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N Address to the Deity
Thomson
A Adam and Eve, in a Morning Hymn,
call upon all the Parts of the Creation
to join with them in extolling their com-
mon Maker
Milton
Mrs. Barbauld
Addison
On the Deity
--
BOOK I. SACRED AND MORAL.
Page
Hymn on Gratitude
Hymn on Providence
Hymn, from the beginning of the 19th Psalm ib.
ib.
Mrs. Rowe
·
Another Hymn
Hymn
Hymn, from Psalm 148th
Psalm 4th Psalm 5th
Psalm 6th- Psalm 8th
Psalm 23d-Psalm 122d
Hymn to Cheerfulness-The author being
Dr. Akenside
Christopher Pitt
sick
it.
The Universal Prayer
Messiah, a Sacred Eclogue
Hymns
An Address to the Deity
Ogilvie
Merrick
1A Summer Evening's Meditation
Hymn to Content
To Wisdom
ib. 56
Merrick 56
ib. 58
Christ's Passion: from a Greek Ode of Mr.
Masters, formerly of New College Pitt 59
7 A Funeral
Mallet 59
6
Veni Creator Spiritus, paraphrased Dryden 60
8 A Night Piece
60
Miss Carter
8 Ode to Melancholy
Gi
61
62
9 The Vanity of Human Wishes
9 Written at Midnight in a Thunder Storm ib.
Johnson
10 Elegy on the Death of Lady Coventry.
ib. 11
Written in 1760
Muson G5
Elegy to a young Nobleman leaving the Uni-
yersity
54
ib. 54
Burns 54
Prior 55
Despondency. An Ode
1 The Frailty and Folly of Man
1A Paraphrase on the latter Part of the Sixth
Chapter of Matthew
Thomson 55
U-it-56
2
2 The Sluggard
2 The Rose
The 8th Psalm translated.
Psalm the 24th paraphrased
Psalm 29th
Psalm 46th paraphrased
Psalm 90th paraphrased
Psalm 144th paraphrased
The 3d Chapter of Job
The 25th Chapter of Job paraphrased
The Song of Moses in 15th Chapter of Exo- dus paraphrased
The 189th Psalm paraphrased
An Hymn to the Supreme Being. An Imita-
tion of the 104th Psalm
Blacklock 13
Two Hymns
A Hymn on the Seasons
Hymn to Humanity
The Enlargement of the Mind. To William
Langhorne, M. A.
3 The Ant, or Emmet
3
A Summer Evening
The Prize of Virtue
An Elegy, written in a Country Church-Yard
3 The Nunc Dimitis
4
The Benedicite paraphrased
5 The Ignorance of Man
5
The Trials of Virtue
ib. 66
The Choice of Hercules: from the Greek of Prodicus The Hermit Anon. 15 The Fire, Side
11 12
ib. 17
Pope 19
ib. 19
ib. 20
Barbauld 55
Thomson 15 VISIONS for the Entertainment and Instruction
Langhorne 16
of Younger Minds, by Dr. COTTON.
Address
Vision I. Slander. Inscribed to Miss ****
II. Pleasure
III. Health
Louth 67
Parnell 69
Cotton 71
The Lion, the Fox, and the Geese
The Lady and the Wasp
The Bull and the Mastiff
Death
Gray 20
Poitous 21
Blair 24
30
31
32
The Grave
Happiness to be found in Virtue alone Pope
On the Eternity of the Supreme Being Smart
On the Immensity of the Supreme Being ib.
On the Omniscience of the Supreme Being ib.
On the Power of the Supreme Being b. 34
On the Goodness of the Supreme Being ib. 36
Ode to Wisdom
Miss Carter 37
On Human Life
Ogilvie 38
Diseases are the Consequence of Intempe-
FABLES, by the late Mr. GAY.
83 The Shepherd and the Philosopher
The Lion, the Tiger, and the Traveller
The Spaniel and the Cameleon
The Mother, the Nurse, and the Fairy
The Eagle and the Assembly of Animals
The Wild Boar and the Ram
38 The Miser and Plutus
rance
Wishes obtained often make men miserable
Boyse 39
The Day of Judgement: a Seatonian Prize-
Poem
Dr. Glynn 48 'The Peacock, the Turkeys and the oose
Mrs. Barbauld 50 Cupid, Hymen, and Plutus
Deity
The Elephant and the Bookseller
52 The Tame Stag
72
73
74
76
78
80
· 81
IV. Content
V. Happiness
VI. Friendship
VII. Marriage. Inscribed to Miss **
VIII. Life
IX. Death
-
84
86
87
· 93
9-1
94
95
96
97
The
91
92.
93
The Monkey who had seen the World
The Philosopher and the Pheasants
The Pin and the Needle
The Shepherd's Dog and the Wolf
The Painter who pleased nobody and every
body
The Lion and the Cub
The Old Hen and the Cock
The Rat-Catcher and Cats
The Goat without a Beard
The Old Woman and her Cats
The Butterfly and the Snail
The Scold and the Parrot
The Cur and the Mastiff
The Sick Man and the Angel
The Persian, the Sun, and the Cloud
The Fox at the Point of Death
The Setting Dog and the Partridge
The Universal Apparition
The Two Owls and the Sparrow
The Courtier and Proteus. -The Mastiffs
The Barley Mow and the Dunghill
Pythagoras and the Countryman
The Farmer's Wife and the Raven
The Turkey and the Ant
The Father and Jupiter
The Monkeys
The Owl and Farmer
The Jugglers
The Council of Horses
The Hound and the the Huntsman
Night I. Sleep Night
- 101
101
102
103
104
105
106
- 106
107
107 Night V. Darkness
108
109
The Poet and the Rose
110
The Cur, the Horse, and Shepherd's Dog - 110
The Court of Death
The Gardener and the Hog
The Man and the Flea
The Hare and many Friends
---
YOUNG'S NIGHT THOUGHTS.
Life and Eternity
Time and Death
97 Night II. Life compared to the Sun-dial
Death of the good Man
98
99
98 NightIII. Picture of Narcissa, Description of
her Funeral, and a Reflection
upon Man
1
100
99 NightIV. Death not to be dreaded
Death desirable to the Aged
Folly of Human Pursuits
Folly of the Love of Life in theAged 121
Address to
121
- 100
Fears of Death extinguished by
Man's Redemption
Greatness of the Redemption
123
Praise, bestowed on Men, due to
Heaven
Magnificence
of the Deity
Inability of sufficiently praising God 123
Man-Religion
and Omnipresence
124
God's Love to Man
Lukewarm Devotion
Death, where is thy Sting?
Faith enforced by our Reason
False Philosophy
The mere Man of the World
Death unavoidable
112
Invocation to Silence and Darkness 112 NightVI.The Death of Narcissa
Time
. 113
113
- 114
114
Oppression, Want, and Disease
Reflections on viewing a Map of the
World-Sympathy
The Instability end Insufficiency of
Human Joys
Man shortsighted
Presumption of depending on To-
morrow
Sudden Death
Man's Proneness to postpone Im-
115
115 Night
115 115
118
Two Choruses to the Tragedy of Brutus
Ode on Solitude
The unreasonableness of Complaint
Grief and Joy---Night
Regularity of the Heavenly Bodies
Miracles
Nature the Foe of Scepticism
Reasons for Belief
141 The Wolf, the Sheep, and the Lamb
142 The Goose and the Swans
145 The Youth and the Philosopher
145 The Bee, the Ant, and the Sparrow
145 The Bears and the Bees
145 The Cameleon
146 The Monkies, a Tale
146 Know Thyself
147
- 147
142 The Lawyer and Justice
142 The Farmer, the Spaniel, and the Cat 142 The Spider and the Bee
142 The Young Lion and the Ape
143 The Colt and the Farmer
The Power of God infinite
The World sufficient for Man. Con-
templation of the Heavens
Man's Science the Culture of his
Heart
The Greatness of God inexpressible
The Misery of Sin-Reason
Man - Death
Reflections on Sleep
Address to the Trinity
Conclusion
143 The Owl and the Nightingale
143 The Sparrow and the Dove
144 The Female Seducers
- 159
. 160
160
161
162
. 162
- 165
144 Love and Vanity
- 170
144 The Young Lady and Looking-Glass Wilkie 173
145 The Boy and the Rainbow
ib. 173
145 The Rake and the Hermit
ib. 174
Whitehead 175
Cotton 175
Merrick 177
ib. 177
Arbuthnot 178
Armstrong 179
Akenside 179
Paraphrase on Psalm lxxiv.16,17 Miss Williams 180
Paraphrase on Isaiah, xlix. 15
148 Paraphrase on Matt. vii. 12
ib. 181
148 Reflections on a Future State, from a Review
of Winter
Thomson. 182
148
A Prayer on the Prospect of Death Burns 182
The Genealogy of Christ, as it is represented
on the East Window of Winchester College
Chapel. Written at Winton School Louth 182
On the Death of Frederic Prince of Wales.
Written at Paris, by David Lord Viscount
150 Stormont, of Christ Church, Oron
150 Death
184
Emily 184
151 On the Immortality of the Soul S. Jenyns 187
BOOK II. DIDACTIC, DESCRIPTIVE, NARRATIVE, AND PATHETIC.
THE
An Essay on Man: in Four Epistles
Moral Essays: in Four Epistles
Epistle to Mr. Addison, occasioned by his
Dialogues on Medals
THE Traveller; or, a Prospect of Society.
Inscribed to the Reverend Mr.H.Gold-
smith
Dr. Goldsmith 194
The Deserted Village
ib. 197
ib. 201
Pope 202
ib. 203 Satires and Epistles of Horace imitated ib. 254
ib. 204 Epilogue to the Satires. In two Dialogues ib. 265
ib. 205 Imitations of Horace
Endwin and Angelina. A Ballad
Epistle to Dr.Arbuthnot, being the prologue
to the Satires
ib. 250
Spring, a Pastoral
Summer, a Pastoral
Autumn, a Pastoral
Winter, a Pastoral
Windsor-Forest
ib. 269
149
150
ib. 206
ib. 209
ib. 210
153
154
155
156
- 157
- 158
Lessons of Wisdom
The Pain arising from virtuous Emotions at-
tended with Pleasure
Pope 220
ib. 240
A Panegyric to my Lord Proctector, of the
present Greatness, and joint Interest, of his
Highness and this Nation
Waller 272
Denham 278
The Dying Christian to his Soul
An Essay on Criticism
ib. 210 Cooper's Hill
ib. 210 On Mr. Abraham Cowley's Death and Burial
ib. 216
amongst the antient Posts
ib. 276
Druder 281
The Rape of the Lock
Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate An Essay on Translated Verse Earl of Roscommon 277
Lady
ib. 229 Absalon and Achitophel
Prologue to Mr. Addison's Tragedy of Cato ib. 224 | Palamon and Arcite; or, the Knight's Tale ib. 312
Fpilogue to Rowe's Jane Shore
ih. 224 Religio Laici
The Temple of Fame
The Happy Life of a Country Parson
ib. 319.
ib. 224 Mac Flecknoe
ib. 3.2
ib. 229 An Essay upon Satire Dryden and Buckingham 324
Cymon
Cymon and Iphigenia
Theodore and Honoria
The Rosciad
The Pleasures of Imagination
Day: a Pastoral
Dryden 327
ib. 332
Chure 335
Akenside 344
Cunningham 349
The Contemplatist : a Night Piece ib. 850
The Visions of Fancy
Langhorne 351
A Letter from Italy to the Right Honorable
Charles Lord Halifax. In the Year 1701.
Addison 353
ib. 355
Parnell 359 A Winter Piece
ib. 359 The School-Mistress. In Imitation of Spenser
R. West 360
Shenstone 479
Couper 361
Collins 482
J. Phillips 48-4
Nugent 486
of Music.
Dryden 487
The Campaign
An Allegory on Man
The Book-Worm
An Amicos
An Address to Winter
Liberty renders England preferable to other
Nations, notwithstanding Taxes, &c.
Description of a Poet
Love Elegies
ib. 362
An Essay on Poetry
The Chace
- 362
Buckingham 364
Somerville 367
Gay 385
Rural Sports; a Georgic
Love of Fame, the Universal Passion Young 388
The Castle of Indolence. An Allegorical
Thomson 409
ib. 423
ib. 424
Yalden 425
West 425
433
To the Memory of Sir Isaac Newton
Hymn on Solitude
Hymn to darkness
Education
A Birth-Day Thought
Moral Reflection. Written on the first Day of
the Year 1782
434
The Triumph of Isis,occasioned by Isis,an Elegy
T. Warton 434
Inscription in a Hermitage, at Ansly-Hall in
Warwickshire
ib. 436
Monody, written near Stratford upon Avon ib. 436
On the Death of King George the Second ib. 436
On the Marriage of the King, 1761, to her
Majesty
On the Birth of the Prince of Wales
Ode to Sleep
ib. 437
ib. 438
ib. 439
The Hamlet, written in Whichwood Forest ib. 439
Ode. The first of April
The Tears of Scotland
Ode to Mirth
Ode to Leven Water
T. Warton 440
Ode. The Suicide
Ode. Sent to a Friend on his leaving a favorite
ib. 441
Artrong 442
rdy 459
470
Songe to Alla, Lorde of the Castelof Brystowe
yune Daies of Yore. From Chatterton,under
the name of Rowley
Bristowe Tragedie; or, the Dethe of Syr Charles
Bawdin. Chatterton,under the name of Rowley 470
The Mynstrelles Songe in Ella, a Tragycal
Enterlude
Oriental Eclogues The Splendid Shilling An Epistle to a Lady
Alexander's Feast, or the Power An Ode on St. Cecilia's Day
Chorns in Goddwyn, a Tragedie
Grongar Hill
Monody on the Death of his Lady
George Lord Littleton 476
Anon. 478
ib. 473
ib. 474
Dyer 474
An Epistle from Mr. Phillips to the Earl of
Dorset. Copenhagen, March, 9, 1709
The Man of Sorrow
488
Greville 489
Monody to the Memory of a Young Lady Shaw 489
An Evening Address to the Nightingale ib. 492
An Ode to Narcissa
Smollet 493
ib. 493
Ode to Arthur Onslow, Esq.
Ode to Melancholy
Elegy in Imitation of Tibullus
The Propagation of the Gospel in Greenland
Couper 493
On Slavery and the Slave Trade
On Liberty, and in Praise of Mr. Howard ib. 494
On Domestic Happiness, as the Friend of Vir-
tue and of the false Good-nature of the Age ib. 494
On the Employments of what is called an Idle
Life
ib. 495
The Post comes in the News-paper is read
the World contemplated at a Distance ib. 495
A Fragment
Mallet 496
Ode to Evening
Dr. Jos. Warton 497
Isis. An Elegy
Mason 497
Epistolary Verses to George Colman, Esq.
written in the Year 1756
Lloyd 498
499
Ogilvie 501
ib. 501
Ode to the Genius of Shakspeare
Ode to Time; occasioned by seeing the Ruins
of an old Castle
Village in Hampshire
The art of Preserving Health
Ode on the Spring
Ode to Innocence
Morning; or, The Complaint. An American
Eclogue
Gregory 505
ib. 459 A Description of a Parish Poor-House Crabbe 507
Ode on a distant Prospect of Eton College ib. 459 Description of a Country Apothecary ib. 507
Ode to Adversity
ib. 460 Description of a Country Clergyman visiting
Ode on the Death of a favorite Cat drowned
in a Tub of Gold Fishes
461
the Sick
ib. 507
The Progress of Poesy. A Pindaric Ode ib.` The Bard. A Pindaric Ode
ib. 462 The Reason for describing the Vices of the ib. 463
The Fatal Sisters. An Ode
ib. 508
Anon. 508
The Descent of Odin. An Ode
Village
it. 464 Apology for Vagrants
ib. 465
The Triumphs of Owen. A Fragment
Ode on the installation of the Duke of Graf-
ton. Irregular
Epistle to a young Gentleman on his leaving
Eton School
Dr. Roberts 508
London. A Poem
Johnson 509
Great Cities,and London in particular, allow-
ed their due Praise
Cowper 511
The Want of Discipline in the English Uni-
versities
ib. 512
A Prayer for Indiference
ib. 465 Greville 466 The Fairy's Answer to Mrs. Greville's Prayer for Indifference Countess of C- 466 The Beggar's Petition Anon. 467
Pollio. An Elegiac Ode; written in the Word Happy the Freedom of the Man whom Grace
near R-Castle, 1762
Mickle 467 makes free-His Relish of the Works
Smollet 469 of God Address to the Creator. ib. 51S
ib. 469 That Philosophy which stops at Secondary
ib. 470 Causes reproved
ib. 502
ib. 504
ib. 505
ib. 514
Rural