Thomas Cooke
Active Years
Min year: 1641, Max year: 1798, Max count: 7
As Author
- 1641: Episcopacie asserted: as it now stands established in our Church and Common-wealth
- 1700: Sir Thomas Cooke, appellant
- 1702: Work-Houses the best charity
- 1704: A sermon preacht in the parochial church of St. Nicholas in the city of Worcester
- 1704: The christian sacrifices recommended
- 1706: A brief but plain explication of the church-catechism
- 1709: The blessedness of dying in the Lord explain'd and exemplified
- 1712: The curate of Kington's vindication of his two sermons lately published
- 1712: The way to peace
- 1722: Marlborough, a poem
- 1724: Albion
- 1725: The battle of the poets
- 1726: The bath
- 1726: The Bath
- 1729: Tales, epistles, odes, fables, &c. With translations from Homer and other antient authors. To which are added Proposals for perfecting the English language
- 1730: The bays miscellany
- 1730: The candidates for the bays. A poem
- 1731: The battle of the poets
- 1731: The triumphs of love and honour
- 1731: The battle of the poets
- 1731: The letters of Atticus
- 1732: Liberty the support of truth
- 1733: A demonstration of the will of God by the light of nature
- 1733: The life of King Edward III. of England
- 1734: The life of King Edward III. of England
- 1737: The eunuch
- 1737: Essays. I. On nobility. To His Grace the Duke of Somerset. II. On the ancient and modern state of Britain, and on the posture of affairs in Europe in the years 1734, and 1735. To His Grace the Duke of Marlborough
- 1739: The mournful nuptials
- 1739: A rhapsody on virtue and pleasure
- 1739: Petworth. A poem
- 1739: Petworth. A poem. To His Grace the Duke of Somerset. By Mr. Cooke
- 1739: Essays. I. On nobility. To His Grace the Duke of Somerset. II. On the antient and modern state of Britain, and on the present posture of affairs in Europe. To His Grace the Duke of Marlborough
- 1739: A rhapsody on virtue and pleasure
- 1739: A cursory view of the creation
- 1742: A demonstration of the will of God by the light of nature
- 1742: Mr. Cooke's original poems
- 1743: An epistle to the Right Honourable the Countess of Shaftesbury, with a prologue and epilogue on Shakespeare and his writings. By Mr. Cooke
- 1744: Love the cause and cure of grief, or the innocent murderer
- 1745: Immortality reveal'd
- 1746: A hymn to liberty
- 1748: A demonstration of the will of God by the light of nature
- 1748: A demonstration of the will of God by the light of nature
- 1749: An ode on beauty
- 1749: The convert: a poem
- 1750: An ode on martial virtue
- 1750: A magnum et multum in parvo: or, A diamond demonstration of the great mystery of the no. 666, in the compass of three 8vo pages, as plain as that two and three make five; or an exposition of Rev. c. xiii. v.18. Here is wisdom, and let him, who hath understanding, count the number of the beast for it is the number of a man; and his name (or number of his name in the order of creatures) is 666. To all the clergy, and laity of Great Britain and Ireland, and elsewhere
- 1751: An ode on the powers of poetry: to which are prefixed observations on taste, and on the present state of poetry and criticism in England
- 1752: The tryal of Hercules, an ode on glory, virtue, and pleasure
- 1752: The scheme of man's present and future existence
- 1752: Pythagoras an ode
- 1753: An ode on benevolence: to which are prefixed observations on education, taste, and poetry
- 1753: A prologue on comic poetry
- 1754: An ode on pleasure
- 1754: An ode on poetry, painting, and sculpture
- 1754: An hymn to May
- 1755: An ode on the powers of eloquence
- 1756: An ode on beauty
- 1770: The universal letter-writer
- 1772: The universal letter-writer; or, New art of polite correspondence
- 1775: The universal letter-writer
- 1788: The universal letter-writer
- 1789: A letter to the Rt. Hon. Thomas Conolly
- 1790: The new and complete universal letter-writer
- 1790: Constitutional connection between Great Britain and Ireland
- 1790: The new and complete universal letter-writer, or young secretary's instructor
- 1790: A letter to the Rt. Hon. Thomas Conolly
- 1790: Constitutional connection between Great Britain and Ireland
- 1791: The universal letter-writer
- 1794: The universal letter-writer
- 1795: The universal letter-writer
- 1796: The universal letter-writer: or, New art of polite correspondence
- 1796: The universal letter-writer
- 1798: The universal letter-writer: or, New art of polite correspondence
- 1798: The universal letter-writer
As Publisher
Sun Dec 10 10:41:24 CST 2023