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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A30923 Poetical recreations consisting of original poems, songs, odes, &c. with several new translations : in two parts / part I, occasionally written by Mrs. Jane Barker, part II, by several gentlemen of the universities, and others. Barker, Jane. 1688 (1688) Wing B770; ESTC R7698 114,866 432

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Style is mean and low But if you like it 't is no longer so What to the unkind World do's Humble seem Lovers and Friends may raise by their Esteem E'er since the Image of Immortal Love Made Dust and Ashes fit for Ioys above Yet though I had as clear and smooth a Vain And Sung as well as any Iovial Swain Though I cou'd force the Dulness of our Clime And aid the Lab'ring Fancy with my Rhime Heighten my thoughts expel the Clouds from thence Or strike from them Flashes of Wit and Sence War wou'd disorder my soft Spirits quite And like a Plague infect and make them fight Rebellious War all Melody destroys From Plow-men's Whistle to the Laureat's Voice Swords fright the Muses●rom ●rom their peacefull seat And Poets are the first they captivate Minerva's easie while her Garment flows Dress her in Armour and how stiff she goes The Harps that drew wild Mortals from the Wood And taught the Harmony of Common good By just proportion of their tunefull strings Rank't People Gentry Nobles and their Kings Hence is it when State-Unisons expire They barbarously slay their Parent Lyre FINIS BOOKS lately Printed for Benj. Crayle at the Peacock and Bible at the West-end of St. Paul's I. THE Glory of God's Revenge against the bloody and detestable Sins of Murther and Adultery Expressed in Thirty Modern Tragical Histories To which are annexed the Triumphs of Friendship and Chastity in some Illustrious Examples with several Letters interwoven suitable to each Story By Tho. Wright M. A. sometime Moderator of St. Peter's Colledge Cambridge Octavo II. Delightfull Novels Exemplified in Eight choice and Elegant Histories lately related by the most Refined VVits with Interludes Twelves● Price 1. S. III. Tentamina E●●gantiarum ●i●a or Two Essays of Elegancies Principal●y 〈◊〉 ●or ●●e ●ri●ging of Scholars after they can Read and W●i●● true G●a●matical Latin ●o a full and clear u●d●●s●anding and wri●●ng of Terse and Polite Latin but a●so ●●y ●e a 〈…〉 G●ntlemen in their Elegant composing ●f English and Latin Epistles c. Octavo Price 1. S. IV. A Nose-gay of Divine Truths wherein the chief Points o● Religion are discussed Printed French and English. Twelves V. The Church of England evidently proved a Member of the Holy Catholick Church wherein the Doctrine of Arians Socinians and Anabap●ists are Answered and Confuted and the Presbyterians proved Schisma●icks wi●h some Reasons of the Reverend Dr. Tillotson against Pers●cution meerly for Religion Both by P. B. formerly of the Order of St. Francis now a Convert to the Church of England Twelves VI. The Beauty o● Holiness By the Au●hour of the Whole Du●y o● Man c. Octavo FINIS * Wood● Auth●● anoth●● Spee●● * The noble and sordid Passions * Doctors (a) Old Doctors (b) Young Physi●ians (a) Having learned Latin by reading the Latin Poets (b) My Brother (c) The Three Humours of the Eye and its several Tunicks (d) Ad infimum ventrem (e) Morbi in infimo ventre Di●rrhaea c. (f) Venae Lactea (g) Secundum Opinionem Galinist contra receptaculum commune (h) Per Diaphragma (i) De cordis Structura (k) My deceased Brother (l) De Motu Cordis (a) Circumcision (b) Baptism (a) Meaning the Muse. (b) The lady being painted with a Bough of Bays in her Hand (a) Trees of the Ladies own setting in her Garden (b) Being at the Fall of th' Leaf (a) The Lady having Skill in Physick (a) The Lady being Painted wi●h a Bough o● Bays in her Hand * Most of this Fourth Stanza is an Allusion to an Old Poetical Fa●le and parallels the King and Queen in some respects to the Heathen Deities Apollo and Diana * The Motto of the King's Medal