Author:Laurence Eusden

Works

 * In Poetical Miscellanies (1714):
 * “The Court of Venus” (p. 97)
 * “The Speech of Pluto to Proserpine” (p. 138)
 * “To the Right Honourable Charles, Lord Hallifax” (p. 190)
 * “On Reading the Critique on Milton in the Spectator” (p. 196)
 * “On a Lady who is the most Beautiful and Witty when she is Angry” (p. 214)
 * “To Mr. —” (p. 216)
 * “On a Dispute with a Gentleman” (p. 218)
 * “From the Fourth Book of Statius’s Thebaid (from verse 246)” (p. 220)
 * “From the Fourth Book of Statius’s Thebaid (from verse 309)” (p. 226)
 * “To the Author of the Tatlers” (p. 251)
 * “To a Lady, that wept at the hearing Cato read” (p. 255)
 * Verses at the Last Publick Commencement at Cambridge (1714)
 * A Poem Humbly Inscribed to His Royal Highness Prince Frederic (1729)

As translator

 * Hero and Leander (1750)
 * Metamorphoses, Book IV., translated from Ovid (1727)

As contributor
Eusden wrote many papers in the Spectator, Tatler, and Guardian (see A General Index to the Spectators, Tatlers, and Guardians (1757) ).
 * The Guardian (Nos. 124 (likely), 127 (in part), 164, &c.)

Works about Eusden

 * “The Life of Lawrence Eusden,” in A Biographical Sketch of the Authors of the Spectator, by Robert Bisset (1793)
 * “Reverend Laurence Eusden,” in The Lives of the Poets-Laureate, by W. S. Austin and J. Ralph (1853)
 * Consult “Rev. Laurence Eusden,” in English Poetry, 1579–1830 (here)
 * Consult “Rev. Laurence Eusden,” in English Poetry, 1579–1830 (here)
 * Consult “Rev. Laurence Eusden,” in English Poetry, 1579–1830 (here)