The Poetical Calendar. Vol. VII. For July. [T146608]
- DMI number:
- 1023
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- Volume Number:
- 7 of 12
- ESTC number:
- T146608 [vol VII]
- EEBO/ECCO link:
- CW113915607
- Full Title:
- THE | POETICAL CALENDAR. | CONTAINING | A COLLECTION | Of scarce and valuable | PIECES OF POETRY: | With Variety of | ORIGINALS AND TRANSLATIONS, | BY THE MOST EMINENT HANDS. | Written and Selected | By FRANCIS FAWKES, M. A. | And WILLIAM WOTY. | IN TWELVE VOLUMES. | LONDON: | Printed by DRYDEN LEACH; | For J. COOTE, at the King's Arms, in Pater-noster-Row. | MDCCLXIII.
- Place of Publication:
- London
- Format:
- Octavo
- Comments:
- Contents: Two poems in French on p. 66. [translations p. 67.] Contents list on p. 123. Query: ECCO copy has unreadable note to poem 29828, pp. 17-33: "Written in the Year MDCCL..."
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Containing a collection of scarce and valuable pieces of poetry: With variety of originals and translations, by the most eminent hands. [T146608]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol I]
- Volume:
- 1 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. II. For February. [T146608]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol II]
- Volume:
- 2 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. VI. For June. [T146608]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol VI]
- Volume:
- 6 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. III. For March. [T146608] [gb]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol III]
- Volume:
- 3 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. IV. For April. [T146608] [gb]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol IV]
- Volume:
- 4 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. IX. For September. [T146608] [gb]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol IX]
- Volume:
- 9 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. V. For May. [T146608] [gb]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol V]
- Volume:
- 5 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. X. For October. [T146608]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol X]
- Volume:
- 10 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. XI. For November. [T146608]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol XI]
- Volume:
- 11 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Title:
- The Poetical Calendar. Vol. XII. For December. [T146608]
- Publication Date:
- 1763
- ESTC No:
- T146608 [vol XII]
- Volume:
- 12 of 12
- Relationship:
- Volume from the same edition
- Comments:
- Editor:
- Francis Fawkes
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Editor:
- William Woty
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- Printer:
- Dryden II Leach
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- BBTI
- Publisher:
- John Coote
- Confidence:
- Absolute (100%)
- Comments:
- BBTI
- First Line:
- The sun comes on apace and through the signs
- Page No:
- pp.1-2
- Poem Title:
- July. An Ode.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Hail goddess of the silver star
- Page No:
- pp.3-4
- Poem Title:
- Hymn to the Morning. Written in Summer.
- Attribution:
- W.W.
- Attributed To:
- William Woty
- First Line:
- How wondrous are thy works O God most high
- Page No:
- p.5
- Poem Title:
- On Viewing an Extensive Prospect from the Top of Aston Hills in Buckinghamshire, Compos'd on Horseback.
- Attribution:
- By a Young Lady.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Behold | The green fields yellowing into corny gold
- Page No:
- p.6
- Poem Title:
- A Harvest Scene.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Thou child of nature genius strong
- Page No:
- pp.7-9
- Poem Title:
- Ode to Genius.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- In the full prospect yonder hill commands
- Page No:
- pp.10-16
- Poem Title:
- An Elegy on a Pile of Ruins.
- Attribution:
- By J. Cunningham
- Attributed To:
- John Cunningham
- First Line:
- Shall lordly man the theme of every lay
- Page No:
- pp.17-33
- Poem Title:
- The Feminead: or Female Genius. A Poem.
- Attribution:
- By John Duncombe, M.A.
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- The curfew tolls the hour of closing gates
- Page No:
- pp.34-39
- Poem Title:
- An Evening Contemplation in a College.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- From the moss-grown coral cave
- Page No:
- pp.40-43
- Poem Title:
- Ode Presented to His Grace Thomas Holles, Duke of Newcastle, Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, on his Arrival There, June XIV, MDCCLIII.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- For quiet on Newmarket's plain
- Page No:
- pp.44-46
- Poem Title:
- Ode to the Hon. John York. Imitated from Horace, Book II. Ode XVI.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- While other bards in venturous song proclaim
- Page No:
- pp.47-48
- Poem Title:
- On Mr. Garrick.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- With wonted candor once again peruse
- Page No:
- pp.49-50
- Poem Title:
- An Epistle from York to a Friend in Kent.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- A song o Philo from the rural shade
- Page No:
- pp.51-52
- Poem Title:
- Answered from Canterbury.
- Attribution:
- By a Friend.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Tonight ye Britons let the deathless name
- Page No:
- pp.53-54
- Poem Title:
- Prologue Spoken at the Charter-House, MDCCLIII
- Attribution:
- By John Duncombe, M.A.
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- If mid their round of pleasure to convey
- Page No:
- pp.55-58
- Poem Title:
- To the Author of Clarissa.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- Tis done unclouded sets the radiant year
- Page No:
- pp.59-61
- Poem Title:
- Verses on the Campaign of MDCCLIX. Addressed to the Publishers of the Gentleman's Magazine.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- Great as from Porus' conquest Philip's son
- Page No:
- p.62
- Poem Title:
- To Colonel Clive, on his Arrival in England.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- Hapless Ramilla in an early grave
- Page No:
- pp.63-64
- Poem Title:
- On the Loss of His Majesty's Ship the Ramillies, Captain Taylor, February MDCCLX.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- We came to Harburg late at night
- Page No:
- p.65
- Poem Title:
- Method of Chusing a Mayor. From the Latin of M. Huet, Afterwards Bishop of Avranches.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- Dreams commonly we see
- Page No:
- p.67
- Poem Title:
- The King's Answer
- Attribution:
- Translated by the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- Some truth we may descry
- Page No:
- p.67
- Poem Title:
- Voltaire to the Princess Amelia of Prussia.
- Attribution:
- Translated by the Same. [i.e. John Duncombe, M.A.]
- Attributed To:
- John Duncombe
- First Line:
- Within a lonely gallery's awful gloom
- Page No:
- pp.68-70
- Poem Title:
- A Moonlight Ode.
- Attribution:
- By a Lady.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- How mean the pride how false the shame
- Page No:
- pp.71-74
- Poem Title:
- Evadne to Emma. An Epistle.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. a Lady]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Fatigued with illness sick with pain
- Page No:
- pp.74-75
- Poem Title:
- Hymn to Resignation.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. a Lady]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Say in this laughing season fresh and fair
- Page No:
- p.76
- Poem Title:
- An Imitation from Pastor Fido.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. a Lady]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- You rejoice without hope and you hope without reason
- Page No:
- p.77
- Poem Title:
- Imitated from Metastasio.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. a Lady]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Alone and pensive through deserted meads
- Page No:
- p.78
- Poem Title:
- Translations from the Italian. Sonnet. From Petrarch.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. a Lady]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- If tis not love what passion rules my heart
- Page No:
- p.79
- Poem Title:
- Sonnet. From the Same.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. a Lady]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- O nymph whose powerful charms his heart could gain
- Page No:
- p.80
- Poem Title:
- Sonnet of Faustina Maratti Zappi. To a Lady with whom She Supposes Her Husband to Have Been Formerly in Love.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. a Lady]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- O Johnson famed for elegance and sense
- Page No:
- p.81
- Poem Title:
- [Inscription to Anningait and Ajutt: A Greenland Tale.] Inscribed to Samuel Johnson, M.A.
- Attribution:
- By Mrs. Penny.
- Attributed To:
- Anne Penny
- First Line:
- Love powerful love each being can control
- Page No:
- pp.82-95
- Poem Title:
- Anningait and Ajutt: A Greenland Tale. Taken from the Fourth Volume of the Rambler. Inscribed to Samuel Johnson, M.A.
- Attribution:
- By Mrs. Penny.
- Attributed To:
- Anne Penny
- First Line:
- Reclined I lay where through my garden glides
- Page No:
- p.96
- Poem Title:
- A Thought in a Garden.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Hence every gloomy care away
- Page No:
- pp.97-98
- Poem Title:
- Verses Written Before Marriage
- Attribution:
- By The Rev. Mr. P.
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Still shall the praise of every fair
- Page No:
- pp.98-99
- Poem Title:
- Written Eight Years After Marriage.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. The Rev. Mr. P.]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Hence unrelenting cares
- Page No:
- pp.100-105
- Poem Title:
- L'Amoroso. A Poem. In Imitation of Milton's L'Allegro. Written in the Year MDCCXLVIII.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. The Rev. Mr. P.]
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Come thou laughter loving power
- Page No:
- pp.106-108
- Poem Title:
- An Ode. Wrote a Few Days Before the Long College-Vacation, MDCCLXIII.
- Attribution:
- C.T. Hartis
- Attributed To:
- C.T. Hartis
- First Line:
- From orchards of ample extent
- Page No:
- pp.109-110
- Poem Title:
- Pomona. A Pastoral.
- Attribution:
- By J. Cunningham.
- Attributed To:
- John Cunningham
- First Line:
- Why are your thoughts on lords alone intent
- Page No:
- pp.111-112
- Poem Title:
- The Man of Kent. In Imitation of Pope's Man of Ross.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Happy were he could finish forth his fate
- Page No:
- p.113
- Poem Title:
- Verses.
- Attribution:
- By the Famous Earl of Essex.
- Attributed To:
- Robert Devereux
- First Line:
- It was a time when silly bees could speak
- Page No:
- pp.114-117
- Poem Title:
- The Buzzing Bee's Complaint.
- Attribution:
- By the Same. [i.e. the Famous Earl of Essex.]
- Attributed To:
- Robert Devereux
- First Line:
- Welcome sweet death the kindest friend
- Page No:
- pp.118-119
- Poem Title:
- Essex's Last Voyage to the Haven of Happiness.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- Common births like common things
- Page No:
- pp.120-121
- Poem Title:
- Ode for His Majesty's Birthday, June IV, MDCCLXIII.
- Attribution:
- By William Whitehead, Esq.
- Attributed To:
- William Whitehead
- First Line:
- When a nymph at her toilet has spent the whole day
- Page No:
- p.122
- Poem Title:
- A Song.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
- First Line:
- In Anna's wars immortal Churchill rose
- Page No:
- p.123
- Poem Title:
- The Comparison Between John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, and Charles Churchill, Anti-Caledonian.
- Attribution:
- Attributed To:
- Not attributed
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