- Page No:
- pp.108-109
- Poem Title:
- The Messiah, surrounded with an host of Angels, goes forth in the Power of his Father, to perform the Work of Creation.
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Here finished he and all that he had made
- Page No:
- pp.109-110
- Poem Title:
- The Messiah returns to Heaven, and takes a Survey of his Work
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- As new waked from soundest sleep
- Page No:
- pp.110-112
- Poem Title:
- Adam gives an Account of his Condition and Sentiments immediately after his Creation
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Oh by what name for thou above all these
- Page No:
- pp.112-115
- Poem Title:
- Adam describes a Conference which he held with his Maker upon the Subject of Solitude
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- When out of hope behold her not far off
- Page No:
- pp.115-117
- Poem Title:
- Adam's Joy and Gratitude upon the Discovery of a Creature resembling the Apparition presented to him in his Dream
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- O Earth how like to heaven if not preferred
- Page No:
- pp.117-119
- Poem Title:
- Satan's Soliloquy after traversing the Globe, and examining the Nature of every Creature
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- He added not and from her turned but Eve
- Page No:
- pp.120-121
- Poem Title:
- Eve addresses herself to Adam for Pardon - their Reconciliation, &c.
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- What better can we do than to the place
- Page No:
- p.122
- Poem Title:
- Our first Parents offer up their penitential Prayers on the very Place where their Judge appeared to them, when he pronounced their sentence.
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Celestial whether among the thrones or named
- Page No:
- pp.123-125
- Poem Title:
- Adam's Speech to Michael, &c.
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Must I then leave thee paradise thus leave
- Page No:
- p.123
- Poem Title:
- Eve's Complaint, upon hearing that she was to be removed from the Garden of Paradise.
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- To whom our saviour calmly thus replied
- Page No:
- pp.125-127
- Poem Title:
- Our Saviour's Reply to Satan, when tempted by him in the wilderness.
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Darkness now arose
- Page No:
- pp.127-128
- Poem Title:
- Description of a horrid Night, which Satan is feigned to have conjured up in the Wilderness.
- Attribution:
- Milton
- Attributed To:
- John Milton
- First Line:
- Mylo forbear to call him blessed
- Page No:
- pp.129-130
- Poem Title:
- False Greatness
- Attribution:
- Dr. Watts
- Attributed To:
- Isaac Watts
- First Line:
- The rising year beheld the imperious Gaul
- Page No:
- pp.130-132
- Poem Title:
- True Monarchy
- Attribution:
- Dr. Watts
- Attributed To:
- Isaac Watts
- First Line:
- I am not concerned to know
- Page No:
- pp.132-134
- Poem Title:
- True Riches
- Attribution:
- Dr. Watts
- Attributed To:
- Isaac Watts
- First Line:
- Happy the man who void of cares and strife
- Page No:
- pp.135-139
- Poem Title:
- The Splendid Shilling. An Imitation of Milton.
- Attribution:
- Phillips.
- Attributed To:
- John Philips
- First Line:
- Lovely lasting peace of mind
- Page No:
- pp.140-142
- Poem Title:
- A Hymn to Contentment
- Attribution:
- Parnell
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Parnell
- First Line:
- By the blue taper's trembling light
- Page No:
- pp.142-145
- Poem Title:
- A Night-Piece on Death
- Attribution:
- Parnell
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Parnell
- First Line:
- Far in a wild unknown to public view
- Page No:
- pp.146-154
- Poem Title:
- The Hermit
- Attribution:
- Parnell
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Parnell
- First Line:
- In Britain's isle and Arthur's days
- Page No:
- pp.154-161
- Poem Title:
- A Fairy Tale in the ancient English Stile
- Attribution:
- Parnell
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Parnell
- First Line:
- Now early shepherds over the meadow pass
- Page No:
- pp.162-164
- Poem Title:
- Health; an Eclogue
- Attribution:
- Parnell
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Parnell
- First Line:
- Where the prime actors of the last year's scene
- Page No:
- pp.165-175
- Poem Title:
- Reflections on Time, Eternity, the last Day, &c.
- Attribution:
- Young
- Attributed To:
- Edward Young
- First Line:
- Ye deep philosophers who can
- Page No:
- pp.175-178
- Poem Title:
- The Young Lady and the Looking Glass. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Wilkie
- Attributed To:
- William Wilkie
- First Line:
- Declare ye sages if ye find
- Page No:
- pp.178-181
- Poem Title:
- The Boy and the Rainbow. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Wilkie.
- Attributed To:
- William Wilkie
- First Line:
- A youth a pupil of the town
- Page No:
- pp.181-185
- Poem Title:
- The Rake and the Hermit. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Wilkie
- Attributed To:
- William Wilkie
- First Line:
- The wind was high the window shakes
- Page No:
- pp.186-187
- Poem Title:
- The Miser and Plutus. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Gay.
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- A monkey to reform the times
- Page No:
- pp.188-190
- Poem Title:
- The Monkey who had seen the World. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- Is there no hope the sick man said
- Page No:
- pp.190-192
- Poem Title:
- The sick Man and the Angel. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- Is there a bard whom genius fires
- Page No:
- pp.192-193
- Poem Title:
- The Persian, the Sun, and the Cloud. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- The man to Jove his suit preferred
- Page No:
- pp.193-195
- Poem Title:
- The Father and Jupiter. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- Friendship like love is but a name
- Page No:
- pp.195-197
- Poem Title:
- The Hare and many Friends. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- The man of pure and simple heart
- Page No:
- pp.197-203
- Poem Title:
- The Squire and his Cur. A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- Hail happy land whose fertile grounds
- Page No:
- pp.204-209
- Poem Title:
- The Man, the Cat, the Dog, and the Fly. A Fable...To my native Country.
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- Near yonder copse where once the garden smiled
- Page No:
- pp.209-211
- Poem Title:
- The Village Preacher
- Attribution:
- Goldsmith
- Attributed To:
- Oliver Goldsmith
- First Line:
- Turn gentle hermit of the dale
- Page No:
- pp.211-218
- Poem Title:
- A Ballad.
- Attribution:
- Goldsmith
- Attributed To:
- Oliver Goldsmith
- First Line:
- Of Leinster famed for maidens fair
- Page No:
- pp.218-221
- Poem Title:
- Colin and Lucy
- Attribution:
- Tickel
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Tickell
- First Line:
- While lost to all his former mirth
- Page No:
- pp.221-223
- Poem Title:
- Ode to a Lady, on the Death of Col. Charles Ross, in the Action at Fontenoy. Written May, 1745.
- Attribution:
- Collins
- Attributed To:
- William Collins
- First Line:
- Oh hear a pensive prisoner's prayer
- Page No:
- pp.223-225
- Poem Title:
- The Mouse's Petition. Found in the Trap where he had been confined all Night.
- Attribution:
- Barbauld
- Attributed To:
- Anna Letitia Barbauld [nee Aikin]
- First Line:
- Hector this heard returned without delay
- Page No:
- pp.226-231
- Poem Title:
- The parting of Hector and Andromache
- Attribution:
- Pope's Homer's Iliad
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Ere yet ingenuous youth thy steps retire
- Page No:
- pp.231-233
- Poem Title:
- Elegy to a young Nobleman leaving the University
- Attribution:
- Mason
- Attributed To:
- William Mason
- First Line:
- All the world's a stage
- Page No:
- pp.233-234
- Poem Title:
- The World compared to a Stage
- Attribution:
- Shakespeare
- Attributed To:
- William Shakespeare
- First Line:
- I'm never merry when I hear sweet music
- Page No:
- pp.234-235
- Poem Title:
- Music
- Attribution:
- Shakespeare
- Attributed To:
- William Shakespeare
- First Line:
- The lunatic the lover and the poet
- Page No:
- pp.235-236
- Poem Title:
- The Power of Imagination
- Attribution:
- Shakespeare
- Attributed To:
- William Shakespeare
- First Line:
- She never told her love
- Page No:
- p.236
- Poem Title:
- Concealed Love
- Attribution:
- Shakespeare
- Attributed To:
- William Shakespeare
- First Line:
- These our actors
- Page No:
- p.236
- Poem Title:
- The Vanity of Human Nature
- Attribution:
- Shakespeare
- Attributed To:
- William Shakespeare
- First Line:
- Give thy thoughts no tongue
- Page No:
- pp.237-238
- Poem Title:
- A Father's Advice to his Son, going to Travel
- Attribution:
- Shakespeare
- Attributed To:
- William Shakespeare
- First Line:
- Seems madam nay it is I know not seems
- Page No:
- p.237
- Poem Title:
- Real Grief
- Attribution:
- Shakespeare
- Attributed To:
- William Shakespeare
- First Line:
- To be or not to be that is the question
- Page No:
- pp.238-239
- Poem Title:
- Hamlet's Soliloquy on Death
- Attribution:
- Shakespeare
- Attributed To:
- William Shakespeare
- First Line:
- It must be so Plato thou reasonst well
- Page No:
- pp.239-240
- Poem Title:
- Cato's Soliloquy on the Immortality of the Soul
- Attribution:
- Addison
- Attributed To:
- Joseph Addison
- First Line:
- Whether amid the gloom of night I stray
- Page No:
- pp.240-242
- Poem Title:
- A Contemplation on Night
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- Ere the foundations of the world were laid
- Page No:
- pp.242-243
- Poem Title:
- A Thought on Eternity
- Attribution:
- Gay
- Attributed To:
- John Gay
- First Line:
- Twas at the royal feast for Persia won
- Page No:
- pp.244-251
- Poem Title:
- Alexander's Feast: or, The Power of Music; an Ode on St. Cecilia's Day.
- Attribution:
- Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- Descend ye nine descend and sing
- Page No:
- pp.251-256
- Poem Title:
- Ode for Music on St. Cecilia's day
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- A parish priest was of the pilgrim train
- Page No:
- pp.256-261
- Poem Title:
- The Character of a Good Parson, imitated from Chaucer.
- Attribution:
- Dryden
- Attributed To:
- John Dryden
- First Line:
- Now jolly swains the harvest of your cares
- Page No:
- pp.261-267
- Poem Title:
- On Sheep-shearing - Song on that Occasion, &c.
- Attribution:
- Dyer
- Attributed To:
- John Dyer
- First Line:
- Through all the brute creation none as sheep
- Page No:
- pp.267-268
- Poem Title:
- Recommendation of Mercifulnesss to Animals
- Attribution:
- Dyer
- Attributed To:
- John Dyer
- First Line:
- Our vallies yield not or but sparing yield
- Page No:
- pp.268-270
- Poem Title:
- Few Dyes the natural Product of England - the Advantages and Necessity of Trade, &c.
- Attribution:
- Dyer
- Attributed To:
- John Dyer
- First Line:
- Even nature lives by toil
- Page No:
- pp.270-271
- Poem Title:
- Recommendation of Labour
- Attribution:
- Dyer
- Attributed To:
- John Dyer
- First Line:
- O when through every province shall be raised
- Page No:
- pp.272-276
- Poem Title:
- Country-Workhouses proposed - a Description of one - good Effects of Industry exemplified, &c.
- Attribution:
- Dyer
- Attributed To:
- John Dyer
- First Line:
- On Guinea's sultry strand the drapery light
- Page No:
- pp.276-277
- Poem Title:
- Reflections on the Slave-Trade
- Attribution:
- Dyer
- Attributed To:
- John Dyer
- First Line:
- Silent nymph with curious eye
- Page No:
- pp.277-282
- Poem Title:
- Grongar Hill
- Attribution:
- Dyer
- Attributed To:
- John Dyer
- First Line:
- The wise and great of every clime
- Page No:
- pp.282-292
- Poem Title:
- Ode to the Right Honourable Francis Earl of Huntingdon. 1747.
- Attribution:
- Akenside
- Attributed To:
- Mark Akenside
- First Line:
- Ye distant spires ye antique towers
- Page No:
- pp.292-295
- Poem Title:
- Ode on a distant Prospect of Eton College
- Attribution:
- Gray
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Gray
- First Line:
- Daughter of Jove relentless power
- Page No:
- pp.295-297
- Poem Title:
- Hymn to Adversity
- Attribution:
- Gray
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Gray
- First Line:
- Twas on a lofty vase's side
- Page No:
- pp.297-299
- Poem Title:
- Ode on the Death of a Favourite Cat, drowned in a Tub of Gold Fishes.
- Attribution:
- Gray
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Gray
- First Line:
- Old battle array big with horror is fled
- Page No:
- pp.299-301
- Poem Title:
- A Pipe of Tobacco: In Imitation of six several Authors. Imitation I. A New-Year's Ode.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Little tube of mighty power
- Page No:
- pp.301-302
- Poem Title:
- Imitation II
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- O thou matured by glad Hesperian suns
- Page No:
- pp.302-303
- Poem Title:
- Imitation III
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Critics avaunt tobacco is my theme
- Page No:
- p.303
- Poem Title:
- Imitation IV
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Blessed leaf whose aromatic gales dispense
- Page No:
- p.304
- Poem Title:
- Imitation V
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Boy bring an ounce of freeman's best
- Page No:
- pp.304-305
- Poem Title:
- Imitation VI
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Ye green-robed Dryads oft at dusky eve
- Page No:
- pp.306-314
- Poem Title:
- The Enthusiast; or the Lover of Nature
- Attribution:
- J. Warton
- Attributed To:
- Joseph Warton
- First Line:
- O parent of each lovely muse
- Page No:
- pp.315-320
- Poem Title:
- An Ode to Fancy
- Attribution:
- J. Wharton
- Attributed To:
- Joseph Warton
- First Line:
- Kneller with silence and surprise
- Page No:
- pp.320-323
- Poem Title:
- To Sir Godfrey Kneller, on his Picture of King George I.
- Attribution:
- Addison
- Attributed To:
- Joseph Addison
- First Line:
- But were there one whose fires
- Page No:
- p.323
- Poem Title:
- Character of Atticus
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
- First Line:
- Father of light and life thou good supreme
- Page No:
- p.324
- Poem Title:
- Another Address to the Deity
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- O thou great arbiter of life and death
- Page No:
- p.324
- Poem Title:
- An Address to the Deity
- Attribution:
- Young
- Attributed To:
- Edward Young
- First Line:
- These as they change almighty father these
- Page No:
- pp.325-329
- Poem Title:
- A Hymn
- Attribution:
- Thomson
- Attributed To:
- James Thomson
- First Line:
- Ye nymphs of Solyma begin the song
- Page No:
- pp.329-332
- Poem Title:
- Messiah, a Sacred Eclogue
- Attribution:
- Pope
- Attributed To:
- Alexander Pope
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