Author:George Granville/Index of Titles
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- Chloe
- On the Same ['Chloe'] ("Bright as the Day, and like the Morning fair")
- On the Same ['Chloe'] ("Of injur'd Fame, and mighty Wrongs receiv'd")
- Corinna
- On the Same ['Corinna']
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- A Latin Inscription on a Medal for Lewis XIV.
- English'd, and apply'd to the Queen
- Liberality
- Love ("Love is begot by Fancy, bred")
- Love ("To Love, is to be doom’d, in Life, to feel")
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- Song. For Myra ("Here end my Chains, and Thraldom cease")
- Song to Myra ("Forsaken of my kindly Stars")
- Song to Myra ("Why should a Heart so tender break?")
- Song. To Myra ("The happiest Mortals once were we")
- Spoken by the Author, being then but Twelve Years of Age, to her Royal Highness the Dutchess of York, at Trinity College in Cambridge
T
- Thyrsis and Delia
- To a very learned young Lady
- To Celia
- To Daphne
- To Flavia. Her Gardens having escap'd a Flood that had destroy'd all the Fruits of the Ground in her Neighbourhood
- To Mr. Waller
- To my Friend Dr. Garth, in his Sickness
- To Mr. Dryden on his Translations
- To Mrs. Higgons, Occasioned by some verses written by that lady, and sent the Author in his retirement, 1690
- To my Lord Lansdowne, upon the bombarding and burning the Town of Granville in Normandy
- To Myra ("Warn'd and made wise by others Flame")
- To Myra ("When wilt thou break, my stubborn Heart?")
- To Myra ("Nature indulgent, provident, and kind")
- To Myra ("Since Truth and Constancy are vain")
- To Myra ("So calm and so serene but now")
- To Myra ("Thoughtful Nights, and restless Waking")
- To Myra. Loving at first Sight ("No warning, of th' approaching Flame")
- To Myra. Song ("Foolish Love, begone, said I")
- To Myra. Song ("I'll tell her the next time, said I")
- To Myra. Song ("Prepar'd to rail, resolv'd to part")
- To Myra. The Enchantment. In Imitation of the Pharmaceutria of Theocritus ("Mix, mix the Philters—Quick—she flies, she flies")
- To Myra. The Surrender ("Now fly, Discretion, to my Aid")
- To Myra. The Vision ("In lonely Walks, distracted by Despair")
- To the immortal Memory of Mr. Waller, upon his Death
- To the King ("Tho' train'd in Arms, and learn'd in Martial Arts")
- To the King ("Heroes of old, by Rapine and by Spoil")
- To the King, in the First Year of His Majesty's Reign