685
|
The Secrets of Divine Love are to be kept
|
685
|
The Vicissitudes experienced in the Christian Life
|
686
|
Watching unto God in the Night Season
|
687
|
On the same
|
688
|
On the same
|
688
|
The Joy of the Cross
|
689
|
Joy in Martyrdom
|
689
|
Simple Trust
|
689
|
The necessity of Self-Abasement
|
690
|
Love increased by Suffering
|
690
|
Scenes favourable to Meditation
|
691
|
TRANSLATIONS OF THE LATIN AND ITALIAN POEMS OF MILTON.
Elegy I.
|
To Charles Deodati
|
691
|
II.
|
On the Death of the University Beadle at Cambridge
|
692
|
III.
|
On the Death of the Bishop of Winchester
|
692
|
IV.
|
To his Tutor, Thomas Young
|
693
|
V.
|
On the Approach of Spring
|
694
|
VI.
|
To Charles Deodati
|
695
|
VII.
|
|
696
|
|
Epigrams. On the Inventor of Guns
|
697
|
|
To Leonora singing at Rome
|
697
|
|
To the same
|
697
|
|
The Cottager and his Landlord. A Fable
|
697
|
|
To Christina, Queen of Sweden, with Cromwell's Picture
|
697
|
|
On the Death of the Vice-Chancellor, a Physician
|
697
|
|
On the Death of the Bishop of Ely
|
698
|
|
Nature unimpaired by Time
|
698
|
|
On the Platonic Idea as it was understood by Aristotle
|
699
|
|
To his Father
|
699
|
|
To Salsillus, a Roman poet, much indisposed
|
700
|
|
To Giovanni Battista Manso, Marquis of Villa
|
701
|
|
On the Death of Damon
|
701
|
|
An Ode, addressed to Mr. John Rouse, Librarian of the University of Oxford
|
704
|
|
Sonnet—"Fair Lady! whose harmonious name"
|
705
|
|
Sonnet—"As on a hill-top rude, when closing day"
|
705
|
|
Canzone—"They mock my toil"
|
|