Wit Restor'd
Wit
Restor’d.
In severall Select
Poems
Not formerly publish’t.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/86/Rule_Segment_-_Fancy2_-_100px.svg/100px-Rule_Segment_-_Fancy2_-_100px.svg.png)
London,
Printed for R. Pollard, N. Brooks, and T. Dring, and are to be sold at the Old Exchange, and in Fleetstreet. 1658.
Poems (not listed in original)
- Mr. Smith, to Captain Mennis
- The Gallants of the Times
- The Bursse of Reformation
- On S. W. S. and L. P.
- The Tytre-Tucs
- A Northern Ballet
- By Mr. Richard Barnslay
- Ad Johannuelem Leporem
- Bagnall's Ballet
- Mr. Smith, to Sir John Mennis
- An Answer to a Letter from Sr. John Mennis
- Mr. Smith's taking a Purge
- The Miller and the King's Daughter
- Mr. Smith, to Tom Pollard, and Mr. Mering
- Upon John Felton's hanging in Chaines at Ports-mouth
- To the Duke of Buckingham
- The Lawyer
- The reverend Canvase
- A non sequitur, by Dr. Corbett
- On Oxford Schollers going to Woodstock
- Horat, 34 Carm. ad 10 ad Ligurium
- To his Mistris
- Upon a Cobler
- On the death of the Lord Treasurer
- The lover's Melancholy
- A Blush
- To his Mistris
- On Christ-church windowe
- An Elegie
- In imitation of Sir Philip Sydnie's Encomium of Mopsa
- A Scholler that sold his Cussion
- On the death of Cut. Cobler
- A Letter to Ben. Johnson
- On a young Lady, and her Knight
- On a Welch-man's devotion
- On a Maid's Legge
- To his Sister
- On the death of Hobson
- Fr. Clark, Porter of St. Johns, to the President
- An Epitaph
- A wife
- The constant man
- To his Mistris
- Swearing
- On a good Legg and Foot
- Upon the view of his Mistresse face in a Glasse
- On Bond the Userer
- To the Duke of Buckingham
- The Gentlemans verses before he Killed himselfe
- A Song in commendation of Musicke
- A Dialogue between Cupid and a Country-Swaine
- Sighes
- Weomen
- On a dissembler
- To a Freind
- A Poeticall Poem
- Thanks for a welcome
- To Phillis
- Women
- The World
- On his absent Mistresse
- The Constant Lover
- The Irish Beggar
- A Question
- The Mock-Song
- The Moderatix
- The affirmative answer
- A discourse between a Poet and a Painter
- To B. R. for her Bracelets
- On Tom Holland and Nell Cotton
- A Welchman
- A Woman that scratcht her Husband
- A Mistris
- One fighting with his wife
- Ambition
- Upon a Gardiner
- On his first Lover
- To his Mistris
- To his lover
- An Epitaph upon Hurry the Taylor
- A Vicar
- On a Ribband
- To a Gentlew man, desiring a copie of Verses
- On Dr. Corbets's Marriage
- Marti. Epigr. 59 lib 5
- In Richardum quendam, Divitem, Avarum
- In Thomam quendam Catharum
- Epilogus Incerti Aucheris
- The Innovation of Penelope and Vlysses
- The Epistle Dedicatory to the Reader
- To his Worthy Friend Mr. J. S. upon his happy Innovation of Penelope and Vlysses
- To his Precious Friend J. S. upon his choyse conceipt of Penelope and Ulysses
- To his Sonne, upon his Minerva
- To his Deare Friend Mr. J. S. upon his quaint Innovation of Penelope and Ulysses
- The Author to the Author
- The Author to himselfe
- The Preface to that most elaborate piece of Poetry, entituled, Penelope and Ulysses
- The Innovation of Vlysses and Penelope
- The Black-Smith
- A Prologue to the Mayor of Quinborough
- A Song
- The drunken Lover
- To the Tune of The beginning of the World
- An Old Song
- The Sowgelder's Song, in the Beggers-Bush
- Phillada flouts me
- The Milk-maids
- The old Ballet of shepheard Tom
- Obsequies
- Of a Taylor and a Lowse
- The old Ballad of Little Musgrave and the Lady Barnard
- The Scots arrears
- The Rebell Scot
This work was published before January 1, 1929, and is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago.
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