TY - BOOK AU - Bredvold,Louis I. TI - Eighteenth century poetry & prose, AV - PR1134 .B7 1956 U1 - 820.82 PY - 1956///] CY - New York PB - Ronald Press Co. KW - English literature KW - 18th century KW - Littérature anglaise KW - 18e siècle KW - Anthologies KW - Prosa KW - swd KW - Versdichtung KW - Englisch KW - Anthologie N1 - Bibliography: p. 1263-1270; from Hudibras; A politician; A bumpkin or country-squire; A latitudinarian; A fanatic; A play-writer; Samuel Butler --; from The diary; Samuel Pepys --; A satire against mankind; John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester --; To my honor'd friend, Sir Robert Howard; To my honor'd friend, Dr. Charleton; John Dryden --; Songs; from Tyrannic love; from Marriage a-la-mode; from The Spanish fryar; John Dryden --; Prologue to The tempest; Epilogue to the second part of The conquest of Granada by the Spaniards; Prologue to Aureng-Zebe; Absalom and Achitophel; The medal : a satire against sedition; Mac Flecknoe; Religio Laici; To the memory of Mr. Oldham; To the pious memory of the accomplish'd young lady, Mrs. Anne Killigrew; The hind and the panther : the first part; A song for St. Cecilia's Day, 1687; Lines printed under the engraved portrait of Milton, in Tonson's folio edition of the "Paradise lost", 1688; To my dear friend Mr. Congreve, on his comedy call'd The doubledealer; Alexander's feast, or, The power of music : an ode in honour of St. Cecilia's Day, 1697; An essay of dramatic poesy; John Dryden --; Of poetry; Sir William Temple --; The choice; John Pomfret --; To a lady : she refusing to continue a dispute with me; To a child of quality five years old; An English padlock; A simile; To Cloe weeping; An ode; Cloe jealous; A better answer (to Cloe jealous); An epitaph; Matthew Prior --; To the echo : in a clear night upon astrop walks; The bird; The tree; To the nightingale; A nocturnal reverie; Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea --; from An essay on projects; A true relation of the apparition of Mrs. Veal; Daniel DeFoe --; Baucis and Philemon; A description of the morning; A description of a city shower; On Stella's birthday; Stella's birthday, March 13, 1726-27; The beasts' confessions to the priest; Verses on the death of Dr. Swift; The day of judgment; from A tale of a tub; from The battle of the books [episode of The spider and the bee]; Against the abolishing of Christianity in England; Gulliver's travels, part IV; A modest proposal; Jonathan Swift --; The tatler, Nos. 1, 21; The spectator [selections]; Richard Steele and Joseph Addison --; To the Earl of Warwick on the death of Mr. Addison; Colin and Lucy; Thomas Tickell --; The splendid shilling : an imitation of Milton; John Philips --; To Miss Charlotte Pulteney, in her mother's arms; Ambrose Philips; Verses on the prospect of planting arts and learning in America; George Berkeley --; An inquiry concerning virtue or merit; from Miscellany III; The apostrophe to nature, from The moralists; Anthony Ashley Cooper, Third Earl of Shaftesbury --; The grumbling hive, or, Knaves turned honest; from The fable of the bees : an enquiry into the origin of moral virtue; Bernard Mandeville --; Summer : the second pastoral, or, Alexis; An essay on criticism (pt. I,II, III); The rape of the lock; Elegy : to the memory of an unfortunate lady; Eloïsa to Abelard; An essay on man; The universal prayer; Moral essays; Epistle IV, Of the use of riches : to Richard Boyle, Earl of Burlington; Alexander Pope --; Epistle to Dr. Arbuthnot; The first Epistle of the second book of Horace : to Augustus; The Dunciad, Book I; The guardian, No. 173; Preface to the works of Shakespeare; Alexander Pope --; On a miscellany of poems; John Gay --; The shepherd's week; Thursday, or, The spell; Friday, or, The dirge; Saturday, or, The flights; John Gay --; from trivia, or, The art of walking the streets of London, from Book II; John Gay --; Sweet William's farewell to black-eyed susan; To a lady on her passion for old China; Song; John Gay --; A hymn to contentment; When thy beauty appears (song); A night piece on death; My days have been so wondrous free (song) / Thomas Parnell --; The young laird and Edinburgh Katy; Katy's answer; The poet's wish : an ode; An thou were my ain thing; Sang; Allan Ramsay; The ballad of Sally in our alley; Henry Carey --; The braces of Yarrow; William Hamilton of Bangour --; Grongar Hill; John Dyer --; A poem sacred to the memory of Sir Isaac Newton; Hymn on solitude; from The seasons (winter); A hymn on the seasons; Rule, Britannia!; The castle of indolence; James Thomson --; The spleen; Matthew Green --; The day of judgment; The hazard of loving the creatures; Crucifixion to the world by the cross of Christ; A prospect of heaven makes death easy; Man frail and God eternal; A cradle hymn; Isaac Watts --; Wrestling Jacob; In temptation; Charles Wesley --; The complaint, or, Night thoughts : night I; Edward Young --; The grave; Robert Blair --; The pleasures of imagination : book I; Mark Akenside --; The schoolmistress; Written at an inn at Henley; Slender's ghost; Inscription : on a tablet against a root-house; Inscription : On the back of a Gothic seat; William Shenstone --; The enthusiast, or, The lover of nature; Ode I, To fancy; Joseph Warton --; The pleasures of melancholy; The crusade; Sonnet III, written in a blank leaf of Dugdale's Monasticon; Sonnet IV, written at Stonehenge; Sonnet VIII, On King Arthur's round table at Winchester; Thomas Warton the Younger --; A song from Shakespeare's Cymbeline; Ode to pity; Ode to fear; Ode to simplicity; Ode on the poetical character; Ode : written in the beginning of the year 1746; Ode to evening; The passions : an ode for music; Ode on the death of Mr. Thomson; Ode on the popular superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland; William Collins --; Sonnet on the death of Mr. Richard West; Ode on a distant prospect of Eton College; Hymn to adversity; Elegy written in a country churchyard; Stanzas to Mr. Bentley; The progress of poesy : a Pindaric ode; The bard : a Pindaric ode; The fatal sisters; The descent of Odin : an ode from the Norse tongue; Letters; Thomas Gray --; from The life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D.; James Boswell --; Prologue spoken by Mr. Garrick, Drury Lane, 1747; The vanity of human wishes; Lines written in ridicule of certain poems published in 1777; On the death of Mr. Robert Levet; The rambler, No. 4; The idler, nos. 60 and 61; The history of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia; Samuel Johnson --; A song to David; Christopher Smart --; Carthon, a poem; James Macpherson; The prophecy of famine : a Scots pastoral; Charles Churchill --; Letters; Horace Walpole --; The traveller, or, A prospect of society; Song; The deserted village; Retaliation; Asem, an Eastern tale; A reverie at the Boar's Head Tavern in Eastcheap; Letters from a citizen of the world, nos. 4, 11, 13, 26, 27, 30, 71, 72, 119; Essay on the theatre, or, A comparison between sentimental and laughing comedy; Oliver Goldsmith --; Ode to the cuckoo; Michael Bruce --; The minstrel, or, The progress of genius (The first book); James Beattie --; The flowers of the forest; Jane Elliot --; Bristowe tragedie; Mynstrelles songe; An excelente balade of charitie; Thomas Chatterton --; Olney Hymns; Praise for the fountain opened; Walking with God; Light shining out of darkness; The happy change; William Cowper --; The shrubbery; Addressed to a young lady; The diverting history of John Gilpin; The poplar-field; William Cowper --; The task; Book three, The garden; Book IV, The winter evening; William Cowper --; On the receipt of my mother's picture out of Norfolk; To Mary; The castaway; Letters; William Cowper --; The holy fair; Address to the deil; The Cotter's Saturday night; To a mouse; To a mountain daisy; Epistle of John Lapraik, an old Scottish bard; A bard's epitaph; To the Rev. John M'Math; Holy Willie's prayer; Address to the Unco Guid, or the rigidly righteous; The jolly beggars; Tam O'Shanter; Green grow the rashes; Of a' the airts; John Anderson my Jo; Highland Mary; Thou lingering star; Afton water; Ae fond kiss; Duncan Gray; A red, red rose; Auld lang syne; Ye banks and braes; Go fetch to me a pint o' wine; For a' that and a' that; Scots wha hae; O, wert thou in the cauld blast; Robert Burns --; The village (book I); The parish register, from part III : Burials; George Crabbe --; Letters; Junius --; from Reflection on the revolution in France; A letter from the right Hon. Edmund Burke to a noble lord; Edmund Burke --; from The rights of man; Thomas Paine; from Poetical sketches; How sweet I roamed from field to field (song); To the evening star; My silks and fine array (song); I love the jocund dance (song); Memory, hither come (song); Mad song; Fresh from the dewy hill, the merry year (song); To the muses; William Blake --; from Songs of innocence; Introduction; The shepherd; The echoing green; The lamb; The little black boy; The chimney-sweeper; Laughing song; A cradle song; The divine image; Holy Thursday; Nurse's songs; Infant joy; William Blake --; from Songs of experience; Introduction; Earth's answer; The clod and the pebble; Holy Thursday; The chimney-sweeper; Nurse's song; The sick rose; The fly; The angel; The tiger; Ah! Sunflower; London; The human abstract; Infant sorrow; To Tirzah; William Blake --; The book of Thel; The French revolution : book the first; The marriage of heaven and hell; A song of liberty; Auguries of innocence; Mock on, mock on, Voltaire, Rousseau; from Milton; William Blake; Supplement : further readings; The life and genuine character of Dean Swift; Gulliver's travel, part II; Jonathan Swift --; The spectator, nos. 10, 519; Richard Steele and Joseph Addison --; The Dunciad, book IV; Alexander Pope --; Conjectures on original composition; Edward Young --; Jubilate Agno; Christopher Smart --; A philosophical inquiry into the origin of our ideas of the sublime and beautiful; Edmund Burke --; The seventh discourse (with Blake's notes); Sir Joshua Reynolds UR - http://www.archive.org/details/eighteenthcentur00bred UR - http://www.openlibrary.org/books/OL6198896M ER -