- A Letter For My Son To One Of His School--Fellows, Son To Henry Rose, Esq;
- A Letter Sent To Mrs. Barber
- A Letter To A Friend,
- A Letter Written For My Daughter To A Lady, Who Had Presented Her With A Cap.
- A Letter Written For My Son To A Young Gentleman
- A Letter Written From London To Mrs. Strangeways Hornet
- A True Tale
- Advice To The Ladies At Bath. Written By A Lady.
- An Apology For My Son To His Master, For Not Bringing An Exercise On The Coronation Day.
- An Apology For The Clergy,
- An Apology To Dr. Clayton, Bishop Of Killala, And His Lady
- An Apology To The Earl Of Orrery
- An Apology Written For My Son To His Master
- An Apology Written For My Son To The Reverend Mr. Sampson,
- An Epigram On The Same Occasion.
- An Epigram. Since Milo Rallies Sacred Writ
- An Epitaph On The Late Lord Mount--Cashel.
- An Hymn To Sleep.
- An Invitation To Edward Walpole, Esq.
- An Unanswerable Apology For The Rich.
- Apollo's Edict.
- By A Person Of Quality.
- Conclusion Of A Letter To The Rev. Mr. C---.
- Epilogue To A Comedy Acted At Bath,
- Jupiter And Fortune.
- Newsffrom St. James's.
- Occasion'D By Reading The Memoirs Of Anne Of Austria
- Occasion'D By Seeing Some Verses Written By Mrs. Constantia Grierson, Upon The Death Of Her Son.
- Occasion'D By Seeing The Honourable --- Treat A Person Of Merit With Insolence
- On Imagining A Friend Had Treated The Author With Indifference.
- On Leaving Bath.
- On Seeing An Officer's Widow Distracted
- On Seeing The Captives, Lately Redeem'D From Barbary By His Majesty.
- On Sending My Son, As A Present, To Dr. Swift, Dean Of St. Patrick's, On His Birth--Day.
- On The Dutchess Of Newcastle's Picture.
- On The Earl Of Oxford And Mortimer's Giving His Daughter In Marriage In Oxford--Chapel.
- Sent As From A School--Fellow To My Son
- Sincerity
- Spoken Extempore, To The Right Honourable The Lady Barbara North
- Stella And Flavia.
- The Oak And Its Branches.
- The Peacock.
- The Prodigy.
- The Recantation: To The Same Lady
- The Resolution
- The Reverend Dr. L---.
- The Widow Gordon's Petition
- To A Gentleman
- To A Gentleman, Who Had Abus'D Waller.
- To A Gentleman, Who Shew'D A Fine Poem As His Own.