II. Of Walking the Streets by Day 289 III. Of Walking the Streets by Night 294 215 Sweet William's Farewell to Black-eyed Susan 297 A Ballad, from the What-d'ye-call-it.. Fable. The Gost without a Beard. Fable. The Universal Apparition A Fairy Tale, in the ancient English Style. 221 Fable. The Hare and many Friends. 298 ib. 299 ib. ROWE. Colin's Complaint. A Song. 230 237 Ancient and Modern Italy compared: being the First Part of "Liberty," a Pocm... 469 Greece: being the Second Part of" Liberty," 472 Rome: being the Third Part of "Liberty," 477 360 Britain being the Fourth Part of" Liberty," 482 An Essay on Man. In Four Epistles. Meral Essays. In Five Epistles to several Epistle I. Of the Knowledge and Char- II. Of the Characters of Women ADVERTISEMENT. THE object of this Work, which is entirely new, is to comprise, within a single volume, a chronological series of our classical Poets, from Ben Jonson to Beattie, without mutilation or abridgment, with Biographical and Critical notices of their Authors. The contents of this volume are so comprehensive, that few poems, it is believed, are omitted, except such as are of sccondary merit, or unsuited to the perusal of youth. The Work, within these bounds, may be termed a "Library of Classical English Poetry," and may safely be recommended to the heads of Schools in general, and to the libraries of Young Persons. |