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Cadenus and Vanessa.
To Love.
Ode to Spring. By a Lady.
to Wisdom. By the fame.
A Rebus. By Vanessa.
The Dean's Answer.
Horace, Book I. Ode I. paraphrafed. 1714.
Page 101
131
132
133
154
ibid.
135
Book I. Ep. V. John Dennis the Shel-
tering Poet's Invitation to Richard Steele the
fecluded Party-writer and Member, to come
and live with him in the Mint.
To Lord Harley, on his Marriage.
In Sickness. Written in Ireland, October 1714.
The Fable of the Bitches. Written in the Year
1715, on an Attempt to repeal the Test-Act.
Horace, Book III. Ode II. To the Earl of Oxford,
late Lord Treasurer. Sent to him when in the
Tower, 1716.
140
146
149
150
152
Phyllis; or, The Progress of Love.
153
Ad Amicum Eruditum Thomam Sheridan. 1717. 156
Horace, Book IV. Ode IX. Addressed to Abp.
A Motto for Mr. Jason Hafad, Woollen-draper in
Dublin; whose Sign was the Golden Fleece.
164
To Mr. Sheridan.
165
Stella's Birth-day, March 13, 1718-19.
166
Dr. Sheridan to Dr. Swift, 1719.
167
Stella's
ة
Stella's Birth-day, 1720.
Page 168
To Stella, who collected and transcribed his Poems, 170
To Stella, visiting me in my Sickness.
Elegy on the Death of Demar, the Ufurer.
Epitaph on a Mifer.
To Mrs. Houghton of Bormount, upon praising her Husband to Dr. Swift.
Verfes written on a Window, at the Deanry-house,
175
179
181
To a Friend, who had been much abused in many
Prologue to a Play for the Benefit of the Distressed
Weavers. By Mr. Sheridan.
Epilogue, by the Dean.
214
A Poem, by Dr. Delany, on the preceding Prologue
and Epilogue.
216
On
On Gaulstown-house, by Dr. Delany.
Page 218
The Country-Life. Part of a Summer spent at
Gaulstown-houfe.
219
Thomas Sheridan, Clerk, to George-Nim-Dan-
Dean, Efq.
224
George-Nim Dan-Dean's Answer.
225
George-Nim-Dan-Dean's Invitation to Thomas
Sheridan.
227
To George-Nim-Dan-Dean, Esq; upon his incom-
parable Verses, &c. By Dr. Delany, in She-
ridan's Name.
229
To Mr. Thomas Sheridan, upon his Verses written
in Circles. By Dr. Swift.
231
On Sheridan's Circular Verses. By Mr. George
Rochfort,
232
On Dan Jackson's Picture cut in Silk and Paper.
233
A Rejoinder by the Dean, in Jackson's Name.
Another Rejoinder by the Dean, in Jackson's
Name.
Sheridan's Submiffion. By the Dean.
To the Rev. Daniel Jackson. To be humbly pre-
fented by Mr. Sheridan in Person, with Respect,
Care, and Speed.
To Dr. Sheridan, on his Art of Punning.
Stella to Dr. Swift. On his Birth-day, Nov. 30,
243
245
246
1721.
247
250
25
To
To Stella, on her Birth-day, 1721-2.
Page 253
254
On the Great Buried Bottle. By Dr. Delany.
Epitaph, by the fame.
Stella's Birth-day; a great Bottle of Wine, long buried, being that Day dug up. 1722-3.
A fatirical Elegy on the Death of a late famous
General.
257
Dean Smedley's Petition to the Duke of Grafton. 258
The Duke's Answer. By Dr. Swift.
Verses by Stella.
Jealoufy. By the fame.
Dr. Delany's Villa.
On one of the Windows at Delville.
Carberiæ Rupes, in Comitatu Corgagenfi.
Carbery Rocks. Translated by Dr. Dunkin.
Upon the horrid Plot discovered by Harlequin, the
Bishop of Rochester's French Dog. In a Dia-
logue between a Whig and a Tory.
Stella at Wood-Park, a House of Charles Ford,
Esq; near Dublin.
Copy of the Birth-day Verses on Mr. Ford.
Joan cudgels Ned.
A Quibbling Elegy on Judge Boat.
Pethox the Great.
Mary the Cook-Maid's Letter to Dr. Sheridan.
A New-Year's-Gift for Bec, 1723-4-
Dingley and Brent. A Song.
To Stella. 1723-4. Written on the Day of her
Birth, but not on the Subject, when I was fick
in Bed.
262
264
266
267
268
270
273
276
280
281
283
286
289
290
291
On Dreams. An Imitation of Petronius. 1724. Page 292
Whitshed's Motto on his Coach.
294
Sent by Dr. Delany to Dr. Swift, in order to be
admitted to speak to him, when he was deaf,
295
The Answer.
ibid..
A quiet Life and a good Name. To a Friend who
married a Shrew.
297
The Birth of Manly Virtue, inscribed to Lord
Carteret.
300
Verses on the Upright Judge who condemned the
Drapier's Printer.
305
On the fame.
On the fame. (The Judge speaks.)
A Simile on our Want of Silver, and the only
Will Wood's Petition to the People of Ireland; being an excellent new Song, supposed to be made and fung in the Streets of Dublin, by William Wood, Iron-monger and Half-
penny-monger.
34
Another Song on Wood's Half-pence.
A ferious Poem upon William Wood, Brafier,
343
Tinker, Hardwareman, Coiner, Founder, and
Eftquire.
346