Page:The lives of the poets of Great Britain and Ireland to the time of Dean Swift - Volume 4.djvu/304

294 *A Ramble through the Heavens, or The Revels of the Gods.
 * The Cavalcade, a Poem.
 * Marriage Dialogues, or A Poetical Peep into the State of Matrimony.
 * A Trip to Jamaica.
 * The Sots Paradiſe, or The Humours of a Derby Alehouſe.
 * A Battle without Bloodſhed, or Military Diſcipline Buffoon’d.
 * All Men Mad, or England a Great Bedlam, 4to. 1704.
 * The Double Welcome, a Poem to the Duke of Marlborough.
 * Apollo’s Maggot in his Cups, or The Whimſical Creation of a Little Satirical Poet; a Lyric Ode, dedicated to Dickey Dickenſon, the witty, but deformed Governor of Scarborough Spaw, 8vo. 1729.
 * The Ambitious Father, or The Politician’s Advice to his Son; a Poem in five Cantos, 1733, the laſt work he left finiſhed.

Mr. Ward’s works, if collected, would amount to five volumes in 8vo. but he is moſt diſtinguiſhed by his London Spy, a celebrated work in proſe.

Sir