Page
Sappho to Phaon
ib.
Eloisa to Abelard
177 On receiving from the right honourable the
Lady Frances Shirley, a Standish and two
TRANSLATIONS.
276
The Temple of Fame
........... 180 Epistle to Robert Earl of Oxford and Morti-
January and May. From Chaucer
186
277
TheWife of Bath, her Prologue. From Chaucer. 199 Epistle to James Craggs, Esq. Secretary of
The First Book of Statius his Thebais
195 State...
ib.
The Fable of Dryope. From Ovid's Meta- Epistle to Mr. Jervas, with Mr. Dryden's
morpboses, Book ix
207 Translation of Fresnoy's Art of Painting ... ib.
Vertumnus and Pomona.
208 Epistle to Miss Blount, with the Works of
Voiture
278
IMITATIONS OF ENGLISH POETS.
Epistle to the same, on her leaving the Town
Chaucer
210
after the Coronation, 1715...
............. 279
Spenser.--The Alley
ib. The Basset-Table, an Eclogue
Waller. Of a Lady singing to her Lute ib.
Verbatim from Boileau
280
On a Fan..
ib.
Answer to a Question of Mrs. Howe
Cowley.- The Garden
211
Occasioned by some Verses of his Grace the
Weeping
ib.
Duke of Buckingham,
ib.
Earl of Rochester.-On Silence..
ib. Prologue to a Play for Mr. Dennis's Benefit, Earl of Dorset --Artemisia
ib.
in 1733, when he was old, blind, and in
Phrype......
212
great Distress, a little before his Death ib.
Dr. Swift.-—
The Happy Life of a Country Prologue to Sophonisba
281
Parsou...
ib. Macer: a Character
ib.
An Essay on Satire, occasioned by the Death To Mr. John Moore, Author of the celebrated
of Mr. Pope, in Three Parts :
Worm-Powder
ib.
Part 1.
ib. Song, by a Person of Quality, written in the
11.
214
Year 1733
282
III.
215 | On a certain Lady at Court
ib.
On bis Grotto at Twickenham, composed of Essay on Man, in Four Epistles:
Marble, Spars, Gems, Ores, and Minerals .. ib.
Epistle I.
217 To Mrs. M. B. on her Birth-day
ib.
II.
2420 To Mr. Thomas Southern, on his Birth-day,
III.
222
1742
ib.
IV.
225 To Lady Mary Wortley Montague
283
The Universal Prayer..
229 The fourth Epistle of the first Book of Ho-
Moral Essays, in Five Epistles :
race's Epistles ....
ib. Epistle 1. Of the Knowledge and Charac.
F.pigram on Mrs. Tofts, a handsome Woman
ters of Men
230
with a fine Voice, but very covetous and
II. Of the Characters of Women 233
proud
ib.
IU. Of the Use of Riches...
255
Epigram on one who made long Epitaphs
284
IV. Of the Use of Riches
239 To Sir Godfrey Kneller, on his painting for me
V. To Mr. Addison, occasioned by
the Statues of Apollo, Venus, and Hercules ib. his Dialogues on Medals....... 241 A Farewell to London, in the year 1715 284
Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot, being the Prologie A Dialognie, between Pope and Craggs ..... ib.
to the Satires
242 Epigram engraved on the Collar of a Dog,
which I gave to bis Royal Highness
ib.
SATIRES AND EPISTLES OF HORACE IMITATED. Epigram, occasioned by an Invitation to Courtib.
Second Book, Sat. i.
To Mr. Fortescue ......
246 On an old Gate erected in Chiswick Gardens . ib.
Second Book, Sat, ii. To Mr. Bethel 948 Fragment.-What are the falling rills, the pen-
First Book, Ep. i. To Lord Bolingbroke .. 250
dant shades
285
First Book, Ep. vi. To Mr. Murray.
253
Verses left by Mr. Pope, on his lying in the
Second Book, Ep. i. To Augustus
254
same Bed which Wilinot the celebrated Earl
Second Book, Ep. ii.
260
of Rochester slept in at Adderbury, then
belonging to the Duke of Argyle . .... ib.
THE SATIRES OF JOHN DONNE, DEAN OF ST. PAUL'S,
Verses to Mr. C. St. James's Place...............
ib.
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On the Monument of the honourable Robert Justrations to the Dunciad: with the Hyper- Bigby, and of his Sister Mary, 1727......... 286 critics of Aristarchus
290
On Sir Godfrey Kneller, in Westminster Abbey, Testimonies of Authors concerning our Author
1723...
ib. and his Works.......
ib.
On General Henry Withers, in Westminster The Dunciad: Book I.
302
Abbey, 1729.........
ib.
JI.
312
On Mr. Elijah Fenton, at Easthamstead in
111...
327
Berks, 1730........
ib.
IV.
337
On Mr. Gay, in Westminster Abbey, 1732.... ib.
APPENDIX.
Another.
ib.
Intended for Sir Isaac Newton, in Westminster I. A Preface prefixed to the five first imper-
Abbey
ib.
fect Editions of the Dunciad ..... 351
On Dr. Francis Atterbury, Bishop of Rochester, II. A List of Books, Papers, and Verses, in
who died in Exile at Paris, 1732. A Dialogue, 287 which our Author was abused ... 353
On Edmund Duke of Buckingham, who died IV. Advertisement to the first Edition, with
in the nineteenth Year of his Age, 1735 ib. Notes in quarto, 1729......
354
For one who would not be buried in West- IV. Advertisement, to the first edition of the minster Abbey.......
ib.
fourth Book of the Dunciad when
Another on the same
ib.
printed separately in the Year 1742... 355
Lord Coningsby's Epitaph
ib. V. Advertisement to the complete Edition of
On Butler's Monument
ib,
1743
VI. Advertisement, printed in the Journals,
THE DUNCIAD: IN FOUR. BOOKS.
1730....
ib.
VII. A Parallel of the Characters of Mr.
A Letter to the Publisher, occasioned by the
Dryden and Mr. Pope
jb.
first correct Edition of the Dunciad...... ib. Index to the Dunciad
357
Martinus Scriblerus, his Prolegomena and Il- Quarto Edition of the Dunciad
509
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The Author's Life, by Dr. Jobnson
365 | Psalm VIII. translated.......
.............. 282
Dedication
367
XXIV. paraphrased..
Preface........
............................ 368 XXIX.
383
Testimonies of Authors
XLVI. paraphrased
ib.
v Au Epistle to Dr. Edward Young, at Easbury
XC. paraphrased
384 in Dorsetshire, on the Review at Sarum,1722 371 CXXXIX. paraphrased in Miltonic Verse ... ib. An Ode on the approaching Delivery of her CXLIV. paraphrased
385 Royal Highness in the year 1721 372 | Job, Chap. III.
386 On the Marriage of the Prince of Orange and Job, Chap. XXV. paraphrased
the Princess Royal of England ..... ib. The Song of Moses, in the fifteenth Chapter of On the Marriage of Frederic Prince of Wales, Exodus, paraphrased.
ib. and Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha 373 The third Ode of the second Book of Horace, The first Hymn of Callimachus to Jupiter ib. paraphrased .....
388
The second Hymn of Callimachus to Apollo. 374 The third Ode of the fourth Book of Horace,
To Sir James Thornhill, on his excellent Paint- paraphrased
jug, The Rape of Helen, at the Seat of On the approaching Congress of Cambray.
General Erle in Dorsetshire. Written in
Written in the Year 1721
389
1718 ......
375 The fable of the young Man and his Cat ib.
Part of the second Book of Statius
377 To Mr. Pope, on bis Translation of Homer's
On the Death of a Young Gentleman
378 Iliad...,
390
Christ's Passion, from a Greek Ode of Mr. Specimen of a Translation of the Odyssey
Masters, formerly of New College. An Ode. ib. On his Majesty's playing with a Tiger in Do the King's Return, in the Year 1720....... 379 Kensington Gardens ......
391
On the Masquerades .
ib. A Dialogue between a Poet and his Servant.
On a Shadow. An Ode
380 In Imitation of Horace, Book II. Sat. VII... ib.
To Celia playing on a Lute
ib. Ode to John Pitt, Esq. advising him to build a
To the unknown Author of the Battle of the Banqueting-House on a Hill that overlooks
Sexes ...
ib. the Sea
392
The twelfth Ode of the first Book of Horace Ode to John Pitt, Esq. on the same subject ... 393
translated.
381 On Mrs. Walker's Poems, particularly that on
The twenty-second Ode of the first Book of the Author
ib.
Horace .....
ib. Verses on a flowered Carpet, worked by the
A Prologue for the Strollers
382
young Ladies at Kingston
Page
Page
Verses on a flowered Carpet
594 Horace, Book II. Ep. XIX. imitated. An
On the Art of Preaching. A Fragment, in Imi- Epistle to Mr. Robert Lowth ...
397
tation of Horace's Art of Poetry
ib. To Mr. Spence, prelixed to the Essay on Pope's
Invitation to Mr. Dodelington. lo allasion to Odyssey
398
Horace, Book I. Ep. V.
395 Imitation of Spenser
ib.
Mr. R. Pitt, to his Brother C. Pitt, on bis Epistle to J. Pitt, Esq. Jn Imitation of Horace,
having a fit of the Gout..
ib. Ep. IV. Book 1.
399
Written in the Folds of a Pin-paper........ ib. Epistle to Mr. Spence. In Imitation of Horace,
De Minimis Maxima. Autore Ludovico Duu-
Ep. X. Book 1.
ib.
combe.
ib. Invitation to a Friend at Court
ib.
An Epitaph, inscribed on a Stone that covers Epistle to Ms. Spence, when Tutor to Lord
his Father, Mother, and Brother
396 Middlesex. In Imitation of Horace, Book I.
A Poem on the Death of Earl Stanhope ib. Ep. XVIII....
400
Epitaph on Dr. Keil, the late famous Astro-
397
The Author's Life, by Dr. Johnson......... 405 To his royal highness the Prince of Wales .... 503
Verses occasioned by the Death of Mr. Aik-
Spring .
413
man, a particular Friend of the Author's... ib.
Summer
423
Ode.---Tell her thou soul of her I love......... ib.
Autumn
485 Epitaph on Miss Stanley, in Holyrood Church,
Winter......
445
Southampton ...
ib.
To the reverend Mr. Murdock, Rector of Stad. THE CASTLE OF INDOLENCE, AN ALLEGORICAL POEM.
dishall, in Suffolk, 1738.
504
Canto 1.
455
A Paraphrase on the latter Part of the sixth
II.
ib.
Chapter of St. Matthew.......
461
ib.
To Mr. Thomson, on bis unfinisbed Plan of a
The Incomparable Soporific Doctor Poem, called the Castle of Indolence, in
The Happy Man........
ib.
Spenser's Style. By Dr. Morrell .... ....... 467
On the Report of a Wooden Bridge to be built
at Westminster
505
Britannia. A Poem
ib. Sung.--One day the god of soft desire
ib,
Ancient and Modern Italy compared : being Song.--Hard is the fate of him who loves..... ib.
the first Part of Liberty, a Poem
469 Song.--- Unless with my Amanda blest
ib.
Greece: being the second part of Liberty, a Song.---For ever, Portuue, wilt thou prove ib.
Poem
472 Song.-Come, gentle god of soft desire ib,
Rome: being the third Part of Liberty, a A Nuptial Song. Intended to have been in-
Poem
477 serted in the fourth Act of Sophonisba, a
Britain : being the fourth Part of Liberty, a Tragedy
506
Poem
482 Ode.-0 Nightingale, best poet of the grove . ib.
The Prospect: being the fifth Part of Liberty, To Seraphina. Ode.....
ib.
a Poem...
493 Ode on Eolus's Harp
ib.
A Poem Sacred to the Memory of Sir Isaac Hymn on Solitude
ib. Newton. Inscribed to the right hon. Sir Prologue to Mr. Mallet's Mustapha
507
Robert Walpole
498 Dennis to Mr. Thomson, who had procured
A Poem to the Memory of the right honoura- him a Benefit Night
ib. ble Lord Talbot, Lord Chancellor of Great Epitaph on Mr. Thomson
ib.
Britain. Addressed to his Son.......
500
Page 159, line 126, of the poem, for from, read form.
217, line 40, for weaker, read stronger 235, line 1, for life, read light. 236, line 12, for too, read to. 838, line 19, for are, read is. 240, line 2, for arts, read arcs.
C Whittingham, Printer, Goswell Street, London.
ADDITIONS AND ALTERATIONS,
MADE BY THE AUTHOR IN 1743, BUT NOT COPIED IN THE EDITION OF 1750.
Nos otia vitæ Solamur Cautu.
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