William Thompson
Active Years
Min year: 1645, Max year: 1800, Max count: 2
As Author
- 1645: Montrosse totally routed at Tividale in Scotland on Saturday last, by Lieutenant Generall Lesly
- 1647: Englands freedome, souldiers rights: vindicated against all arbitrary unjust invaders of them, and in particular against those new tyrants at Windsore, which would destroy both under the pretence of marshall law. Or, the just declaration, plea, and protestation of William Thompson
- 1649: Englands standard advanced in Oxfordshire, or, A declaration from Mr. VVil. Thompson, and the oppressed people of this nation, now under his conduct in the said county
- 1649: Englands standard advanced. Or A declaration from M. Will. Thompson and the oppressed people of this nation, now under his conduct in Oxfordshire
- 1705: Some fruits of solitude: in reflections and maxims
- 1710: The care of parents is a happiness to children
- 1711: The child's guide to the English tongue
- 1743: An enquiry into the natural state of man
- 1746: An hymn to May
- 1746: Sickness. A poem
- 1747: Ode brumalis
- 1747: Winter, an ode
- 1756: Gratitude. A poem
- 1757: The Royal Navy-men's advocate
- 1757: Poems on several occasions, to which is added Gondibert and Birtha, a tragedy. By William Thompson M. A. Late Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford
- 1759: The case of William Thompson, citizen, in Little Tower-Street, London, and author of The royal navy-men's advocate, briefly stated and considered
- 1760: Garden inscriptions
- 1761: A copy of Thompson's Justification
- 1761: An appeal to the public
- 1771: The conduct of the Royal Academicians
- 1779: The new gardener's calendar
- 1779: The new gardener's calendar
- 1783: The new and complete bird-fancyer
- 1785: Hay-market exhibition (now open) is a curious and valuable assemblage of five hundred pictures & drawings, and are all the property and works of Mr. Thompson, confessedly the greatest number ever exhibited. (in this or any other country) By the pencil of one master
- 1790: To the respectable citizens of Boston
- 1791: Dear brethren, we whose names are underwritten, having seriously weighed the present state of our affairs,
- 1793: An exhortation
- 1796: The Baltimore Town and Fell's Point directory
- 1800: The new and complete bird-fancier, or, Bird fancier's recreation and delight
As Bookseller
Thu Jun 01 11:21:33 CDT 2023