| Page |
| LEWESDON HILL | [1] |
| Notes | [41] |
| Inscribed beneath the picture of an ass | [61] |
| Ode to the Lyric Muse. Spoken in the Theatre at the installation of Lord North, chancellor of the university of Oxford | [64] |
| Verses intended to have been spoken in the Theatre to the Duke of Portland, at his installation as chancellor of the university of Oxford, in the year 1793 | [70] |
| On the Death of Captain Cook | [75] |
| Elegy to the memory of Dr. W. Hayes, professor of music in the university of Oxford | [80] |
| The World. Intended as an apology for not writing. By a Lady | [82] |
| The British Theatre. Written in 1775 | [84] |
| On two Publications, entitled Editions of two of our Poets | [89] |
| The Spleen | [92] |
| Lines written with a pencil in a lady’s almanac | [98] |
| To a young gentlewoman, with Thomson’s Seasons, doubled down at the story of Palemon and Lavinia | [101] |
| Sonnet | [103] |
| Sonnet to Petrarch | [105] |
| To a lady, who desired some specimens of the author’s poetry | [107] |
| Epitaph on a child who died of a scarlet fever in the fifteenth month of his age, 1802 | [108] |
| Epitaph on Sir Charles Turner, bart. in the family mausoleum at Kirk Leatham, Yorkshire | [109] |
| Lines written at the tomb of William of Wykeham, in Winchester cathedral | [111] |
| Translation of a Greek inscription upon a fountain | [112] |
| From Lucretius | |
|
sæpius olim
Religio peperit scelerosa.—Lib. I. v. 83.
| [114] |
| From Lucretius | |
|
Suave, mari magno turbantibus.—Lib. II. v. 1.
| [117] |
| From Lucretius | |
|
Avia Pieridum peragro loca.—Lib. IV. v. 1.
| [119] |
| Psalm LXXII. abridged, and adapted to a particular tune | [120] |
| Midnight Devotion. Written in the great storm, 1822 | [123] |
| Silbury Hill | [125] |
| To the Daisy | [127] |
| Fragment | [129] |
| From Purchase’s Pilgrimage, versified and designed as a motto to “Voyages for the Discovery of a N. W. Passage” | [131] |
| Fragment | [133] |
| The rape of Proserpine | [135] |
| Sonnet | [137] |
| Song | [139] |
| Song | [141] |
| Song | [142] |
| To a lady going to her family in Ireland | [143] |
| To the Sun | [144] |
| Song | [146] |
| To a lady, fortune-telling with cards | [148] |
| Epigram | [150] |
| On two English poets, who flourished in the former half of the last century, and published complimentary verses on each other | [152] |
| Verses to the honour of the London Pastrycook, who marked “No popery” on his pies, &c. | [154] |
| On the funeral of ⸺, in a hearse and six, followed by a mourning coach and four | [157] |
| Parody on Dryden’s “Three poets,” &c. | [160] |
| Epigram | [161] |
| An expostulatory supplication to Death, after the decease of Dr. Burney | [162] |
| On the decease of Horne Tooke | [163] |
| Inscription for the granite sarcophagus brought from Alexandria to the British Museum | [164] |
| Inscription for a statue of field-marshal Suworow | [166] |
| On field-marshal Suworow. A dialogue | [169] |
| On F. W. the king of Prussia’s ineffectual attempt on Warsaw | [171] |
| Political advice to the members of the French Convention. A dialogue | [176] |
| Written when Buonaparte was altering the governments of Germany | [178] |
| Suggested by reading Dryden’s Britannia Rediviva, a poem on the prince born on the 10th of June, 1688 | [179] |
| Succession | [183] |
| Epigram | [186] |
| On the increase of human life | [188] |
| Ode to the king of France. 1823 | [189] |
| Verses spoken in the Theatre, Oxford, at the installation of the chancellor, Lord Grenville, July 10, 1810, by Henry Crowe, a commoner of Wadham College | [193] |
| Ad Musas | [198] |
|
Ηως
Εργων ἡγητειρα, βιου προπολε θνητοισιν—Or. Hym.
| [199] |
| Jepthæ Votum | [202] |
| Palmyra | [204] |
| Ad Hyacinthum. 1791 | [206] |
| Romulus. Scriptus 1803 | [208] |
| Helena Insula | [215] |
| On Captain Sir M. Murray, wounded at the Westminster election | [221] |
| Amnestia Infida | [222] |
| Psalm CXIV. | [223] |
| Psalm CXXXIII. | [225] |
| Psalm CXXXVII. | [226] |
| In obitum senis academici, Thomæ Pryor, Armigeri | [228] |
| In obitum J. N. Oxoniensis, 1783 | [229] |
|
Bene est cui Deus dederit
Parca quod satis est manu.—Hor. Lib. 3. Od. 16.
| [230] |
| ΕΙΣ ΚΟΣΣΥΦΟΝ | [232] |
| Inscriptio in Horto auctoris apud Alton in com. Wilt. | [234] |
| Epicedium | [237] |
| De Seipso, mandatum auctoris | [239] |