Skip directly to:
Main content
Main navigation
University of Virginia Library
Search this document
Poems on several subjects
Nicol, Alexander
[section]
TO THE HONOURABLE JAMES HALYBURTON of Pitcur, Esq; Member of Parliament of Orkney and Shetland, and Colonel of the Third Regiment of Foot-Guards, &c.
PREFACE.
To the Author, on his Collection of Miscellany Poems.
I.
NATURE without ART.
An Account of the Author, being an Epistle to the Right Honourable Susanna Countess of Strathmore, in the Year 1727; but newly revised and corrected, with some Circumstances then omitted.
An Introduction to a Wedding SONG. To the Right Honourable the Lord ------.
The ODE.
A POEM, inscribed to the Right Honourable the Earl of Morton, on his accepting the former Ode, &c.
The DREAM.
On the Death of the Honourable Henry Crawfoord of Monorgan, who died March 1731.
The young Man's Litany.
The young Woman's Litany in Choice of an Husband.
To the Right Honourable, the Lord Gray, upon his sending me Mr Ramsay's Poems.
To two GENTLEWOMEN.
An ACROSTIC.
Another ACROSTIC.
LOVE's CURE.
A Collection of Scots Songs, being new Words adapted to old Tunes.
An Epitaph on that puissant Duke of Berwick, Great Marshal of France, who, at the siege of Phillipsburgh, viewing the trenches, had his head shot off by a cannon ball, in the year 1734.
CHRIST's KIRK on the GREEN.
An Epistle to Mr P---, one of his Majesty's Officers of Excise, on his ridiculing my Verses.
A Letter to J--- B--- an old Batchelor, persuading him to marry.
Written by a Gentleman upon seeing some of my Verses.
My ANSWER.
An Epistle to Mr Allan Ramsay.
Said on WRITING.
An Epistle to a Friend newly married, against the will of his Wife's Friends.
To the Laird of ABERCAIRNIE.
Upon our jolly Change-Keeper leaving the place.
A Tale of two Brothers, and their Posterity.
The AUTHOR's Wish.
On FORTUNE.
Upon the fair Sex.
PROVERBS, Chap. xxxi. Verse 10.
The honest Country-man's Meditation, as he was humming it over alone in Words at Resting-time.
Thirty Riddles, with their Expositions.
A POEM, shewing the Original, Antiquity, Beauty, and Glory of Masonry; also its Progress, Improvements, and Usefulness; with a Description of the Mason's Lodge. All which is concluded with an Ode, sung to the tune of, The free and accepted Mason. To which is prefixed, instead of a Preface, a Poem on the printed Pamphlet.
A POEM on Masonry.
The Masons Lodge.
The ODE.
On receiving a Compliment from the Right Honourable the Lord Kinnaird.
An ELEGY on auld Use and Wont
An ELEGY on Johnie Galla'.
An EPISTLE, from Mr D--- L--- Schoolmaster at Kinnaird, to Alexander Nicol Schoolmaster at Collace, February 3d 1749; on seeing my last book, called Nature without Art.
Alexander Nicol's Answer to the foregoing Epistle, February 6th 1749.
James Ratcliff's Retreat from the Prison of Edinburgh, Monday 23d of July 1739, he being to be hanged the Wednesday after:
A SAPPHIC ODE.
A SONG, Tune Allan Water.
A POEM on R--- H--- of South-Ballo.
ACROSTIC.
A Remark on the Poverty of Poets.
The Complaint of a Lark directed to a great Lion: A Fable; occasioned by another Lion being influenced by some evil Speaker, to suspect the honesty of the Lark.
[section]
The MORAL.
The Cat and the Ape. A Fable.
On seeing Smith and Craig's bantering Poems, anent the building of a School-house at Glenshie.
An EPISTLE to Mr Robert Smith Schoolmaster at Kinnaird, upon his saying he would not stay in the Place.
Mr Smith's ANSWER.
Another EPISTLE to Mr Robert Smith.
The PETITION of Alexander Nicol. Schoolmaster at Collace, to the Honourable Sir William Nairn of Dunsinnan Baronet.
An EPITAPH on Alexander Robertson of Struan.
An ACROSTICK.
To the Memory of the Honourable George Hay of Leys, Esq
On Captain Balnave's being dangerously sick of a Fever at the time he should have been married; inscribed to his Lady afterwards.
On the City of DUNDEE.
The BROKEN LAIRD REPAIR'D; OR, The DYVOUR turn'd a THRIVER:
Sung by Miss JENNY.
On FORTUNE.
A PASTORAL between Colin, Willie, and Deavy, upon Baledgarno's Marriage.
VENUS's JOURNEY. A POEM inscribed to Mr Ogilvie of Inchmartine, on his Marriage.
On Mrs Ogilvie's Chariot-wheel sinking on the Brink of the River Spey.
To the Right Honourable the Lord Kinnaird, on his commencing Master of Masons, &c.
II.
NATURE without ART.
Collapse All
|
Expand All
Poems on several subjects
The MORAL.
True honest simplicity never can gain
Such profits from mankind as flatt'ry obtain.
Poems on several subjects