BIBLIOGRAPHY I POEMS INFLUENCED BY PARADISE LOST 1685 ROSCOMMON, Earl of. An essay on translated verse, 2d ed., 1685. 1695 BLACKMORE, Sir RICHARD. Prince Arthur, an heroick poem, 10 books, 1695. DENNIS, JOHN. The court of death, a pindarique poem, 1695. 1697 BLACKMORE, Sir RICHARD. King Arthur, an heroick poem, 12 books, 1697. 1698 w. SAY, SAMUEL. Epistles of Horace (four). - Poems on Several Occasions, 1745, PP. 1-26. 1701 PHILIPS, JOHN. Imitation of Milton (the Splendid Shilling). - A New Mis cellany of Poems, ed. Charles Gildon, 1701, pp. 212–21. 1702 ANON. The vision.- Examen Miscellaneum (ed. Gildon?), 1702, pp. 44-64. SMITH, MATTHEW. The vision, or a prospect of death, heav'n and hell, 1702. 1703 BLACKMORE, Sir RICHARD. A hymn to the light of the world. - Collection of Poems, 1718, pp. 385-409. 1703-23 w. 1709-31 p. TRAPP, JOSEPH. The works of Virgil, 2d ed., 3 vols., 1735. 1704 ADDISON, JOSEPH. Milton's style imitated, in a translation out of the third Aeneid. – Works, Bohn ed., 1890, i. 38-41. DENNIS, JOHN. Britannia triumphans, or a poem on the battel of Blenheim. - Select Works, 1718, i. 147–218. - [Translations from Tasso's Jerusalem Delivered, in) Grounds of criti cism in poetry. -Ib. ii. 436, 448-50. 1704? ROWE, ELIZABETH. A description of hell, in imitation of Milton.-Works, 1739, i. 49-52. On heaven. - Ib. 52-5. 1705 BLACKMORE, Sir RICHARD. Eliza, an epick poem, 10 books, 1705. PHILIPS, JOHN. Bleinheim, 1705. 1705-6 DEFOE, DANIEL. Lines. - A Review of the Affairs of France, 1705, vol. i, supplement no. 5. On the fight at Ramellies. - Ib., vol. üi (1706), no. 61. DENNIS, JOHN. The battle of Ramillia, 5 books, 1706. PHILIPS, JOHN. Cerealia, an imitation of Milton, 1706. 1706 W. 1715 p. STANDEN, JOSEPH. To Dr. Watts, on his Horae Lyricae. - Isaac Watts's Works, 1810, iv. 419–21. 1708 GAY, JOHN. Wine, 1709. PHILIPS, JOHN. Cyder, 2 books, 1708. 1708 w. RowE, THOMAS. Horace, book i, ode xii, imitated. - Original Poems, etc., 1738, appended to Miscellaneous Works of Elizabeth Rowe, 1739, ii. 245-8. 1708-11 ANON. (Short passages in) British Apollo, 1708-11, vol. i. nos. 50, 56, 78, 90, 99, 101, 105, 108, 111, quarterly paper no. 1, and supernumerary paper no. 8 (two pieces); vol. ii, nos. 3, 9 (two pieces), 14, 18, 19, 31, 55, 60, 61, 72, 90, 96, 104, 107, and supernumerary papers nos. 3, 4; vol. iii, nos. 17, 23, 127. 1 All the poems in this bibliography are in blank verse, except those by Blackmore (1695, 1697, 1703, 1705), Dennis (1695), Smith (1702), Burges (1801), Palmer (1802), Cottle (1815), and Wordsworth (1822), all but a few lines of Roscommon (1685), and parts of the anonymous Vision (1702), of Fellows (1770), Thomson (1796), and Mrs. Flowerdew (1803). III-21. 1709 BELLAMY, DANIEL (the elder). Taffy's triumph, or a new translation of the Cambro-muo-machia, in imitation of Milton, 1709. GROVE, HENRY. A thought on death.– Works, 1747, iv. 395. "Philo-MILTON." Milton's sublimity asserted, in a poem occasion'd by a late celebrated piece, entituled Cyder, 1709. Several Occasions, ed. Waller, Camb., 1905, pp. 1969. To Mitio.-Ib. 261–79. An elegiac thought on Mrs. Anne Warner.-Ib. 304-8. bef.1710? w. ROWE, ELIZABETH. Part of the thirteenth book of Tasso's Jerusalem, translated.-Works, 1739, i. 147-50. 1711 W. 1724 p. NEEDLER, HENRY. (Poem proving the existence of God from the works of creation.]-Works, 2d ed., 1728, pp. 135-9. To the memory of Favonia.- Ib. 198–200. 1712 FENTON, ELIJAH. Part of the fourteenth chapter of Isaiah, paraphras'd. Poems on Several Occasions, 1717, pp. 37-40. 1713 FINCH, ANNE, Countess of Winchilsea. Fanscomb Barn, in imitation of Milton.- Miscellany Poems, 1713, PP. 58–65. 1713 W. 1724 p. THOMSON, JAMES. The works and wonders of almighty power. – Complete Poetical Works, ed. J. L. Robertson, 1908, pp. 483-4. 1713–26 BRADY, NICOLAS. Virgil's Aeneis, 4 vols. in one, 1716–26. 1714 ANON. Prae-existence, in imitation of Milton, 1714. 1715 ANON. The mouse-trap, done from the Latin in Milton's stile, 1715. 1717 FENTON, ELIJAH. The eleventh book of Homer's Odyssey, in Milton's style. - Poems on Several Occasions, 1717, pp. 85-127. C. 1718 w. 1847 p. THOMSON, JAMES. Lisy's parting with her cat.– Works, 1908, pp. 511-13 1719 PECK, FRANCIS. Sighs upon the death of Queen Anne, in imitation of Milton, 1719. 1720 “A GENTLEMAN OF TRINITY-COLLEGE IN CAMBRIDGE." An occasional poem.- Reasons for Abolishing Ceremony, by J. Swift, Jr., 1720, pp. 20-25. 1720? ANON. (J. BULKELEY?). The last day, book i, 1720(?). bef.1721 W. PRIOR, MATTHEW. Virgils Georgic 4 verse 511, translated. - Dialogues of the Dead, etc., ed. Waller, Camb., 1907, p. 334. Prelude to a tale from Boccace.- Ib. 339-44. 1721 ANON. A description, in imitation of Milton.- Miscellaneous Collection of Poems, publish'd by T. M. Gent, Dublin, 1721, ii. 54-8. on Several Occasions, ed. Waller, 1905, pp. 200-204. 1721 W. 1793 P. MALLET, David. The transfiguration, in imitation of Milton's style. Europ. Mag., XXV. 52. 1723 BAKER, HENRY. An invocation of health, 1723. NEWCOMB, THOMAS. The last judgment of men and angels, after the man ner of Milton, 12 books, 1723. 1724 BROWN, N. The north-country wedding. - Miscellanedus Poems, published by Matthew Concanen, 1724, pp. 1-15. The fire.-Ib. 16-21. and pigmies, in imitation of Milton's style. – Tracts by Warburton, etc. 1 blank verse, 2 pts., 2d ed., 1719. Not seen. i bef. 1719 1725 ANON. TO Miss M-reton, in Milton's stile.- A New Miscellany of Poetry, from Bath, Tunbridge, etc., 1725, pp. 50-51. 1726 ANON. A verbal translation of part of the first Aeneid. – Miscellaneous Poems, published by D. Lewis, 1726, pp. 307-9. in imitation of the style of Milton, 1726. 1726–30 THOMSON, JAMES. The seasons, 4 parts, 1730. 1727 BROOME, WILLIAM. Part of the tenth book of the Iliads of Homer, in the stile of Milton.-Poems on Several Occasions, 2d ed., 1739, pp. 101–30. From the eleventh book of the Iliads of Homer, in the stile of Psalm the cviith, paraphrased. - Ib. 235-42. Poems and Translations, 1727, pp. 120–27. Poems, Translations, etc., 1727, pp. 93-6. Pp. 436-42. 1728 CURTEIS, THOMAS. Eirenodia.-R. Freeman's Kentish Poets, Canterbury, 1821, ii. 121-46. Pemberton's View of Newton's Philosophy, 1728. Sawney, an heroic poem occasion'd by the Dunciad, 1728. bef. 1729? CAREY, HENRY. To Handel. - Poems on Several Occasions, 3d ed., 1729, pp. 108-9. 17291 ANON. The loss of liberty, or fall of Rome, 1729. BROWNE, MOSES. To George Dodington. - Piscatory Eclogues, 1729, dedication. RALPH, JAMES. Zeuma, or the love of liberty, 3 books, 1729. THOMSON, JAMES.(?) To the memory of Mr. Congreve.-Works, 1908, pp. 457-62. Britannia.-Ib. 471-80. 1730-42 W. BLAIR, ROBERT. The grave, 1743. C.1730-65w.DUNKIN, WILLIAM. The poetical mirror, 4 books. -Select Poetical Works, Dublin, 1769–70, i. 100-337. The frosty winters of Ireland in 1739, 1740.-Ib. 430–43. - Translation from Boetius.-Ib. 518–20. 1731 ANON. Isaiah, chap. lx. - A Miscellany of Poems, ed. J. Husbands, Oxford, 1731, pp. 1-8. 1 1729 1731 1732 1 1732 w. 1733 ANÓN. An evening hymn.-Ib. 266–70. verse.- New Miscellaneous Poems, 7th ed., 1731, pp. 180–88. The Flower-Piece, 1731, pp. 205-9. ment, translated, Edin., 1732. See Swift's Correspondence, ed. F. E. Ball, 1913, iv. 327–31 (Swift to Wogan, Aug. 2, 1732). grotto.-Gent. Mag., iii. 541. üi. 1181 (Aug., 1733). LONG, ROGER. “When o'er the sounding main to Belgia's coast." Gratulatio Academiae Cantabrigiensis ... Annae Georgii II ... Filiae ... Nuptias celebrantis, Camb., 1733, pp. 13-6). Liberty, 5 parts. – Works, 1908, pp. 309-421. of Six Several Authors, 1736, pp. 13-15. 343–7. 2 1734 1734-6 1735 1736 vi. 479. “ENDYMION.” An astronomical paradox.-Ib. 159-60. Solution of the astronomical paradox.-Ib. 283. WESLEY, SAMUEL (the younger). The dog, a Miltonick fragment. - Poems on Several Occasions, 1736, pp. 148–50. The descriptive, a Miltonick, after the manner of the moderns. Ib. 151-6. 1737 AKENSIDE, MARK. The poet. - Poetical Works, Aldine ed., 1835, pp. 282–7. ANON. Albania, a poem addressed to the genius of Scotland. - Scottish Poetry of the Eighteenth Century, ed. G. Eyre-Todd, Glasgow, 1896, i. 82-6. 444-55. 1737 W. 1749 p. HOADLY, JOHN. Kambromyomachia, or the mouse-trap.-A Collection of Poems by Several Hands (Dodsley's Miscellany), 1758, v. 258–68. 1738 ANON. A hymn to the morning, attempted in Miltonic verse. -Lond. Mag., m vii. 44. - A hymn to night, attempted in the same verse.-Ib. 44. verse, 1732. Not seen. 1 1732 1738 ANON. Verses wrote when smoaking some bad tobacco.-Gent. Mag., viii. 99-100. “BRITANNICUS." The voice of liberty, a poem in Miltonic verse, occa sion'd by the insults of the Spaniards, 1738. “EUGENIO.” A hymn to the Creator of the world. - Lond. Mag., vii. 509-10. “A FRESHMAN OF CLARE-HALL.” An elegy on the death of her majesty.– Ib. 253 1738 w. PRICE, HENRY. To Mr. [Moses) Browne.-Gent. Mag., viii. 651. Select Collection of Poems, 1782, viii. 109-11. Fawkes and Woty, 1763, iii. 67–77. The wicked man's reflections.- Ib. 119–21. 1739 Pp. 266-8. GLOVER, RICHARD. London, or the progress of commerce, 1739. 1739 w. DAVIES, SNEYD. Vacuna.- John Whaley's Collection of Poems, 1745, pp. 178–81. Epithalamium.-- Ib. 242-5. 1739-67 STRAHAN, ALEXANDER. The Aeneid, translated, 2 vols., 1767.-See Mo. Rev., ix. 1-11, xxxvii. 321-3. 1740 ANON. Liberty regain'd, in imitation of Milton, 1740. ANON. On the resurrection, in imitation of Milton.- Appended to Francis Peck's New Memoirs of Milton, 1740. Miscellaneous Collection of Poems, 1740, pp. 339-42. Litterary State of Great-Britain for 1740 (appended to his Political State, etc.), p. 25. SOMERVILE, WILLIAM. Hobbinol, or the rural games, a burlesque, 1740. pp. 182-6. On J. W. ranging pamphlets. - Ib. 202–7. The nativity.-Ib. 225-8. 1740 W. 1744 p. WARTON, JOSEPH. The enthusiast, or the lover of nature. - Biographi cal Memoirs, etc., ed. J. Wooll, 1806, pp. 111-24. 1741 ANON. The country christning, from a Latin poem. -Lond. Mag., X. 44-5. SOMERVILE, WILLIAM. Field sports, 1742. Dublin, 1742, pp. 283-6. 1742–6 YOUNG, EDWARD. The complaint, or night thoughts, 9 parts. – Poetical Works, Aldine ed., 1852, vol. i. bef. 1743 w. SAY, SAMUEL. Fragment.–J. Nichols's Collection, 1780, vi. 43. 17421 i bef. 1743 W. HINCHLIFFE, WILLIAM. (Translation of Telemachus, books i-ix, in manuscript.) In blank verse: Cibber's Lives, 1753, V. 25. Not seen. |