1793 |
January 1793 |
An Ode on the Restoration of Freedom to France |
February 1793 |
Louis XVI. to His Subjects |
March 1793 |
Church and King |
March 1793 |
Sonnet to Rational Liberty |
March 1793 |
Elegiac Sonnet Written on the Murder of the Late unfortunate Monarch of France |
April 1793 |
A Fragment, Supposed to be Written near the Temple On the Night Before the Murder of Louis the Sixteenth |
July 1793 |
The Humble Petition of the British Jacobins to their Brethren of France |
July 1793 |
A Word to the Wise |
3 August 1793 |
The Drum |
September 1793 |
On the Present unhappy Situation of the Queen of France, and her Son |
7 September 1793 |
The Disgusted Patriot |
11 September 1793 |
The Miners' Song |
14 September 1793 |
The Bishop of London's Opinion on War |
21 September 1793 |
The Favorite Song |
October 1793 |
Peace Preferable to War |
October 1793 |
Stanzas, supposed to be written whilst the late Queen of France was sleeping, by her attendant in the Temple |
5 October 1793 |
Epitaph on General Custine |
October 1793 |
Peace More Desirable Than War
|
12 October 1793 |
To the Continental Despots |
November 1793 |
Evening |
15 November 1793 |
A Favourite Song |
16 November 1793 |
Effects of War |
2 December 1793 |
France and England |
14 December 1793 |
The Genius of France |
1793 |
Thoughts on the Late Proceedings in France |
31 December 1793 |
Lines by John Gabriel Stedman |
|
|
1794 |
18 January 1794 |
Translation of the Hymn for the Feast celebrated at Paris on account of the Re-capture of Toulon |
February 1794 |
To My Country |
1 February 1794 |
A Sure Way to Prevent the Threatened Invasion by the French |
15 February 1794 |
Sonnet |
22 February 1794 |
Effects of War |
1 March 1794 |
To the Tyrants Infesting France |
8 March 1794 |
Impromptu on the Late Fast |
15 March 1794 |
Hymn |
May 1794 |
The Field of Battle |
June and July 1794 |
The Republicans to the Devil |
19 July 1794 |
A Card to Subscribers |
July 1794 |
Song |
August 1794 |
The Farmer and Labourer |
1794 |
The annex'd elegy is on a graveston in the churchyard at Hythe |
May and August 1794 |
Ode to the Memory of the British Officers, Seamen, and Soldiers, who have fallen in the present War |
6 September 1794 |
The Tender's Hold, Or, Sailor's Complaint |
13 September 1794 |
Ode to War |
13 September 1794 |
Epigram |
4 October 1794 |
A New Song |
29 November 1794 |
The Triumph of Freedom |
December 1794 |
Hymn to the Guillotine |
December 1794 |
On A Late Victory at Sea |
December 1794 |
Half-Pay |
|
|
1795 |
1795 |
The Soldier |
1795 |
Ode, Written on the Opening of the Last Campaign |
21 January 1795 |
Good Advice |
1795 |
Lines Written on the Capture of Gen. Kosciusko |
1795 |
Ode. On The Present Times, 27th January 1795 |
29 January 1795 |
January, 1795 |
5 February 1795 |
The Political Christian |
1795 |
The Vision |
6 February 1795 |
Reflections on the Present War |
28 February 1795 |
Sonnet to W. Wilberforce |
March and May 1795 |
Anna's Complaint; Or the Miseries of War |
May 1795 |
The Armed Yeoman |
22 June 1795 |
The Widow |
5 August 1795 |
The Military Hobby; or, John Bull Humbugg'd |
1 October 1795 |
Kate of Dover |
24 October 1795 |
Anticipation |
27 October 1795 |
On Mister Surgeon Thelwall |
29 October 1795 |
Song, by Della Crusca, On Lord Howe, And the Action of the First of June |
2 November 1795 |
The Weird Jacobins |
3 November 1795 |
Song |
16 November 1795 |
Portrait of a Jacobin |
19 November 1795 |
On the Five Kings of France |
26 November 1795 |
A Dramatic Fragment |
1795 |
An Elegy on my Sailor |
1795 |
Ode to Moderation |
|
|
1796 |
4 January 1796 |
Sonnet to Peace |
9 January 1796 |
Robespierre's English |
January 1796 |
Ode to Peace |
22 January 1796 |
Thomas and Kitty |
17 March 1796 |
Supposition.—A New Song |
2 April 1796 |
[In evil hour, and with unhallow'd voice] |
May 1796 |
Anarchy: A Sonnet |
May and October 1796 |
Pro Patria Mori |
August 1796 |
Cautions to England Against Waste, Corruption, and False Friends |
November 1796 |
The Don’s Dilemma |
December 1796 |
Political Integrity |
1796 |
On the Death of Lieutenant-Colonel Buller |
1796 |
Lines Occasioned by Mr. Sheridan’s Poem on the Death of Col. Buller |
1796 |
An Elegy on War |
|
|
1797 |
8 January 1797 |
Ode to Anarchy |
January 1797 |
The Depredations of the Rats |
25 April 1797 |
Mutiny at Portsmouth |
May 1797 |
Reflections on a Field of Battle |
June 1797 |
Reason Uttering a Soliloquy Over A Field of Battle |
July 1797 |
Soldier Bob Rusty’s Night Cap |
22 August 1797 |
A Family Dialogue, on a Son’s Wishing to Go to Sea |
August 1797 |
Lines Written by Anna Seward, After Reading Southey’s “Joan of Arc” |
August 1797 |
Ode to Peace |
October 1797 |
Britain’s Triumph, or the Dutch Well Dressed |
October and November 1797 |
The Female Exile |
4 December 1797 |
La Sainte Guillotine |
11 December 1797 |
The Soldier’s Friend |
|
|
1798 |
January 1798 |
Poor Mary! |
March 1798 |
The Runaway Fox |
May 1798 |
The Bo-Peep Squadron |
18 September 1798 |
Suum Cuique |
September 1798 |
The Invasion of 1796 |
October 1798 and 1804 |
Song |
8 November 1798 |
The Age of War |
November and December 1798; 8 January 1799 |
Poor Tom |
November 1798 |
Nelson’s Victory |
November 1798 |
On the Death of Captain Westcott |
December 1798 |
Britain’s Pre-Eminence |
1798 |
On the Return of a Festival |
1798 |
The Dying Soldier |
1798 |
A Fast-Day Hymn |
|
|
1799 |
1799 |
Buonaparte |
1799 |
The Soldier’s Funeral |
January 1799 |
Verses, Addressed to a Female Republican |
January 1799 |
On the Consecration of the Colours of The Military Association of ———
|
February 1799 |
[The pomp of courts, and pride of kings] |
14 March 1799 |
Verses on seeing the Military Association going to Church on the Fast-Day in their Uniform |
March 1799 |
The Triumph of Britons |
April 1799 |
Dialogue Betwixt Peace and War |
August 1799 |
The Emigree |
August 1799 |
Written After Seeing Opie’s Picture of the Tired Soldier in the Late Exhibition |
1799; April 1801 |
A War Poem |
1799 |
The Wounded Soldier |
|
|
1800 |
1800 |
The Battle of Blenheim |
1800; March 1802 |
The Orphan Boy’s Tale |
June 1800 |
Sonnet |
July 15 and August 5 1800 |
Colin’s Return to Sea |
November 1800 |
The Generous Soldier |
27 December 1800 |
A New Song |
1800 |
The Fruits of the War |
|
|
1801 |
18 March 1801; 1806; 4 September 1807 |
Alteration of the Old Ballad “Ye Gentlemen of England” |
May 1801 |
On Lord Nelson’s sending a flag of truce to Copenhagen in the midst of victory |
2 June 1801 |
Stanzas |
June 1801 |
Billy Moor |
18 August 1801 |
On the French Navy Being Cover’d with Glory |
August 1801 |
The Beggar Girl |
11 September 1801 |
The Field of Battle |
September 1801 |
On the Invasion of Egypt by the French |
15 October 1801 |
The Olive of Peace |
21 November 1801 |
Freedom and Peace |
November 1801 |
Lines, Composed in the Stone-gallery, above the Dome of St. Paul’s |
November 1801 |
On the Peace |
17 November 1801 |
Ode to Peace |
28 and 30 December 1801 |
The Widow |
1801 |
Impromptu, On Being Told that the Present War is for the Preservation of Property |
1801; 1802 |
War Elegy |
|
|
1802
|
1802 |
The Camp |
March 1802 |
Acrostic on Bonaparte |
May 1802 |
On the Peace |
July 1802 |
(All Hail the Shouting Trumpet) |
2 July 1802 |
The Spirit of the Volunteers |
24 August 1802 |
Ode, to France |
24 August 1802 |
Paris Fashions |
June and August 1802 |
The Pilot that Moor’d Us in Peace |
September 1802 |
Ode, On Hearing that Bonaparte had Suppressed the English Newspapers in France |
1802 |
A Sonnet |
1802 |
Lines Written at Norwich On The First News of Peace |
1802 |
The Sailor’s Farewel |
|
|
1803 |
July 1803 |
War Song |
July 1803 and 1804 |
Britons, to Arms!!! |
July 1803 and July 1806 |
On the Battle of Hohenlinden |
August 1803; 1804; 1 July 1805 |
The Oracle Consulted |
August 1803 |
[What's to be done to save the State?] |
July and August 1803 |
The Voice of the British Isles |
August 1803 |
Serious Advice to Bonaparte |
October 1803; 1804 |
Buonaparte’s Will |
October 1803 |
Mary of Carron |
November 1803 |
Stop to a Stride |
November 1803 |
[The subjoined Verses were intended as an Anthem] |
November 1803; 1804 |
Harlequin’s Invasion |
27 December 1803 |
For Christmas Day, 1803 |
1803 |
The Orphan Sailor-Boy |
1803 |
The Soldier’s Prayer In the Field of Battle |
September 1803 |
English, Scots, and Irishmen |
1803 |
To a dead Jack-Ass |
1803 |
A British War Song |
1803; 1804; 27 November |
The Ploughman’s Ditty |
|
|
1804 |
11 January 1804 |
Parody on a Well-Known English Song |
31 January 1804 |
Adieux from the Wife of a French Officer of Dragoons, on his quitting Rotterdam to join the Army of Italy |
14 February 1804 |
The Briton’s Alphabet |
February 1804 |
To Buonaparte |
28 February 1804 |
Ode on the Anniversary of the Birthday of Burns |
March 1804 |
Song, For the Tweedale Volunteers |
April 1804 |
The Soldier’s Return |
July 1804 |
Impromptu, On the Price of Dollars, bearing the Impression of the King’s Head, being raised from 4s. 9d. to 5s. |
July 1804 |
A New Song, On the Renewed Threat of Invasion |
25 September and October 1804 |
Recipe To make a French Legion of Honour |
12 October 1804 |
A New Song to an Old Tune |
October 1804 |
Parody of the Song Called “The Dream” |
14 December 1804 |
Bonaparte’s Coronation |
1804 |
Ca N’ira pas |
1804 |
To the Memory of Sir Ralph Abercrombie |
1804 |
Bonaparte's Soliloquy |
1804 |
The British Heroes |
1804 |
Parody |
1804 |
Richard Llwyd, the Bard of Snowden |
1804 |
Erin Go Bra |
1804 |
The Frogs and Crane |
1804; 1805 |
A New Song of Old Sayings |
1804 |
The Soldier’s Dream |
|
|
1805 |
February 1805 |
Picture of France |
February 1805 |
Song |
March 1805 |
The Inscrutable Ways of Providence |
July and 17 August 1805 |
The Muffled Drum |
August 1805 |
The Mottos Translated |
19 September 1805 |
From an Unpublished Poem. Ascribed to Ossian |
1 October 1805 |
Lord Castlereagh’s Patriotism |
8 November 1805 |
Dirge on the Death of Lord Nelson |
15 November 1805 |
The Want |
22 November 1805 |
Horatio’s Death |
19 November 1805 |
Nelson and Buonaparte |
November 1805 |
The Battle of Trafalgar |
November 1805 |
Epicedium On the Death of Lord Nelson |
December 1805 |
Tom’s Triumph |
|
|
1806 |
30 January 1806 |
Lines Written on a Swallow, that took Refuge in the Ward Room of His Majesty’s Sea Captain, Off Brest, November 10, 1805 |
February 1806 |
The Triple Loss |
8 April 1806 |
The Bed of Roses |
May 1806 |
The Bull-Dogs |
June 1806 |
Invasion Anticipated. An Ode |
August 1806 |
Ode to War |
August 1806 |
Song |
28 October 1806 |
Rosabell |
8 November 1806 |
Song |
1806 |
War Song |
|
|
1807 |
February 1807 |
Britain’s Genius Triumphant |
February 1807 |
Mary Marton |
March 1807 |
The Soldier at Night |
July 1807 |
To the Inhabitants of the British Empire |
11 August 1807 |
The Royal Feast |
August 1807 |
Tilsit Fair |
August 1807 |
The Soldier’s Embarkation |
October 1807 |
The Exile, A Sonnet |
26 November 1807 |
[Ode On the Big-Endiuns] |
November 1807; 5 January 1808 |
Imitation of the Ancient Ballad |
11 December 1807 |
The New Mariners, For 1808 |
December 1807; 9 September 1808; 1811 |
To the British Channel |
|
|
1808 |
15 February 1808 |
Song on the New Affair of Copenhagen (not Lord Nelson’s) |
22 March 1808 |
Ode to Columbia |
March 1808 |
Song. The Worn Soldier |
26 March 1808 |
A Danish Tale (A La Southey) |
March and April 1808 |
The Curieux |
May 1808; 25 April 1809 |
The New French Grammar Analysed |
14 July 1808 |
The Choice |
14 July 1808 |
[Epigram] |
July 1808 |
Jupiter and the Frogs |
July 1808 |
Sonnet to Peace |
July 1808 |
Spain |
15 August 1808 |
King Joe and Jo-king |
6 September 1808 |
A Consolatory Epigrammatic Dialogue |
20 September 1808 |
To Sir A. W. |
20 September 1808 |
The Substance of a Long Convention |
September 1808 |
Military Economy |
19 October 1808 |
An Imitation |
7 November 1808 |
Catch |
|
|
1809 |
3 January 1809 |
A Political Parody |
27 January 1809 |
Glee In the New Tragedy of “Much Ado About Nothing” |
March 1809 |
War Songs. No. 1 |
March 1809 |
War Songs. No. 2 |
27 April 1809 |
First Siege of Saragossa |
May 1809 |
The Spanish Mother |
June 1809 |
The Winds |
1809 |
On the Burning of the French Bridges Over the Danube, by the Austrians |
July 1809 |
The Sea-Fight |
September 1809 |
The Battle of Talavera |
25 October 1809 |
Additional Verse to “God Save the King” |
October 1809 |
Extempore on the Invasion of Walcheren |
December 1809 |
The Sailor’s Ghost |
1809 |
An Old Soldier’s Answer |
1809 |
The Devil at Malmaison |
|
|
1810 |
7 and 8 January 1810 |
Walcheren Expedition |
23 January 1810 |
Europa Reviviscens |
19 February 1810 |
The Disastrous Administration |
24 March 1810 |
The Pen and the Sword |
March 1810 |
On a Late Noble Action |
May 1810 |
On Mr. West’s Picture of the Death of Lord Nelson |
25 August 1810 |
Ode to the Fleas of Walcheren |
October 1810 |
On Murat’s Summons to Sir J. Stuart to surrender Sicily, in order to spare the Effusion of Blood |
20 November 1810 |
Bonaparte and Commerce |
December 1810 |
The True Story |
1810 |
A Tear for Albion.—1808 |
1810 |
A Small Tribute to the Character of British Seamen |
|
|
1811 |
March 1811 |
Ships, Colonies, and Commerce |
August 1811 |
Bonaparte |
26 October 1811 |
Poor Joe |
7 November 1811 |
Sequel to Poor Joe |
1811 |
Address to a Warrior |
1811 |
Sonnet To France |
1811 |
The Dying Patriot |
|
|
1812 |
28 August 1812 |
The Absent Soldier’s Lament |
14 September 1812 |
Lines Written on Reading in the Edinburgh Review Some Remarks on the Continuation of the Slave Trade by Spain and Portugal |
September 1 and 17; November 1812 |
Nelson—A Dirge |
1 November 1812 |
Ode, To the Sons of Britain and America |
27 November 1812 |
Parody on Bonaparte’s Letter to the Bishops of France After the Battle of Moskwa |
November 1812 |
Epigram |
15 December 1812 |
Little Epigrams on the Great Emperor |
22 December 1812 |
The Flight of Bonaparte from the Battle of Krasnoi: or The Three “Offs” |
1812 |
Thoughts Suggested by the Approach of a Regiment of Soldiers |
1812 |
Stanzas |
|
|
1813 |
1 and 2 January 1813 |
The Apes: A Fable from the Italian |
February 1813 |
The Soldier’s Adieu |
February 1813 |
National Discord |
April 1813 |
The British Soldier |
1 May 1813 |
War the Source of Riches |
9 and 13 June 1813 |
[The Duke to the Emperor offer'd his fist] |
6 and 7 July 1813 |
The Plains of Vittoria; Or, The Death of the Brave |
July 1813 |
The Cockle Shell and the Sea |
7 August 1813 |
Hudibras Improved! |
14 August 1813 |
Written the Night of the Illuminations For the Battle of Vittoria |
28 August 1813 |
The Crimp Serjeant |
19 November 1813 |
Epigram on the Frequent Defeats of the French Army |
1813 |
Bonaparte’s Bridge |
|
|
1814 |
1814 |
Napoleon’s Dream |
1 January 1814 |
Mutat Fortuna Nomina Rerum |
23 January 1814 |
Bellman's Verses for 1814 |
30 January 1814 |
A Modern Ballad |
1 February 1814 |
Buonaparte’s Title to the Emperor of the French Vindicated |
April 1814 |
Impromptu, On Reading Buonaparte’s Abdication of the Throne |
10 May 1814 |
Epigram |
13 June 1814 |
The Good Old Times |
2 July 1814 |
Squib |
26 July 1814 |
The Soliloquy of a Sailor |
July 1814 |
For A’ That and A’ That |
30 August; 13 September 1814 |
Wellington’s Welcome |
August 1814 |
On the Present State of Spain |
24 December 1814 |
The Congress at Christmas |
1814 |
Sonnet To Napoleon, Returned to Paris, Dec. 1812 |
1814 |
Deeds of Glory |
|
|
1815 |
20 January 1815 |
Imitation of Campbell’s “Hohenlinden” |
29 January 1815 |
Petition for a New War! |
30 January 1815 |
Moscow |
March 1815 |
[A Droll Ballad] |
5 April 1815 |
A New Song |
31 August; October 1815 |
Epistle from Tom Cribb to Big Ben, Concerning some Foul Play in a Late Transaction |
August 1815 |
The Battle of Waterloo |
August 1815 |
Ode On the Surrender of Paris to the Allies, March 30, 1814 |
1 October 1815 |
To the People of Spain |
21 October 1815 |
Napoleon |
1 November 1815 |
Lines written after reading an account of the Late Battle |
December 1815 |
The Inhabitants of the British Empire Congratulated on the Return of Peace, 1815 |