Blacklight

Miscellanies. The Last Volume [**query: possible duplicate record]

DMI number:
60
Publication Date:
1731
Volume Number:
3 of 3
ESTC number:
T39474
EEBO/ECCO link:
CW125019100
Place of Publication:
London
Format:
Duodecimo
Pagination:
0
Comments:
Query: this appears to be a duplicate record. 12 Theta 1064 Preface, signed Pope and Swift. Prose works: Peri Bathous, pp. 15-92
Related People
Editor:
Alexander Pope
Confidence:
Absolute (100%)
Comments:
Editor:
Jonathan Swift
Confidence:
Absolute (100%)
Comments:
Publisher:
Benjamin Motte
Confidence:
Absolute (100%)
Comments:
'Printed for Benjamin Motte, at the Middle Temple-Gate, Fleetstreet, and sold by Weaver Bickerton, at the Lord Bacon's Head without Temple Bar, and Lawton Gilliver, at Homer's Head over against St. Dunstan's Church, Fleetstreet'.
Sold by:
Lawton Gilliver
Confidence:
Absolute (100%)
Comments:
'Printed for Benjamin Motte, at the Middle Temple-Gate, Fleetstreet, and sold by Weaver Bickerton, at the Lord Bacon's Head without Temple Bar, and Lawton Gilliver, at Homer's Head over against St. Dunstan's Church, Fleetstreet'.
Sold by:
Weaver Bickerton
Confidence:
Absolute (100%)
Comments:
'Printed for Benjamin Motte, at the Middle Temple-Gate, Fleetstreet, and sold by Weaver Bickerton, at the Lord Bacon's Head without Temple Bar, and Lawton Gilliver, at Homer's Head over against St. Dunstan's Church, Fleetstreet'.
Content/Publication
First Line:
The shepherds and the nymphs were seen
Page No:
pp.95-132
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
In ancient times as story tells
Page No:
pp.132-140
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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First Line:
Careful observers may foretell the hour
Page No:
pp.140-143
Poem Title:
A Description of a City Shower. In Imitation of Virgil's Georg.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Now hardly here and there an hackney coach
Page No:
pp.143-144
Poem Title:
A Description of the Morning
Attribution:
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First Line:
Harley the nation's great support
Page No:
pp.145-152
Poem Title:
Horace, Epistle VII, Book I, imitated and addressed to the Earl of Oxford, in the Year 1713
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
I often wished that I had clear
Page No:
pp.152-157
Poem Title:
Horace, Lib. 2. Sat 6 Part of it imitated.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Parson these things in thy possessing
Page No:
pp.158-159
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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First Line:
Women tho nat sans leacherie
Page No:
pp.159-160
Poem Title:
A Tale of Chaucer, lately found in an old Manuscript
Attribution:
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First Line:
In every town where Thamis rolls his tide
Page No:
pp.161-164
Poem Title:
The Alley. An Imitation of Spencer
Attribution:
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First Line:
In Yorkshire dwelt a sober yeoman
Page No:
pp.164-165
Poem Title:
The Capon's Tale; to a Lady who father'd her Lampoons upon her Acquaintance.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Peruse my leaves through every part
Page No:
pp.166-167
Poem Title:
Verses wrote on a Lady's Ivory Table-Book
Attribution:
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First Line:
Humbly sheweth | That I went to warm my self in Lady Betty's chamber because I was cold
Page No:
pp.167-173
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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First Line:
Once on a time as old stories rehearse
Page No:
pp.174-176
Poem Title:
Lady B--- B--- finding in the Author's Room some Verses unfinished, underwrit a Stanza of her own, with Raillery upon him, which gave Occasion to this Ballad
Attribution:
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First Line:
In times of old when time was young
Page No:
pp.176-182
Poem Title:
V---'s House. Built from the Ruins of Whitehall that was Burnt
Attribution:
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First Line:
When Mother Clud had rose from play
Page No:
pp.182-184
Poem Title:
The History of V--'s House
Attribution:
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First Line:
The rod was but a harmless wand
Page No:
pp.184-188
Poem Title:
The Virtues of Sid Hamet the Magician's Rod
Attribution:
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First Line:
Atlas we read in ancient song
Page No:
pp.188-189
Poem Title:
Atlas, or the Minister of State; to the Lord Treasurer Oxford
Attribution:
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First Line:
As mastiff dogs in modern phrase are
Page No:
pp.189-192
Poem Title:
The Description of a Salamander. Out of Pliny's Nat. Hist. lib. 10. c. 67. and lib. 29. c. 4.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Ere bribes convince you whom to choose
Page No:
pp.193-194
Poem Title:
The Elephant: or, the Parliament Man; written many Years since. Taken from Coke's Institutes.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Well tis as Bickerstaff has guessed
Page No:
pp.195-200
Poem Title:
An Elegy on the supposed Death of Partridge the Almanack Maker
Attribution:
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First Line:
Some Colinaeus praise some Bleau
Page No:
pp.200-201
Poem Title:
Verses to be prefix'd before Bernard Lintot's New Miscellany
Attribution:
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First Line:
How much egregious Moore are we
Page No:
pp.202-204
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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First Line:
Jove called before him the other day
Page No:
pp.204-208
Poem Title:
Verses occasion'd by an &c. at the End of Mr. D'Urfey's Name in the Title to one of his Plays.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Grown old in rhyme twere barbarous to discard
Page No:
pp.208-209
Poem Title:
Prologue, design'd for Mr. Durfy's last Play
Attribution:
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First Line:
Authors are judged by strange capricious rules
Page No:
pp.210-212
Poem Title:
Prologue to the Three Hours after Marriage
Attribution:
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First Line:
Ye lords and commons men of wit
Page No:
pp.212-216
Poem Title:
Sandy's Ghost: Or a proper new Ballad on the new Ovid's Metamorphosis; as it was intended to be translated by Persons of Quality
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
Close to the best known author Umbra sits
Page No:
pp.216-217
Poem Title:
Umbra
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
When simple Macer now of high renown
Page No:
pp.220-221
Poem Title:
Macer
Attribution:
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First Line:
Sylvia my heart in wondrous wise alarmed
Page No:
pp.222-223
Poem Title:
Sylvia, a Fragment
Attribution:
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First Line:
Though Artimesia talks by fits
Page No:
pp.223-224
Poem Title:
Artemisia
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
Phryne had talents for mankind
Page No:
pp.224-225
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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First Line:
When Cupid did his grandsire Jove intreat
Page No:
pp.225-226
Poem Title:
On Mrs. Biddy Floyd
Attribution:
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First Line:
Phoebus now shortening every shade
Page No:
pp.226-229
Poem Title:
Apollo Outwitted. To the Honourable Mrs. Finch, under her Name of Ardelia.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Stella this day is thirty four
Page No:
p.230
Poem Title:
Stella's Birthday. 1718
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
All travellers at first incline
Page No:
pp.231-233
Poem Title:
Stella's Birth Day. 1720
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
As when a beauteous nymph decays
Page No:
pp.237-239
Poem Title:
Stella's Birth-Day. 1724
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
Oh be thou blessed with all that heaven can send
Page No:
pp.240-241
Poem Title:
To Mrs. M. B. sent on her Birthday. June 15.
Attribution:
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First Line:
I said to my heart between sleeping and waking
Page No:
pp.241-242
Poem Title:
Song.
Attribution:
By a Person of Quality.
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
Of all the girls that ever were seen
Page No:
pp.243-245
Poem Title:
Ballad
Attribution:
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First Line:
The longitude missed on
Page No:
pp.245-246
Poem Title:
Ode for Musick on the Longitude
Attribution:
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First Line:
Strange all this difference should be
Page No:
p.246
Poem Title:
Epigram on the Feuds about Handel and Bononcini
Attribution:
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First Line:
So bright is thy beauty so charming thy song
Page No:
p.247
Poem Title:
On Mrs T--s
Attribution:
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First Line:
Two or three visits and two or three bows
Page No:
pp.248-249
Poem Title:
Two or Three; or a Receipt to make a Cuckold
Attribution:
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First Line:
While maudlin whigs deplored their Cato's fate
Page No:
p.248
Poem Title:
On a Lady who P--st at the Tragedy of Cato; occasion'd by an Epigram on a Lady who wept at it.
Attribution:
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First Line:
As Thomas was cudgelled one day by his wife
Page No:
pp.249-250
Poem Title:
Epigram.
Attribution:
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First Line:
When Israel's daughters mourned their past offences
Page No:
p.249
Poem Title:
Epigram, in a Maid of Honour's Prayer-Book.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Now Europe's balanced neither side prevails
Page No:
p.250
Poem Title:
The Balance of Europe
Attribution:
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First Line:
Disdain not Snow my humble verse to hear
Page No:
pp.251-254
Poem Title:
A Panegyrical Epistle to Mr. Thomas Snow, Goldsmith near Temple-Bar; Occasion'd by his Buying and Selling the Third South-Sea Subscriptions, taken in by the Directors at a Thousand per Cent.
Attribution:
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First Line:
Ye wise philosophers explain
Page No:
pp.255-262
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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First Line:
When as corruption hence did go
Page No:
pp.263-266
Poem Title:
A Ballad on Quadrille
Attribution:
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First Line:
Says my uncle I pray you discover
Page No:
pp.266-269
Poem Title:
Molly Mog: Or, The Fair Maid of the Inn
Attribution:
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First Line:
My passion is as mustard strong
Page No:
pp.269-273
Poem Title:
A New song of New Similes
Attribution:
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First Line:
Ye gallants of Newgate whose fingers are nice
Page No:
pp.273-276
Poem Title:
Newgate's Garland: Being a New Ballad, shewing how Mr. Jonathan Wild's Throat was cut from Ear to Ear with a Penknife by Mr. Blake, alias Blueskin, the bold Highwayman...
Attribution:
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First Line:
When first the squire and tinker Wood
Page No:
pp.277-280
Poem Title:
Prometheus. On Wood the Patentee's Irish Half-pence
Attribution:
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First Line:
With every lady in the land
Page No:
pp.280-281
Poem Title:
Strephon and Flavia
Attribution:
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First Line:
This day the year I dare not tell
Page No:
pp.281-283
Poem Title:
Corinna
Attribution:
Attributed To:
Not attributed
First Line:
How vain are mortal man's endeavours
Page No:
pp.283-285
Poem Title:
The Quidnunki's: A Tale. Occasion'd by the Death of the Duke Regent of France.
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
In fable all things hold discourse
Page No:
pp.285-287
Poem Title:
Ay and No: A Fable
Attribution:
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First Line:
Desponding Phyllis was endued
Page No:
pp.287-291
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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First Line:
The farmer's goose who in the stubble
Page No:
pp.291-293
Poem Title:
The Progress of Poetry
Attribution:
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First Line:
When first Diana leaves her bed
Page No:
pp.293-297
Poem Title:
The Progress of Beauty
Attribution:
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First Line:
From Venus born thy beauty shows
Page No:
pp.297-301
Poem Title:
Pethox the Great
Attribution:
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First Line:
Soon as Glumdalclitch missed her pleasing care
Page No:
pp.302-305
Poem Title:
The Lamentation of Glumdalclitch for the Loss of Grildig. A Pastora
Attribution:
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First Line:
Welcome thrice welcome to thy native place
Page No:
pp.306-311
Poem Title:
Mary Gulliver to Captain Lemuel Gulliver
Attribution:
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First Line:
In amaze
Page No:
pp.311-313
Poem Title:
To Quinbus Flestrin, the Man-mountain. A Lilliputian Ode
Attribution:
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First Line:
Echo I ween will in the woods reply
Page No:
pp.313-315
Poem Title:
A Gentle Echo on Woman. In the Dorick Manner
Attribution:
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First Line:
Who dares affirm this is no pious age
Page No:
pp.316-318
Poem Title:
[no title]
Attribution:
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First Line:
As when a lofty pile is raised
Page No:
pp.318-324
Poem Title:
To Stella, who collected and transcribed his Poems
Attribution:
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First Line:
Beneath this verdant hillock lies
Page No:
p.318
Poem Title:
Epitaph on a Miser
Attribution:
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First Line:
Those dreams that on the silent night intrude
Page No:
pp.324-325
Poem Title:
On Dreams, an Imitation of Petronius
Attribution:
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Not attributed
First Line:
Pallas observing Stella's wit
Page No:
pp.326-330
Poem Title:
To Stella, Visiting me in my Sickness, October 1727
Attribution:
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First Line:
This day whatever the fates decree
Page No:
pp.330-333
Poem Title:
Stella's Birth-Day, March 13, 1724
Attribution:
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Not attributed