Poems
A selection of poems notable for frequency of appearance, significance to their miscellany context, or meta-reflection on the subject of compiling a poetry book
Displaying 51–75 poems out of 193 total
First Line | Author | Description | Manuscripts |
---|---|---|---|
Hark! my gay friend, that solemn toll | Hubert Stogdon | Elegy [Death, afterlife]. Transcribed from Stogdon, Hubert, "The Unknown World." Poems and letters of the late Reverend Mr. Hubert Stogdon, Collected from His Original Papers, 1729, pp. 10–13. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0111861595. |
10 |
Has not my Friend transported run | Cuthbert Wilson | Occasional (Presentation of gift book) [Friendship; Literature]. Transcribed from Beinecke Osborn c193. |
1 |
Hear all you Friends to Knighthood | Philip Dormer Stanhope | Ballad [Humour]. Transcribed from "On Sir W— M—n, Knight of the Bath, loosing his Badge of the Order." Miscellaneous poems, by several hands... 1729, pp. 206–208. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0110619696. |
8 |
Heav'n first taught letters for some wretch's aid | Alexander Pope | Epistle [Love]. Transcribed from Pope, Alexander, "Popeana. Letters." The altar of love... vol. 2, 1727, p. 19. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0111079145. |
3 |
Here lies Father & Mother, & Sister and I | John Godfrey | Epitaph [Family]. Transcribed from "Nettlebed, Oxfordshire." Select and remarkable epitaphs on illustrious and other persons, in several parts of Europe... vol. 2, 1757, p. 202. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0102442998. |
3 |
Here lies poor Johnson: reader have a care, | Soame Jenyns | Epitaph. Transcribed from 'On Dr. Johnson. Said to be written by Soame Jenyns Esqre." Brotherton Lt. 99, p. 114. Brotherton Library, University of Leeds. |
5 |
His Time was quick, his Touch was neat | [Anonymous] | Epigram [Humour; Music, song, opera]. Transcribed from "On a Music and Dancing Master..." The Brittanic magazine..., vol. 9 , [1793–1807], p. 332. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0125863368. |
3 |
How are thy servants blest, O Lord! | Joseph Addison | Ballad; Hymn [Death, afterlife; Devotional writing, religious belief; Nature; Travel]. Transcribed from A Select collection of modern poems. By the most eminent hands. Viz. Milton. Mr. Prior.... 2nd ed., 1750, pp. 191–192. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CB0130548092. |
3 |
How gaily is at first begun | Anne Kingsmill Finch | Elegy [Illness; Death, afterlife]. Transcribed from "The Progress of Life." Secret memoirs and manners of several persons of quality... From the New Atalantis... Delariviere Manley, 1709, pp. 169–171. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CB0128106258. |
5 |
How sleep the Brave, who sink to Rest | William Collins | Ode [Death, afterlife]. Transcribed from Collins, William. "Ode Written in the beginning of the Year 1746." Odes on several descriptive and allegorical subjects, 1747, p. 19. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0115231278. |
5 |
I am monarch of all I survey | William Cowper | Lyric [Solitude, loneliness, retirement; Historical subjects; Devotional writing, religious belief] Transcribed from Cowper, William, "Verses, supposed to be written by Alexander Selkirk, during his solitary Abode in the Island of Juan Fernandez." Poems by William Cowper, of the Inner Temple, Esq., 1782, pp. 305–308. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0113895452. |
7 |
I Ask not Wit, nor Beauty do I crave | Arabella Morton | Prayer [Women; Courtship, marriage; Domestic life]. Usually accompanied by Hervey's Answer, "Nature, perversly to your wish, has given..." Transcribed from "The Wish of Miss M—n, Daughter to the Lord L— M—." The gentleman's miscellany, In Verse and Prose... ed. Sir Butterfly Maggot, 1730, p. 43. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0117223459. |
3 |
I heard the Sisters of the Sacred Well | Charles Yorke | Occasional (complimenting the book's compiler) [Literature; Classical themes; Love] Transcribed from Leeds Brotherton Lt 119, pp. 101–102. |
1 |
I Hold for faith | Epigram; Satire [Humour, wordplay; Public affairs; Satire - religious]. Transcribed from "The Catholic," The first part of miscellany poems. Containing variety of new translations of the ancient poets: together with several original poems. By the most eminent hands. Publish'd by Mr. Dryden, 1716, p. 403. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CB0132026648. Please note the first line in this miscellany is "I hold as faith," but it has been replaced with the more common "I hold for faith" on this database for easy identification in manuscript verse miscellanies. |
5 | |
I love thee, mournful sober-suited night | Charlotte Turner Smith | Sonnet [Nature]. Transcribed from Smith, Charlotte Turner. "Sonnet." Emmeline, the orphan of the castle. By Charlotte Smith. In four volumes, vol. 4, 1788, p. 147. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0110676128. |
2 |
I love with all my heart/ The Tory party here | Epigram; Satire [Public affairs; Satire - political; Humour, wordplay]. This poem is frequently titled "The Ambodexter" because it can be read two ways (with antithetical meanings). Note: This record only accounts for this particular version of the poem. Other variants (such as, "I love with all my heart/ The loyal party here...") are also popular with manuscript verse miscellany compilers. |
6 | |
I took Pen, Ink, and Paper too | Robert Beere | Occasional (concluding the manuscript book) [Literature], original. Transcribed from Huntington MS 106, p. 369. |
1 |
I'm [not] High-Church, nor Low-church, nor Tory, nor Whig | [Anonymous] | Satire [Public affairs; Satire - political]. Transcribed from S. H., "To all whom it may concern to know me, Greeting." Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal, no. 2, p. 3, 1728. Burney Newspapers Collection, GALE|Z2001494968. |
7 |
I'm a strange composition as e'er was in nature | Elizabeth Amherst Thomas | Riddle [Women]. Transcribed from Thomas, Elizabeth Amherst. "A Prize Riddle on Herself when 24." Eighteenth-Century Women Poets. ed. Roger Lonsdale, Oxford University Press, 1990, p. 180. |
3 |
If this fair rose offend thy sight | William Somervile | Epigram [Love; Public affairs; Humour, wordplay]. Transcribed from Somervile, William. "Lines supposed to have been written in the 15th century, by the Duke of Clarence ... of the House of York, and sent, with a Rose, to Lady Eliza Beauchamp, daughter to the Duke of Somerset..." Select epigrams. In two volumes... vol. 2, 1797, pp. 94–95. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0114976089. |
7 |
If you by Theft, this Book should take | Benjamin Coles | Prologue [Literature; Conduct, morality]; original. Transcribed from Leeds Brotherton Lt 53. |
1 |
Immortal Newton never spoke | Panegyric; Imitation (of "The old Egyptians hid their Wit...") [Visual Arts; Celebrities]. Transcribed from "On Mr Nash's Present of His Own Picture at Full Length, Fixt between the Basto's of Mr Pope, and Sir if. Newton, in the Room at Bath." The Gentleman's Magazine: and historical chronicle, vol. 11, February 1741, p. 102. ProQuest, [ProQuest document ID:] 8423994. |
5 | |
Imprimis---my departed shade I trust | Mary Leapor | Occasional; Epitaph [Death, afterlife]. Transcribed from Leapor, Mary. Poems upon several occasions, 1748, pp. 8–10. Eighteenth Century Collections Online, GALE|CW0110271895. |
2 |
In Charles the Second’s Golden Days | [Anonymous] | Parody [Public affairs; Drinking, tobacco]. Transcribed from The vicar of bray, 1714. ProQuest, [ProQuest document ID:] 2240931670. |
4 |
In earliest times, ere man had learn'd | Charles Yorke | Ode [Literature; Classical themes]. Transcribe from Yorke, Charles. "Stanzas, in the manner of Waller: occasioned by a Receipt to make Ink, given to the Author by a Lady." The Gentleman's Magazine: And Historical Chronicle, vol. 40, January 1770, p. 39. British Periodicals, ProquestID: 8304960. |
2 |