Poems written on several occasions by N. Tate.
- Title
- Poems written on several occasions by N. Tate.
- Author
- Tate, Nahum, 1652-1715.
- Publication
- London :: Printed for B. Tooke ...,
- 1684.
- Rights/Permissions
-
This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. Searching, reading, printing, or downloading EEBO-TCP texts is reserved for the authorized users of these project partner institutions. Permission must be granted for subsequent distribution, in print or electronically, of this text, in whole or in part. Please contact project staff at eebotcp-info@umich.edu for further information or permissions.
- Subject terms
- Occasional verse, English.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A63114.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"Poems written on several occasions by N. Tate." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A63114.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 6, 2024.
Contents
- title page
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TO Her HIGHNESS THE Princess
ANN, &c. - THE CONTENTS.
- These Mistakes are to be corrected, being destru∣ctive to the Sense.
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POEMS, &c.
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On His Royal Highness's Deliverance from Shipwrack in the Gloucester,the Sixth of May, 1682. - Indisposed.
- On a Diseased Old Man, who Wept at thought of leaving the World.
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TO Mr.
FLATMAN, On his Excellent POEMS. - ON THE Present Corrupted State OF POETRY.
- The Search.
- The Prospect.
- The Request.
- The Installment.
- The Penance.
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Laura 's Walk. - The Ʋsurpers.
- The Amusement.
- The Amorist.
- The Surprizal.
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The Ʋnconfin'd. SONG. -
DIALOGUE,
Alexis andLaura. - The Restitution.
- The Escape.
- The Politicians.
- The Vow-Breaker.
- The Tear.
- The Discovery.
- The Parting.
- On an Old Miser that Hoarded His Treasure in a Steel Chest, and bu∣ry'd it.
- The Vision.
- ODE.
- The Banquet.
- The Match.
- The Disconsolate.
- Sliding on Skates in a hard Frost.
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Strephon
's Complaint on quitting his Retirement. - The Gold-hater.
- The Mistake.
- Disappointed.
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Lib. 1.Epigr. CX. - The Confinement.
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On Snow fall'n in Autumn,and dis∣solv'd by the Sun. - Melancholy.
- On a Grave Sir, retiring to Write in Order to undeceive the World.
- On a deform'd Old Bawd, designing to have her Picture drawn.
- Advice to a Friend, publishing his Poems.
- The Ignorant.
- The Beldam's Song.
- The Inconstant.
- Of the Ape and the Fox.
- The Round.
- The Male-Content.
- The Dream.
- Amor Sepulchralis.
- The three First Verses of the 46th Psalm Paraphas'd.
- The Mid-Night Thought.
- The Counter-Turn.
- The Voyagers.
- The Choice.
- On Sight of some Martyrs Sepulchres.
- Of Vice and Vertue.
- To a Desponding Friend.
- Disswasion of an Aged Friend from leav∣ing his Retirement.
- Recovering from a Fit of Sickness.
- The Challenge.
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The Cure. A DIALOGUE,Claius andCoridon. - The Hurricane.
- The Grateful Shepherd.
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On the Assembling of a New Parliament the 6th.of March, 1682. - The Despair.
- MEDEA TO JASON.
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Ʋpon the Marquess of Worcester'sde∣fending his Seat of Ragland Castle;the last Garrison that held out for the King. -
Catullus.
Epigr. II. - After beating his Mistress.
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Propert. Lib. 1.Eleg. 4. -
To the Conceal'd Author of
ABSALOM andACHITOPHEL. - On the Meddal.
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To my ingenious Friend Mr. Creech,on his Translation of Lucretius. -
The Battle of the B—d'sin the Theatre Royal, Decemberthe 3d 1680. -
Hor. Ode 5th.lib. 3. -
To the Translator of Father Simon's Critical History. - The Charge.
- PROLOGUE.
- EPILOGUE.
- EPILOGUE.
- The PROLOGUE.
- EPILOGUE.
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To Mr. L. Maidwell,on his New Grammar. -
An Attempt on the Ode of Assumption, By Mr.Crashaw. -
The Three First Chapters of Job. - The Charnell-House.
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To the Memory of Sir Richard Rayns∣ford,Lord Chief Justice. -
Prhoris.
From the Metamorph. of Ovid. Lib. 7 - VIRGIL.
- THE Third ECLOGUE OF VIRGIL CALLED,
-
TO
His Friend that absconded Catullus, Epigr. 56. -
From Petronius Arb. -
To Mr. Gibbonson his incomparable Carved Works. -
On the Translation OF
EƲTROPIƲS, By Young Gentlemen, Educated by Mr.L. Maidwell. -
The First ELOGY OF TIBULLUS:
Divitias alius fulvo sibi congerat Auro, &c.
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