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Poem
22
Miscellany
9
Related People
Thomas Betterton
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31
Geoffrey Chaucer
22
Not attributed
10
John Dryden
9
(Barnaby) Bernard Lintot [Lintott]
5
Alexander Pope
5
John Gay
5
Edmund Smith
3
Elijah Fenton
3
Charles Sackville
2
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Poem Theme
Religion
5
Characters
4
Trades / labour
4
Sex / relations between the sexes
3
Charity
2
Clothing
2
Corruption
2
Fighting / conflict
2
Food and drink
2
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Poem Genre / Form
Character
19
Couplet
19
Imitation / translation / paraphrase
17
Comic verse
3
Song
2
Alternate rhyme [ababcdcd...]
1
Extract / snippet from longer work
1
Narrative verse
1
Satire
1
Sestet aabccb
1
Miscellany Genre
Collection of literary verse
4
Collection of translations/imitations
2
Miscellany dominated by poet
2
Collection including prose
1
Year
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1712
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1742
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22
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1.
A franklin was the sergeant's chief delight
First Line:
A franklin was the sergeant's chief delight
Last Line:
Renowned for courtesy by all beloved
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18342
2.
A fryar next to every female dear
First Line:
A fryar next to every female dear
Last Line:
A useful fryar and Hubert was his name
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18338
3.
A knight there was whose early youth had shown
First Line:
A knight there was whose early youth had shown
Last Line:
To thank the saint that brought him safely home
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18333
4.
A Pardon-Monger last brought up the rear
First Line:
A Pardon-Monger last brought up the rear
Last Line:
Therefore he sung so cheerful and so loud
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18353
5.
A steward of the temple next must come
First Line:
A steward of the temple next must come
Last Line:
Some to undo but most to be undone
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18350
6.
A merry wife of Bath comes next in place
First Line:
A merry wife of Bath comes next in place
Last Line:
For she had practiced long that old new dance
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18347
7.
A ploughman followed who had still at hand
First Line:
A ploughman followed who had still at hand
Last Line:
A steward and myself were all the crew
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18348
8.
A sergeant of the law discreet precise
First Line:
A sergeant of the law discreet precise
Last Line:
With a striped silken sash about his waist
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18341
9.
At Trompington not far from Cambridge stood
First Line:
At Trompington not far from Cambridge stood
Last Line:
The mother and the daughter both well pleased
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
7330
10.
Next these a merry monk appears in place
First Line:
Next these a merry monk appears in place
Last Line:
His horse was sleek and as the berry brown
Author:
Thomas Betterton (Absolute)
DMI number:
18337
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