Author:Jonathan Swift/Poems

A

 * Ad Amicum Eruditum Thomam Sheridan (1717)
 * Advice to the Grub Street Verse Writers (1726)
 * Another Rejoinder in Jackson's Name (1721)
 * An Answer to a Friend's Question (c. 1710-1740)
 * Answer to A New Simile For the Ladies (1733)
 * Answer to Ballad on Ballyspellin (1728)
 * The Answer to Dr. Delany's Request (1724)
 * Answer to Dr. Sheridan's Prologue, and to Dr. Swift's Epilogue, in behalf of the distressed Weavers (c. 1720-1735)
 * The Answer to Paulus, an Epigram (c. 1728)
 * Answer to The Pheasant and the Lark (1730)
 * Apollo, or a Problem Solved (1731)
 * Apollo Outwitted (c. 1706)
 * Apollo to the Dean (1720)
 * Apollo's Edict: Occasioned by News From Parnassus (1723)
 * An Apology (c. 1733-36)
 * Atlas, or the Minister of State (1710)
 * The Author Upon Himself (1713)
 * Ay and No: A Tale from Dublin (1737)

B

 * A Ballad on the Game of Traffick (1699)
 * A Ballad to the Tune of the Cut-purse (1699)
 * Baucis and Philemon (1708)
 * The Beasts' Confession (1732)
 * The Beasts' Confession to the Priest (1732)
 * The Beau's Reply (1728)
 * A Beautiful Young Nymph Going to Bed (c. 1731)
 * Bec's Birthday (1726)
 * Bettesworth's Exultation, Upon Hearing that His Name Would Be Transmitted to Posterity in Dr. Swift's Works (c. 1720-1740)
 * Billet to a Company of Players (c. 1710-1730)
 * The Birth of Manly Virtue (1724)
 * Birthday Verses on Mr. Ford (c. 1723)
 * Bouts Rimés, on Signora Domitilla (c. 1710-1740)

C

 * Cadenus and Vanessa (1713)
 * Carberiæ Rupes (1723)
 * Carbery Rocks (1723)
 * Cassinus and Peter (1731)
 * Catullus de Lesbia (c. 1713)
 * Clad All in Brown (c. 1728)
 * Clever Tom Clinch (1727)
 * Conclusion From These Epigrams, With Dr. Swift's Answer (1732)
 * Corinna (1712)
 * The Country Life (1721)

D

 * Dan Jackson's Defence (1721)
 * Daphne (c. 1730)
 * The Day of Judgment (c. 1733)
 * The Dean and Duke (1734)
 * Dean Swift at Sir Arthur Acheson's (c. 1727)
 * The Dean's Answer to Dr. Sheridan's Poem (1719)
 * The Dean's Answer to The Rebus (c. 1713)
 * The Dean's Answer to the Stolen Crown (c. 1725)
 * The Dean's Complaint Translated and Answered (c. 1710-1730)
 * The Dean's Manner of Living (c. 1733-36)
 * The Dean's Reasons For Not Building at Drapier's Hill (1730)
 * Death and Daphne (1730)
 * A Description of a City Shower (1710)
 * A Description of a City Shower
 * The Description of a Salamander (1720)
 * The Description of an Irish Feast (1720)
 * A Description of the Morning (1709)
 * A Description of the Morning
 * Desire and Possession (1727)
 * A Dialogue Between an Eminent Lawyer and Dr. Swift (c. 1728)
 * A Dialogue between Mad Mullinix and Timothy (1728)
 * Dick, a Maggot (c. 1728)
 * Dick's Variety (c. 1728)
 * Dingley and Brent (c. 1724)
 * Directions for Making a Birthday Song (1725)
 * The Discovery (c. 1706)
 * The Dog and Shadow (c. 1710-1730)
 * The Dog and Thief (1726)
 * Dr. Helsham's Answer to Swift's Epistle to Two Friends (1731)
 * Dr. Swift on His Own Deafness (c. 1710-1730)
 * Dr. Swift to Himself on St Cecilia's Day (c. 1728)
 * Dr. Swift to Mr. Pope While He Was Writing the Dunciad (1727)
 * Dr. Swift's Answer (c. 1727)
 * Dr. Swift's Reply (to the poem On a Very Old Glass at Market Hill) (1719)
 * Drapier's Hill (1730)
 * The Duke's Answer, by Dr. Swift (c. 1722)

E

 * An Echo
 * Elegy on Partridge the Almanack Maker (1708)
 * An Elegy on the Death of Demar the Usurer (1720)
 * An Elegy on the supposed Death of Partridge, the Almanack-Maker
 * Epigram – 1 (1712)
 * Epigram – 2 (c. 1721)
 * Epigram from the French (c. 1713)
 * Epigram on an Irish Magazine (c. 1736) (Said to be Swift’s last poem)
 * Epigram on Delacour's Complimenting Carthy on His Poetry (c. 1710-1730)
 * Epigram on Dr. Rundle, Bishop of Derry (c. 1735)
 * Epigram on Wood's Brass Money (1725)
 * Epigrams, Occasioned by Dr. Swift's Intended Hospital for Idiots and Lunaticks (c. 1720-1740)
 * Epigrams on the Busts in Richmond Hermitage (1732)
 * Epigrams on Windows (1726)
 * Epilogue to a Play for the Benefit of Distressed Weavers (c. 1721)
 * Epistle to a Lady (c. 1732)
 * An Epistle to Mr. Gay (1731)
 * Epistle to Two Friends (1731)
 * An Epistle upon an Epistle From a Certain Doctor to a Certain Great Lord (1729)
 * The Epitaph (John Partridge) (c. 1708)
 * Epitaph at Lee in Kent, on William Pate, the learned Woollen-draper (1746)
 * Epitaph on the Duke of Schomberg (1731)
 * Epitaph on the Duke of Suffolk's Fool (1728)
 * Epitaph on the Earl of Berkeley (1712)
 * Epitaph on General Gorges and Lady Meath (1728)
 * An Epitaph on Partridge
 * Epitaph on the Same [Demar the Usurer] (1720)
 * An Excellent New Ballad on the True English Dean (c. 1730)
 * An Excellent New Song on a Seditious Pamphlet (1720)
 * An Excellent New Song on the Earl of Nottingham (1711)

F

 * The Fable of Midas (1711)
 * The Fable of the Bitches (1715)
 * The Faggot (1713)
 * A Fan
 * Fragment of a Satire (c. 1710-1730)
 * A Friendly Apology for Hartley Hutchinson (c. 1733)
 * The Furniture of a Woman's Mind (1727)

G

 * A Gentle Echo on Woman (c. 1710-1730)
 * A Gentle Echo on Woman
 * George-Nim-Dan-Dean's Answer (1721)
 * George-Nim-Dan-Dean's Invitation to Thomas Sheridan (1721)
 * The Grand Question Debated of Hamilton's Bawn (1729)

H

 * The Hardship Upon the Ladies (1733)
 * Helter Skelter (c. 1725)
 * The History of Vanbrugh's House (1708)
 *  Horace, Book I. Ep. V. (John Dennis’s Invitation) (1714)
 *  Horace, Book I. Ode XIV. (Inscribed to Ireland) (1726)
 *  Horace, Book II. Ode I. (Addressed to Richard Steele) (1714)
 *  Horace, Book III. Ode II. (Sent to the Earl of Oxford When in the Tower) (1716)
 *  Horace, Book IV. Ode IX. (Addressed to Archbishop King) (1718)
 * Horace, Book IV, Ode XIX, Addressed to Humphry French, Late Lord Mayor of Dublin (c. 1731)
 * Horace, Part of Book I, Sat. IV (To Sir Thomas Prendergast) (1733)

I

 *  Imitation of Horace, Book I. Ep. VII. (1713)
 * Imitation of Horace, Book II. Sat. 6 (1714)
 * In Sickness (1714)

J

 * Joan Cudgels Ned (1723)
 * The Journal of a Modern Lady (1728)
 * Judas (1731)

L

 * The Ladies Dressing Room (1730)
 * A Left-Handed Letter to Dr. Sheridan (1718)
 * The Legion Club (1736)
 * A Letter to Dr. Helsham (c. 1733-36)
 * Letter to Dr. Sheridan (1719)
 * A Libel on Dr. Delany and Lord Carteret (1729)
 * The Logicians Refuted
 * A Love Poem from a Physician to His Mistress (c. 1727)
 * A Love Song
 * A Love Song in the Modern Taste (1733)

M

 * Mary the Cook Maid's Letter to Dr. Sheridan (1723)
 * A Maypole
 * Merlin's Prophecy (1709)
 * Molly Mog (1726)
 * A Motto for Jason Hazard (c. 1718)
 * Mrs. Harris's Petition (1699)
 * My Lady's Lamentation and Complaint (1728)

N

 * A New Song on Wood's Halfpence (1725)
 * A New Year's Gift for Bec (1724)

O

 * Occasioned by Sir William Temple's Late Illness and Recovery (1693)
 * Ode on Science (c. 1725)
 * Ode to Dr. William Sancroft, Late Lord Archbishop of Canterbury (1689)
 * Ode to King William, on his Successes in Ireland (c. 1692)
 * Ode to Sir William Temple (1689)
 * Ode to the Athenian Society (1691)
 * On a Candle
 * On a Cannon
 * On a Circle
 * On a Corkscrew
 * On a Curate's Complaint of Hard Duty (c. 1713)
 * On a Pair of Dice
 * On a Pen
 * On a Printer's Being Sent to Newgate (c. 1733)
 * On a Shadow in a Glass
 * On a Very Old Glass at Market Hill (c. 1727)
 * On Burning a Dull Poem (1729)
 * On Censure (1727)
 * On Cutting Down the Old Thorn at Market-Hill (c. 1727)
 * On Dan Jackson's Picture – 4 (1721)
 * On Dr. Rundle, Bishop of Derry (1735)
 * On Dr. Swift (1733)
 * On Dreams (c. 1724)
 * On Ink
 * On Mr. Pulteney's Being Put Out of the Council (1731)
 * On Mrs. Biddy Floyd (c. 1706)
 * On One of the Windows at Delville (c. 1722)
 * On Paddy's Character of the Intelligencer (1729)
 * On Poetry, a Rhapsody (1733)
 * On Psyche (c. 1733)
 * On Reading Dr. Young's Satires (1726)
 * On Rover, a Lady's Spaniel (c. 1733-36)
 * On Snow
 * On Stephen Duck (1730)
 * On the Archbishop of Cashel and Bettesworth (c. 1733)
 * On the Collar of Tiger (c. 1726)
 * On the Dean of St. Patrick's Birthday; being on Nov. 30, St. Andrew's Day (c. 1720-1740)
 * On the Death of Dr. Swift (1731)
 * On the Five Ladies at Sot's-hole (1728)
 * On the Five Senses
 * On the Irish Bishops (1731)
 * On the Irish Club (c. 1730)
 * On the Little House by the Churchyard of Castlenock (1710)
 * On the Moon
 * On the Union (c. 1706)
 * On the Vowels
 * On the Words Brother Protestants and Fellow Christians Used (1733)
 * On Time
 * On Wood the Ironmonger (1725)

P

 *  Palinodia. Horace, Book I. Ode XVI. (c. 1726)
 * A Panegyrick on the Dean (1730)
 * Parody on a Character of Dean Smedley (c. 1729)
 * The Parson's Case (c. 1732-3)
 * A Pastoral Dialogue between Dermot and Sheelah (1728)
 * A Pastoral Dialogue between Richmond Lodge and Marble Hill (1727)
 * Peace and Dunkirk (1712)
 * Pethox the Great (1723)
 * Phyllis, or the Progress of Love (1716)
 * The Place of the Damned (1731)
 * The Power of Time (1730)
 * The Problem (c. 1706)
 * The Progress of Beauty (1720)
 * The Progress of Marriage (c. 1730)
 * The Progress of Poetry (c. 1720)
 * Prometheus: On Wood's Halfpence (1724)
 * The Puppet Show (c. 1725-9)

Q

 * A Quibbling Elegy on Judge Boat (1723)
 * A Quiet Life and a Good Name (1724)

R

 * A Receipt to Restore Stella's Youth (1725)
 * A Rejoinder in Jackson's Name (1721)
 * The Revolution at Market Hill (1730)
 * A Riddle (c. 1707)
 * Riddles (1724)
 * Robin and Harry (1730)
 * The Run upon the Bankers (1720)

S

 * A Satirical Elegy on the Death of a General (1722)
 * A Serious Poem upon Will Wood (1725)
 * Sheridan's Submission, by the Dean (1721)
 * A Simile on Our Want of Silver (1725)
 * The South Sea Project (1721)
 * Stella at Wood Park (1723)
 * Stella's Birthday, 1718-9 (1719)
 * Stella's Birthday, 1719-20 (1720)
 * Stella's Birthday, 1721-2 (1722)
 * Stella's Birthday, 1722-3 (1723)
 * Stella's Birthday, 1724-5 (1725)
 * Stella's Birthday, 1726-7 (1727)
 * Strephon and Chloe (1731)

T

 * Tim and the Fables (c. 1728)
 * To A Friend Who Had Been Much Abused in Many Different Libels (c. 1721)
 * To Betty the Grisette (1730)
 * To Dr. Delany on the Libels Written Against Him (c. 1729)
 * To Dr. Sheridan (1718)
 * To Dr. Sheridan on His Art of Punning (c. 1721)
 * To Janus on New-Year's Day (1726)
 * To Lord Harley on his Marriage (1713)
 * To Love (c. 1713)
 * To Mr. Congreve (1693)
 * To Mr. Delany (1718)
 * To Mr. Thomas Sheridan Upon His Verses Written in Circles (1721)
 * To Mrs. Houghton of Beaumont (c. 1720)
 * To Quilca (1725)
 * To Stella (On Her Birthday) (1724)
 * To Stella Visiting Me in My Sickness (1720)
 * To Stella, on transcribing his Poems (1720)
 * To the Earl of Peterborow (c. 1706)
 * To the Rev. Daniel Jackson (1721)
 * To the Rev. Dr. Swift, Dean of St. Patrick's: a Birthday Poem 1736 (1736)
 * Toland's Invitation to Dismal (1712)
 * Tom Mullinix and Dick (c. 1728)
 * A Town Eclogue (1710)
 * Traulus, a Dialogue Between Tom and Robin (1730)
 * Twelve Articles (c. 1730)

U

 * Upon Carthy's Threatening to Translate Pindar (c. 1710-1730)
 * Upon the Horrid Plot discovered by Harlequin (1723)

V

 * Vanbrugh's House (1706)
 * Verses Made For Fruit Women (c. 1733-36)
 * Verses Occasioned by the Foregoing Presents (1732)
 * Verses on I Know Not What (c. 1710-1730)
 * Verses on St. Patrick's Well (1726)
 * Verses on the Upright Judge Who Condemned the Drapier's Printer – 1 (c. 1724)
 * Verses on the Upright Judge Who Condemned the Drapier's Printer – 2 (c. 1724)
 * Verses on the Upright Judge Who Condemned the Drapier's Printer – 3 (c. 1724)
 * Verses on Two Celebrated Modern Poets (c. 1710-1740)
 * Verses Written on a Window at the Deanery (c. 1720)
 * A Vindication of the Libel (c. 1733)
 * The Virtues of Sid Hamet's Rod (1710)

W

 * Whitshed's Motto on his Coach (1724)
 * The Windsor Prophecy (1711)
 * Will Wood's Petition (1725)
 * Wood an Insect (1725)
 * Written in a Lady's Ivory Tablebook (1699)

Y

 * The Yahoo's Overthrow (c. 1733)
 * A Young Lady's Complaint, For the Stay of the Dean in England (c. 1710-1730)