Verses from Horace printed at foot of each page. ; First edition? One of three editions printed in the same year. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Clark Lib. copy has signatures: 1 leaf unsigned, B-F⁴, G³.
Title in black and red. ; Paged continuously; p. 600, 867, v. 2, incorrectly numbered 560, 877, respectively. ; Signatures: v. 1. 3 leaves unsigned, a-c , d , B-U , X , X* ; v. 2. 1 leaf unsigned, Y-Z , Aa-Tt , Uu (Y , cancel) ; Case ; ESTC ; Mode of access: Internet.
Signatures: A⁶ B-L⁸ M². ; Bound in calf leather stamped in gilt, dark brown and blind; decorated end papers; edges marbled. ; Sometimes found with Durfey's collection, "Wit and mirth, or, Pills to purge melancholy"--Lowndes, p. 72. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Poems in ms. on t.-p. ; "A compleat collection of all the remarkable speeches" has special t.-p., dated 1707, and separate paging. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Error in paging : numbers 145-216 omitted. ; --The miscellaneous works written by George, late Duke of Buckingham. -A collection of state poems, and satyrs on the times, as also upon other subjects. By several hands. -A collection of the most remarkable speeches, that were spoken in both houses of Parliament by several noblemen, and commoners, in relation to the government and the liberty of the subject, in the reigns of K. Charles I, the usurpation of the Rump, and Oliver Cromwell, K. Charles II, and K. William III, &c. ; Mode of access: Internet.
OSU's c. 1 lacks Q5-6, p. 255-258. ; Signatures: A⁴ B-Q⁸ R⁴ ²A⁴ ²B-Q⁸ ²R⁴ S⁸. ; Running title: Poems on state affairs. [Vol. 2] has title: State poems; continued from the time of O. Cromwell, to the year 1697. Written by the greatest wits of the age, viz. The Lord Rochester . with several poems in praise of Oliver Cromwel, in Latin and English . 1702. ; On spine: State poems 1658-1697. ; ESTC ; Mode of access: Internet.
Includes political ballads and songs, some with tunes indicated by title. ; Pirated from "Poems on affairs of state . written by the greatest wits of the age" (4 v., 1697-1707) and repudiated as "spurious" in v. 4 of the latter, which lists more than 100 items omitted from this surreptitious volume and taunts its publishers for "the mean and low additions" after p. 452.--Cf. Cambridge bibliography of English literature, v. 2, p. 187, and Lowndes' Bibliographer's manual, p. 1895. ; Mode of access: Internet.
1 sheet ([1] p.). ; Caption title. ; Attributed to Pennecuik by Wing (2nd ed.). ; Place and date of publication suggested by Wing (2nd ed.). ; Imperfect: cropped, tightly bound with loss of text. ; Reproduction of original in: National Library of Scotland.
96 p. ; 15 cm. (8vo) ; Running title: Compleat souldier. ; "To the reader" signed: Nicholas Boone. ; "A poem on the art military, and compleat souldier."--p. 64-66. ; "The military laws passed by the Great and General Court or Assembly of province of the Massachusets-Bay, in New-England ."--p. [68]-96, with separate title page. ; Bookseller's advertisement, p. [1].
v. l. Poetical works. Priestcraft dangerous to religion and government. Proposal for putting a speedy end to the war, written upon the death of Charles II of Spain. Essay upon publick spirit. Essay on the operas after the Italian manner.--v. 2. Iphigenia, a tragedy. Liberty asserted, a tragedy. Appius and Virginia, a tragedy. A plot and no plot, or Jacobite credulity, a comedy. Priestcraft distinguish'd from Christianity. The grounds of criticism in poetry. Letters upon several occasions, written by and between Mr. Dryden, Mr. Wycherley, Mr.---, Mr. Congreve, and the author. ; Mode of access: Internet.
[2], 21, 84, 97, 42, 30, 44, 21, 6, [4] p. ; First edition. ; Reproduction of original in Huntington Library. ; Sacellum Appollinare, a funeral poem to the memory of that great patriot and statesman George late Marquiss of Hallifax -- The lady's New-Year's gift, or, Advice to a daughter -- The character of a trimmer, his opinion . -- The anatomy of an equivalent -- A letter to a dissenter, upon His Majesties late gracious declaration of consideration of those who are to chuse members to serve in the ensuing Parliament -- A rough draught of a new model at sea, 1694 -- Maxims of state -- A letter sent by His Lordship to Charles Cotton, Esq.