Page
Page
POPE.
THOMSON.
The Seasons :
The Rape of the Lock. An Heroi-Comical
Spring
415
Poem. In Five Cantos.
Summer
424
Canto I.
.............................................. 346 Autumn
437
(I.
347 Winter
147
III.
348 The Castle of Indolence: an Allegorical Poem.
349 In Two Cantos,
V.
............ 351
Canto I.
457
Prologue to Mr. Addison's Tragedy of Cato 352
II.
463
Eloisa to Abelard
ib. Ancient and Modern Italy compared. being
The Temple of Fame ..........
355 the First Part of “ Liberty," a Poem
469
The Fable of Dryope. From Ovid's Meta Greece : being the Second Part of " Liberty,” 472
morphoses, Book IX.
959 Rome: being the Third Part of “ Liberty,'
477
Vertumnus and Pomona. From the same, Britain : being the Fourth Part of “ Liberty,” 482
Book IV.
360 The Prospect : being the Fifth Part of
An Essay on Man In Four Epistles.
“ Liberty,"
492
Epistle I. Of the Nature and State of Man
Ode
with respect to the Universe 361 The Happy Man
ib.
II. Of the Nature and State of Man
Song
ib.
with respect to Himself, as Song
499
an Individual
363 Ode
ib.
III. Of the Nature and State of Man
Hymn on Solitude
ib.
with respect to Society 366 To the Rev. Mr. Murdoch, Rector of Strad-
IV. Of the Nature and State of Man
dishall, in Suffolk
ib.
with respect to Happiness ... 368
Moral Essays.
In Five Epistles to several
Persons.
A. PHILIPS
Epistle I. Of the Knowledge and Cha-
racters of Men...........
..... 372 To the Earl of Durset
........ 500
II. Of the Characters of Women 374 A Hymn to Venus, from the Greek of Sappho 501
III. On the Use of Riches 376 A Fragment of Sapplio
ib.
IV. Of the Use of Riches
......... 379
V. To Mr. Addison, occasioned by
his Dialogues on Medals... 381
COLLINS.
Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot, being the Prologue
to the Satires
382 Ode to Pity
502
Mexialı, a Sacred Eclogue, in imitation of Ode to Fear
503
Virgil's Pollio........
385 Ode, written in the year 1746
ib.
Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady 386 Ode to a Lady, on the Death of Col. Charles
Satire
ib. Ross, in the Action at Fontenoy
504
Epistle to Robert Earl of Oxford and Earl Ode to Evening
ib.
Mortimer
388 Ode to Liberty
505
The Passions, an Ode for Music
506
SWIFT.
Dirge in Cymbeline
507
An Ode on the popular Superstitions of the
Cadenus and Vanessa
390 Highlands of Scotland; considered as the
Stella's Birthday
397
Subject of Poetry
ib.
The Journal of a Modern Lady, in a Letter to Ode on the Death of Mr. Thomson
509
a Person of Quality
ib.
On the Death of Dr. Swift
399
Baucis and Philemon. On the ever-lamented
DYER.
loss of the two Yew-trees in the Parish of
Chilthorne, Somerset. Imitated from the
Grongar Hill
511
Eighth Book of Ovid..........
403 The Ruins of Rome
512
A Description of the Morning
405
The Grand Question Debated : Whether Ha-
milton's Bawn should be turned into a Bar-
SHENSTONE.
rack or a Malt-house
ib.
On Poetry: a Rhapso
406 The School-Mistress. In Imitation of Spenser 517
A Description of a City-Shower, in imitation Elegy, describing the sorrow of an ingenuous
of Virgil's Georgics
410 mind, on the melancholy event of a licen-
Horace, Book III. Ode II. To the Earl of tious amour .....
520
Oxford, late Lord Treasurer. Sent to him A Pastoral Ballad. In Four Parts.
when in the Tower
411 Part I. Absence.
521
Mrs. Harris's Petition
ib.
II. Hope
ib.
To the Earl of Peterborow, who commanded
III. Solicitude...
522
the British Forces in Spain.....
412
IV. Disappointment...
ib.
The Progress of Poetry
ib. The Dying Kid
525