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CONTENTS
OF
THE FIRST VOLUME.
RURAL Sports. A Georgic. To Mr. Pope.
Canto I.
Page 1
EPISTLES.
I. To a Lady. Occafioned by the Arrival of
her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales. 157.
II. To the Right Honourable the Earl of Bur-
lington. A Journey to Exeter- 1716. 163
III. To the Right Honourable William Pulte-
ney, Efq. 1717.
169
IV. To the Right Honourable Paul Methuen,
Efq.
178
V. To her Grace Henrietta, Dutchefs of Marl-
borough. 1722.
182
I
VI. To Mr. Pope, on his having finished his Tranflation of Homer's Iliad. A Welcome
from Greece.
185
VII. To Mr. Thomas Snow, Goldfmith, near
Temple Bar. A Panegyrick, occafioned by
his buying and felling of the Third South-
fea Subscriptions, taken in by the Directors
at a thousand per cent.
VIII. Mary Gulliver to Captain Lemuel Gul-
liver.
IX. Bounce to Fop. From a dog at Twicken-
ham to a dog at court.
X. To my ingenious and worthy friend Wil-
liam Lownds, Efq. Author of that cele-
brated Treatife in Folio, called The Land-
tax-bill.
193
196
201
205
XI. To a Young Lady, with fome Lampreys. 208
XII. To a Lady on her paffion for old China. 210
XIII. On a Miscellany of Poems. To Bernard
Lintott.
XIV. To the most Honourable the Earl of
Oxford, the Lord High Treasurer. The
Epigrammatical Petition of John Gay.
ECLOGUES.
The Birth of the Squire, in imitation of the
Pollio of Virgil.
The Toilette. A town eclogue. Lydia.
The Tea Table. A town eclogue. Doris and
Melanthe.
213
217
219
224
228
The Funeral. A town eclogue. Sabina. Lucy. 233
The Efpoufal. A fober eclogue between two
of the people called Quakers. Caleb. Ta-
Sweet William's Farewell to Black-eyed Sufan. 253
261
The Coquette Mother and Daughter.
Molly Mcg; or, The Fair Maid of the Inn. 263
4
SONGS
SONGS and BALLADS.
Ballad.
Ballad on Quadrille.
A New Song of New Similies.
Newgate's Garland; being a new Ballad, fhew-
ing how Mr. Jonathan Wild's throat was cut
from ear to ear with a penknife, by Mr.
Blake, alias Blue-fkin, the bold highway-
man, as he ftood at his trial in the Old
Bailey, 1725.
MISCELLANIES.
Prologue defigned for the paftoral tragedy of
Dione.
A Contemplation on Night.
A Thought on Eternity.
Epigrammatical Expoftulation.
Epitaph of Bye-words.
My own Epitaph.
265
267
270
273
275
277
279
• 280
281
ibid.
A Motto for the Opera of Mutius Scævola. ibid.
The Lamentation of Glumdalclitch for the lofs
282
of Grildrig. A paftoral.
292
To Quinbus Fleftrin, the man-mountain. A
Lilliputian ode.
295
Verfes to be placed under the picture of Sir
Richard Blackmore, England's arch - poet,
containing a complete catalogue of his works. 296
A receipt for ftewing veal. With notes by the