bef.1745 W. WARTON, THOMAS (the elder). Invocation to a water-nymph.-Poems, 1764 1778 W. 1787 1788 1793 1801 1811 1814 1748, pp. 21-2. ANON. Parthenia, or the lost shepherdess, an Arcadian drama, 1764.-See MASON, WILLIAM. Sappho, a drama.-Poems, York, 1797, iii. 143-89. ANON. Midsummer eve, or the sowing of hemp, 1793.-See Mo. Rev., enl., THELWALL, JOHN. [Songs in] The fairy of the lake.-Poems written in IMPEY, E. B. [Choruses in] The sylphs.- Poems, 1811, pp. 104-7, 115-17. C. POEMS INFLUENCED BY THE TRANSLATION FROM HORACE c.1701-20 w.1 SAY, SAMUEL. To his harp, from Casimir.- Poems, 1745, pp. 47-8. Horace, book iii, ode xvi, imitated.-Ib. 75-80. 1744-5 W. WARTON, THOMAS (the elder). Ode to taste.-Poems, 1748, pp. 180-83. 1746 COLLINS, WILLIAM. Ode to evening.-Poems, ed. Bronson, Boston (U.S.A.), 1898, pp. 53-5. 1759 1759-60 1761 1762 1763 WARTON, JOSEPH. Ode viii, To a fountain, imitated from Horace. — Odes, 1746, pp. 32-3. Ode xiii, On shooting.-Ib. 44-5. AIRY, HARRIOT. Ode to truth.-Gent. Mag., xxix. 538. WOTY, WILLIAM. Ode to content. -Shrubs of Parnassus, 1760, pp. 44-5. A summer's morning.-Ib. 104-6. Ode to health.-Ib. 112-13. PHILIPPS, RICHARD. "Ye solemn Cloysters."-Pietas Univ. Oxon., 1761, 3L, verso. VYSE, WILLIAM. "Midst the loud tumults."-Epithalamia Oxoniensia, RAYNSFORD, RICHARD. "Hail, royal babe."-Gratulatio Solennis Univ. TERRY, MICHAEL. "Auspicious month."-Ib. Cc, verso. 1766 w. 1770 p. BRUCE, MICHAEL. Ode to a fountain.-Works, 1865, pp. 205-6. 1770 1773 1776 1780 1782 AIKIN, A. L. (Mrs. BARBAULD). Ode to spring.-Poems, 1773, pp. 97-100. KEMBLE, J. P. Ode to the memory of Mr. Inchbald.—Fugitive Pieces, 1780, pp. 34-6. ANON. Ode to health. - Univ. Mag., lxxi. 166. c. 1782 W. MARRIOTT, JOHN. Collins's Ode to Evening imitated.-A Short Account of 1783 1785 John Marriott, etc., Doncaster, 1803, pp. 85-8. Translation of Horace's twenty-second ode, in book i.-Ib. 89-90. ANON. Ode to the morning. - Univ. Mag., lxxii. 323. BOOKER, LUKE. Hymn to the moon. - Poems, Wolverhampton, 1785, i. 70-74. 1 c. 1740 W. THOMAS, Captain LEWIS (?). Ode on Paradise Lost: see T. Warton's edition of Milton's minor poems, 1785, p. 368 n. Not seen. 1785 HEADLEY, HENRY. Ode to the memory of Chatterton.-Poetical Works, ed. Park, 1808, pp. 31-2. MERRY, ROBERT. Ode to summer.-The Florence Miscellany, Florence (Italy), 1785, pp. 109–12. Ode to winter.-Ib. 113-15. C. 1785 W. ROBINSON, MARY. Ode to Della Crusca.- Poems, 1791, pp. 54-6. 1786 1787 ANON. Ode to night.-Ib. 380-81. ANON. On seeing an old man.-Gent. Mag., lvi. 65. MERRY, ROBERT. Ode to tranquillity.- Poetry of the World, 1788, i. 18-20. bef.1790 W. WARTON, THOMAS (the younger). 1790 W. 1791 W. 1792 1792 W. 1793-9 w. 1798 1798 w. 1802, i. 116. Horace, book iii. od. 18, after the manner of Milton.-Ib. 117. SAYERS, FRANK. Ode to morning. - Poetical Works, 1830, pp. 156–8. ANON. Ode to the Eolian harp.—Univ. Mag., xci. 60. G. Ode to fancy.-Poems by Gentlemen of Devonshire and Cornwall, "PHILO-THOMSON." Ode to indolence.-Gent. Mag., lxii. 656. To recovery.-Ib. 159-60. The destruction of Jerusalem.-Ib. 182-4. The death of Wallace.-Ib. 185-6. The Spanish Armada.-Ib. 187-8. St. Bartholomew's day.-Ib. 189-90. Song of the Araucans during a thunder storm.-Ib. 210-11. Song of the Chikkasah widow.-Ib. 212-13. To indolence.-Annual Anthology, 1799, i. 126–8. ANON. Translation of Horace, book iii, ode 3.-Mo. Mag., v. 208. 1798-1803?w. 1803- p. WHITE, HENRY KIRKE. Ode, written on Whit-Monday.Remains, 1811, i. 356–7. 1799 The shipwreck'd solitary's song, to the night.-Ib. 371-3. To an early primrose.—Ib. ii. 52. Ode to the morning star.-Ib. iii (1822), 74-5. TAYLOR, WILLIAM. A topographical ode.-Southey's Annual Anthology, i. I-9. bef.1800 W. WARTON, JOSEPH. Ode to content. -Biographical Memoirs, ed. Wooll, 1801 1802 1804 1806, pp. 140-42. HUNT, LEIGH. To friendship.-Juvenilia, 4th ed., 1803, pp. 116-18. ANON. To the oak [at Llangollen Vale].-Mo. Mirror, xviii. 342-3. S., F. To a red-breast.-Ib. 61-3. To the echo of a grotto.-Ib. 67-9. Horace, ode xxxi, book i.-Poetical Register for 1804, 2d ed., 1806, p. III. 1805 1806 1807 1808 1813 W. To the wind, at midnight.-Mo. Mirror, xix. 268-9. C. (JOSIAH CONDERS?). To hope.-The Associate Minstrels, 2d ed., 1813, NOBLE, THOMAS. Translation of the thirty-first ode, first book of Horace. ANON. A Song of freedom for the nineteenth century, translated from SHELLEY, P. B. To Harriet *****.- Poetical Works, ed. Hutchinson, 1823 w. bef.1836 p. KEBLE, JOHN. Burial of the dead.-Miscellaneous Poems, 3d ed., Oxford, etc., 1870, pp. 15-18. 1827 1835 1837 1907 1647 Tuesday after Easter. - The Christian Year, Oxford, 1827, i. 125–7. CLARE, JOHN. Autumn.-Poems, ed. A. Symons, 1908, pp. 102-5. COLERIDGE, SARA. "O sleep my babe."-Phantasmion, N. Y., 1839, i. 151-2. "Ah, where lie now those locks that lately stream'd?"-Ib. ii. 192–3. GARNSEY, E. R. To Pyrrha [Horace, I. v]. —Odes of Horace, 1907, p. 83. D. POEMS INFLUENCED BY THE NATIVITY BARON, ROBERT. Erotopaignion, or the Cyprian academy, 1648. C. 1730 W. SAY, SAMUEL. Psalm xcvii, in paraphrastic verse. - Poems, 1745, pp. 85-9. 1746 COLLINS, WILLIAM. Ode to simplicity.- Poems, 1898, pp. 39–41. WARTON, JOSEPH. Ode iv, To superstition.-Odes, 1746, pp. 19-21. To a gentleman upon his travels thro' Italy.-Ib. 22–5. GRAY, THOMAS. Ode for music. - English Poems, ed. Tovey, Camb., 1898, pp. 76-9. 1769 1775 1798 1822 1827 66 Ode v, CLIO." Ode for the nativity. - Town and Country Mag., vii. 662–3. ANON. The abolition of catholicism.-Mo. Mag., v. 367-8. SHELLEY, P. B. Chorus.-Hellas, 1822, lines 197–238. KEBLE, JOHN. Second Sunday after Easter.-The Christian Year, 1827, 1866-1904 SWINBURNE, A. C. To Victor Hugo. -Poems, 1904, i. 144-50. 1867 1908 Ode on the insurrection in Candia.-Ib. 200-208. The high oaks.-Ib. 326-30. Barking hall: a year after.-Ib. 331-3. INGELOW, JEAN. Song for the night of Christ's resurrection (a humble BIBLIOGRAPHY IV EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY SONNETS1 This is not a list of sonnets influenced by Milton (for such a list, see pages 696-7), but of all sonnets published between 1700 and 1800, as well as of all those by persons who began to write quatorzains before the end of the century.2 Magazine sonnets are an exception, since they are included only when some of their authors' pieces appeared in books.3 Unless otherwise indicated, each poem listed contains fourteen pentameter lines not riming in couplets. = = = = Of the abbreviations, trans. = translation; P. Petrarchan (only poems that rime abba abbacdecde or-cdc dc d are included under this head); S. Shakespearean (ab a b c d c d e f efgg); Sp. Spenserian (a babbcbccdc dè e); Ir. Irregular, a designation used to cover any variation, however slight, from the other types but not intended as a reflection upon the poems, since Petrarch himself did not always use the system indicated by P. When the number or the kind of sonnets is not mentioned, it is because I have not seen the work. bef.1701 W. 1705? bef.1715 W. 1721 1741 W. SEDLEY, CHARLES. Miscellaneous Works, 1702, pp. 97, 100-101, 121-2, 144-5. 4 S. (2 octosyllabic). Several other pieces have a similar rime-scheme but contain more or less than fourteen lines; two others of sonnet length are in couplets. None of the poems are called sonnets. KING, WILLIAM. Miscellanies in Prose and Verse, 1705 (?), pp. 491-2. I Ir. (not called a sonnet; only six of the lines are pentameter). MONCK, MARY. Marinda, 1716, pp. 25-7, 65, 71-5, 87-91, 122-3. 8 Ir. (trans.). Called sonnets, but 1 is elegiac, 4 are in couplets, 3 in blank verse, I octosyllabic, 2 in more than fourteen lines. I S., Mr. The Grove, 1721, pp. 163-4. 1 S. YORKE, PHILIP, second earl of Hardwicke. H. Walpole's Catalogue of 1742 w. 1775 p. GRAY, THOMAS. English Poems, ed. Tovey, Camb., 1898, p. 3. 1Ir. 1746 w. 1801- p. STILLINGFLEET, BENJAMIN. Literary Life and Select Works, ed. W. Coxe, 1811, ii. 159-68. 8 P. 1746-55W. 1748- p. EDWARDS, THOMAS. Canons of Criticism, 6th ed., 1758, pp. 1, 2, 3, and 18 prefatory, 260-61, 281-325; Nichols's Collection of Poems, 1782, vi. 103-5. 52: 44 P., 4 Sp., 4 Ir. 1 This bibliography owes a great deal both in accuracy and in completeness to the months of painstaking labor Miss Rowe has given to it. 2 In case of the numerous sonnets of Wordsworth and Capel Lofft, however, only the three each wrote before 1800 are listed. 3 These four may be regarded as significant on account of their early dates: London Mag., 1737, vi. 448 (trans., eighteen lines, in couplets); 1738, vii. 356 ("in imitation of Milton's sonnets"); 1740, ix. 555 (trans.); 1741, x. 47 (trans., sixteen lines, in couplets). 1748 RODERICK, RICHARD. Collection of Poems by Several Hands [Dodsley's 1748–97w. 1764- p. MASON, WILLIAM. Works, 1811, vol. i, prefatory, and pp. 119–34. 14: 12 P., 2 Ir. 1749- W. HIGHMORE, SUSANNAH (Mrs. DUNCOMBE). R. Freeman's Kentish Poets, Canterbury, 1821, ii. 385-6; another sonnet is written in a Boston library copy of Edwards's Canons. 4 (2 trans.): 2 P., 2 Ir. c.1750w. 1775- p. CHAPONE, HESTER M. Works, 1807, ii. 11-12, iv. 155, 193. 3 Ir. (I trans.). C.1750 W. HALL, WILLIAM. Nichols's Literary Anecdotes, 1814, viii. 520. 1 P. 1802, ii. 143-61. 9: 5 P., 4 Ir. Works, ed. Mant, Oxford, 1755- w. 1764-71 p. PERCY, THOMAS. The Hermit of Warkworth, 1771, prefatory; Collection of Poems by Several Hands [Pearch's Supplement to Dodsley], new ed., 1783, iii. 298-300. 3 Sp. bef.1757 W. 1761w. 1770 p. 1762 1763 1763-1800 1764? 1764-76? 1766-70 1767 DUNCOMBE, JOHN. Freeman's Kentish Poets, 1821, ii. 379. 1 P. CARTER, ELIZABETH. Poems on Several Occasions, 1762, p. 49. ANON. Poetical Calendar, 1763, vii. 78-80, viii. 65, xi. 110. 5(4 THOMPSON, WILLIAM. Poetical Works, ed. T. Park, 1807, pp. 177–8. 2 Sp. HOOLE, JOHN. Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered, translated, 2d ed., 1764, vol. i, pp. xxxiii, xxxvi-vii; Metastasio's Dramas, translated, 1800, vol. i, pp. xix-xx; Ariosto's Orlando Furioso, translated, 1783, in Chalmers's English Poets, xxi. 34. 4 Ir. (trans.). WALPOLE, HORACE. Castle of Otranto, 2d ed., 1765, p. iii. 1 Ir. (lines of four or three feet). LANGHORNE, JOHN. Chalmers's English Poets, xvi. 430, 472-4; Mo. SCOTT, JOHN, of Amwell. Poetical Works, 1782, pp. 313-17; Pearch's 1767-96w. 1768?- p. DOWNMAN, HUGH. Poems, 2d ed., Exeter, 1790, pp. 74-9; Poems to Thespia, 2d ed., Exeter, 1791, pp. 141–73, 175; Poems by Gentlemen of Devonshire and Cornwall, Bath, 1792, i. 182; Essays by Gentlemen at Exeter, 1796, pp. 337-41, 549-51; Polwhele's Traditions and Recollections, 1826, i. 155-6, 203-4; three other sonnets are written in the Harvard copy of Poems to Thespia, and one in the Harvard Bampfylde MS. 56: 1 P., 5 S., 50 Ir. (5 in blank verse, I in couplets, 1 in thirteen lines). c. 1767- W. 1768 1769 W. HUDDESFORD, GEORGE, and others. Wiccamical Chaplet, 1804, PP. 71, 74-5, 80, 87-8. 6: 4 P., 2 Ir. (1 in blank verse, thirteen lines).1 BOSWELL, JAMES. Account of Corsica, Glasgow, 1768, p. 214. I Ir. (trans., sixteen lines). WOLCOT, JOHN ("PETER PINDAR"). Wrote some "descriptive sonnets": see Polwhele's Traditions and Recollections, 1826, i. 35. 1770 W. 1784 p. SEWARD, ANNA. Original Sonnets, 2d ed., 1799; Works, 1810, iii. 50, 314, 316; Asylum for Fugitive Pieces, 1786, ii. 139; Gent. Mag., 1789, lix. 743. 105 (5 trans.): 38 P., 67 Ir. 1 of the other sonnets in the volume, five are by Thomas Russell, four by Bampfylde, one each by Bowles, Davenport, and Charlotte Smith. |