ANNUAL REGISTER. 
923 
POETRY. 
Epilogue, Pizarro, xli 462 
Epistle from a Clergyman to a Young Gen- 
tleman of the Law, |. 435 § 
—— the Abbé de Rance to a Friend, 
ix 232 
——— bya Gentleman of Oxford, xi 233 
familiar, toa Friend, with the Head 
of Harpocrates in a ring, xii 222 
to lord Cobham, by Pope, 7b. 237 
——— to a young Gentleman on leaving 
Eton, xvii 225 
to Goldsmith on his ‘Retaliation,’ 
xxi 206 
Epitaph, on Johnny Armstrong, i. 408 
———— in a Churchyard, Dorsetshire, 7d. 
on Theodore, king of Corsica, 
ib. ib. 
———— on miss Frampton, iv 239 
on adm. Boscawen, 7b. 258 
———— on Sam. Richardson, b. 259 
———— on mrs. Meyrick, v 226 
— on Regnier, vii 247 
for an Infant, viii 294 
———-— on C. Phillips, x 252 
ee anatomical, on an Invalid, xi 
on L. Sterne, 7d. 227 
B. Thornton, 24. 230 
W. Lowndes, xii 242 
— on mr. Powell, Bristol, xiv 235 
on a Miser, 7b. 236 
— ona Horse, 2b. 237 
———— on rt. hon. G. Grenville, 75 238 
on mr. Beighton, xv 220 
on mrs. M. Taylor, 2b. 221 
on mrs. Pritchard, 2d. 2b. 
on T. Hammond, a parish clerk, 
xvi 246 
——— dr. Goldsmith, xvii 230 
— in Halifax church, xviii 219 
P. Whitehead, xx 201 
tion, 2, 211 
burlesque, xxvi 200 
by Voltaire, in his own chamber, 
xxvii 148 
— xxxiii 165 
———— J. Elwes, xxxv 40] 
—on mr. T. A. Hamilton, xliii 516 
——-— in Ickworth church, xlv 918 
———— on mr. Pitt, xlviii 1057 
on a Dog, 1. 220 
on an Unfortunate Young Lady, 
lvii 633 
Erskine, hon. H. Parody on ‘ Blest as the 
Immortal Gods’ xxviii 150 
Evening, viii 282 
———— a Rhapsody, xivii 976 
— ode to, 1. 223 
Expostulation, the, xiii 228 
—— the Reply to, 7b. 229 
—— xxii 178 
——-— — xxvi 201 
— ona Lady who died of Consump- 
Fables, English Bull-dog, Dutch Mastiff, 
and Quail, i. 438 
——— Fisherman and the Little Fish, 
from La Fontaine, iii 236 
——-—- Ship and the Wind, #. 240 
Rainbow, iv 256 
——— Elm and the Vine, vi 214 
——— Reason and Imagination, by Smart, 
wb. 215 
—— The Trees, 74, 220 
——— Snarling Pug, and Dancing Bear, 
tb. 232 
—w— Candle and Snuffers, 
vii 248 
—— Poetandithe Straw, xiii 217 
The two Kings, 2b. 218 
Wear Petition of the Fools to Jupiter, xiii 
by Lloyd, 
The Entail, (Walpole) xv 209 
Pelican and the Spider, 5. 222 
Attraction and Repulsion, xviii 220 
——-— Lizard and Crocodile, from the Ita- 
lian, xxxii 160 
Faith, (rev. H. Moore) xlix 568 
Fame and his Companions, xiii 239 
Fancy, ode to, xlviii 1055 
Farmer’s Boy, extracts from, xlii 457 
Farringdon Hill, extract from, xvii 212 
Fatal Sisters, an ode by Gray xi 211 
Fawkes, translation from Menander, vi 212 
——— Twenty-fifth Idyllium of Theocritus, 
x 225 
Fragment from Menander, ¢é. 251 
Fear, to, i. 421, xiii 232 
Feathered young Ladies, xxvii 141 
Felon’s Dream, (Crabbe) lii 723 
Female Advocate, by miss Scott, extract 
from, xvii 205 
Ferney, an Epistle to Voltaire, by Keate, xi 
16 
Fitzgerald, rey. G. Academie Sportsman, 
extract from, xvi 232 
— W. T. Literary Fund Address, 
xlix 962 
——————— Appeal tothe Spirit of the 
Land, 7b. 996 
Fitzpatrick, hon, R. Inscription, Temple 
of Friendship, St. Anne’s Hill, xliii_ 523 
Fly, the, judging of Architecture, vi 237 
Folly, from Smyth’s English Lyrics, xlviii 
1068 
Fools’ Petition, the, xiii 234 
Foote, mr. prologue to All in Wrong, iv 233 
Address to the Public, v 212 
Forced Marriage, (Crabbe) 1. 232 
Forgetfulness, address to, (Pains of Memory) 
xxxvili 504 
Fortune, ode to, from Rousseau, xiii 233 
Fountain in Hampshire, verses on, |. 224 
Fox, hon. C. verses on mrs. Crewe, xviii 214 
= ——_—____-—— Gibbon’s Promo« 
tion to the Board of Trade, xxxvi 415 
———~—— Monody on, xlix 456 
——-———~—— on his own Birthday, to a 
Lady, xli 461 
