John Lacy
Active Years
Min year: 1560, Max year: 1779, Max count: 5
As Author
- 1560: wyl bucke his testament
- 1669: Tobacco, a poem
- 1672: The old troop: or, Monsieur Raggou
- 1672: The dumb lady: or, The farriar made physician
- 1672: The old troop: or, Monsieur Raggou
- 1684: Sr. Hercules Buffoon: or The poetical squire
- 1698: The old troop: or, Monsieur Raggou
- 1698: Sauny the Scott: or, The taming of the shrew
- 1699: A new Scotch song. Sett by Mr. Daniel Purcell, and sung in the last reviv'd play call'd, the taming of the Shrew, or, Sawny the Scot. Sung by Mrs. Harris
- 1699: 'Twas in the month of May
- 1699: A song in the Taming the Shrew or Sawny the Scot, sung by Mrs. Ciber set by Mr. Purcell and exactly engrav'd by Tho: Cross
- 1702: The representative of London and Westminster in Parliament, examined and consider'd. Wherein Appears the Antiquity of most of the Burroughs in England; with the Proportions, whereby every County is over or under Represented, according to a Scale from the Royal Aid Assesments; by which appears that Middlesox is found to be Represented but one Tenth part of it's due Proportion; unto which a Remedy is proposed, and several Reasons offer'd to prove the same, of Universal Benefit to the Kingdom. By a gentleman
- 1704: A letter to Sir H. Mackworth, concerning his treatise about the late occasional bill
- 1704: A moral test, the manifest intent in law, of the sacramental; and a due enforcement thereof evinced, the honour, the safety, and incomparable happiness of England. With a dedication to Her Majesty. By John Lacy, Esq,
- 1707: Warnings of the eternal spirit, by the mouth of his servant John, sirnam'd Lacy. The second part
- 1707: The prophetical warnings of John Lacy, Esq
- 1707: Warnings of the eternal spirit, by the mouth of his servant John, sirnam'd Lacy. The third and last part
- 1708: A relation of the dealings of God to his unworthy servant John Lacy, since the time of his believing and professing himself inspir'd
- 1708: Sauny the Scot
- 1708: Predictions concerning the raising the dead body of Mr. Thomas Emes, commonly call'd Doctor Emes, late of Old-Street-Square, in the parish of St. Giles, by Cripplegate, London: who on or about the 4th day of December, 1707. was taken with a most violent Head-Ach, or meagrim; and died on the 22d day of December, 1707. and was buried on the 25th day of the same month, being Christmas-Day, in the burying-place, in Bun-hill-Feilds, near Moor-Fields.
- 1708: Mr. Lacy's letter to the Reverend Dr. Josiah Woodward, concerning his remarks on the modern prophets
- 1708: Squire Lacy's reasons why Dr. Emms was not rais'd from the dead on the 25th. of May, according to the French prophet's predictions
- 1709: A warning of the eternal spirit, &c
- 1711: A letter from John Lacy, to Thomas Dutton, being reasons why the former left his wife and took E.Gray a prophetess to his bed
- 1713: The general delusion of Christians
- 1713: The general delusion of Christians
- 1714: The steeleids, or, the tryal of wit. A poem, in three cantos: by John Lacy, Esq
- 1714: Sauny the Scot
- 1714: The ecclesiastical and political history of Whig-Land
- 1714: The representative of London and Westminster in Parliament, examined and consider'd. ... By John Lacy, Esq
- 1715: The vision of John Lacy, Esq; and prophet, on Thursday the 9th of June, 1715
- 1723: The scene of delusions
- 1731: Sauny the Scot
- 1736: Sauny the Scot
- 1738: A serious address to the lovers of civil and religious liberty
- 1738: A serious address to the lovers of civil and religious liberty
- 1738: Peter's visitation
- 1738: The second part of Peter's visitation
- 1779: The universal system
Thu Dec 07 06:46:55 CST 2023