Thomas Gibbons
Active Years
Min year: 1739, Max year: 1799, Max count: 4
As Author
- 1739: An impartial review of Mr. Melvil's last piece against Mr. Nichols; Occasioned by His numerous Misrepresentations of, and injurious Reflections upon the Dissenters in general, and the Calvinists in particular. By Thomas Gibbons.
- 1740: The new-Blown bladder prick'd: or, a proper chastisement of one Jaques Spearman
- 1742: The mourner's complaint considered, and applied
- 1742: An elegy sacred to the memory of Mr. William Beldam
- 1743: Poems on several occasions
- 1745: Britannia's alarm
- 1746: The deliverance and triumph of Great Britain. In a thanksgiving-sermon for the success of His Majesty's arms under His Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland. Preached at Haberdashers-Hall, October 1, 1746. At the Conclusion of the Weekly Exercise of Prayer. By Thomas Gibbons. Published, with some Additions, at the Desire of the Ministers and People who heard it
- 1746: The mourner's complaint considered
- 1747: The prosperity of the Christian church in the latter ages of time represented and improved
- 1748: The religious observance of the sabbath practically stated and enforced
- 1748: The divine improvement of desolating judgements represented: in a sermon preached at Haberdasher's-Hall, March 27. on occasion of the dreadful fire in the City, on March 25, 1748. By Thomas Gibbons.
- 1748: An elegy on the death of the Reverend Mr. Peter Goodwin
- 1749: An elegiac poem
- 1749: The religious observance of the sabbath
- 1750: Juvenilia: poems on various subjects of devotion and virtue. By Thomas Gibbons
- 1752: A letter from a pastor to his people on the commencement of the New-Year, 1752
- 1752: The excellency of the gospel, and the happiness of an interest in it, represented in a sermon, preached at Haberdashers-Hall, Nov.4, 1751. To the Charitable Society, for promoting Religious Knowledge among the poor. By Thomas Gibbons.
- 1755: A sermon, preached at Haberdashers-Hall, November 30th, on occasion of the tremendous earthquake at Lisbon, November 1. 1755. By Thomas Gibbons
- 1755: Sympathy with our suffering brethren
- 1756: A sermon preached at Haberdashers-Hall, November 30th, on occasion of the tremendous earthquake at Lisbon, November 1, 1755
- 1756: Our duty as patriots, protestants, and Christians, in a time of war
- 1759: The tears of friendship. An elegiac ode
- 1760: A sermon, occasioned by the sudden decease of His late Most Excellent and Gracious Majesty George the second, at his palace at Kensington, on Saturday, October 25, 1760
- 1761: Divine conduct vindicated
- 1761: Divine conduct vindicated, or the operations of God shown to be the operations of wisdom: in the substance of two discourses, preached at Haberdashers-Hall, London, March 29, 1761
- 1761: Divine conduct vindicated
- 1762: Sermons on various subjects: with an hymn, adapted to each subject. Designed to assist the devotions of the family and closet. By Thomas Gibbons, M.A
- 1764: The duty of serving one another in love opened and inforced
- 1764: The divine glories displayed in babes and sucklings; a sermon preached at Haberdashers-Hall, June 10. Occasioned by the death of Nathaniel Gibbons, who departed this life May 28, 1764, ... By Thomas Gibbons, A.M
- 1764: Dedication of ourselves to God argued from the divine mercies
- 1767: Rhetoric; or, a view of its principal tropes and figures, in their origin and powers: with a Variety of Rules to escape Errors and Blemishes, and Attain Propriety and Elegance in Composition. By Thomas Gibbons, D.D
- 1768: An ode to the memory of His Grace the late Duke of Newcastle
- 1769: An account of a most terrible fire that happened on Friday the eighth of September, 1727
- 1769: Hymns adapted to divine worship
- 1770: The state of the world in general
- 1772: The christian minister, in three poetic epistles to Philander
- 1773: Objections against the application to the legislature for relief for Protestant dissenting ministers, and dissenting tutors and schoomasters [sic], dispassionately considered and obviated. To which are added, the sentiments and observations of Lactantius, an excellent Christian writer in the fourth century, and of the eminent Dr John Owen in the last century, upon the only warrantable methods of treating diversities of opinion in religion. By Thomas Gibbons, D.D
- 1773: The character and blessedness of the righteous represented
- 1775: Dissertatio inauguralis, de mulierum mammis, et morbis quibus obnoxiae sunt
- 1775: The blessedness of dying in the Lord considered in a sermon preached at the weigh-house in Little Eastcheap on the death of the Rev. William Langford, D.D. who departed this life April 23, 1775. ... By Thomas Gibbons, D.D
- 1775: Proposals for the printing by subscription, in two volumes, octavo, female worthies; or, The lives and memoirs of eminently pious women, who were ornaments of their sex, blessings to their families, and edifying examples to the church and world
- 1775: An english version of the Latin epitaphs in The Nonconformist's memorial
- 1776: The remembrance of our creator in the days of our youth
- 1777: Memoirs of eminently pious women, who were ornaments to their sex, blessings to their families, and edifying examples to the Church and the world. In two volumes. By Thomas Gibbons, D.D. ...
- 1778: An English version of the Latin epitaphs in The Nonconformist's memorial
- 1780: The remembrance of our creator in the days of our youth
- 1780: Memoirs of the Rev. Isaac Watts, D.D. By Thomas Gibbons, D.D
- 1781: Select portions of scripture
- 1784: Hymns adapted to divine worship
- 1787: Sermons, on evangelical and practical subjects
- 1789: To the freemen of Chatham County
- 1792: The life & death of Lady Jane Grey, by Thomas Gibbons, D.D
- 1799: Medical cases and remarks. Part I. On the good effects of salivation in jaundice arising from calculi. Part II. On the free use of nitre in hæmorragy. By Thomas Gibbons, M.D
Sat Dec 02 18:13:10 CST 2023