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Fable.
221 Fable.
223
224
.....................
....................................... 226
227
228
PRIOR.
Henry and Emma. A Poem, upon the Model
of the Nut-Brown Maid.......
Alma: or, the Progress of the Mind.
Three Cantos.
Canto I.
...................
II.
III.
Solomon on the Vanity of the World. A Poem,
in Three Books.
Book I. Knowledge
II. Pleasure
III. Power
192
A Ballad
198
203
208
209
215
In
230
231
ib.
232
234
237
238
240
The Lady's Looking-Glass. In imitation of
a' Greek Idyllium
Rural Sports. A Georgic. In Two Cantos.
.....
Trivia:
: or, the Art of walking the Streets of
London. In Three Books.
Book I. Of the Implements for Walking
the Streets, and Signs of the
Weather
287
II. Of Walking the Streets by Day 289
III. Of Walking the Streets by Night 294
Sweet William's Farewell to Black-eyed Susan 297
A Ballad, from the What-d'ye-call-it
998
The Goat without a Beard
The Universal Apparition
The Jugglers.......
299
300
301
302
303
The Hare and many Friends
The Shepherd's Week. In Six Pastorals
Monday; or, the Squabble.....
Tuesday: or, the Ditty
Wednesday; or, the Dumps
Thursday; or, the Spell..........
Friday; or, the Dirge
Saturday; or, the Flights
Fable. The Farmer's Wife and the Raven... 309
Fable. The Turkey and the Ant
305
306
308
258
264
272
279 Elegy
GAY.
2821
ib. The Chase.
Book I.
IV.
....
In Four Books.
HAMMOND.
SOMERVILE.
The Grotto. Written by Mr. Green, under
the name of Peter Drake, a fisherman of
Brentford.......
The Sparrow and Diamond.
An Epistle from a Lady in England to a
Gentleman at Avignon
253 An Ode, inscribed to the Earl of Sunderland
at Windsor
284
286
...
310
317
321
322
323
325
326
328
331
335
340
The Rape of the Lock. An Heroi-Comical
Poem. In Five Cantos.
V.
The Seasons:
Spring
Summer
346
347
Autumn
Winter .......
348 The Castle of Indolence: an Allegorical Poem.
In Two Cantos.
349
351
......
Prologue to Mr. Addison's Tragedy of Cato 352
...........
Eloisa to Abelard
Ancient and Modern Italy compared: being
the First Part of "Liberty," a Poem
355
469
Greece: being the Second Part of " Liberty," 472
Rome: being the Third Part of "Liberty,” 477
Britain being the Fourth Part of "Liberty," 482
The Prospect: being the Fifth Part of
"Liberty,"
..................
The Temple of Fame.
The Fable of Dryope.
morphoses, Book IX.
Vertumnus and Pomona.
Book IV.
Page
From Ovid's Meta-
From the same,
An Essay on Man. In Four Epistles.
Epistle 1. Of the Nature and State of Man
with respect to the Universe 361
II. Of the Nature and State of Man
with respect to Himself, as
an Individual
363
III. Of the Nature and State of Man
with respect to Society
366
368
IV. Of the Nature and State of Man
with respect to Happiness
Moral Essays. In Five Epistles to several
Persons.
Epistle I. Of the Knowledge and Cha-
racters of Men.........
372
374
II. Of the Characters of Women
III. On the Use of Riches
IV. Of the Use of Riches
376
..... 379
V. To Mr. Addison, occasioned by
his Dialogues on Medals... 381
Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot, being the Prologue
to the Satires
382
Messiah, a Sacred Eclogue, in imitation of
Virgil's Pollio
385
Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady 386
Satire
Epistle to Robert Earl of Oxford and Earl
Mortimer
388
Cadenus and Vanessa ........................................................ 390
Stella's Birth-day.........
397
The Journal of a Modern Lady, in a Letter to
a Person of Quality.
......................
On the Death of Dr. Swift
Baccis and Philemon. On the ever-lamented
loss of the two Yew-trees in the Parish of
Chilthorne, Somerset. Imitated from the
Eighth Book of Ovid.........
A Description of the Morning
The Grand Question Debated: Whether Ha-
milton's Bawn should be turned into a Bar-
rack or a Malt-house
Os Poetry: a Rhapsody
A Description of a City-Shower, in imitation
of Virgil's Georgics
Horace, Book III. Ode II. To the Earl of
Oxford, late Lord Treasurer. Sent to him
when in the Tower....
Mr. Harris's Petition .............
To the Earl of Peterborow, who commanded
the British Forces in Spain..........
The Progress of Poetry
********...
359
360
399
403
405
406
410
411
A Pastoral Ballad. In Four Parts.
Part I. Absence.
II. Hope
III. Solicitude..
412
IV. Disappointment...
ib. The Dying Kid ..............
415
424
437
447
457
463
492
498
499
............... ib.
509
502
503
504
The School-Mistress. In Imitation of Spenser 517
Elegy, describing the sorrow of an ingenuous
mind, on the melancholy event of a licen-
tious amour
.... 520
511
512
521
522
523