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Ode occasioned by reading Mr. West's Trans-
154
155
Preface.......
The eleventh Olympic Ode
The twelfth Olympic Ode
lation of Pindar: by the Rev. Mr. Joseph 147 The fourteenth Olympic Ode..
Warton.......
The first Pythian Ode...........
156
158
159
160
ib.
273
XIV. Declining an Invitation to visit fo-
reign Countries, he takes Occasion
to intimate the Advantages of his
own. To Lord Temple............ ib.
XV. In Memory of a private Family in
Worcestershire
XVI. He suggests the Advantages of Birth
to a Person of Merit, and the
Folly of a Superciliousness that is
built upon that sole Foundation... 274
XVII. He indulges the Suggestions "of
Spleen. An Elegy to the Winds. 275
XVIII. He repeats the Song of Collin, a dis-
cerning Shepherd; lamenting the
State of the woollen Manufactory. ib.
XIX. Written in Spring, 1743
276
XX. He compares his humble Fortune
with the Distress of others; and
his Subjection to Delia with the
miserable Servitude of an African
Slave ..
XXI. Taking a View of the Country from
his Retirement, he is led to medi-
tate on the Character of the an-
cient Britons. Written at the
Time of a rumoured Tax upon
Luxury, 1746
..
XXII. Written in the Year, when the
Rights of Sepulture were so fre-
quently violated
...
285
Upon a Visit to the same, in Winter, 1748 287
An irregular Ode after Sickness, 1749
To a Lady, with some coloured Patterns of
Flowers, October 7, 1736 ....
Written in a Flower-Book of my own Colour-
ing, designed for Lady Plymouth, 1753-4... 289
Anacreontic, 1738.-'Twas in a cool Aonian
glade
Ode. Written 1759.-'Twas not by beauty's
aid alone
The dying Kid...........................
SONGS, WRITTEN CHIEFLY BETWEEN THE YEARS 1737
AND 1742.
I. I told my nymph, I told her true...... 290
II. The Landscape
III. Ye gentle nymphs and generous dames. ib.
IV. The Sky-Lark
V. On every tree, in every plain
VI. The Attribute of Venus...
VII. 1741. The lovely Delia smiles again.
VIII. 1742.-When bright Roxana treads
the green
IX. 1743.-Valentine's Day
X. 1743.-The fatal hours are wondrous
near
....
291
XXIII. Reflections suggested by his Situa-