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Epistle to Mrs. Tyler
To the rev. Mr. Powell, on the Non-Perform-
ance of a Promise he made the Author of
a Hare......
ib.
I. The sick Monkey..
II. Apollo and Daphne.
III. The Miser and the Mouse. From the
Greek
74
IV. On a Woman who was singing Ballads for
Money to bury her dead Husband ib.
To the right honourable Earl of Darlington,
on his being appointed Paymaster of his
Majesty's Forces.......
..........
A Cantata..
Book I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
........ "4"
IX.
A Dream. In the Manner of Spenser.
On the Death of Master Newberry. After a
lingering Illness
Epitaph on the rev. Mr. Reynolds. At St.
Peter's in the Isle of Thanet
To my worthy Friend Mr. T. B. one of the
People called Quakers. Written in his
Garden, July 1752.....
On seeing the Picture of Miss R-G-n.
Drawn by Mr. Varelst, of Threadneedle
Street
Page 68
69
...................
The Author's Life, by Mr. Chalmers ......... 109 The Author's Preface to his Epigoniad....... ...... 123
THE EPIGONIAD.
FABLES.
To the Earl of Lauderdale.... The young Lady and the Looking-Glass
70
71 ib.
72
73
POEMS OF WILKIE.
An Invitation to Mrs. Tyler, a Clergyman's
Lady, to dine upon a Couple of Ducks on
the Anniversary of the Author's Wedding-
Day.
To Miss S-P-e.
Disertissime Romuli Nepotum, imitated after
dining with Mr. Murray
Inscriptions on an Æolian Harp
178
An Epigram by Sir Thomas More.
The long-nosed Fair
Fanny.-Blooming Fair. Translated into La-
tin, in the Manner of Mr. Bourne
Horace, Ode iv. Ad Xanthiam Phoceum
The pretty Chambermaid. In Imitation of
the above Ode of Horace
Christophorus Smart Samueli Saunders, Col.
Regal, S. P. D.
The famous general Epitaph from Demos-
thenes
Carmen in S. Cæciliam.
Pope's Ode on St. Cecilia's Day
.........
A Latin Version of Milton's L'Allegro
Datur Mundorum Pluralitas, A Voyage to the
Planets. Translated by the Rev. Mr.
Fawkes, A. M........
A Latin Version of
The Horatian Canons of Friendship
An occasional Prologue and Epilogue to Othello,
as it was acted at the Theatre Royal in
Drury Lane, on Thursday the 7th of March,
1751, by Persons of Distinction, for their
Diversion.....
Page
Epilogue to the Apprentice
Epilogue spoken by Mr. Shuter, at Covent-
Garden, after the Play of the Conscious Lo-
vers, acted for the Benefit of the Middiesex
Hospital for Lying-in-Women, 1755, in the
Character of a Man-Midwife,
De Arte Critica. A Latin Version of Mr. Pope's
Essay on Criticism.........
The Kite and the Rooks.
179
133
134
The Muse and the Shepherd...
................................................... 180
The Grasshopper and the Glow-worm ......... 181
The Ape, the Parrot, and the Jackdaw
The Boy and the Rainbow
Celia and her Mirror..
141
182
........ 183
........ 184
The Fishermen. Imitated from Theocritus.. 185
......................................................... .................. ................... 151 Cupid and the Shepherd.......................
............................................................ 145
186
187
....
The Swan and other Birds
157
The Lover and his Friend. To the Poets.
The Rake and the Hermit......
Phebus and the Shepherd
188
189
190
The Breeze and the Tempest......
The Crow and the other Birds. Containing
an useful lint to the Critics
Materies gaudet Vi Inertiæ, The Temple of
Dullness. Translated by the same Hand.. S4
Mutica Oscitationum Propagatio solvi potest
mechanice, A nechanical Solution of the
Propagation of Yawning.
Translated by
the same Hand
76
77
82
888
87
The Author's Life, by Mr. Chalmers........... 1-99
The State Dunces: a Satire. Inscribed to
Mr. Pope, 1733
Manners: a Satire, 1758
The Gymnasiad, or boxing Match: a very
short, but very curious epic Poem, with the
Prolegomena of Scriblerus Tertius and Notes
variorum
...
POEMS OF P. WHITEHEAD.
213
214
216
.................. ................................ ......... 217
218
221
Honour: a Satire, 1747......
An Epistle to Doctor Thomson, 1755
An occasional Song, as performed by Mr.
Beard, in the Character of a recruiting Ser-
jeant, at the Theatre-Royal in Covent Gar-
den, in the Entertainment of The Fair ....
Song, sung by Mr. Beard, in the Entertain-
ment of Apollo and Daphne
Song, sung by Mr. Beard at the annual Meet-
ing of the Vice-Presidents, Governors, &c.
of the London Hospital
Fragment.--When Bacchus, jolly god, invites, 226
Verses occasioned by Lady Pomfret's Present
.....
of some antique Statues to Oxford; the
Streets whereof were foolishly said to be
paved with Jacobites
To Dr. King
......
The Butterfly and Bee. To Flavia
Verses dropt in Mr. Garrick's Temple of
Shakspeare
227
O
............
207
210
233
235
The Author's Life, by Mr. Chalmers.....
Bramham Park. To Robert Lane, Esq.
A Description of Calypso and her Grotto.. 238
An Epithalamic Ode. Intended for Music
239
The Death of the Lark.
1738
The Sparrow. From Catullus, 1738
240
On the Death of a young Gentleman, Sep-
tember, 1759
*****.....
An Epistle to a Friend in Yorkshire
On a Lady's singing and playing upon the
Harpsichord
241
On the Death of the right hon. the Earl of
Uxbridge.
POEMS OF FAWKES.
225
242
Cupid baffled
Death and the Doctor...
An occasional Prologue, spoken by Mr. Powell,
at the Opening of the Theatre Royal in Co-
vent Garden, on Monday, September 14,
1767.........
Verses on converting the Chapel to a Kitchen,
at the Seat of the Lord Donnerayle, called
the Grove, in Hertfordshire
Verses on the Duke of Cumberland's Victory
at Culloden, in the Year 1746
Verses inscribed on a Monument, called the
Tomb of Care, in the Garden of the late
John Rich, Esq. at Cowley in Middlesex;
whereon three beautiful Boys ars covering
a funeral Urn with a Veil of Flowers ...... 229
The Epitaph (in Letters of Brass, inserted by
a female Figure representing History) on a
marble Pyramid of the Monument of John,
Duke of Argyle
Verses on the Name, P. Whitehead, sub-
scribed to the above Inscription, being re-
moved thence some time after the Monu-
ment was erected
To Miss Herring. With four Odes on the
Seasons......
Verses to Mr. Brooke, on the Refusal of a
Licence to his Play of Gustavus Vasa... ... ib.
Song.-As Granville's soft numbers tune My-
ra's just praise
To Dr. Schomberg, of Bath
Epitaph, by Mr. Garrick, on Paul Whitehead,
Esq.
Aurelius: an Elegy.
Sacred to the Memory
of Thomas Herring, D. D. late Lord Arch-
bishop of Canterbury
.............
On the Death of his most sacred Majesty King
George the Second
To his most sacred Majesty, on his Accession.
A Parody on a Passage in Milton's Paradise
Lost. Book iv........
228
David's Lamentation over Saul and Jonathan.
Samuel, Book ii. Chapter i.
The Picture of Old-Age, paraphrased from
243
******.
A vernal Ode, sent to his Grace the Lord Arch- bishop of Canterbury. March 12, 1754 ib.
Ode to Summer. By a Gentleman of Cam-
bridge
An autumnal Ode. To Mr. Hayman, the
Painter. October, 1754
244
Ode on Winter. By a Gentleman of Cam-
An Ode to his Grace the Lord Archbishop of Canterbury
230
ib
245
246
the seven first Verses of the twelfth Chap-
ter of Ecclesiastes
A good Wife. From Proverbs, Chapter xxxi.
Nathan's Parable, 2 Samuel, Chap. xii.
The Song of Deborah .....
EPITAPHS.
On a very good Woman....
249
On a young Gentleman, who died A. D. 1743,
ætat, 15. In a Church in Cheshire
On a worthy Friend who was accomplished in
the Sister-Arts of Music and Painting
On the rev. Mr. Cookson, Vicar of Leeds
On Mrs. Fountayne, Daughter of Thomas
Whichcot, Esq. and Wife to the Dean of
York; who died in Child-bed, July, 1750,
ætat. 19
On a young Gentleman, who died for love,
1751...
On James Fox, Esq. 1754
To a young Lady, with a Present of Books,
Partridges, and Snuff.
An Elegy on the Death of Dobbin, the Butter-
Woman's Horse
Epithalamium on the Marriage of a Cobler
and a Chimney-Sweeper..
Woman:
The smoking Doctor's Soliloquy over his Pipe.
a Ballad. Being a Contrast to
"The women all tell me I'm false to my
lass."
251
The Brown Jug: a Song. Imitated from the
Latin of Hieronymus Amaltheus
A Pair of Spectacles. From Bourne
From the same
The Stage Coach.
Thank you for Nothing
An Eulogy on Sir Isaac Newton. Translated
252
from the Latin of Dr. Halley....
Claudian's old Man, who never went out of
the Suburbs of Verona
Archimedes's Sphere. From Claudian......
On Menander. Imitated from a Greek Epi-
gram in the Anthologia
253
247
248
.......
FRAGMENTS OF MENANDER. TRANSLATED FROM THE
Sorrow familiar to all Men
Good and Evil blended
Content
Banish Care....
Temple of Reason
The Man of Reason.......
Good Sense ..................................
250
The Misery and Folly of Man
Man unhappy, compared with other Creatures. ib.
The Origin of Man
The Pleasures of Solitude
254
255
256
ib. Imitated by Mr. Fawkes...
The Temple of Dullness, translated
Mutua Oscitationum Propagatio solvi potest
mechanice. By Christopher Smart, M. A. 263
Mechanical Solution of the Propagation of
257
and promised to sup with him. By the
Rev. Dr. Cowper.
258
259
........ 266
4 Description of May, from Gawin Douglas,
Bishop of Dunkeld. Modernized
Gawin Douglas his eloquent Description of Wynter, wyth hys grete Stormes and Tem- pestis
261 ib.
A Description of Winter, from Gawin Douglas,
Bishop of Dunkeld
Glossary to May and Winter
Part of Sat. vi. Book ii, of Horace, translated.
Beginning at, Perditur hæc inter misero lux,
non sine votis, &c.
275
A Parody on the city and country Mouse ib.
Horace, Epist. v. Book i. imitated. To John
Hawkesworth, Esq.
265 ib. ib.
270
ib. 273
278
The Vicar's Reply. By Francis Fawkes, M.A. 279
To Dr. Redman, who sent the Author a Hare,
276
277
-P
P
P.
On rebuilding Combe-Neville, near Kingston,
Surrey, once the seat of the famous king-
making Earl of Warwick, and late in the
Possession of the Family of Harvey......... 289
On Lady Pomfret's presenting the University
of Oxford with her Collection of Statues
On rural Sports
Ode to Captivity. Written in the last War...
Imitation from Ossian's Poems. Lately pub-
lished by the Title of Fingal, &c........
Ode to Youth
Address to the Thames
To Mrs. B, reading Julia with Tears, dur-
ing a hard Frost
285
286
To the Thames
To Miss K-
To Miss K- P, with Anson's Voyage.
The Complaint of Cambria. To Miss K-
P, setting to Music, and singing English
Verses. Done into English from the Welsh
Original...
On a Present to the Author, of two Impressions
from a fine antique Seal of the Head of
Alexander; the one by Lady P, on Pa-
per; the other by Miss J- P-- , in Wax. 296
On the Subject of the Monument in Arcadia. ib.
On the same
Hitchin Convent. A Tale
To a young Lady, a very good Actress....... 297
To an accomplished Lady. In the Manner of
Waller
The Author's Life, by Mr. Chalmers To the right honourable Charles Earl of Peter- borough and Monmouth Advertisement..
287 ib.
290
291
292
ib. 293
ib. To Miss G-
294
295
298
512
319
324
An Essay on Painting. To the right honoura-
ble Thomas Earl of Pembroke
Acontins to Cydippe. From Ovid.............
Part of Pindar's first Pythian Ode, para-
phrased........
326
The Episode of Orpheus and Eurydice, trans-
lated from the fourth Georgic of Virgil...... 327
To Lady F, on her Marriage
Song. No gandy Rubens ever dare
Verses written after passing through Findon,
Sussex, 1768. Addressed to the rev. Mr.
Woodeson, of Kingston upon Thames
To a Lady
Stanzas. The bird of midnight swell'd her
throat
POEMS OF HARTE.
The Mulberry-tree
On a very fine Lady
On an Asiatic Lady.
******. ******...
To the same, on her Dress.......
To the same....
On reading the foregoing Verses. By MissG-
Reply to Miss G
Seng. Hang my lyre upon the willow.....
Laura's Answer. By Miss G
299
To a young Lady, who objected to sup with a
Party of both Sexes that met at a Coffee-house ib.
A Dream
To the same. On Politics
To Laura-Farewell to the rose
To Laura, on her receiving a mysterious
Letter from a Methodist Divine...
300
Song to ****.-What! bid me seek another fair, ib.
On Men being deprived, from Custom and De-
licacy, of enjoying social Friendship with
the Fair-sex..
To a young Lady, fainting at the News of her
Friend's Misfortunes
On the Death of an Infant....
To Miss N-m, written at Brighthelmstone... ib. To the Mistresses R-s, written at Bright- helmstone.....
Verses written at Brighthelmstone
To Miss G- From Brighthelmstone......
Answer to the foregoing Verses,by Miss G-
On the Death of a young Gentleman..
Inscription for a Fountain
On the converting the late Mr. Woodeson's
House at Kingston into a Poor-house, and
cutting down the great Walk of high Trees
before it
301
302
303
304
305
306