Edward Stephens
Active Years
Min year: 1649, Max year: 1765, Max count: 11
As Author
- 1649: A letter of advice, from a secluded Member of the House of Commons, to his Excellency, Thomas Lord Fairfax
- 1674: A discourse concerning the original of the povvder-plot
- 1675: Observations upon a treatise intituled, Of humane reasonˇ
- 1687: Relief of apprentices wronged by their masters
- 1687: Relief of apprentices wronged by their masters
- 1687: Reasons for the repeal of the tests
- 1689: A specimen of a declaration against debauchery
- 1689: A caveat against flattery, and profanation of sacred things to secular ends
- 1689: A postcript. To the paper of humiliation
- 1689: Reflections upon the occurrences of the last year from 5 Nov. 1688. to 5 Nov. 1689
- 1689: The true English government
- 1689: An admonition to the magistrates of England upon our new settlement.
- 1689: Reflections upon the occurrences of the last year. From 5. Nov. 1688. to 5. Nov. 1689
- 1689: Reflections upon the occurrences of the last year. From 5. Nov. 1688. to 5. Nov. 1689
- 1689: Important questions of state, law, justice and prudence, both civil and religious, upon the late revolutions and present state of these nations. By Socrates Christianus
- 1689: Of humiliation, and the effects of it, in relation to the present occasion
- 1690: The great question, of the authority of the arch-bishops, bishops, & clergy
- 1690: A plain relation of the late action at sea, between the English & Dutch, and the French fleets, from June 22. to July 5. last
- 1690: A second letter to William Pen, George Whitehead, T. Eccleston, and the rest of the ministers of the Quakers at their general yearly meeting
- 1690: Considerations for competitors and electors of representatives in Parliament
- 1690: A preparation for death
- 1690: Considerations for competitors and electors of representatives in Parliament
- 1690: Reasons for the tryal of the Earl of Torrington by impeachment by the Commons in Parliament, rather than any other way
- 1690: An apology for Mr. R. Stafford, with an admonition to him and such other honest mistaken people
- 1690: Authority abused by the vindication of the last years transactions, and the abuses detected
- 1691: The beginning and progress of a needful and hopeful reformation in England
- 1691: Old English loyalty & policy agreeable to primitive Christianity. The first part. By the author of The beginning and progress of a needfull and hopefull reformation
- 1691: Brief heads of some seasonable reflections upon the miscarriages at sea, and upon the state of the nation in the year 1690. Not unusefull in this present year, 1691
- 1691: The spirit of the church-faction detected, in its nature and operations
- 1691: An admonition concerning a publick fast
- 1691: An appeal to heaven and earth
- 1695: Old English loyalty & policy
- 1695: A letter to a lady
- 1695: Positions concerning the differences between the true English liturgy
- 1695: Phinehas: or, the common duty of all men
- 1695: To his grace the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury
- 1695: A letter to a lady
- 1696: Asceticks: or, The heroick piety & virtue of the ancient Christian anchorets and coenobitesˇ
- 1696: The Cranmerian liturgy, or, The subtilty of the serpent
- 1696: The liturgy of the ancients represented, as near as well may be, in English forms
- 1696: The more excellent way: or, A proposal of a compleat work of charity
- 1697: A kind invitation to the people called Quakers, to the due consideration of some important truths
- 1697: An apology for, and an invitation to, the people call'd Quakers
- 1697: Tracts theological
- 1697: The shame and humiliation of the Quakers
- 1697: Theologica mystica
- 1697: Theologia mystica
- 1699: To Sir Richard Cocks
- 1699: Of prayers for the dead
- 1700: Thoughts about promoting the interest of Christ's universal church
- 1700: A preparative for the reception of truth
- 1700: A seasonable and necessary admonition to the gentlemen of the First Society, for Reformation of Manners
- 1700: The apology of Socrates Christianus
- 1700: To the knights, gentlemen, freeholders and commons of England, Edward Stephens wisheth prudence, piety, peace and happiness
- 1700: A compleat and unexceptionable form of liturgy, or divine service
- 1700: The apology of Socrates Christianus: or a brief and plain narrative of his honest endeavours for the service of his country
- 1700: The second part of the apology of Socrates Christianus, or, A plain declaration of the authority by which he acts
- 1700: An abstract of common principles of a just vindication of the rights of the kingdom of God upon earth, against the politick machinations of Erastian hereticks
- 1700: The case of the Church of England by law established
- 1700: The second service, or Office of the faithful enlarged, according to ancient forms
- 1701: Letters and papers concerning some matters in the last Parliament, relating to the common rights of all the Commons of England, fit to be considered in the next, and by all the said Commons in the mean time
- 1701: To Mainard Colchester, Esq; Sir, I should have much rejoyc'd at the election of our county of Gloucester, had they not unhappily dishonour'd it with the choice of so unworthy a person as Sir Richard Cocks,
- 1701: A message of peace to the distracted English nation, in certain necessary observations upon the proclamation for the fast; a letter to the ... E. of Pembrook,
- 1701: To the knights, gentlemen and free-holders of the county of Gloucester
- 1701: The most proper and effectual expedient to secure this nation against all counsels and attempts of any papal faction for the future
- 1702: A collection of tracts and papers lately written for the service of the church and kingdom of England
- 1702: A petition and demand of right and justice by one of the Commons of England, on behalf of himself and the rest. In a letter to his representative in the present House of Commons.
- 1702: The justice of our cause in the present war, in respect of what is peculiar to the English, in matter of civil right
- 1703: The case of the Roman Catholick missionars in England truly represented. In a letter to the ... Bishop G--- and the rest of the English bishops of the Roman communion
- 1703: A brief admonition concerning the present state of the Church of England. And the reformation of it
- 1703: A good and necessary proposal for the restitution of Catholick communion
- 1703: A true account of the unaccountable dealings of some Roman Catholick missionars of this nation, for seducing proselytes from the simplicity of the gospel, to the Roman mystery of iniquity. ... By Mr. Edward Stephens
- 1703: The misrepresenter truly represented, or a notable metamorphosis, of a zealous antipapist into a zealous popish missioner; and of a reputed Roman Catholick saint, into a real cheat and impostor
- 1703: A true account of the unaccountable dealings of some Roman Catholick missionaries of this nation
- 1703: A true account of the unaccountable dealings of some Roman Catholick missionars of this nation
- 1703: A good and necessary proposal for the restitution of Catholick communion
- 1704: The suppression of popery recommended to Her Majesty
- 1704: Achan and Elymas
- 1704: Letters and papers concerning some matters in the last Parliament
- 1704: The wonder of the Bishop of Meaux upon perusal of Dr. Bull's books, consider'd and answer'd
- 1704: The wonder of the Bishop of Meaux, upon perusal of Dr. Bull's books, consider'd and answer'd
- 1704: The spirit of a Roman Catholick missioner try'd and discover'd. In a certain letters between himself and a real Catholick
- 1705: An essay towards a proposal for Catholick communion
- 1705: An essay towards a proposal for Catholick communion
- 1705: A letter to the author of the Vindication of the deprived Bishops, in reply to his reasons for the validity of the lay-deprivation of the bishops by the statute of 1 Eliz. c. I
- 1705: The preface, relating the progress of the conviction aforesaid
- 1705: Questions concerning the proper and peculiar Christian worship
- 1705: The confusion of popery in England
- 1705: The case of the poor Grecian seamen.
- 1706: An unanswerable conviction of the impostures of popery, and deceits of the papal agents
- 1745: The dying heathen
- 1747: Miscellaneous poems
- 1748: A poem on the park and woods of the Right Honourable Allen Lord Bathurst. The second edition. By Edward Stephens
- 1751: A poem, in blank verse, on a violent storm, attended with thunder and lightning
- 1759: Poems on various subjects
- 1765: The birth-Day
Sat Dec 09 03:14:19 CST 2023