Miscellanies. The last volume [T39474]
- DMI number:
- 592
- Publication Date:
- 1730
- Volume Number:
- 1 of 1
- ESTC number:
- T39474
- EEBO/ECCO link:
- CW125019100
- Shelfmark:
- ECCO - Bod
- Full Title:
- MISCELLANIES. | [rule] | THE | LAST VOLUME. | [rule] | [ornament] | [rule] | [i]LONDON:[/i] | Printed for BENJAMIN MOTTE, at the [i]Middle- | Temple-Gate[/i], [i]Fleetstreet[/i], and sold by WEAVER | BICKERTON, at the Lord [i]Bacon[/i]'s Head without | [i]Temple Bar[/i], and LAWTON GILLIVER, at [i]Homer[/i]'s | Head over against St. [i]Dunstan[/i]'s Church, [i]Fleetstreet[/i]. | MDCCXXXI.
- Place of Publication:
- London
- Genres:
- Miscellany associated with group of poets
- Format:
- Duodecimo
- Comments:
- MISCELLANY GENRE: Collection of satirical verse associated with Pope and Swift. CONTENTS: 'Treatise of the Art of Sinking in Poetry' pp.[14]-90; 'Contents' to the foregoing treatise (2pp.); collection of 'Miscellanies in Verse' pp.[94]-332; contents (3pp.). PAGINATION: In the ECCO copy, the two consecutive unnumbered pp. constituting the last page of the 'Contents' to the Art of Sinking and the title page of 'Miscellanies in Verse' are repeated. p.86 mispaginated as p.6. OTHER NOTES: Dated 1731 i.e. 1730. "Printed by William Bowyer; his records show 1500 copies printed" (ESTC). Although the ESTC record indicates that the volume contains a preface by Pope and Swift dated 1727, this is not present in the ECCO copy.
- References:
- Teerink-Scouten 25(3ad) and the bibliographical notes in E. L. Steeves, The art of sinking in poetry: a critical edition, New York 1952 (facs). Case 344(3)(a).
- Author:
- Jonathan Swift
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- 'By Jonathan Swift.' (ESTC)
- Publisher:
- Benjamin Motte
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Sold by:
- Lawton Gilliver
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Sold by:
- Weaver Bickerton
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- First Line:
- The shepherds and the nymphs were seen
- Page No:
- pp.95-132
- Poem Title:
- Cadenus and Vanessa. Written Anno 1713.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- In ancient times as story tells
- Page No:
- pp.132-140
- Poem Title:
- Baucis and Philemon. Imitated from the Eighth Book of Ovid.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Now hardly here and there an hackney coach
- Page No:
- pp.143-144
- Poem Title:
- A Description of the Morning.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Parson these things in thy possessing
- Page No:
- pp.158-159
- Poem Title:
- The Happy Life of a Countrey Parson. In Imitation of Martial.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- In every town where Thamis rolls his tide
- Page No:
- pp.161-164
- Poem Title:
- The Alley. An Imitation of Spencer [sic].
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- To their Excellencies the Lords Justices of Ireland. The humble Petition of Frances Harris, Who must starve, and die a Maid if it miscarries.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- When Mother Clud had rose from play
- Page No:
- pp.182-184
- Poem Title:
- The History of V--'s House.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Well tis as Bickerstaff has guessed
- Page No:
- pp.195-199
- Poem Title:
- An Elegy on the supposed Death of Partridge the Almanack Maker.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Here five foot deep lies on his back
- Page No:
- pp.199-200
- Poem Title:
- The Epitaph.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- How much egregious Moore are we
- Page No:
- pp.202-204
- Poem Title:
- To Mr. John Moore, Author of the Celebrated Worm-Powder.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Authors are judged by strange capricious rules
- Page No:
- pp.210-212
- Poem Title:
- Prologue to the Three Hours after Marriage.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Ye lords and commons men of wit
- Page No:
- pp.212-216
- Poem Title:
- Sandys'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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Close to the best known author Umbra sits
- Page No:
- pp.216-217
- Poem Title:
- Umbra.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- If meagre Gildon draws his venal quill
- Page No:
- pp.217-220.
- Poem Title:
- Fragment of a Satire.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- When simple Macer now of high renown
- Page No:
- pp.220-221
- Poem Title:
- Macer.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Sylvia my heart in wondrous wise alarmed
- Page No:
- pp.222-223
- Poem Title:
- Sylvia, a Fragment.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Though Artimesia talks by fits
- Page No:
- pp.223-224
- Poem Title:
- Artimesia.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Phryne had talents for mankind
- Page No:
- pp.224-225
- Poem Title:
- Phryne.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- When Cupid did his grandsire Jove entreat
- Page No:
- pp.225-226
- Poem Title:
- On Mrs. Biddy Floyd.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Stella this day is thirty four
- Page No:
- p.230
- Poem Title:
- Stella's Birth-Day. 1718.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- All travellers at first incline
- Page No:
- pp.231-233
- Poem Title:
- Stella's Birth-Day. 1720.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Resolved my annual verse to pay
- Page No:
- pp.233-237
- Poem Title:
- Stella's Birth-Day. A great Bottle of Wine, long buried, being that Day dug up. 1722.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- As when a beauteous nymph decays
- Page No:
- pp.237-239
- Poem Title:
- Stella's Birth-Day. 1724.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- 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 Birth-Day. June 15.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- The longitude missed on
- Page No:
- pp.245-246
- Poem Title:
- Ode for Musick on the Longitude.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Strange all this difference should be
- Page No:
- p.246
- Poem Title:
- Epigram on the Feuds about Handel and Bononcini.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- So bright is thy beauty so charming thy song
- Page No:
- p.247
- Poem Title:
- On Mrs. T--s.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Two or three visits and two or three bows
- Page No:
- pp.247-248
- Poem Title:
- Two or Three; or a Receipt to make a Cuckold.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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; occasioned by an Epigram on a Lady who wept at it.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- As Thomas was cudgelled one day by his wife
- Page No:
- pp.249-250
- Poem Title:
- Epigram.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Now Europe's balanced neither side prevails
- Page No:
- p.250
- Poem Title:
- The Balance of Europe.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Ye wise philosophers explain
- Page No:
- pp.255-263
- Poem Title:
- The South-Sea. 1721.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- When as corruption hence did go
- Page No:
- pp.263-266
- Poem Title:
- A Ballad on Quadrille.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- My passion is as mustard strong
- Page No:
- pp.269-273
- Poem Title:
- A new Song of new Similies.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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 Pen-knife, by Mr. Blake, alias Blueskin, the bold Highwayman, as he stood at his Tryal in the Old-Bailey. 1725.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- With every lady in the land
- Page No:
- pp.280-281
- Poem Title:
- Strephon and Flavia.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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 Quidnuncki's: A Tale. Occasioned by the Death of the Duke Regent of France.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- In fable all things hold discourse
- Page No:
- pp.285-287
- Poem Title:
- Ay and No: A Fable.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Desponding Phyllis was endued
- Page No:
- pp.287-291
- Poem Title:
- Phyllis: or the Progress of Love.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- The farmer's goose who in the stubble
- Page No:
- pp.291-293
- Poem Title:
- The Progress of Poetry.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- When first Diana leaves her bed
- Page No:
- pp.293-297
- Poem Title:
- The Progress of Beauty.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- From Venus born thy beauty shows
- Page No:
- pp.297-301
- Poem Title:
- Pethox the Great.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Soon as Glumdalclitch missed her pleasing care
- Page No:
- pp.302-305
- Poem Title:
- The Lamentation of Glumdalclitch for the Loss of Grildrig. A Pastoral.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Welcome thrice welcome to thy native place
- Page No:
- pp.306-311
- Poem Title:
- Mary Gulliver to Captain Lemuel Gulliver.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- In amaze
- Page No:
- pp.311-313
- Poem Title:
- To Quinbus Flestrin, the Man-Mountain. A Lilliputian Ode.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Who dares affirm this is no pious age
- Page No:
- pp.316-318
- Poem Title:
- Epilogue to a Play, for the Benefit of the Weavers in Ireland.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Beneath this verdant hillock lies
- Page No:
- p.318
- Poem Title:
- Epitaph on a Miser.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Those dreams that on the silent night intrude
- Page No:
- pp.324-325
- Poem Title:
- On Dreams, an imitation of Petronius.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- 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:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- This day whatever the fates decree
- Page No:
- pp.330-333.
- Poem Title:
- Stella's Birth-Day, March 13. 1726/7.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
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