9 1789 “GLANVILLE.” Ode to hope. – Poetry of the World, 1791, iii. 28-31. GRAVES, RICHARD. Ode on caprice. -Scots Mag., li. 342-3. 1790 ANON. Ode to superstition.-See New Annual Register, 1790, pp. (160–62). BENTLEY, ELIZABETH. Ode to content. -Gent. Mag., lx. 1167-8. bef.1791 w. BLACKLOCK, THOMAS. Ode to Aurora. – Poems, Edin., 1793, pp. 200–201. ORAM, S. M. Ode to friendship. - Poems, 1794, pp. 24-8. 1791 ADNEY, THOMAS. Ode to health. - Europ. Mag., XX. 143-5. vi. 307 (Dec. 28, 1791). Whitsuntide.- Ib. 65–7. Christmas.- Ib. 69–71. Ode to reflection.- Ib. 97-9. Ode to meditation.- Ib. 143-7. 1791 W. 1834 p. COLERIDGE, S. T. Music. - Complete Poetical Works, ed. E. H. Coleridge, Oxford, 1912, i. 28. i. 1792 "ALBERT.” Verses written in midsummer. – Walker's Hibernian Mag., Aug., 1792, p. 183. Nov., p. 472. Cornwall, Bath, 1792, i. 30–31. shire, etc., i. 86-94. 376. 1792 w. SOUTHEY, ROBERT. To contemplation.-Works, 1837, ii. 132-4. 1792 w. 1895 p. COLERIDGE, S. T. To disappointment. - Works, 1912, i. 34. 1793 ANON. L'allegro. - The Looker-On, no. 53 (in British Essayists, Boston, U. S. A., 1857, xxxvi. 219-22). ROBINSON, MARY. Ode to hope. - Works, 1806, i. 164–7. bef.1794 w. BLAMIRE, SUSANNA. The farewell to affection. - Works, 1842, pp. 46-9. -The recall to affection.-Ib. 49-51. Hope. - Ib. 148–53. 1794 ANON. Ode to sleep.- Univ. Mag., xcv. 119-20. LOCKE, Miss. The visionary.- Gent. Mag., lxiv. 67-8. 1795 MOORE, HENRY. Private life.- Poems, 1803, pp. 144-53. PORTER, ANNA MARIA. Address to summer.-Univ. Mag., xcvi. 369. 1796 “CASTOR.” Ode to vengeance. - Europ. Mag., xxix. 201-2. COURTIER, PETER L. The triumph of freedom. – Poems, 1796, pp. 50-53. To night.-Ib. 56-61. Hibernian Mag., Sept., 1796, pp. 277-8. 1796 w. BOSCAWEN, WILLIAM. Ode iïi, For the anniversary meeting of subscribers to the literary fund. - Poems, 1801, pp. 39–45. J., E. S. To despondency.-Scots Mag,, lix. 841. SMYTH, WILLIAM. Ode to mirth.- English Lyrics, 3d ed., 1806, pp. 39-45. 1798 "AN ENGLISH JACOBIN.” Ode to Jacobinism.- Poetry of the Anti-Jacobin, ed. C. Edmonds, 2d ed., 1854, pp. 105-7. W., W. A. Ode to peacei - Hezekiah, King of Judah, 1798: see Mo. Rev., enl. , xxviii. 351. bef.1800 w. WARTON, JOSEPH. The temple of love. - Biographical Memoirs, ed. J. Wooll, 1806, pp. 91-5. 1800 WAKEFIELD, GILBERT. Address to peace.-Mo. Mag., X. 438. C. 1800 w. HARDINGE, GEORGE. To the winds. - Miscellaneous Works, 1818, ii. 173. C. 1800 W. 1807 p. WHITE, HENRY KIRKE. Thanatos. - Remains, ed. Southey, 5th ed., 1811, i. 363-4. Athanatos.- Ib. 364-5. 1801 ANON. Il luttuoso ed il gaudioso, il giocoso ed il diligente, 1801. PRESTON, WILLIAM. Hymn to old age.-A Collection of Poems (ed. Joshua Edkins), Dublin, 1801, pp. 305-10. tirement, Hereford, 1801, pp. 51–2. A lyric rhapsody.-Ib. 6-10. Ode to wisdom.- Ib. 97–101. "SENNED.” Greenwich park, or Whitsun Monday.-Europ. Mag., xli. 385-7. 1803 HOLLOWAY, WILLIAM. Adieu and recal to poetry.-Scenes of Youth, etc., 1803, pp. 131-49. W., J. Peace of mind.-Ib. 136. 1811, i. 35-8. To contemplation.- Ib. ii. 73-9. Ode to liberty.-Ib. iii. (1822), 114-16. 1804 DRAKE, NATHAN. To fancy. – Literary Hours, 3d ed., 1804, iii. 175-7. ELTON, C. A. The mistress.- Poems, 1804: see New Annual Register, 1804, pp. (266–7). To meditation; written near a Gothic church.-Ib. 72–3. 1804 RICHARDS, GEORGE. To autumn.– Poems, Oxford, 1804, ii. 33–6. To prosperity.- Ib. 64-6. 1805 ANON. Ode to spring.-Gent. Mag., lxxv. 559-60. RICHARDSON, WILLIAM. Address to meditation.- Poems and Plays, new ed., Edin., 1805, i. 11-13. Hymn to melancholy. — Ib. 79-86. Hymn to friendship. — Ib. 133-8. AUSTIN, W. Ode to amusement.- Europ. Mag., xlix. 373. lanies, ed. W. Beattie, 1838, i. 272. 1807 FIELD, BARRON. La ciriegia, an austere imitation of Milton's L'Allegro. — The News, March 20, 1807. 1808 C. (JOSIAH CONDERS?). To forgetfulness. – The Associate Minstrels, 2d ed., 1813, pp. 179-84. 1809 To cheerfulness.-Ib. 168–74. i. 155-6. 1810 w. STRUTHERS, JOHN. Lines for the 25th of January, 1810. - Works, 1850, ü. 199–200. 1811 -Stanzas for the anniversary of the birth of Burns. – The Winter Day, etc., Glasgow, 1811, pp. 93-6. 1812 DYER, GEORGE. On peace. – Poetics, 1812, i. 124–30. 1814 N., H. Ode to enthusiasm. – Mo. Mag., xxxvi. 522–3. Twiss, HORACE. Fashion, a paraphrase of L'Allegro.- Posthumous Paro dies, etc., 1814, pp. 3-12. 1818 BOWICK, JAMES. The genius of poetry, Montrose, 1818. 1820 KEATS, JOHN. Fancy.- Poems, ed. E. de Sélincourt, 2d ed., 1907, pp. 198–200. 1821 CLARE, JOHN. Solitude. – Poems, ed. A. Symons, 1908, pp. 75-84. 1822 WORDSWORTH, WILLIAM. To enterprise. - Poetical Works, ed. Knight, 1896, vi. 218–24. 1824 SHELLEY, P. B. To Jane: the invitation.Poetical Works, ed. Hutchinson, Oxford, 1904, pp. 748-9. 1825, i. 147. 1832 MOTHERWELL, WILLIAM. Melancholye. – Poetical Works, ed. James M'Conechy, Paisley, etc., 1881, pp. 67–70. 1825 BIBLIOGRAPHY III POEMS INFLUENCED BY THE REMAINING WORKS OF MILTON: 1737 w.? 3 A. POEMS INFLUENCED BY LYCIDAS 1729 BROWNE, MOSES. Eclogue v, Colin's despair, an imitation of Lycidas. Piscatory Eclogues, 1729, pp. 74-86. ii. 276–81. 1744 w. 1747 p. MASON, WILLIAM. Musæus, a monody (on) Pope, in imitation of Lycidas. - Works, 1811, i. 1-15. 1747 LYTTELTON, GEORGE, Lord. To the memory of a lady lately deceased, a monody, 1747; 1751 IMAGE, JOHN. “Ah me! the luckless chime.” – Acad. Cantab. Luctus in Obitum Frederici ... Walliae Principis, Camb., 1751, X. 1753 WERGE, JOHN. An irregular ode on the death of Charles Broome.-Collec tion of Poems, Stamford, 1753, pp. 51-4. 1755 HALLIDAY, Dr. Brutus, a monody to the memory of (William] Bruce, 1755. -See Mo. Rev., xiv. 351-6. 1759 POTTER, ROBERT. Kymber, a monody, 1759. 1763 Scott, James. The redemption, a monody, Camb., 1763. 1765 W. 1770 p. Bi CE, MICHAEL. Daphnis, a monody.-Works, ed. Grosart, Edin., 1865, pp. 230–34. 1767 SCOTT, JAMES. The vanity of human life, a monody, 1767. C. 1769 w. SEWARD, ANNA. Monody on Mrs. Richard Vyse. - Works, Edin., 1810, i. 104-7. 1771 w. ANON. Ode on the death of Gray.-Works of Gray, with Memoirs by William Mason, 1827, pp. 434-5. 1774 Anon. Monody (on) Mr. Cholwell, in imitation of Lycidas, 1774. 1777 MAURICE, THOMAS. Monody (on) Elizabeth, duchess of Northumberland. - Poems, Epistolary, Lyric, etc., 1800, pp. 109–15. WARTON, THOMAS (the younger). Monody, written near Stratford upon Avon.- Works, ed. Mant, Oxford, 1802, i. 63–7. 1778 ANON. A monody (after the manner of Lycidas) on Mr. Linley, 1778. – See Crit. Rev., xlvi. 316. 1779 PRATT, S. J. The shadows of Shakespeare, a monody (on) Garrick, 2d ed., Bath, 1780 (?). -Gent. Mag., xlix. 608; also lv. 56. 1785 w. DERMODY, THOMAS. Corydon, a monody. – Life, with Original Poetry, by J. G. Raymond, 1806, i. 6-9. 1786 DAMER, JOHN. Elegy on the death of a lady.- New Foundling Hospital for Wit, new ed., 1786, i. 254-8. 1790 “WARTOPHILUS." On Mr. (Thomas) Warton.-Gent. Mag., lx. 648-9. 1790 W. 1794 P. COLERIDGE, S. T. Monody on Chatterton.-Works, ed. E. H. Coleridge, Oxford, 1912, i. 13-15, 125-31. 1 Except sonnets: cf. Bibliography IV. : 1743-6 STILLINGFLEET, BENJAMIN. Monody (on] Lord Henry Spenser: MS. in the British Museum. Not seen. 3 1762 LAMBE, THOMAS. (?) Lycidas, a masque, 1762. Not seen. 1791 BOWLES, W. L. Monody, written at Matlock, Salisbury, 1791. CARR, W.W. The muse, a monody (on) Shenstone. - Poems, 1791, pp. 1-28. 1791, PP. 129-47. 1855, i. 135-41. 1834 Roscoe, W. S. Monody.- Poems, 1834, pp. 40–48. 1850 FANE, JULIAN. Monody on the queen dowager.- Poems which have ob tained the Chancellor's Gold Medal, Camb., 1860, pp. 293-300. 1919 O'BRIEN, KATHLEEN. Mary Jane, ex-munition worker, demobilized, speaks. - Littell's Living Age, cccii. 188. Monodies that owe little or nothing to Lycidas except the name were written by Edmund Smith (Thales, a Monody in imitation of Spenser, 1751, composed before 1710); Thomas Blacklock (Poems, 1754, pp. 107-124); Thomas Denton (1755, Dodsley's Miscellany, 1758, v. 226-38); anonymous writers, Scots Mag. (1758, 1815), xx. 20, lxxvii. 536, and Mo. Mirror (1797), iv. 108–9, 177-8; John Langhorne (1759–69, Chalmers's English Poets, xvi. 432, 458, 459); John Hoole (on Mrs. Woffington, 1760); anonymous authors (on George II, 1760, and the Duke of Cumberland, 1765); Cuthbert Shaw (on a "young lady," 1768, and to a nightingale, 1770); R. B. Sheridan and William Meyler (both on Garrick, 1779, and see Poetical Amusements near Bath, 1781, iv. 75-9); Anna Seward (on Garrick and André, 1781, Works, 1810, ii. 15-17, 68– 88); G. D. Harley (on John Henderson of Covent Garden theater, 1786); “Della Crusca" (Poetry of the World, 1788, i. 76-9); Andrew M'Donald (Miscellaneous Works, 1791, pp. 52-4); “R. B. Sheridan?)” and W. H. Reid (1791, Scots Mag., liii. 339, 444-5), and "H.” (on James Grahame, 1811, ib. lxxiii. 934); Joseph Cottle (on John Henderson of Bristol, in Cottle's Poems, Bristol, 1795); Richard Polwhele (Poetic Trifes, 1796, pp. 23-6); William Roscoe (1796, Currie's edition of Burns, 1800, i. 33742); George Dyer (Poems, 1802, i. 110, ii. 229); John Leyden (1802, from the Arabic, Poetical Remains, 1819, pp. 233-9); John Thelwall (on the Princess Charlotte, 1817, Poetical Recreations, 1822, pp. 48-9), and a broadside on Princess Charlotte, signed “M.” (1817); Mrs. Robinson (Works, 1806, i. 56, 246, iii. 53); Joseph Blackett (Kirke White's Remains, 1811, i. 311-14); W.H. Ireland (on William Cavendish, 1811); W. A. Bryson (Poems, Dublin, 1812, pp. 59-65); Byron (on Sheridan, 1816); John Taylor (1817 and 1821, Poems, 1827, ii. 225-6, 235); F. Mayne (Poems, Dover, 1818, pp. 5-13); William Beattie (on Campbell, 1844); Ebenezer Elliott (on Keats, in Elliott's Works, 1876, ii. 182–3). See also Bibl. I, 1757 (Andrews), 1786 (Knipe), 1787 (anon.), 1801 (Dyer), 1806 (Thelwall). I have not seen Richard Rolt's monody on the Prince of Wales (1751), or the anonymous ones mentioned in the Critical Review, xxviii. 71 (1769), xxxi. 74 (1771), lvii. 153 (1784), or those on a young lady who died at Bath (Bath, 1778) and J. P. Kemble (1823), or T. Harral's on John Palmer (1798), Dennis Lawler's on the Duc d'Enghien (1804), Edward Rushton's on Burns (Rushton's Poems, 1806), Lady Champion de Crespigny's on Lord Collingwood (1810), Thomas Gent's on Sheridan (1816), C. A. Elton's on his two sons (The Brothers, 1820), James Davies's on an officer in the East India service (1844), "J. D.'s” on a brother (Halifax, undated), or William Beattie's on the death of his wife (1845). B. POEMS INFLUENCED BY COMUS 1647 1738 1742 BARON, ROBERT. Erotopaignion, or the Cyprian academy, 1648. - Dodsley's Miscellany, 1748, ii. 107–68. |