ANNUAL REGISTER. 
931 
POETRY. 
Scott, Walter, The Douglas Tragedy, 7d. 
1044 
Young Benjie, 2. 1046 
——= Introduction, Marmion,Canto 
2, 1. 203 
Tale of Constance, from do. 
2b. 205 
=——— Song of Fitz-Eustace, 26. 212 
= — Banquet, 75. 213 
Lochinvar, 24.216 
SS Morning Call (Lord of the 
Isles) lvii 618 
——- Scene in the Isle of Skye, 24. 
620 
—— Lady of the Lake, extracts, 
lii 703 
———— Harp of the North, 7d. 7d. 
Ellen, 7d. ib. 
The Harper, 2b. 705 
——_—_—— The Sacrifice, zb. 7. 
The Wedding, 2b. 708 
2b. 709 
Farewell to the Harp, zd. 710 
Sea-chaplain’s Petition, for the use of the 
quarter gallery, i 441 
Sea-shore, description of (dr. Aikin) xxxiii 
429 
Selma, songs of, from Ossian, iv 270 
Seneca’s Troades, chorus from, xiii 238 
Sensibility, Sphere of, from Triumphs of 
Temper, xxiv 171 
Sentimental poetry, from the Wreath of 
Fashion, xxi 2]0 
Sequestered Bard, an elegy, vi 242 
Seward, miss, elegy on capt. Cook, xxiii 195, 
Ode to Melpomene, from 
Horace, xxvii 146 
Horace’s Ode to Thaliarchus, 
xli 460 
461 
Shee’s character of Reynolds as an Artist, 
lvii 623 
do. Opie, 2b. 625 
Sheep and the Bramble Bush, ix 261 
ae mr. lines written in his garden, 
1 
Persian king to his Son, 70. 
song, ii 460 
lines to, iv 246 
do. by miss Loggin, 2b. 247 
elegy by, vii 224 
lines on, xiv 237 
Shepherd’s Life, ix 259 
et ou R. B. Epilogue to Semiramis, xx 
1 
——-— Monody on Garrick, ex- 
tract, xxii 176 
—-——— Stanzas, ‘ Ask’st thou how 
long my Love shall stay ? xxx 196 
song in the Stranger, xl 
447 
————— sonnet, ‘ Dry be that Tear’, 
xliii 518 
Ship, and the Wind, a fable, iii 240 
Sickness, an elegy, by mr. Delap, iii 224 
Siddons, mrs. Farewell Address, liv 545 
Siege of Acre, Epode on (Bowles) xlvi 902 
Simile, a, ii 439 
answer to, 2b. 440 
——__—_—_— ih. 442 
Woman and the Moon, xxix 183 . 
Simplicity (miss More) xvi 237 
Sir Eldred of the Bower, extract from, xix 
206 
Sir Hew, 1. 220 
Sky-lark, the, a Song, by Shenstone, ii 460 
Skye, scene in the Isle of, lvii 620 
Sleep, lines on, xviii 220 
Smart, Chr. fable by, i 438 
Smith, Charlotte, Sonnet to a Nightingale, 
xxvii 141 
to the South Downs, 7. 
142 
Sonnets from Petrarch, 
xxviii 149 
ode to the Po XXXiv 
473 PPY> 
Sas Horologue of the Fields, 
xlix 965 
J.P. on the Birth-day of a Lady, 
xlviii 1054 
ode to Fancy, 24. 1055 
Smollett, ode to Leven Water, xiv 239 
Smyth’s English Lyrics, Reflection, xlvii 
995, The Poet, 996, The Maid with 
Bosom cold, xlviii 1063, Elegy to Wisdom, 
2b. 1064 
Smyth, W. ode performed at the Install- 
ation of the duke of Gloucester, at Cam- 
bridge, liii 593 
Softly, an ode from Hafiz (Ford) xxix 179 
Solitude, ode to, iv 250, do. (Chapone) xviii 
200 
Lines on, by Pope, xii 244 
. (miss More) xvi 237 
Solon, fragment, xi 231 
Songs, Let ‘ Euler go measure the Sun,’ ii 
59 
—— The Sky-lark, 2b. 460 
——-— from the ‘ Way to keep Him’, iii 236 
‘Reflection that makes Mortals wise,’ 
iv 253 
‘When the Nymphs were contending,’ 
2b. 254 
from a musical entertainment at 
the queen’s palace, vi 224 A 
‘Says Pheebe, Why is gentle Love’, xii 
244 
I cannot eat but little Meat,’ xvi 244 
‘ Push the jovial Bowl about,’ xviii 225 
‘When Clouds thatangel Face deform,’ 
xxi 215 
‘Night and Day the anxious Lover,’ 
xxiii 217 
—— ‘OPI reform,’ xxvi 199 
‘Cease to blame my Melancholy,’ 
xxvii 140 
by capt. Morris, xxix 124 
‘Your Molly has never been false,’ xxx 
180 
302 
