Short-title | Where | Text |
Add. MS. 19759. |
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So all was cleared when your triumphant beams appeared |
An Ode ... at the Castle of Dublin ... etc. ... |
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Thou virgin, heav’nly train |
An Ode to the King
On his Return from New-Market.
An ... |
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Let all our fears, let all our murmurs cease |
An ode upon the happy return of King Charles II ... |
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And is there one fanatique left? |
Benjamin Martin, Miscellaneous Correspondence, vol. 4 (1764) |
p. 997 | link |
At length th’ imperious lord of war |
Complete Edition ... Poets of Great Britain, 11 (1795) |
p. 960 | link |
At length th’ imperious lord of war |
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p. 960 | link |
Go, Flora (said th’ impatient Queen) |
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pp. 959-60 |
God of slaughter, quit the scene |
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pp. 967-8 | link |
Ye powers, who rule o’er states and kings |
D-HS, Sig. M A/836 |
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No! He’s not dead! |
GB-Bu 5001 |
ff. 1-9 |
Good morrow to the year |
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ff. 11 - 14 |
Rise, thou best and brightest morning |
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ff. 11-14 |
Rise, thou best and brightest morning |
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ff. 19 - 30 |
Come we shepherds, whose blest sight |
GB-Cfm, MU MS 681. |
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Awake harmonious powers |
GB-Cu MRB.290.65.1 |
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Hail! Hail, thou Blest, thou most Auspicious Day |
GB-Lbl Add 22100 |
ff. 54v-56 |
Illustrious day, what glory canst ye boast |
GB-Lbl Add. 33278 |
ff. 53r - 59v |
Great Janus, tho the festival be thine |
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ff. 58r - 62v |
The birth of Jove |
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ff. 75r - 78r |
Dread Sir, the prince of light |
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ff. 93r - 96v |
The new year is begun |
GB-Lbl Add. 33287 |
ff. 112 - 117v |
Great sir, the joy of all our hearts |
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ff. 118-124v |
My trembling song, awake, arise |
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ff. 125-130 |
Dread Sir, father Janus |
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ff. 21v-22v |
Tis not to add new glories to the day |
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ff. 63-69 |
How does the new-born infant year rejoice? |
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ff. 69v-71v |
See mighty sir the day appears |
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ff. 89v-92v |
Oh mighty prince, whose loud or dreaded name |
GB-Lbl, 11626.f.24. |
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To England’s monarch, Holland’s chief |
GB-Lbl, 11631.bb.2. |
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Sing great Anna’s matchless name |
GB-Lbl, 11642.bbb.50; US-SM, 231546 |
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Great, inexhausted source of day |
GB-Lbl, 1465.i.12(5). |
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From fate’s dark cell to empire called |
GB-Lbl, 1490.e.24. |
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Awake, desponding fair one! |
GB-Lbl, 161.m.47. |
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Hark, how the muses call aloud |
GB-Lbl, 1870.d.1.(97.). |
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From glorious toils of war |
GB-Lbl, Add. 17835 |
ff. 134–141v |
Hail happy day, hail auspicious light |
GB-Lbl, Add. 30934 |
f. 36 |
Again the welcome morn we sing |
GB-Lbl, Add. 31452 |
f. 54v |
The nymphs of ye wells and ye nymphs of ye hills |
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ff. ? |
Hail thou infant year with ye may bliss renew |
GB-Lbl, Add. 31457 |
ff. 26v-44r |
Welcome happy day in times record forever live |
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ff. ? |
Welcome genial day! |
GB-Lbl, Add. 31812 |
ff. 32–43 |
Let Nature smile, let all be gay |
GB-Lbl, Ashley 4955 |
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As through Britannia’s raging sea |
GB-Lbl, Ashley 4957 |
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Light of the world, and ruler of the year |
GB-Lbl, R.M.24.d.5, 1–6 |
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Prepare, ye sons of art, your songs of joy |
GB-Lcm MS. 1097A |
ff. 119v-123v | link |
Arise, great monarch |
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Leaves extracted from GB-Lcm MS. 1097 and bound separately | link |
Smile again twice happy morn |
GB-Lcm, 989 |
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Welcome glorious day in times record forever live |
GB-Lcm, MS 1097 |
f. 189 |
With cheerful hearts let all appear |
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ff. 135-50 | link |
Hail monarch sprung of race divine |
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ff. 151-68 | link |
Is it a dream that thus deserves our sight |
GB-Lcm, MS. 776 |
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Appear in all thy pomp, great Janus appear |
GB-Llp, SR1175 1.033. |
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Inspire us, genious of the day |
GB-Ob Add. C.304a |
f. 165 |
Come loyal hearts, make no delay |
GB-Ob MS Ashm. 36–7 |
f. 166 |
Looke, shepheards, looke |
|
f. 167 |
Come loyal hearts, make no delay |
GB-Ob MS Mus c.26 |
ff. 121-127 |
Up, shepherds, up |
GB-Ob, Don. c 56, 26–28. |
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While Anna with victorious arms |
GB-Ob, G.Pamph. 1746 (5). |
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Summon to the cheerful plain |
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Musick now thy charms display |
GB-Ob, Harding Mus. G 331(7). |
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Appear Apollo’s darling sons appear |
GB-Ob, MS. Mus. c. 6. |
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Come bring ye song ye muse’s silence has been strangely long |
GB-Ob, Vet. A4 e.2199. |
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All hail! Thou most auspicious day |
GB-Ob, Vet. A4 e.760 (4). |
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All hail! Thou happy land |
GB-Och Mus. 14 |
ff. 91r - 93v |
All things their certain periods have |
IRL-Cab, M.4.12.(21). |
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Glorious prince! The hope of Britain! |
IRL-Cab, M.6.17.(10). |
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Such harmony, as crowned the Olympic revels |
IRL-Dcla, 7E (13), item 33. |
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Hail happy queen! Born to heal and to unite |
IRL-Dcla, Newenham Pamphlets 7E (13) [87]. |
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Welcome genial day! |
IRL-Dki, Pamphlets v.344. |
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Let’s melt the sullen world with sounds harmonious |
IRL-Dn, Dix Dublin LB 1707 (1). |
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From thy peaceful rest arise |
IRL-Dn, Ir.82259.c2. |
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At length the teeming womb of time has ripened |
IRL-Dn, L.O. 1675. |
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Great parent, hail! |
IRL-Dn, LOP.181 (3). |
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Britannia, hail thy hero |
IRL-Dtc, P.gg.20.(14). |
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Ye hov’ring zephyrs |
IRL-Dtc, P.hh.22 no. 32 |
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Great, inexhausted source of day |
J. S. Smith, Musica Antiqua, A Selection of Music of ... |
vol. 2 (London, 1812), 194–198 |
Whilst he abroad does like the sun |
London Magazine, or, Gentleman’s Monthly Intelligencer, 1735 |
p. 619 | link |
Monarch of music, verse, and day |
Matthew Pilkington, Poems on Several Occasions (Dublin: Printed by George ... |
pp. 178-189 |
Great, inexhausted source of day |
New Court-Songs and Poems by R. V. |
pp. 86-87 |
See mighty sir the day appears |
|
pp. 94 - 5 | link |
When from his throne the Persian god displays |
New Poems Consisting of Satyrs, and Odes: Together with a ... |
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Clowdy Siturnia drives her steeds apace |
Ode on the King’s Birth-Day, By Tho. Shadwell ([London]: Francis ... |
| link |
Hail! Hail, thou Blest, thou most Auspicious Day |
Pills vol 2 (1719 edn) |
280–281 |
Behold, how all the stars give way |
Pills vol 4 (London, 1706) |
pp. 323-326 |
Mars now is arming |
Poems and Songs, by Thomas Flatman, Fourth Edition |
pp. 201-203 |
My trembling song, awake, arise |
|
pp. 203-205 |
From those serene and rapturous joys |
Poems on Affairs of State |
vol. ii (1697) |
Now does the glorious day appear |
|
vol. iii (1698) |
Arise my muse, and to my tuneful lyre compose a mighty ode |
Purcell Society Edition, Vol. 15 |
| link |
What shall be done in behalf of the man? |
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p. xxv |
Welcome, vicegerent of the mighty King |
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pp. xxvi-xxvii |
Swifter, Isis, swifter flow |
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pp. xxx-xxxi |
The summer’s absence unconcerned we bear |
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pp. xxxii-xxxiii |
From hardy climes |
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xxxiv-xxxv |
Fly, bold rebellion |
Purcell Society Edition, vol. 18 |
pp. xxxvi-xxxvii |
Sound the trumpet! beat the drum! |
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xxxiv-xxxv |
Ye tuneful muses raise your heads |
Purcell Society Edition, vol. iv. |
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Who can from joy refrain |
Purcell Society Edition, vol. xi. |
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Welcome glorious morn: Nature smiles at your return |
Purcell Society Edition, vol. xxiv. |
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Love’s goddess sure was blind this day |
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Come, ye sons of art, away! |
Purcell, Royal Welcome Songs Part II (ed. Bruce Wood) |
xxxiii | link |
Why are all the Muses mute? |
Richard Crashaw, Carmen Deo Nostro, Te Decet Hymnus Sacred Poems ... |
pp. 17-18 | link |
Rise, thou best and brightest morning |
Samuel Johnson, The Works of the English Poets |
vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 71–6 |
Hail to thee, glorious rising year |
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vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 76–8 |
Lay thy flowery garlands by |
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vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 78–80 |
Winter! Thou hoary venerable sire |
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vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 80–2 |
Thou fairest, sweetest daughter of the skies |
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vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 82–3 |
Oh touch the string, celestial muse |
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vol. 26 (London: printed by H. Hughs, 1779), 84–5 |
King of the floods, whom friendly stars ordain |
Steps to the Temple 1646 |
pp. 94 - 95 |
Rise, thou best and brightest morning |
Steps to the Temple 1670 |
pp. 29 - 32 |
Come we shepherds, whose blest sight |
|
pp. 72 - 74 |
Rise, thou best and brightest morning |
Sylvae, Or the Second Part of Poetical Miscellanies |
499-452 | link |
Arise, great monarch |
The Complete Works of Thomas Shadwell, ed. M. Summers (London, ... |
pp. 365–366 |
Welcome, thrice welcome, this auspicious morn |
The Flying Post |
28–31 May 1715 |
Arise, harmonious powers |
|
2–5 January 1720 |
Lift up thy hoary head, and rise |
The Gentleman’s Journal |
April 1693 |
Hark, the muses and the graces call |
|
December 1692, 2–3 |
The happy year is born that wonders shall disclose |
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January & February 1694, 5–7 |
Sound the trumpet, choicest gifts prepare |
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November 1693 |
Sound a call, the tritons sing |
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November, 1694 |
Spring, where are thy flowery treasures? |
The Gentleman’s Magazine |
vol. 21 (January 1751) | link |
Glory! Where art thou, goddess, where? |
|
vol. 24 (November 1754), p. 524 |
When Glory with refulgent wings |
The Gentleman’s Magazine and Historical Chronicle |
vol. 13 (London, 1743), pp. 603-04 | link |
Of fields! of forts! and floods! unknown to fame |
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vol. 32 (London: D. Henry, 1762), 39. | link |
God of slaughter, quit the scene |
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vol. 9 (1739), p. 43 | link |
Refulgent god with radiant smiles |
The Literary Works of Matthew Prior (1959) |
pp. 125–8 |
Light of the world, and ruler of the year |
The London Chronicle, or Universal Evening Post |
vol.11 no. 850 (2-5 June 1762), p. 529 | link |
Go, Flora (said th’ impatient Queen) |
The Muses Mercury |
vol. 1 no. 2. Example: GB-Ob, Don.e.167. |
Time dispense thy brightest hours |
The Performances of the Antient Music for the Season 1781 ... |
no. 6, 6–8 |
Eternal source of light divine |
The Poetical Works of John Hughes, vol. 2 (Edinburgh: Apollo ... |
pp. 38–39 |
While Venus in her snowy arms |
The Scots Magazine |
vol. 22 (1761), p. 653 | link |
Still must the Muse, indignant, hear |
US-Cah, *EB7.A100.707o2. |
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Hail happy day, when thy beams thou dost display |
US-Cah, *EB7.A100.712t3. |
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Hail happy day! that blessed the earth |
US-Cah, *EC65.T1878.711s. |
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Fair as the morning, as the morning early |
US-Cah, *GC7.K9686.712s. |
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Through all the race of rolling time |
US-Cah, EC 65 T 1878. 708s. |
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See how the new-born season springs! |
US-CAh, EC65.T1878.702o. |
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Wake Britain, ’tis high time to wake |
US-CHH, PR3679 .S1 O3 |
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Guardian of our happy isle |
US-NHub Osborn, MS fb 108, 97–98. |
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The noise of foreign wars |
US-SM, 308068 |
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A hero scarce could rise of old |
US-SM, 329556 |
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Happy queen, in whose calm bosum tender goodness always reigns |
US-TxU, -Q- M 1739.3 A2 S6 1694 |
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Forgive, great Sir! If less we pay |
US-Ws, 158- 185q |
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O Harmony where’s now thy power |