London, Middlesex
Beinecke Osborn c162
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1701-1730 |
Archive | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
Anonymous, ca. 1710s.
3 items.
The first poem is a mock-heroic that praises the women of Stepney and Mile End, and the second and third respond to the first.
Beinecke Osborn c193
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1761-1790 , 1791-1820 |
Archive | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
Stephen Barrett, 1770-1794.
Gift from Cuthbert Wilson with a presentation poem.
45 items.
Original poems in Latin and English, mostly by Barrett, including school exercises; translations by Barrett of early modern and eighteenth-century English poems into Latin.
Beinecke Osborn c341
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1761-1790 , 1791-1820 |
Archive | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
Anne Blandford, 1791 and later.
114 poems, mostly occasional.
Mostly verses by Hannah More and her circle.
Beinecke Osborn fc132
Title | Poems on Several Occasions; Collected from D [...] |
---|---|
Period | 1761-1790 , 1791-1820 |
Archive | Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
James Forbes, 1766–1800.
This entry concerns only the first volume, as the second is entirely prose.
151 poems.
Poems on various subjects, including many on death and women, but also conduct, retirement, nature, and slavery.
Bodleian MS Eng. poet. c. 9
Title | Miscellanies |
---|---|
Period | 1731-1760 |
Archive | Bodleian Library |
Thomas Phillibrown, 1740–1757.
Divided into sections according to odd and even numbered pages.
152 poems.
Very London oriented (Public affairs, local interest, celebrities).
Reflects a mid-century coterie centering around John Hawkins and Moses Browne.
Bodleian MS Eng. poet. e. 111
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1791-1820 |
Archive | Bodleian Library |
Reginald Heber, ca. 1788–1789.
Very plain book.
18 poems.
Commemoration of people and events in the Brent River area.
Bodleian MS Eng. poet. e. 28
Title | A Collection of Poems by various Hands, but [...] |
---|---|
Period | 1761-1790 |
Archive | Bodleian Library |
Eleanor Peart, 1768.
Organized chronologically and thematically.
182 poems.
A high proportion of original poetry; strong emphasis on the pastoral including the use of pastoral pseudonyms.
Bodleian MS Eng. poet. e. 40
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1731-1760 , 1761-1790 |
Archive | Bodleian Library |
Gabriel Lepipre, ca. 1750.
246 poems.
Good example of miscellany as autobiography; also includes lots of epitaphs.
British Library Add. MS 59656
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1761-1790 , 1791-1820 |
Archive | British Library |
Tickell family, 1787–ca. 1828.
35 poems.
Poems about love, friendship, and artistic pursuits, as well as commemorative poems about deaths in the family.
Clark MS 1956.002
Title | A Poetical Miscellany. In two parts. /by S. [...] |
---|---|
Period | 1761-1790 |
Archive | Clark Library |
Samuel Greatheed, 1772–1773.
24 poems.
A good example of a miscellany by one author/compiler; includes some imitations and translations.
Folger MS M.a.104
Title | A Collection of Poems by Several Hands |
---|---|
Period | 1701-1730 |
Archive | Folger Shakespeare Library |
Charles Plumptre ca. 1730.
79 poems.
Includes school exercises; some poems possibly from friendship circle that includes John Hoadly and Isaac Hawkins Brown; could be connected with Newcombe’s school in Hackney; satires on women; poems by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.
Folger MS M.a.15
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1761-1790 |
Archive | Folger Shakespeare Library |
Associated with Penelope Judith Maitland, daughter of Col. Maitland
30 poems.
Attention to aesthetic features; themes of friendship, sentimental love, poverty, despair and hope.
Folger MS M.a.174
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1701-1730 |
Archive | Folger Shakespeare Library |
Anonymous, 1724–1728.
109 poems.
Almost entirely early eighteenth-century poetry. Many contemporary satirical pieces, and items from Mist's Weekly Journal.
Folger MS W.a.103
Title | Ballads &c Vol. I |
---|---|
Period | 1731-1760 |
Archive | Folger Shakespeare Library |
Anonymous, ca. 1735.
15 poems.
Lots of ballads.
Houghton MS Eng 926
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1761-1790 , 1791-1820 |
Archive | Houghton Library |
Charlotte Burney Francis Broome, 1771–ca. 1806.
82 poems.
Mostly original poetry by members of the Burney family with themes of family, courtship/marriage, and death.
Huntington MS 82623
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1701-1730 , 1731-1760 |
Archive | Huntington Library |
Anonymous, 1724–1729, with additional items copied in the 1690s and early 1730s.
A book bound subsequent to copying.
115 poems.
Contains a Historical Dialogue in Scripture, as well as addresses, ballads, epigrams, epitaphs, extracts, poems and verses. Interest in literary celebrities like Pope and Swift.
Leeds Brotherton Lt 104
Title | Poems of various kinds by the late Revd. Pet [...] |
---|---|
Period | 1731-1760 , 1761-1790 |
Archive | Brotherton Library |
Anonymous compilation of poems by Peter Pinnell, ca. 1749–1790.
59 items.
Example of a one-author collection followed by a short section of poems by different authors.
Leeds Brotherton Lt 119
Title | Untitled |
---|---|
Period | 1731-1760 |
Archive | Brotherton Library |
Mary Capell, ca. 1740–1751.
Verso pages are filled with explanatory notes identifying people and places from the poems.
87 items.
Political satire, love poems; poems about poetry (writing, collection, gifts of poetry), the arts, and prologues and epilogues.
The final section of poems seems to be associated with the Yorke-Grey coterie.
Leeds Brotherton Lt 12
Title | Miscellany Poems 1728 |
---|---|
Period | 1701-1730 , 1731-1760 , 1761-1790 |
Archive | Brotherton Library |
George Scott, 1728–1779.
Consecutive hands (George Scott is the second hand) seemingly linked by a Miss Verney who becomes Mrs. Bowes, then a Miss Bowes in part two.
99 items.
The first section contains quite a few poems by women; the second half sees a shift to copying newspaper items, many of which are attributed.
Title | Regions | Description | Manuscripts |
---|---|---|---|
Mist's Weekly Journal |
Essay periodical. 1725–1728. |
1 | |
Public Advertiser |
Newspaper. 1752–1793. |
4 | |
Gentleman's Magazine |
Magazine. 1731–1907. ed. Edward Cave, David Henry. |
17 | |
Spectator |
Essay periodical. 1711–1712. ed. Joseph Addison and Richard Steele. |
11 | |
Grub Street Journal |
Essay periodical. 1730–1737. ed. John Martyn, Alexander Russel. |
2 | |
Miscellanies in Prose and Verse |
Anthology. 1731–1732. Jonathan Swift, Alexander Pope, John Gay. |
2 | |
English Chronicle, and Whitehall Evening Post |
Newspaper. 1802–1843. |
0 | |
Morning Herald |
Newspaper. 1786–1869. |
3 | |
General Advertiser |
Newspaper. 1744–1752. |
2 | |
General Evening Post |
Newspaper. 1733–1832. |
3 | |
Daily Courant |
Newspaper. 1702–1735. |
1 | |
Ladies Magazine |
Magazine. 1749-1753. |
0 | |
Collection of Poems by Several Hands |
Anthology. 1748-58. ed. Robert Dodsley. |
5 | |
Old Whig or Consistent Protestant |
Newspaper. 1735–1738. |
1 | |
London Magazine |
Magazine. 1732–1783. ed. Isaac Kimber, Edward Kimber. |
6 | |
Lady's Curiosity or Weekly Apollo |
Newspaper. 1738. ed. Nestor Druid, Gent. |
1 | |
Universal Spectator |
Essay periodical. 1728–1746. |
3 | |
The Royal Westminster Journal and London Political Miscellany |
Essay periodical. 1760. |
0 | |
London Daily Advertiser |
Newspaper. 1751–1753. |
1 | |
Morning Chronicle |
Newspaper. 1789–1865. |
3 | |
Miscellaneous Poems, by several hands |
Anthology. 1730. ed. D. Lewis. |
1 | |
St. James's Chronicle |
Newspaper. 1761–1899. |
5 | |
Lintott's Miscellany |
Anthology. 1712. ed. Barnaby Bernard Lintott. |
4 | |
Tatler |
Essay periodical. 1709–1711. ed. Richard Steele. |
3 | |
Daily Gazetteer |
Newspaper. 1735–1745. |
2 | |
Female Spectator |
Essay periodical. 1744–1746. ed. Eliza Haywood. |
0 | |
The Whitehall Evening-Post |
Newspaper. 1700–1802. |
2 | |
Times |
Newspaper. 1788–present. |
2 | |
Sun |
Newspaper. 1792–1871. |
1 | |
London Chronicle |
Newspaper. 1765–1823. |
3 | |
Critical Review |
Essay periodical. 1756–1817. ed. Tobias George Smollett. |
4 | |
Christian's Magazine |
Magazine. 1760–1767. ed. William Dodd. |
2 | |
British Apollo |
Essay periodical. 1708–1711. |
0 | |
British Magazine |
Magazine. 1746–1751; 1760–1767. |
1 | |
Female Tatler |
Essay periodical. 1709–1710. ed. B. Bragge. |
0 | |
London Journal |
Essay periodical. 1720–1735. |
0 | |
Observator |
Essay periodical. 1702–1712. |
0 | |
Westminster Magazine |
Magazine. 1773–1785. |
0 | |
Court Miscellany, or Ladies New Magazine |
Magazine. 1765–1771. |
0 | |
Freeholder's |
Magazine. 1769–1771. |
0 | |
Court and City |
Essay periodical. 1770–1771. |
0 | |
Covent Garden, or Amorous Repository |
Essay periodical. 1772–1774. |
0 | |
Every Man's Magazine |
Magazine. 1771–1773. |
0 | |
Monthly Review |
Essay periodical. 1749–1845. |
2 | |
New Universal Magazine |
Magazine. 1751–1759. |
1 | |
Royal Magazine, or Gentleman's Monthly Companion |
Magazine. 1759–1771. |
0 | |
Sentimental Magazine |
Magazine. 1773–1777. |
0 | |
Town and Country Magazine |
Magazine. 1769–1796. |
1 | |
Universal Magazine |
Magazine. 1747–1803. |
3 | |
Universal Museum |
Essay periodical. 1762–1772. |
0 | |
Laugh and be fat: or, an antidote against melancholy |
Anthology. 1710, 1724. |
2 | |
Lady's Magazine; or Entertaining Companion for the Fairer Sex |
Magazine. 1770–1847. |
2 | |
Elegant Extracts |
Anthology. 1784, 1789. |
3 | |
Annual Register |
Essay periodical. 1758–present ed. Edmund Burke (1758-[1790s]) |
2 | |
Museum: or, The literary and historical register |
Essay periodical. 1746–1747. ed. Robert Dodsley. |
0 | |
New miscellany: being a collection of pieces of poetry from Bath, Tunbridge, Oxford, Epsom |
Anthology. 1725. T. Warner. |
0 | |
Monthly Magazine |
Magazine. 1796–1843. ed. Dr. John Aikin. |
1 | |
British Spy, or, New Universal London Weekly Journal |
Essay periodical. 1752–1799. |
1 | |
London Packet, or, New Lloyd's Evening Post |
Newspaper. 1772–1836. |
1 | |
Craftsman, or Say's Weekly Journal |
Essay periodical. 1758–1810. |
3 | |
Baldwin's London Weekly Journal |
Newspaper. ca. 1769–1836. |
1 | |
World |
Newspaper. 1753–1756. |
2 | |
Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser |
Newspaper. 1764–1796. |
3 | |
Owen's Weekly Chronicle |
Newspaper. 1758–1770. |
1 | |
Middlesex Journal and Evening Advertiser |
Newspaper. 1773–1778. |
1 | |
Hymns and Spiritual Songs |
Anthology. 1707. Isaac Watts. |
1 | |
Public Ledger |
Newspaper. 1761–1799. |
1 | |
City Mercury |
Newspaper. 1691–1[ ]. |
0 | |
Help to Elocution |
Anthology. 1780. |
1 | |
Collection of the Most Esteemed Pieces of Poetry... |
Anthology. 1767. Moses Mendez. |
1 | |
Reliques of Ancient English Poetry |
Anthology. 1767, 1775, 1794. Thomas Percy. |
2 | |
Anecdotes, &c. Antient & Modern |
Anthology. 1790. James Pettit Andrews. |
1 | |
Northern Antiquities |
Anthology. 1770. Paul Henri Mallet. |
1 | |
London Gazette |
Newspaper. 1666– Edward Jones. |
1 | |
Intelligencer |
Newspaper. 1663–1665. |
1 | |
British Journal |
Essay periodical. 1722–1731. F. Peele. |
1 | |
Morning Post and Daily Advertiser |
Newspaper. 1775–1792. W. Griffin. |
1 | |
Flowers of Literature |
Anthology. 1801–1829. Francis William Blagdon. |
1 | |
Miscellany Poems |
Anthology. 1684, 1716. John Dryden. |
2 | |
Marvell's Miscellaneous Poems |
Anthology. 1681. Andrew Marvell. |
1 | |
New Foundling Hospital for Wit |
Anthology. 1784. |
1 | |
Guardian |
Essay periodical. March–October 1713. Founded by Richard Steele. |
2 | |
Poor Robin's Almanack |
Almanac. 1663. |
2 | |
Select Beauties of Ancient English Poetry |
Anthology. 1787. Henry Headley. |
1 | |
The European Magazine |
Also known as 'European Magazine'. London Magazine, published initially by James Perry. Published from 1782-1826.
|
1 | |
The London Evening Post |
Pro-Jacobite Newspaper, published 1727-1797 |
1 |
Phillibrown-Hawkins network
A London-based network that included John Hawkins, Moses Browne, and Foster Webb, active in c. 1740/41-1757. Their poetry, essays, and song lyrics are recorded, along with supporting correspondence, by Thomas Phillibrown. Discussed in Schellenberg, Literary Coteries and the Making of Modern Print Culture: 1740–1790 (Cambridge UP, 2016).
Rose Tavern club
A club that met at the Rose tavern in Covent Garden, London, in the 1730s. Members included Richard Miller (addressed as “Precedent of the Rose Club”), Dr. Cotton, and John Weldon.
Stepney coterie
A social circle located in Stepney and Mile End; active c. 1710s.
Tickell family
Family circle of Richard Tickell, his wife Mary Linley, son Samuel Tickell, Richard Brinsley Sheridan and his wife Elizabeth Ann née Linley (Mary’s sister), and William Linley. Contributors from this group were active in England and India, c. 1787-1818.
Cavendish-Ponsonby-Crewe network
An interconnected, late-eighteenth-century network of fashionable hostesses and political figures Frances Anne (née Greville) Crewe, Lady Crewe; Henrietta (née Spencer) Ponsonby, Countess of Bessborough; and Henrietta’s sister Georgiana (née Spencer) Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire. Their activities were centred in multiple locations, including London (Devonshire House), Bath, and various country seats. Literary and personal connections included Richard Brinsley Sheridan, Charles James Fox, the Burney family, the Tighe family, and Crewe’s mother Frances Greville.
Madan-Maitland family
Three generations of a poetical family, beginning with the poet Judith Cowper Madan and her husband Colonel Martin Madan, and including the couple’s two daughters, Penelope Madan Maitland and Maria Madan Cowper, as well as their brothers Martin and Spencer, and Maitland’s daughters Penelope Judith Maitland (later Cope) and Charlotte Maitland. The extended family also included the poetical Ashley Cowper (Judith Cowper Madan’s brother) and the very popular William Cowper (Judith’s nephew).
Judith Cowper Madan and her children Penelope Maitland and Martin Madan were based in London; the family possessed slave-owning plantations on Nevis and St Kitts in the West Indies.
Bodleian Ms.Eng.Poet. c.51, while not a miscellaneous verse manuscript and therefore not included in this database, is also related to the Madan-Maitland family.