920 
INDEX TO DODSLEY’S 
POETRY. 
Campbell, T. Pleasures of Hope, extract, xli 
467. 
lines on the Corpse of a Sui- 
cide, xliii 517 
Lochiel’s Warning, xliv 829 
Beech-tree’s Petition, ib. 531 
— — Hohenlinden, 7d. 832 
Pleasures of Hope, extract, ¢b. 
833 
lines on James 4th of Scotland, 
xlv 917 
ballad ‘ A Chieftain to the 
Highlands bound,’ xlvi 929 
do.‘ O heard you the Pibroch ?’ 
2b. 931 
— do. The Turkish lady, xlvii 969 
Gertrude of Wyoming, extract, 
1i 887 ; 
ode on Kemble’s retirement, 
lix 605 ‘ 
Canning, rt. hon. G. lines on mr. Pitt’s 
Birthday, xliv 827 
Card-Club, (Crabbe’s Borough) lii 718 
Carey, D. to a Lady asking What is Love, 
xlix 684 
To Miss * * * 70.685 
———— To Mary, id. ih. 
Carlisle’s, countess, Reply to mrs. Griffith’s 
Prayer for Indifference, xlii 455 
Carlisle, earl of, translation from Dante, 
xvi 230 , 
verses to sir J. Reynolds, xxxii 
142 
Cantata, by P. Pindar, xxxv 404 
Capel, lord, stanzas by, while a prisoner in 
the Tower, xxxv 413 
Captive, the, Persian elegy, xix 221 
—— mrs. J. Hunter, xlvii 986 
Caradoc and Senena, from Southey’s Madoc, 
xvii 979 
Carmen Triumphale, (Southey) lv 541 
Carter’s (miss) Poems, lines on, by lord 
Lyttleton, v 196 
Carysfort, earl of, Battle of the Nile, an ode, 
xlvii 965 
Casimir, ode 22, book 3, imitated, xii 232 
ode 2, book 1, 2b, 233 
———— ode to a Grasshopper xxvii 147 
Castle of Otranto, dedication of, to lady 
Mary Coke, viii 280 
Time, an allegory, iii 242 
Castlereagh, lord, and sir W. Curtis, li 
880 
Cat, killed in a Dove-house, xiii 225 
ay emer d on, from the Salmagundi, xxxiii 
] 
Catch, ancient, xxxvii 150 
singing by the People and Ministers, 
1. 21 
Cave of Famine, from Churchill, v 223 
Cavendish, sir C, to countess of Shrewsbury, 
xxxiii 140 
Cecilia’s Day, burlesque ode on, vi 243 
Celtic poetry, fragments of, iv 226 
Ceres, the Triumph of, xvi 252 
Champion, theatric, at Covent Garden, iv 
231 
Chapone, mrs. ode to Solitude, xviii 200 
Chatham, earl of, on his verses to Garrick, 
xv 216 
205 
verses to Garrick, xxi 
Invitation to South Lodge, 
xxxvii 150 
Chatterton, song to Alle, xviii 195 
——~— the Bristowe tragedy, xix 2]1 
Chesterfield, earl of, on his Recovery, x 
254 
——__———— Answer to the Fools’ 
Petition, xiii 235 
Chevy-Chase, ancient ballad of, viii 261 
Child crying, lines on, iv 253 
Chinnery, G. B. Statue of the Dying Gladi- 
ator, lii 701 
Chorus, use and office of, iii 233 
from ‘ Old City Manners,’ xviii 
225 
Choultry, lines in a, by capt. Anderson, lviii 
639 
Christian Negroes, (Montgomery) lii 729 
Chudleigh, lady, verses to the Ladies, xviii 
215 
Churchill, extracts from the Ghost, v 220, 
from the Prophecy of Famine, 7. 223 
Ancient Britons described, vii 
233 
——— State of the Savages, ib. 234 
Peasant and king contrasted, 7b. 
235 . 
A Character, 7), 237 
Cibber, mrs. lines on, xi 241 
Clairon, madlle. vers 4, xviii 212 
Clancy, dr. on the earl of Chesterfield’s Re- 
covery, x 254 
Eulogium on Ignorance, 7b. 263 
—— Rubrilla, true Beauty, xii 240 
Coat, on throwing by an old black one, xiii 
226 
Coleridge, S. on a Spring in a Village, 
xxxvili 494 
Collins, W. Superstitions of the Highlands, 
an ode, xxx 170 
Colman, mr. prologue to the earl of War- 
wick, ix 264 
— do. to Bon Ton, xviii 211 
—— epilogue to School for Scandal, 
xx 200 
xxiii 203 
—— epilogue on Opening Drury- 
lane, xxxvi 416 
—— Modern Novels, xxxix 447 
Lodgings for Single Gentlemen, 
ib. 450 
prologue, Chapter of Accidents, 
The Rhyming Apothecary, a 
tale, xlii 461 
Common Lot, the, (Montgomery) xlvii 990 
Comus, lines under a Bust of, at lard Mel. 
combe’s, iv 240 
Content, by Cunningham, ix 256 
