Thomas D'Urfey
Active Years
Min year: 1660, Max year: 1791, Max count: 13
As Author
- 1660: Amorett and Phillis or two to one is odds. Strephon a fair and comely lad who made two shepheardesses mad, above the rest one did pursue Phillis by name, what's that to you
- 1670: The Winchester wedding: or, Ralph of Reading
- 1670: Pretty Kate of Edenborough
- 1670: Pretty Kate of Edenborough
- 1671: Beauties cruelty: or, the passionate lover
- 1671: Beauty's cruelty: or, the passionate lover
- 1672: The Scotch lasses constancy: or Jenny's lamentation for the death of Jockey
- 1672: Pretty Kate of Edenborough
- 1672: The Scotch lasses constancy or Jenny's lamentation for the loss of Jockey
- 1674: The gowlin: or, a pleasant fancy for the spring
- 1674: Amoret and Phillis
- 1676: The siege of Memphis, or the ambitious queen
- 1676: The Scotch vvedding, or, a short and pretty way of wooing
- 1676: The Scotch wedding: or, A short and pretty way of wooing
- 1677: Madam Fickle: or the witty false one
- 1677: A fond husband: or, The plotting sisters
- 1678: A fond husband: or, The plotting sisters
- 1678: The fool turn'd critick
- 1678: Trick for trick: or, The debauch'd hypocrite
- 1679: Squire Oldsapp: or, the night-adventurers
- 1680: The virtuous wife; or, Good luck at last
- 1681: An excellent new ballad, to the tune of How unhappy is Phillis in love.
- 1681: A vvord in season: or, Now or never
- 1681: New operas with comic stories
- 1681: The progress of honesty: or, a view of a court and city
- 1681: An excellent new ballad, to the tune of, How unhappy is Phillis in love.
- 1681: An excellent new ballad, to the tune of, How unhappy is Phillis in love:
- 1681: The progress of honesty: or, a view of a court and city
- 1681: An excellent new ballad, to the tune of, How unhappy is Phillis in love.
- 1681: Sir Barnaby Whigg: or, No wit like a womans
- 1681: The gowlin: or, A pleasant fancy for the spring
- 1682: The injured princess, or The fatal vvager
- 1682: The king's health.
- 1682: The royalist·
- 1682: An excellent new ballad to the tune of, How unhappy is Phillis in love,
- 1682: The Scotch lasses constancy: or, Jenny's lamentation for the death of Jockey
- 1682: Butler's ghost: or, Hudibras
- 1682: Scandalum magnatum: or, Potapski's case
- 1682: Jenneys lamentation for the loss of Jocky or, a new song in the play called The Royalist
- 1682: A prologue to a new play, called The royallist
- 1682: Madam Fickle; or, The witty false one
- 1682: Advice to the city
- 1682: Advice to the city or the Wiggs loyalty explain'd
- 1682: The Scotch lasses constancy: or, Jenny's lamentation for the death of Jockey
- 1683: Several new songs
- 1683: A carrouse to the emperor, the royal Pole, and the much-wong'd [sic] Duke of Lorrain
- 1683: Kind lady or, The loves of Stella and Adonis
- 1683: Choice new songs never bfore printed
- 1683: A New collection of songs and poems
- 1683: The kind lady or, The loves of Stella and Adonis
- 1683: The kind lady, or, The loves of Stella and Adonis
- 1683: A carrouse to the Emperor, the royal Pole, and the much-wrong'd Duke of Lorrain
- 1684: State & ambition
- 1684: Sung before his Majesty at New-Market
- 1684: The New-market song
- 1684: A new littani, design'd for this Lent, and to be sung in all the conventicles, in and about London, for the instruction of the Whiggs
- 1684: The New-market-song, to the tune of, Old Simon the King
- 1684: The malecontent
- 1684: State and ambition
- 1684: The prologue to Mr. Lacy's new play, Sir Hercules Buffoon or the poetical esquire. Written by Tho. Durfey, Gent. Spoken by Mr. Haynes
- 1684: State & ambition
- 1685: The Winchester wedding: or, Ralph of Reading and Black Bess of the Grern
- 1685: The constant lover: or, Celia's glory exprest to the life
- 1685: The Scotch lad's moan. Or, Pretty Moggies unkindness
- 1685: A fond husband: or, The plotting sisters
- 1685: The joys of vertuous love: or, An invitation to the happy state of marriage
- 1685: An elegy upon the late blessed monarch King Charles II
- 1685: Prologue to A commonwealth of women
- 1685: A third collection of new songs, never printed before
- 1686: A common-wealth of vvomen·
- 1686: Advice to the ladies of London, in the choice of their husbands
- 1686: The banditti, or, A ladies distress
- 1687: A new collection of songs and poems
- 1687: A compleat collection of Mr. D'Urfey's songs and odes
- 1688: A fool's preferment, or, The three Dukes of Dunstable
- 1688: A poem congratulatory on the birth of the young prince
- 1688: The maiden-warrier
- 1688: New songs sung in The fool's preferment, or The three dukes of Dunstable
- 1688: The happy lovers, or, Cælia won by Aminta's loyalty
- 1688: Beauty's cruelty: or, The passionate lover
- 1688: The call to the races at New-Market
- 1689: The maiden-warrier: or, The damsels resolution to fight in field, by the side of Jockey her entire love
- 1689: The female trooper, or the valiant Scotch-wife
- 1690: New poems, consisting of satyrs, elegies, and odes
- 1690: Collin's walk through London and VVestminster
- 1690: An ode on the anniversary of the Queens birth
- 1690: Bonny Dundee: or, Jockey's deliverance
- 1690: Collin's walk through London and VVestminster
- 1690: Bonny Dundee, or, Jockey's deliverence [sic]
- 1691: Madam Fickle: or, The witty false one
- 1691: Love for money: or, The boarding school
- 1691: The weesil trap'd
- 1691: Love for money: or, The boarding school
- 1691: A Pindarick ode, on New-Year's-Day
- 1691: The moralist: or, A satyr upon the sects·
- 1691: The weesils
- 1691: A Pindarick poem on the Royal Navy
- 1691: Love for money: or, the boarding school
- 1691: Love for money: or, The boarding school
- 1692: A pindarick poem upon the fleet. Written by Mr. D'urfey
- 1692: The marriage-hater match'd
- 1692: The marriage-hater match'd
- 1692: The northern ditty: or, the Scotch-man out-witted by the country damsel
- 1693: The marriage-hater match'd
- 1693: The Richmond heiress: or, A woman once in the right
- 1693: The marriage-hater match'd
- 1693: The Richmond heiress: or, A woman once in the right
- 1694: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1694: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1694: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1694: The songs to the new play of Don Quixote
- 1694: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1694: The songs to the new play of Don Quixote
- 1694: The songs to the new play of Don Quixote· Part the first
- 1694: The Richmond heiress: or, A woman once in the right
- 1695: Gloriana. A funeral Pindarique poem
- 1696: A song in the third part of Don Quixote, set to musick by R. Raphael Courtivill
- 1696: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1696: New songs in the third part of The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1696: Love for money: or, The boarding school
- 1697: A new opera, call'd, Cinthia and Endimion: or, The loves of the deities
- 1697: An excellent new song, call'd, Celemene. Or, how shou'd I know more than you
- 1697: The intrigues at Versailles: or, A jilt in all humours
- 1697: A new opera, call'd, Cinthia and Endimion: or, The loves of the deities
- 1697: A Scotch song in the second part of the play call'd Don Quixote
- 1698: Hampton Court
- 1698: Albion's blessing
- 1698: A song in the Campaigners the words by Mr. Tho: Durfey
- 1698: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1698: The campaigners: or, the pleasant adventures at Brussels
- 1699: A choice collection of new songs and ballads. The words made to several pleasant tunes
- 1699: The second collection of new songs and ballads. With the songs and dialogues in the first and second part of Massaniello. By Tho. D'ursey. The tunes transpos'd for the flute, at the beginning of the book
- 1700: An ode, for the anniversary feast made in honour of St. Cæcilia. Nov. 22. Anno Domini, 1700. Set to musick by Dr. John Blow. The words made by Mr. D'Urfey
- 1700: A dialogue in the second part of the Conquest of Granada
- 1700: The northern ditty: or, The Scotch man out-witted by the country damsel
- 1700: An excellent new play-house song; called, the bonny gray-ey'd morn; or, Jockie rouz'd with love
- 1700: An excellent new play-house song, call'd The bonny grey-ey'd morn or Jockey rous'd with love
- 1700: The famous history of the rise and fall of Massaniello·
- 1701: The Winchester wedding: or, Ralph of Reading
- 1701: The bath
- 1701: The northern ditty: or, the Scotch-man out-witted by the country damsel
- 1702: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1703: The old mode & the new
- 1704: Tales tragical and comical
- 1705: An essay towards the theory of the intelligible world
- 1706: Wonders in the sun
- 1706: A new ode. Or, Dialogue between Mars, the God of war, and Plutus
- 1707: A new ode. Or, dialogue between Mars, the god of war, and Plutus
- 1707: The trophies
- 1707: Stories, moral and comical
- 1708: The French pride abated
- 1708: Honor & opes
- 1709: The modern prophets: or, New wit for a husband
- 1709: The call to the races at New-Market
- 1710: An excellent new song, on the authentick letter of Marshal D'Bouffler's to the French King, on the late unfortunate, but glorious, battle (as he calls it) fought near Mons; paraphrastically done into metre, in broken English. Written by Mr. Durffey. To a famous tune on the Welsh-harp, call'd, Of a noble race was Shinkin
- 1711: A fond husband
- 1711: The Winchester wedding: or, Ralph of Reading and Black Bess of the Green
- 1711: A fond husband: or, the plotting sisters. A comedy
- 1718: The richmond heiress
- 1719: The northern ditty: or, the Scotchman out-witted by the country damsel
- 1720: The hubble bubbles
- 1720: Love of no party
- 1720: The hubble bubbles
- 1720: The hubble bubble
- 1721: New opera's
- 1724: Love for money
- 1725: The satyr shewing, the nature and proceedings of the Church of En---nd, &c.
- 1726: Love for money
- 1727: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1727: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1727: The english stage Italianiz'd
- 1729: The comical history of Don Quixote
- 1735: The fond husband
- 1738: The dame of honour
- 1739: The progress of honesty
- 1740: The dame of honour
- 1740: The northern ditty
- 1740: The dame of honour
- 1750: The dame of honor; or, hospitality
- 1760: The northern ditty
- 1760: The northern ditty
- 1770: A song for two voices. Set by Mr. H. Purcel
- 1791: Wit and mirth
Mon Oct 02 01:12:24 CDT 2023