Original poems and translations [T82103] [ECCO]
- DMI number:
- 420
- Publication Date:
- 1714
- Volume Number:
- 1 of 1
- ESTC number:
- T82103
- EEBO/ECCO link:
- CW116873022
- Shelfmark:
- BL - 161.k.18
- Full Title:
- ORIGINAL | POEMS | AND | [i]TRANSLATIONS.[/i] | BY | [i]Mr.[/i] HILL, [i]Mr.[/i] EUSDEN, [i]Mr.[/i] | BROOME, [i]Dr.[/i] KING, &c. | [rule] | [i]Never before Printed.[/i] | [rule] | [ornament] | [rule] | [i]LONDON,[/i] | Printed for E. CURLL, at the [i]Dial[/i] and [i]Bible[/i] against | St. [i]Dunstan's[/i] Church in [i]Fleet-street[/i]. 1714.
- Epigraph:
- n/a
- Place of Publication:
- London
- Genres:
- Miscellaneous collection, Collection includes verse in other languages, and Collection of translations/imitations
- Format:
- Duodecimo
- Pagination:
- [1p], [1]-33pp.
- Bibliographic details:
- MS. date below imprint by Narcissus Luttrell: July 15 (ESTC).
- Comments:
- Contents: Latin verse pp. 25-28.
- Other matter:
- Back matter: List of 'Books lately publish'd...for E. Curll' [1pp.]
- Title:
- Miscellanea: the second volume [T39419] [partial reissue of T39417 vol. 2; reissue of T82103]
- Publication Date:
- 1727
- ESTC No:
- T39419
- Volume:
- 2 of 2
- Relationship:
- Reissue
- Comments:
- Publisher:
- Edmund Curll
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- 'Printed for E. CURLL, at the Dial and Bible against St. Dunstan's Church in Fleet-street.'
- First Line:
- How long my friend shall we thy absence mourn
- Page No:
- pp.1-6
- Poem Title:
- To Mr. L----; Occasion'd by his Travelling from Cambridge over some Parts of England. Footnotes.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Eusden
- Attributed To:
- Laurence Eusden
- First Line:
- No wonder if a folly I pursue
- Page No:
- p.7
- Poem Title:
- To the Same, upon Reading the Dispensary.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Eusden.
- Attributed To:
- Laurence Eusden
- First Line:
- Shall then Vulcanus unlamented go
- Page No:
- pp.8-10
- Poem Title:
- On the Death of Vulcan, of sordid Memory, an old Servant at Trinity-College, Cambridge.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Hill.
- Attributed To:
- Aaron Hill
- First Line:
- How calm the evening see the falling day
- Page No:
- pp.11-14
- Poem Title:
- A Pastoral.
- Attribution:
- By Mr. Broome.
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- When the wind rages and the tempest blows
- Page No:
- pp.15-16
- Poem Title:
- From Boetius. The Goddess Philosophy speaks thus concerning Boetius.
- Attribution:
- By the same Hand [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Happy the mortal whose enlightened eyes
- Page No:
- pp.17-20
- Poem Title:
- Orpheus: From Boetius.
- Attribution:
- By the same Hand [i.e. Broome]
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- Love is a noble rich repast
- Page No:
- pp.21-22
- Poem Title:
- The Coy
- Attribution:
- By the same Hand [i.e. Broome].
- Attributed To:
- William Broome
- First Line:
- As when the king of peace and lord of love
- Page No:
- pp.23-24
- Poem Title:
- On the Death of Mr. Hawtrey.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Of all the delicates which Britons try
- Page No:
- pp.29-32
- Poem Title:
- Apple-Pye. A Poem in Imitation of Virgil's Georgicks.
- Attribution:
- By Dr. William King
- Attributed To:
- William King
- First Line:
- See sir see here's the grand approach
- Page No:
- p.33
- Poem Title:
- Upon the Duke of Marlborough's House at Woodstock.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
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