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374. 13 An archæological epistle to Jeremiah Miller, president of the society of antiquaries. London, 1782.

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1 Keate's epistle to Angelica Kauffman. London, 1781.

2 Irwin's occasional epistles. Written during a journey from London to Busrah, in the gulf of Persia, to William Hayley. London, 1783. 3 Horace's art of poetry, an epistle to the Pisos. Translated into English, with notes, by George Coleman. London, 1783.

1 Speculation; or a defence of mankind, a poem. London, 1780.. 3 The country justice, a poem.. London, 1784.

4 Fashion, an ode; with other poems. London, 1783.

5 The rise and progress of the Scandinavian poetry, a poem. By Mr. Jerningham. London, 1784.

1 The progress of refinement, a poem. By Henry James Pye. Oxford, 1783.

2. Florio, a tale; and the bass bleu; or conversation. Two poems. By Hannah More. London, 1786.

3 The news-paper, a poem. By George Crabbe. London, 1785.

4 Elegies and sonnets. London, 1785.

1 Courtenay's poetical review of the literary and moral character of the late Doctor Samuel Johnson. 3d edit. London, 1786.

2 Bozzy and Fiozzi; or the British biographers. A town eclogue. By Peter Pindar, Esq. 3d edit. London, 1786.

3 Elegiac sonnets. By Charlotte Smith. 3d edit. London, 1786.

2 Shooting, a poem

3 Landscapes, in verse.
London, 1785.

London, 1784.

Taken in spring, by the author of sympathy.

1 Edwin; or the emigrant.

An eclogue.

An eclogue. With three other poetical sketches. By the Rev. Mr. Coombe. Philadelphia, 1775.

2 An exercise, containing a dialogue and two odes. Philadelphia, 1767. 3 An exercise, containing a dialogue and an ode, on the accession of - George the third. Philadelphia, 1762.

4 Science, a poem. By Francis Hopkinson.

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Philadelphia, 1762.
Charlestown, South Ca

1 An ode on the late glorious successes of his majesty's arms. Philadelphia, 1762.

2 A panegyrick. By Strephon. Philadelphia, 1762.

3 The court of fancy, a poem. By Thomas Godfrey.

Philad. 1762.

Phila

4 The manners of the times, a satire. By Philadelphiensis.

delphia, 1762.

5 A dialogue on peace, held at Nassau-hall, September, 1763. Philadelphia, 1763.

10 Liberty, a Pindaric ode. Philadelphia, 1783.

6 Oppression, a poem. By an American, London.

7 Liberty, a poem. By Rusticus. Philadelphia, 1769.

1 Poems on various subjects. By Ann Yearsley, the Clifton milk-woman. Being her second work. London, 1787..

2 The triumph of benevolence; occasioned by the national design of erecting a monument to John Howard, Esq. London, 1786.

3 Slavery, a poem. By Hannah More. London, 1788.

504 3 A search after happiness, a pastoral drama. By Hannah More. Phi

506

ladelphia, 1787.

4 A monody in honour of the chiefs who have fallen in the cause of American liberty; and a rondelay, celebrating American independency. Philadelphia. This, and the preceding pamphlet, the gift of Zachariah Poulson, jun.

2 West-Indian eclogues. London, 1787.

3 The wrongs of Africa, a poem. London, 1787.

4 Slavery, a poem. By Hannah More. London, 1788.

5 Aura; or the slave, a poem. London, 1788. This volume the gift of the Philadelphia society for promoting the abolition of slavery.

562 1 The English garden, a poem. Book the first. By W. Mason. 2d edit. London, 1772.

589

599

608

633

2 The poem which the committee of the town of Boston had voted to be published; with extracts from a composition never before published. Boston, 1772.

3 An oration which might have been delivered to the students in anatomy, on the late rupture between the two schools in this city. Philadelphia. 1789.

I The English orator. A didactic poem. By Richard Polwhele. 2d edit. Exeter, 1786.

2 Humanity; or the rights of nature. A poem. By the author of sympathy. London, 1788.

1 Expostulatory odes to a great duke and a little lord. By Peter Pindar. London, 1789.

2 A complimentary epistle to James Bruce, Esq, the Abyssinian traveller. By Peter Pindar. London, 1790.

1 Salmagundi; a miscellaneous combination of original poetry. London, 1791.

2 The rights of kings; or loyal odes to disloyal academicians. By Peter Pindar, Esq. London, 1791.

3 Odes to Mr. Paine, author of "Rights of man." By Peter Pindar, Esq: London, 1791.

3 More money! or, odes of instruction to Mr. Pitt; with a variety of other choice matters. By Peter Pindar. London, 1792.

644 6 Liberty; a poem. By Rusticus. Philadelphia, 1768.

665

712

1 Knight's landscape; a didactic poem. London, 1794.

2 Merry's Paulina; or, the Russian daughter; a poem. Lond. 1787.
6 Poetical sketch of the campaign of 1793. By an officer of the guards,
on the continent. London.

7 Joseph Fawcet's art of war. A poem. London, 1795.

8 Walks in a forest; or, poems descriptive of scenery and incidents characteristic of a forest, at different seasons of the year. Lond. 1794. 9 Magic lantern; or, les ombres patriotiques. London.

10 Peter Pindar's hair-powder; a plaintive epistle to Mr. Pitt; with his Frogmore fête, an ode for music, for the first of April. Lond. 1795. 734 1 Hayley's elegy on the death of Sir William Jones; with notes. London, 1795.

2 Maurice's elegiac and historical poem, sacred to the memory and virtues of Sir William Jones; containing a survey of the progress of science, and the Mohammedan conquests in Asia. London, 1795,

4 The imperial epistle from Kien Long, emperor of China, to George the third, in the year 1794. Translated into English verse from the original Chinese poetry; with notes. London.

5 Peter Pindar's additional works. London, 1795.

6 The mæviad; by the author of "The baviad." London, 1795. 762 1 The monopolist; or the installation of Sir John Barleycorn. A poetical tale, addressed to servant maids. Bath, 1795.

2 Anna Seward's Llangollen vale; with other poems. London, 1796. 3 Lenore, a tale; from the German of Gottfreid Augustus Bürger, by Henry James Pye. London, 1796.

4 Robert Merry's poem, entitled, "The pains of memory." London, 1796.

787 1 Pindar's one thousand seven hundred and ninety-six; a satire. London, 1797.

800

2 Pindar's ode to the livery of London; an ode to Sir Joseph Banks, and a Jeremi-ad to George Rose, Esq. London, 1797.

3 Colman's night-gown and slippers; or tales in verse.

Lond. 1797. 5 The chase, and William and Helen; two ballads, from the German of Gottfried Augustus Bürger. Edinburgh, 1796.

1 Gisborne's vales of Wever, a loco-descriptive poem. London, 1797. 2 Henry James Pye's naucratia; or naval dominion; a poem. Loudon, 1798.

3 The grove; a satire. With notes, including anecdotes of the king, &c. By the author of the pursuits of literature. 2d edit. Lopdon, 1798.

5 Alexander Thomson's paradise of taste, a poem. London, 1796. 804 1 The group; or an elegant representation illustrated. A satirical poem. By a native of Philadelphia. Gift of Michael Keppele.

836

859

6 Nisbit's poem, entitled, "The source of virtue." Saint Christopher's, 1790. Gift of the author.

1 Mrs. West's elegy on the death of Edmund Burke. London, 1797.

1 M. G. Lewis's poem, entitled, "The love of gain." Lond. 1799.

2 Joseph Cottle's Malvern hills; a poem. London, 1798.

3 Coleridge's fears in solitude, written in 1798, during the alarm of an invasion. To which are added, France, an ode; and frost at midnight. London, 1798.

4 The gardens, a poem. Translated from the French of the Abbé De Lille. London, 1798.

5 Maurice's Grove-hill, a descriptive poem; with plates. To which is added, an ode to Mithra. London, 1799.

6 Bowles's St. Michael's mount, a poem. Salisbury, 1798.

890 2 Gifford's epistle to Peter Pindar. 3d edit. with additions. London, 1800.

899

922

3 Bardomachia poema macoronico Latinum. Londini, 1800.

1 Mrs. Cowley's siege of Acre; an epic poem, in six books. London,

i801.

2 Persian lyrics, or scattered poems, from the Diwan i-hafiz; with paraphrases in verse and prose, &c. London, 1800.

1 Bowles' sorrows of Switzerland; a poem. London, 1801.

922

3 Bread; or, the poor. A poem. With notes. By Mr. Pratt. London, 1801.

977 3 Mrs. Opie's elegy to the memory of the late duke of Bedford. Lon

983

1011

don, 1802.

4 Peter Pindar's island of innocence; a poetical epistle. Lond. 1802. 5 The genius of France; or, the consular vision. A poem, with notes. London.

6 Jacobinism; a poem. London, 1801.

1 Rev. Henry Moore's poems, lyrical and miscellaneous. Lond. 1803. 2 Peter Pindar's horrors of bribery; a penitential epistle. Lond. 1802. 1 D'Israeli's narrative poems. London, 1803.

1097 R. P. Knight's landscape, a didactic poem in three books, addressed to Uvedale Price, Esq. London, 1794.

1278 Extracts in manuscript.

1308 A collection of sermons.

4344 A collection of sermons.

1397

1 Walter Scott's lay of the last minstrel; a poem. With notes. London, 1805.

2 Spencer's year of sorrow. Written in the spring of 1803. London, 1804.

4 Robert Bloomfield's good tidings; or news from the farm. A poem. London, 1804.

OCTAVO.

666

1109

1 The ship-wreck, a poem. By a sailor. London, 1764.

2 The pleasures of imagination, a poem. By Doctor Akenside. Loudon, 1763.

1 A search after happiness, a pastoral drama; with Armine and Elvira, a legendary tale. By Hannah More. Philadelphia, 1774. 1150 10 The fair thinker; or reason asserted; in a dissection of bigotry and devotion; a satire. London, 1740.

1280 S Sir Eldred of the bower; and the bleeding rock, two legendary tales. by Hannah More. 2d edit. London, 1778.

1323

1462

4 Homer's hymn to Ceres. Translated into English verse, by Richard Hole. Exeter, 1781.

5 Edwy, a dramatic poem. London, 1784.

3 Ancient Scottish poems, viz. the Gaberlunzie-man and Christ's kirk. on the green; with notes and observations, by John Callander. Edinburgh, 1782.

1525 1 The birth, parentage and education of Praise-god Barebones; with an election ballad.

1557

2 The disappointment, or the force of credulity, a new American comicopera. By Andrew Barton. New York, 1767.

1 The patriot muse; or poems on some of the principal events of the late war; with a poem on the peace. London, 1764.

2 Kawanio che Keeteru; a true relation of a bloody battle fought between George and Lewis, in the year 1755.

3 An exercise; containing a dialogue, and an ode on peace. Philadelphia, 1763.

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1557 4 Gallic perfidy, a poem. By John Maylem, Boston, 1758. 5 Poems upon several occasions. Boston, 1779.

1573

1595

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6 The kirkiad; or golden age of the church of Scotland. Edinburgh,

1774.

7 The London clergy's petition against the quaker's affirmation, answered. 1722.

8 Beveridge's familiar epistles, and other miscellaneous pieces. Latin and English. Philadelphia, 1765.

9 A poem on the rising glory of America. Philadelphia, 1772.

10 The plan of a performance of solemn music, to be sung in the college of Philadelphia. 1765.

11 Resignation; in two parts, with a postscript to Mrs. B. Philadelphia, 1764.

6 The battle of Bunker's-hill, a dramatic piece; with a military song. Philadelphia, 1776.

7 The fall of British tyranny; or American liberty triumphant, a tragi comedy. Philadelphia, 1776.

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9 The group, a new farce. Boston, 1775.

10 The present situation of American affairs, a poem.

11 American liberty, a poem. New York, 1775.

12 General Gage's soliloquy. MS. 1775.

13 A voyage to Boston, a poem. New York, 1775.

14 General Gage's confession to his ghostly father-friar Francis. 1775.
16 America invincible, an heroic poem. Danvers, near Boston, 1779.
17 A speech of General Washington on entering the town of Boston after
the British had abandoned it, (in verse.)

1 La Verité, ode à Monsieur de Voltaire. Londres, 1765.
2 Le barbier de Seville, par M. de Beaumarchais.
1771 3 M'Fingal, a modern epic poem, in four cantos.

Paris, 1776. Hartford, 1782. 1952 3 Animal magnetism. A ballad. With notes and observations, containing anecdotes of animal magnetisers, ancient as well as modern. By Valentine Absonus. London, 1791.

1978 2 Group, a farce. Philadelphia, 1775.

2128

4 Courtney's present state of the manners, arts and politics of France and Italy; in a series of poetical epistles, from Paris, Rome and Naples, in 1792 and 1793; with notes: addressed to Robert Jephson. 2d edit. London, 1794.

2234 2 Hurdis's poem, entitled, "Tears of affection," occasioned by the death of a beloved sister. London, 1794.

2265

2266

3 Hurdis's bouquet; a collection of scattered poetical pieces. London,

1794.

4 Academical contributions of original and translated poetry. Cambridge, 1795.

1 Dwight's Green-field hill; a poem, in seven parts. New York, 1794. 4 Monarchy; a parody on the eclogue of Pope. Philadelphia, 1795. Gift of Samuel Harrison Smith.

2269 4 Markoe's poem, entitled "The times." Philadelphia, 1788. Gift of

Josiah Herves.

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