Such has been this ill-natured nation's fate
- DMI number:
- 4559
- First Line:
- Such has been this ill-natured nation's fate
- Last Line:
- Nothing can make us greater than a queen
- Poem Genre / Form:
- Satire, Panegyric, and Couplet
- Themes:
- Liberty, Politics, and The monarchy (heads of state)
- Author:
- Daniel Defoe
- Confidence:
- Confident (50%)
- Comments:
- LION; ECCO; see The mock mourners. A satyr, by way of elegy on King William, the second edition corrected. By the author of The true-born Englishman (London, 1702)
- Title:
- Poems on affairs of state [vol. II] [T125689]
- Page No(s):
- pp.293-308
- Poem Title:
- The mock mourners. A satyr, by way of elegy on King William
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- Title:
- Poems on affairs of state [vol. II] [N12192]
- Page No(s):
- pp.293-308
- Poem Title:
- The Mock Mourners. A Satyr, By way of Elegy on King William.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- Title:
- Poems on affairs of state [Vol. II] [T121816]
- Page No(s):
- p.293-308
- Poem Title:
- The Mock Mourners. A Satyr, By way of Elegy on King William.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- Title:
- Poems on affairs of state [Vol. II] [T144917]
- Page No(s):
- pp.293-308
- Poem Title:
- The Mock Mourners. A Satyr, By way of Elegy on King William.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
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