ANNUAL REGISTER. 
929) 
POETRY. 
Pindar, Peter, Ode on Cambria, xxxiii 413 
Magpie and Robin Red- 
breast, xxxiii 426 
Ode to Prudy, 2b. 7d. 
Jurymen, xxxvii 149 
— Sorrows of Sunday, xxxviii 
507 
473 
Simplicity, or the Curate, xli 
Gipsy Ballad, xxxv 403 
—— Cantata, 7b. 404 
Pine-tree, Elegy to, ix 260 
Pipe of Tobacco, xi 231 
Pirate’s Song (Byron’s Corsair) lvi 569 
Pitt, mr. Ode to, ii 446, xxv 195 
Birth-day, Lines on (G. Canning) 
xliv 827 
— Song on, 7d. 828 
Pizarro, an excellent new Song, xli 464 
Plato, translation from, x 252 
Pleader’s Guide, extract from (mr. Surre- 
butter’s commencement of his Legal 
Career) xxxviii 502 
— the 8th Lecture, xliv 848 
Pleasures of the Mind, i 414 
—— Memory, Lines written 
in, 
xxxiv 479 
—— Hope, extract, xli 467 
Poet’s Prayer, xvii 223 
Poet, Provincial, portrait of, xxviii 153 
Poets of the Age, apostrophe to, xli 470 
id from Smyth’s English Lyrics, xlvii 
99 
Poetry, on the Study of, xxiv 179 
Pope, Epistie to Lord Cobham, xii 237 
Farewell to London, in 1714, xviii 
222 
Lines for Durastante, 7b. 221 
Poppy, Ode to (C. Smith) xxxiv 473 
Porden, miss, address of Winter to Timour, 
lviii 640 
Porter, tankard of, ii 458 
Portes, instructions to one, xxxii 146 
Posidippus, against Life, xv 219 
the Traveller and Statue of 
Opportunity, xvi 245 
Potter, rev. mr. The Superannuated Horse 
to his Master, xxx 193 
Poverty, invocation to, xix 224 
Pace mr. the Partridges, an Elegy, xiv 
1 
on an Infant sleeping, 7b. 242 
toa lady on her birth-day, 7d. 
—_— 
244 
Sympathy, extract, xxiv 177 
— her Brother’s Lyre to mrs. 
Sheridan, xxvii 139 
Prologue to Matilda, xxxi 156 
Prayer for Indifference, v 202 
Preston, W. Epistle to a young gentleman 
on the study of Poetry, xxiv 179 
Primrose, to an early, xlvi 933 
— (J. Mayne) xlix 988 
Pritchard’s, mrs. Farewell Epilogue, xi 224 
— epitaph on, xv 221 
Pant II. 
Progress of Poetry, xv 225 
Prologue to Agis, 1 432 
Cleone, 2b. 433 
(Latin) to the Adelphi, ii 454 
— to the Siege of Aquileia, iii 235 
— Tempest, spoken by lord 
Palmerston, iv 231 
—— All in the Wrong, by Foote, id. 
233 
~ Terence’s Andria (Latin) 2. 
235 
English at Bourdeaux, vi 225 
——— Discovery, ib. 228 
———_—— Philaster, 7b. 231 
—————— Author, vii 244 
——on opening the Theatre, Rich- 
mond-Green, viii 284 
—— Clandestine Marriage, ix 247 
— Double Mistake, 7b, 252 
at the opening of the Bristol 
Theatre, 74. 260 
——————. Earl of Warwick, 2b. 264 
English Merchant, x 246 
Tailors, 2b. 250 
at the Opening of Covent.Garden, 
2b. 253 
ev 
Oxonian in Town, 2. 256 
—Peep behind the Curtain, x 
258 
—— Widowed Wife, 76. 259 
— Good-natured Man, xi 223 
on the appearance of the new 
Juliet at Covent Garden, 2b. 238 
—— Roman Father, xii 239 
—— West Indian, xiv 234 
Word to the Wise, xx 198 
School for Scandal, 24. 199 
at opening North Aston Theatre, 
2b. 206 ; 
———- to the Battle of Hastings, xxi 
196 
Suicide, 2. 197 
——_— — Chapter of Accidents, xxiii 203 
Generous Impostor, 75. 204 
——— —— Miniature Picture, ib, 209 
— Variety, xxv 199 
——_—_—— Heiress, xxviii 144 
Julia, xxix 168 
—— False Appearances, xxxi 150 
Matilda, at mr. Fector’s Private 
Theatre, xxxi 156 
— King John, acted at West- 
minster School, xxxii 133 
—— High Life below Stairs, 7b. 134 
—— Better Late than Never, ib. 139 
———— spoken at Winchester, 7d. 140 
School for Arrogance, xxXxili 
———_ 
414 , 
————. Columbus, xxxiv 474 
——. Every One has his Fault, xxxv 
410 
on opening Drury Lane, 1794, 
xxxvi 415 
Wheel of Fortune, xxxvii 152 
England Preserved, xl 446 
30 
