The Poetical Works of William Collins; With a Memoir
William Collins Ætatis Quos primus equis Oriens afflavit anhelis––Virg.
WITH A MEMOIR.
BOSTON: LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. 1865.
No one can have reflected on the history of genius without being impressed with a melancholy feeling at the obscurity in which the lives of the poets of our country are, with few exceptions, involved. That they lived, and wrote, and died, comprises nearly all that is known of many, and, of others, the few facts which are preserved are often records of privations, or sufferings, or errors. The cause of the lamentable deficiency of materials for literary biography may, without difficulty, be explained. The lives of authors are seldom marked by events of an unusual character; and they rarely leave behind them the most interesting work a writer could compose, and which would embrace nearly all the important facts in his career, a “History of his Books,” containing vi the motives which produced them, the various incidents respecting their progress, and a faithful account of the bitter disappointment, whether the object was fame or profit, or both, which, in most instances, is the result of his labours. Various motives deter men from writing such a volume; for, though quacks and charlatans readily become auto-biographers, and fill their prefaces with their personal concerns, real merit shrinks from such disgusting egotism, and, flying to the opposite extreme, leaves no authentic notice of their struggles, its hopes, or its disappointments. Nor is the history of writers to be expected from their contemporaries; because few will venture to anticipate the judgment of posterity, and mankind are usually so isolated in self, and so jealous of others, that neither time nor inclination admits of their becoming the Boswells of all those whose productions excite admiration.
If these remarks be true, surprise cannot be felt, though there is abundance of cause for regret, that little is known of a poet whose merits were not appreciated until after his decease: whose powers were destroyed by a distressing malady at a period of life when literary exertions begin to be rewarded and stimulated by popular applause.
William Collins
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CONTENTS.
MEMOIR OF COLLINS.
AN ESSAY ON THE GENIUS AND POEMS OF COLLINS.
ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
WRITTEN ORIGINALLY FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT OF THE LADIES OF TAURIS.
PREFACE.
ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
ECLOGUE I.
ECLOGUE II.
ECLOGUE III.
ECLOGUE IV.
ODES
ON SEVERAL DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL SUBJECTS.
ODES.
ODE TO PITY.
ODE TO FEAR.
ODE TO SIMPLICITY.
ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.
ODE,
ODE TO MERCY.
ODE TO LIBERTY.
ODE TO A LADY,
ODE TO EVENING.
ODE TO PEACE.
THE MANNERS.
THE PASSIONS.
ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.
ODE ON THE POPULAR SUPERSTITIONS OF THE HIGHLANDS OF SCOTLAND;
AN EPISTLE,
DIRGE IN CYMBELINE,
VERSES
TO MISS AURELIA C–––R,
SONNET.
SONG.
OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES AND ODES.
OBSERVATIONS ON THE ORIENTAL ECLOGUES.
ECLOGUE I.
ECLOGUE II.
ECLOGUE III.
ECLOGUE IV.
OBSERVATIONS
ON THE ODES, DESCRIPTIVE AND ALLEGORICAL.
ODE TO PITY.
ODE TO FEAR.
ODE TO SIMPLICITY.
ODE ON THE POETICAL CHARACTER.
ODE,
ODE TO MERCY.
ODE TO LIBERTY.
ODE TO A LADY,
ODE TO EVENING.
THE MANNERS.
THE PASSIONS.
AN EPISTLE
DIRGE IN CYMBELINE.
ODE ON THE DEATH OF THOMSON.
FOOTNOTES: