Author:Mark Akenside

Works

 * Dissertatio de Ortu et Incremento Fœtus Humani (1744)
 * Oratio anniversaria, quam ex Harveii instituto in theatro Collegii Regalis Medicorum Londinensis die Octobris 18 a MDCCLIX (1760)
 * De Dysenteria Commentarius (1764)
 * A commentary on the dysentery: or, bloody flux (1767), translated from the original Latin by John Ryan
 * De Dysenteria Commentarius (1764)
 * A commentary on the dysentery: or, bloody flux (1767), translated from the original Latin by John Ryan

Poetry

 * The Virtuoso, the ‘Gentleman's Magazine.’ (23 April 1737)
 * A British Philippic (1738)
 * On the Winter Solstice (1740)
 * An Epistle to the Rev. Mr. Warburton (1744)
 * An Epistle to Curio (1744)
 * The Pleasures of Imagination; a poem in three books (1744)
 * Odes on Several Subjects (1745)
 * An Ode to the Right Honourable the Earl of Huntingdon (1748)
 * The Remonstrance of Shakespeare (1749)
 * An Ode to the Country Gentlemen of England (1758)
 * Call to Aristippus (1758)
 * Ode to the late Thomas Edwards (1766)
 * The poetical works of Mark Akenside (1854), edited by Alexander Dyce

Anthologized:

 * In Poems and Extracts by William Wordsworth (1905):
 * "Me though in life's sequestered vale"
 * "Inscription" (For a Grotto) ("To me who in their lays the shepherds call")
 * "Throned on the sun's descending car
 * "Inscription" ("Whoe'er thou art whose path in summer lies")

Works about Akenside

 * "Akenside" in The Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets (1783), by Samuel Johnson, pp.407-418.