THE WORKS OF THE ENGLISH POETS, FROM CHAUCER TO COW PER; INCLUDING THE SERIES EDITED, WITH PREFACES, BIOGRA.P:HFCAŁ:AND CRITICAL, BY DR. SAMUEL: JOHNSON: Any: PRINTED FOR J. JOHNSON; J. NICHOLS AND SON ; R. BALDWIN ; P. AND C. RIVINGTON; W. OTPIDGE AND JON; LEICH AND SOTHEBY ; R. FAULDER AND SON ; G. NICOL AND SON ; T. PAYNE; G. ROBINSON; WILKIE AND 1810. CONTENTS. Page THE Author's Life, by Mr. Chalmers 3 Song of Fairies, by Puck in Midsummer Night's 27 Song in Much Ado about Nothing.-Sigh no more, fadios, sigh no more....... 62. In the Merchant of Venice.—Tell me, where song, in the Tempest. Where the bee From As You Like It-Blow, blow thou winter, ip Twelfth Night.—Come away, come away, lo England's Helicon, and Love's Labour Lost From the Two Gentlemen of Verona.-Who is ib. ib. Winter.— A song at the end of Love's Labour From As You Like It.--Under the green wood SONGS FROM HIS PLAYS. The Author's Dedication to Queen Elizabeth . 80 Of the Soul of Man, and the Immortality Section I. That the Soul is a Thing subsisting II. That the Soul is more than a Per- fection or Reflection of the Sense. 84 III. That the Soul is more than the V. Erroneous Opinions of the Creation VI. That the Soul is not ex Traduce ... 87 Sect. IX. Why the Soul is united to the Body. 89 X. In what Manner the Soul is united XI. How the Soul exercises her Powers XII. The vegetative Power of the Soul ib, XIX. Of the Imagination, or Common XXII, The Passion of the Sense XXIII. Local Motion ............ XXIV. The intellectual Powers of the Soul ib. XXV. Wit, Reason, Understanding, Opi- XXVI, Innate Ideas in the Soul ib. |