Miscellaneous poems, translations and imitations [T5780] [vol II]
- DMI number:
- 306
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Evidence:
- Publication Date:
- 1722
- Volume Number:
- 2 of 2
- ESTC number:
- T5780
- EEBO/ECCO link:
- n/a
- Shelfmark:
- BOD 12 Theta 1018
- Full Title:
- MISCELLANEOUS | [r]POEMS,[/r] | 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.[/i] | 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 | DANIEL. [/column two] | [rule] | [r]VOL. II.[/r] | [rule] | The FOURTH EDITION. | [rule] | [r][i]LONDON:[/r][/i] | Printed for BERNARD LINTOT between the [i]Temple[/i]-| Gates in [i]Fleetstreet[/i], 1722.
- Epigraph:
- n/a
- Place of Publication:
- London
- Genres:
- Collection of literary verse
- Format:
- Duodecimo
- Price:
- n/a
- Pagination:
- [2], [5]-144, 143-279, [7] pp.
- Bibliographic details:
- Title page in red and black. Art of Cookery has separate title page, p. [6]. Case notes a book-list of Lintot facing the title page: this is not present in BOD 12 Theta 1018. Case also lists a different sequence of mis-numbered pages. Mispagination: 98 misnumbered 74; 99 as 75, 102 as 78, 103 as 79, 106 as 82, 107 as 83, 110 as 86, 111 as 87, 114 as 90, 115 as 91, 118 as 94, 119 as 95.
- Comments:
- Mispagination: 98 misnumbered 74; 99 as 75, 102 as 78, 103 as 79, 106 as 82, 107 as 83, 110 as 86, 111 as 87, 114 as 90, 115 as 91, 118 as 94, 119 as 95. ATTRIBUTIONS: some attributions are given in the Index, not in the main body of the text. CONTENTS: Items in Latin: pp. 75-83, odd numbers 83[i.e. 107]-117. MISCELLANY GENRE: edited collection of named poets.
- Other matter:
- Back matter: Index to vols I and II, [7pp.]
- References:
- Case 260 (2) (c). No ECCO copy of this volume.
- 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 [T5779] [vol II]
- Publication Date:
- 1720
- ESTC No:
- T5779 [vol II]
- 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:
- 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:
- If Bellvill can his generous soul confine
- Page No:
- pp.35-37
- Poem Title:
- An Imitation of Horace's Invitation Of Torquatus to Supper. Which is The Fifth Epistle to his First Book.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Mountown thou sweet retreat from Dublin cares
- Page No:
- pp.38-43
- 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.44
- 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.45-48
- 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.49-51
- 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.52-54
- 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.55-56
- 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.57-59
- 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.60-63
- Poem Title:
- The Incurious
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. King]
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- Sir | since our Isis silently deplores
- Page No:
- pp.64-74
- 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.84-88
- 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.89
- Poem Title:
- On the River Danube.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- That all from Adam first begun
- Page No:
- p.90
- Poem Title:
- The Old Gentry, Out of French.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Apollo I will not implore
- Page No:
- pp.91-95
- 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.96-101
- 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.78-82 [i.e. 102-106]
- 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.108-112
- Poem Title:
- Kisses. Translated from Secundus.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Fenton
- Attributed To:
- Elijah Fenton
- First Line:
- As the young enamoured vine
- Page No:
- p.90 [i.e.114]-94 [i.e. 118]
- Poem Title:
- Translated.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Fenton
- Attributed To:
- Elijah Fenton
- First Line:
- When money and my blood run high
- Page No:
- pp.95 [i.e.119]-120
- Poem Title:
- Verses imitated from the French of Mousiuer 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.121-123
- 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.124-125
- 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.126-127
- Poem Title:
- On the first fit of the Gout.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- These sacred lines with wonder we peruse
- Page No:
- pp.128-129
- 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.130-132
- 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.133
- Poem Title:
- Verses made to a Simile of Mr. Pope's.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Rowe
- Attributed To:
- Nicholas Rowe
- First Line:
- When in a glorious terrible array
- Page No:
- pp.134-138
- 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.139-144
- 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.143-148
- 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.149-151
- 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.152-153
- 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.154-158
- 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.159-161
- 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.162-166
- 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.167-169
- 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.170-171
- 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.172-174
- 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.175-176
- 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.177-186
- Poem Title:
- Phoenix-Park
- Attribution:
- By Mr. James Ward
- Attributed To:
- James Ward
- First Line:
- Come Pyrrha tell what lover now
- Page No:
- pp.187-188
- 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.189-191
- 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.192-193
- 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.194-199
- 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.200-202
- 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.203-206
- 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.207-208
- 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.209-210
- 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.211-225
- 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.226-231
- 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.233-238
- Poem Title:
- God Omniscient and Omnipresent. A Divine Poem. Inscrib'd to the Right Reverend Father in God Nicholas 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.239-243
- Poem Title:
- Messiah: A Paraphrase on the XVI Psalm.
- Attribution:
- By the Same [i.e. Daniel]
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- From Sion's lofty palaces on high
- Page No:
- pp.244-249
- 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.250-256
- 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.257-259
- Poem Title:
- A Paraphrase on the 29th Psalm.
- Attribution:
- By the same [i.e. Daniel]
- Attributed To:
- Richard Daniel
- First Line:
- Offspring of heaven celestial flame
- Page No:
- pp.262-279
- 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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