Author:Bezaleel Morrice

Works

 * The Muse's treat: or, a collation of wit and love (1702)
 * An essay on the poets (1712)
 * Miscellanies or amusements in prose and verse (1712)
 * Verses to Mr. Tickell, on Mr. Pope's translation of Homer (1715)
 * A voyage from the East-Indies. By Capt. Morrice (1716)
 * Love and resentment: a pastoral (1717) []
 * Astrea: or, the dream, and Composition (1719)
 * Three satires. Most humbly inscribed and recommended to that little gentleman, of great vanity, who has just published, a fourth volume of his Homer (1719)
 * An epistle to Mr. Welsted; and a satyre on the English translations of Homer (1721)
 * An essay on the poets (1721)
 * The present state of poetry. A satyr (1721)
 * Two odes of Horace, with a description of Fame or Report from Virgil (1721)
 * Poetical descriptions (1722)
 * Unequall enemies; being an essay in the stile of epick poesy (1722)
 * An address to Homer (1723)
 * The amour of Cytherea: a poem (1724)
 * An essay on the universe: a poem (1725)
 * A satire: address'd to a friend, and dedicated to Mr. Welstead (1726)
 * Verses on the king; occasion'd by his late danger and distress, at sea (1726)
 * Dissectio Mentis Humanae: or a satiraic essay on modern critics, stage and epic poets (1730)
 * Maria or the picture of a certain young lady (1730)
 * Dissectio mentis: or a satyrical display of the faults and errors of human nature; as manifested in the knowledge and manners of the present time: a poem (1731)
 * An epistle to Mr. Pope, on reading his translations of the Iliad and Odyssy of Homer (1731)
 * The amour of Venus: or, the disasters of unlicens'd love. A poem (1732)
 * An essay on the universe (1733)
 * On rural felicity; in an epistle to a friend (1733)
 * A satirical essay on modern poets (1734)
 * All is fish, that comes to the net (1735)
 * Rural felicity; or the delight and excellence of retirement: an epistle to a friend (1735)
 * The successful fisher, or, all is fish, that come to net (1735)
 * The present corruption of Britons, being a paraphrase of the latter part of Mr P — e's dialogue, entitled, One thousand seven hundred and thirty-eight. (1738)
 * To the falsely celebrated British Homer. An epistle. (1742)