Dunkin wrote: •
Techrethyrambeia sive poëma in P. Murphorum Trin. Coll. subjanitorem, Dublin, 1730; a translation of
Techrethyrambeia (Dublin, 1728). The neo-Latin
mock epic appeared in 1729 in
The Tribune by
Patrick Delany. The English translation of 1730 was by Joseph Cowper. •
Carbery Rocks (the English version of
Carberiæ Rupes), published among Swift's poems • ''The Lover's Web'', (Dublin, 1734) •
Epistola ad Franciscum Bindonem arm., cui adjiciuntur quatuor Odæ, (Dublin, 1741) • ''Hymen's Triumph
, a poem in the Gentleman's Magazine'' for 1743 • a prologue at the opening of a Dublin hospital, in the ''Gentleman's Magazine'' for 1745 • ''The parson's revels'' (1746), Ed. with notes and introd. by Catherine Skeen, Dublin : Four Courts Press, 2010, 978-1-84682-227-8 •
Bœotia, a poem, (Dublin, 1747) •
The Bramin, an eclogue to Edm. Nugent, esq., (London, 1751) (Nugent was apparently an old pupil) •
An Ode on the death of Frederick, P. of Wales, with remarks by P. H. M. D', (Dublin, 1752) •
An Epistle to the Rt. Hon. Philip, Earl of Chesterfield, (Dublin, 1760) • ''The Poet's Prayer
, a poem in the Annual Register'' for 1774 •
Select Poetical Works, (Dublin, 1769–70) •
Poetical Works, to which are added his
Epistles to the Earl of Chesterfield, (Dublin, 1774). ==References==