Wit Restor'd
Appearance
Wit
Restor’d.
In severall Select
Poems
Not formerly publish’t.
London,
Printed for R. Pollard, N. Brooks, and T. Dring, and are to be sold at the Old Exchange, and in Fleetstreet. 1658.
Poems (not listed in original)
- Mr. Smith, to Captain Mennis
- The Gallants of the Times
- The Bursse of Reformation
- On S. W. S. and L. P.
- The Tytre-Tucs
- A Northern Ballet
- By Mr. Richard Barnslay
- Ad Johannuelem Leporem
- Bagnall's Ballet
- Mr. Smith, to Sir John Mennis
- An Answer to a Letter from Sr. John Mennis
- Mr. Smith's taking a Purge
- The Miller and the King's Daughter
- Mr. Smith, to Tom Pollard, and Mr. Mering
- Upon John Felton's hanging in Chaines at Ports-mouth
- To the Duke of Buckingham
- The Lawyer
- The reverend Canvase
- A non sequitur, by Dr. Corbett
- On Oxford Schollers going to Woodstock
- Horat, 34 Carm. ad 10 ad Ligurium
- To his Mistris
- Upon a Cobler
- On the death of the Lord Treasurer
- The lover's Melancholy
- A Blush
- To his Mistris
- On Christ-church windowe
- An Elegie
- In imitation of Sir Philip Sydnie's Encomium of Mopsa
- A Scholler that sold his Cussion
- On the death of Cut. Cobler
- A Letter to Ben. Johnson
- On a young Lady, and her Knight
- On a Welch-man's devotion
- On a Maid's Legge
- To his Sister
- On the death of Hobson
- Fr. Clark, Porter of St. Johns, to the President
- An Epitaph
- A wife
- The constant man
- To his Mistris
- Swearing
- On a good Legg and Foot
- Upon the view of his Mistresse face in a Glasse
- On Bond the Userer
- To the Duke of Buckingham
- The Gentlemans verses before he Killed himselfe
- A Song in commendation of Musicke
- A Dialogue between Cupid and a Country-Swaine
- Sighes
- Weomen
- On a dissembler
- To a Freind
- A Poeticall Poem
- Thanks for a welcome
- To Phillis
- Women
- The World
- On his absent Mistresse
- The Constant Lover
- The Irish Beggar
- A Question
- The Mock-Song
- The Moderatix
- The affirmative answer
- A discourse between a Poet and a Painter
- To B. R. for her Bracelets
- On Tom Holland and Nell Cotton
- A Welchman
- A Woman that scratcht her Husband
- A Mistris
- One fighting with his wife
- Ambition
- Upon a Gardiner
- On his first Lover
- To his Mistris
- To his lover
- An Epitaph upon Hurry the Taylor
- A Vicar
- On a Ribband
- To a Gentlew man, desiring a copie of Verses
- On Dr. Corbets's Marriage
- Marti. Epigr. 59 lib 5
- In Richardum quendam, Divitem, Avarum
- In Thomam quendam Catharum
- Epilogus Incerti Aucheris
- The Innovation of Penelope and Vlysses
- The Epistle Dedicatory to the Reader
- To his Worthy Friend Mr. J. S. upon his happy Innovation of Penelope and Vlysses
- To his Precious Friend J. S. upon his choyse conceipt of Penelope and Ulysses
- To his Sonne, upon his Minerva
- To his Deare Friend Mr. J. S. upon his quaint Innovation of Penelope and Ulysses
- The Author to the Author
- The Author to himselfe
- The Preface to that most elaborate piece of Poetry, entituled, Penelope and Ulysses
- The Innovation of Vlysses and Penelope
- The Black-Smith
- A Prologue to the Mayor of Quinborough
- A Song
- The drunken Lover
- To the Tune of The beginning of the World
- An Old Song
- The Sowgelder's Song, in the Beggers-Bush
- Phillada flouts me
- The Milk-maids
- The old Ballet of shepheard Tom
- Obsequies
- Of a Taylor and a Lowse
- The old Ballad of Little Musgrave and the Lady Barnard
- The Scots arrears
- The Rebell Scot
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse