Miscellaneous poems, translations and imitations [T5779] [vol II]
- DMI number:
- 298
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Evidence:
- Publication Date:
- 1720
- Volume Number:
- 2 of 2
- ESTC number:
- T5779 [vol II]
- EEBO/ECCO link:
- CW124773386
- Shelfmark:
- BOD 12 Theta 799.
- Full Title:
- MISCELLANEOUS | POEMS, | TRANSLATIONS | AND | IMITATIONS, | By several Hands: | PARTICULARLY, | [two columns] [column one] Dr. KING late of the [i]Com-|mons.[/i] | Mr. SMITH, late of [i]Christ | Church. | Revd Mr. DIBBEN. | Mr. ELISHA FENTON. | Revd Dr. YALDEN. [/column one] | [column two] Mr. ROWE, | Mr. SOUTHCOT. | Revd Mr. BROOME. | Revd Mr. JAMES WARD. | AND THE | Revd Mr. Archdeacon DA-| NIEL. | [rule] | VOL II. | [rule] | The THIRD EDITION. | [rule] | [i]LONDON:[/i] | Printed for BERNARD LINTOT between the [i]Temple-[/i] | Gates in [i]Fleet-street[/i], 1720.
- Epigraph:
- n/a
- Place of Publication:
- London
- Genres:
- Collection of literary verse
- Format:
- Duodecimo
- Price:
- n/a
- Pagination:
- [4], [1]-318, [8] pp.
- Bibliographic details:
- Art of Cookery (p. [5]) has separate title page.
- Comments:
- Contents: Prose items, pp. 61-79, 82-85; Latin verse pp. 97-99, 134-144. Welsh verse pp. 100-110. Attributions: Some attributions are taken from the Index rather than from the body of the text.
- Other matter:
- Prefatory matter: list of 'Books printed for Bernard Lintot' facing title page. End matter: Index to vols I and II, together with attributions, [8pp.]
- References:
- Case 260 (2) (b)
- Title:
- Miscellaneous poems and translations [T5777]
- Publication Date:
- 1712
- ESTC No:
- T5777
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- Title:
- Miscellaneous poems and translations [T5778]
- Publication Date:
- 1714
- ESTC No:
- T5778
- Volume:
- 1 of 1
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- Title:
- Miscellaneous poems and translations [T5779] [vol I]
- Publication Date:
- 1720
- ESTC No:
- T5779
- Volume:
- 1 of 2
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- Title:
- Miscellaneous poems and translations [T5780] [vol I]
- Publication Date:
- 1722
- ESTC No:
- T5780
- Volume:
- 1 of 2
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- Title:
- Miscellaneous poems, translations and imitations [T5780] [vol II]
- Publication Date:
- 1722
- ESTC No:
- T5780
- Volume:
- 2 of 2
- Relationship:
- Unknown
- Comments:
- Publisher:
- (Barnaby) Bernard Lintot [Lintott]
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- 'Printed for BERNARD LINTOT between the Temple-Gates in Fleet-street.'
- First Line:
- If Bellvill can his generous soul confine
- Page No:
- pp.1-3
- Poem Title:
- An Imitation of Horace's Invitation Of Torquatus to Supper. Which is the Fifth Epistle to his First Book.
- Attribution:
- By Dr. King
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Ingenious L-- were a picture drawn
- Page No:
- pp.7-34
- Poem Title:
- The Art of Cookery, In Imitation of Horace's Art of Poetry. To Dr. Lister
- Attribution:
- By Dr. King.
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Mountown thou sweet retreat from Dublin cares
- Page No:
- pp.35-40
- Poem Title:
- Mully of Mountown.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- At sight of murdered Pompey's head
- Page No:
- p.41
- Poem Title:
- To Laura, In imitation of Petrarch.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Young Slouch the farmer had a jolly wife
- Page No:
- pp.42-45
- Poem Title:
- The Old Cheese.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Two neighbours Clod and Jolt would married be
- Page No:
- pp.46-48
- Poem Title:
- The Skillet.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Tom Banks by native industry was taught
- Page No:
- pp.49-51
- Poem Title:
- The Fisherman.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- From London Paul the carrier coming down
- Page No:
- pp.52-53
- Poem Title:
- Little Mouths
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- There was a lad the unluckiest of his crew
- Page No:
- pp.54-56
- Poem Title:
- Hold fast below.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- A virtuoso had a mind to see
- Page No:
- pp.57-60
- Poem Title:
- The Incurious
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Horace you now have long enough
- Page No:
- pp.80-81
- Poem Title:
- Advice to Horace to take his Leave of Trinity-College in Cambridge.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Sir | since our Isis silently deplores
- Page No:
- pp.86-96
- Poem Title:
- A Poem To the Memory of Mr. John Philips. To a Friend.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Edmund Smith
- Attributed To:
- Edmund Smith
- First Line:
- To all ye ladies now at land
- Page No:
- pp.111-115
- Poem Title:
- A Song Written at Sea...in the first Dutch war.
- Attribution:
- by the late Earl of Dorset
- Attributed To:
- Charles Sackville
- First Line:
- See how the wandering Danube flows
- Page No:
- p.116
- Poem Title:
- On the River Danube.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- That all from Adam first begun
- Page No:
- p.117
- Poem Title:
- The Old Gentry. Out of French.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Apollo I will not implore
- Page No:
- pp.118-122
- Poem Title:
- The Monster of Ragusa, as it was seen in the Flying-Post, Feb. 1716, an excellent new Ballad.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Whylom in Kent there dwelt a clerke
- Page No:
- pp.123-128
- Poem Title:
- A Tale, Devised in the plesaunt manere of gentil Maister Jeoffrey Chaucer.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Fenton
- Attributed To:
- Elijah Fenton
- First Line:
- Over winter's long inclement sway
- Page No:
- pp.129-133
- Poem Title:
- An Ode To the Right Honourable John Lord Gower. Written in the Spring, 1716.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. Fenton]
- Attributed To:
- Elijah Fenton
- First Line:
- When Venus in the sweet Idalian shade
- Page No:
- pp.135-139
- Poem Title:
- Kisses. Translated from Secundus.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Fenton
- Attributed To:
- Elijah Fenton
- First Line:
- As the young enamoured vine
- Page No:
- pp.141-145
- Poem Title:
- Translated.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Fenton
- Attributed To:
- Elijah Fenton
- First Line:
- When money and my blood run high
- Page No:
- pp.146-147
- Poem Title:
- Verses imitated from the French of Monsieur Maynard to Cardinal Richlieu.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Stepney
- Attributed To:
- George Stepney
- First Line:
- To green retreats that shade the muses stream
- Page No:
- pp.148-150
- Poem Title:
- The Dream: Imitated from Propertius, Book iii. Elegy iii.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Fenton
- Attributed To:
- Elijah Fenton
- First Line:
- Freeman and Wild two hot young gallants
- Page No:
- pp.151-152
- Poem Title:
- The two Friends. Imitated from Monsieur de la Fontaine.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Welcome thou friendly earnest of fourscore
- Page No:
- pp.153-154
- Poem Title:
- Upon the first fit of the Gout.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- These sacred lines with wonder we peruse
- Page No:
- pp.155-156
- Poem Title:
- On the reprinting Mr. Milton's prose-works, with his poems written in his Paradise lost.
- Attribution:
- By Dr. Yalden
- Attributed To:
- Thomas Yalden
- First Line:
- Sir | Tis no hard matter to divine
- Page No:
- pp.157-159
- Poem Title:
- An Epistle from Mr. W-----n to Dr. C------ of Queens College Oxon, when he had the Gout.
- Attribution:
- from Mr. W---n
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- When at our house the servants brawl
- Page No:
- p.160
- Poem Title:
- Verses made to a Simile of Mr. Pope's.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Rowe
- Attributed To:
- Nicholas Rowe
- First Line:
- Stand sun of justice sovereign God most high
- Page No:
- pp.161-166
- Poem Title:
- The Prayer of Jeremy Paraphras'd. Prophetically representing the passionate grief of the Jewish people, for the loss of their town and sanctuary.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Southcot
- Attributed To:
- Mr. Southcott
- First Line:
- When in a glorious terrible array
- Page No:
- pp.167-171
- Poem Title:
- The Third Chapter of Habakkuk paraphras'd. An Ode.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Broome
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Then from his bright aereal abode
- Page No:
- pp.172-177
- Poem Title:
- Part of the XXXVIIIth and XXXIXth Chapters of Job. A Paraphrase.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- The sun that rolls his beamy orb on high
- Page No:
- pp.178-183
- Poem Title:
- The forty third chapter of Ecclesiasticus. Paraphrased.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Say lovely offspring of the May
- Page No:
- pp.184-186
- Poem Title:
- On a Flower Which Belinda gave me from her bosom.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Why lovely babe does slumber seal your eyes
- Page No:
- pp.187-188
- Poem Title:
- On The Birth-Day Of Mr. Robert Trefusis; Being Three Years old, March 22, 1710/11.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- I who was once the glory of the plain
- Page No:
- pp.189-193
- Poem Title:
- The Complaint. Coelia to Damon. In Which some Lines of Remond's Alexias are imitated.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- If ever my humble muse melodious sings
- Page No:
- pp.194-196
- Poem Title:
- To a Gentleman Who Corrected some Verses for me.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Say while each scene so beautiful appears
- Page No:
- pp.197-201
- Poem Title:
- Rapin Imitated, In A Pastoral Sent to a Lady upon her leaving the Country.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Sure sickness never such beauty wore
- Page No:
- pp.202-204
- Poem Title:
- To a young Lady, on her Sickness and Recovery.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Ah cruel hand that could such power employ
- Page No:
- pp.205-206
- Poem Title:
- On a Lady's Picture.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Twas sung of old how one Amphion
- Page No:
- pp.207-209
- Poem Title:
- Poverty and Poetry.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- My eyes with floods of tears overflow
- Page No:
- pp.210-211
- Poem Title:
- Courage in Love.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Shall Cooper's Hill majestic rise in rhyme
- Page No:
- pp.212-221
- Poem Title:
- Phoenix-Park
- Attribution:
- By Mr. James Ward
- Attributed To:
- James Ward
- First Line:
- Come Pyrrha tell what lover now
- Page No:
- pp.222-223
- Poem Title:
- In Imitation of Horace.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Ward]
- Attributed To:
- James Ward
- First Line:
- Fair as Phoebe's silver light
- Page No:
- pp.224-226
- Poem Title:
- From Johannes Secundus's Book of Kisses: The sixteenth.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Ward]
- Attributed To:
- James Ward
- First Line:
- Be not still kissing me still smiling
- Page No:
- pp.227-228
- Poem Title:
- The Ninth.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Ward]
- Attributed To:
- James Ward
- First Line:
- However great whoever you are
- Page No:
- pp.229-234
- Poem Title:
- Part of the second chorus of Seneca's Hercules Oetaeus.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Ward]
- Attributed To:
- James Ward
- First Line:
- How is our reason to the future blind
- Page No:
- pp.235-237
- Poem Title:
- From the Second Chapter of the Wisdom of Solomon.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Ward]
- Attributed To:
- James Ward
- First Line:
- My son the instruction that my words impart
- Page No:
- pp.238-241
- Poem Title:
- The Seventh Chapter of the Proverbs, translated into Verse.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Ward]
- Attributed To:
- James Ward
- First Line:
- Mindless of fate in these low vile abodes
- Page No:
- pp.242-243
- Poem Title:
- To his Grace the Duke of Argyle, upon reading the following short Preamble to the Patent creating him Duke of Greenwich.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- By milk-white doves as drawn of old
- Page No:
- pp.244-245
- Poem Title:
- On Lady Katharine Hyde's Picture, drawn by Sir Godfrey Kneller. Venus mistaken.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- The British muse in Chaucer first began
- Page No:
- pp.246-260
- Poem Title:
- The British Warriour.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Archdeacon Daniel
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- Britain arise in all your glory smile
- Page No:
- pp.261-266
- Poem Title:
- A Poem On His Majesty's Return, &c.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Daniel]
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- The theme of malice and the courtier's song
- Page No:
- pp.268-273
- Poem Title:
- God Omniscient and Omnipresent. A Divine Poem. Inscrib'd to the Right Reverend Father in God Nicolas Lord Bishop of Rapho.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Daniel]
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- Wherever my solitary steps I bend
- Page No:
- pp.274-278
- Poem Title:
- Messiah: A Paraphrase on the XVIth Psalm.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. Daniel]
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- From Sion's lofty palaces on high
- Page No:
- pp.279-285
- Poem Title:
- Sentence pronounced upon Sinners: A Divine Poem. In imitation of the 50th Psalm.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Daniel]
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- Great God with conscious blushes lo I come
- Page No:
- pp.286-292
- Poem Title:
- The Royal Penitent. Psalm LI.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Daniel]
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- Arise O Israel know the lord
- Page No:
- pp.295-297
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the XXIXth Psalm.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Daniel]
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- Offspring of heaven celestial flame
- Page No:
- pp.300-318
- Poem Title:
- God the Creator, and the Preserver.
- Attribution:
- Dedication to William, Archbishop of Dublin is signed 'Richard Daniel'
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
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Miscellaneous poems and translations
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