John Tutchin
Active Years
Min year: 1685, Max year: 1705, Max count: 6
As Author
- 1685: Poems on several occasions. With a pastoral·
- 1688: The Protestant Martyrs: or, The bloody assizes
- 1689: The bloody assizes: or, A compleat history of the life of George Lord Jefferies, from his birth to this present time
- 1689: A new martyrology: or, The bloody assizes
- 1689: The Dying speeches, letters and prayers, &c
- 1689: An heroick poem upon the late expedition of His Majesty
- 1689: The second and last collection of the dying speeches, letters and prayers, &c
- 1689: An impartial history of the life and death of George Lord Jeffreys late Lord Chancellor of England
- 1690: Reflections upon the French Kings declaration
- 1690: A poem upon Their Majesties speeches to the nonconformist ministers
- 1690: A true and impartial account of a great and bloody fight between part of the English fleet, commanded by Sir Clovesly Shovel, and the French at sea·
- 1690: Civitas militaris. Or, A poem on the city royal regiment of horse
- 1691: A congratulatory poem to the reverend Dr. John Tillotson
- 1691: The tribe of Levi
- 1691: The tribe of Levi·
- 1691: The tribe of Levi
- 1691: The tribe of Levi
- 1692: The earth-quake of Jamaica
- 1692: A funeral poem on the death of the reverend and learned divine Mr. Richard Baxter. Written by Mr. Tutchin
- 1693: A new martyrology: or, The bloody assizes
- 1694: An epistle to Mr. Benjamin Bridgwater, occasion'd by the death of the late Queen Mary. By Mr. Tutchin
- 1696: A Pindarick ode, in the praise of folly and knavery. By Mr. Tutchin
- 1697: A search after honesty
- 1698: White-hall in flames. A pindarick poem
- 1700: Remarks on the present condition of the navy, and particularly of the victualling·
- 1700: The foreigners. A poem. Part I
- 1700: The foreigners
- 1700: Remarks on the present condition of the Navy, and particularly of the victualling
- 1700: Remarks upon the Navy. The second part
- 1701: The apostates. A poem
- 1701: The British muse: or Tyranny expos'd. A satyr occasioned by all the fulsom and lying poems and elegies, that have been written in on the occasion of the death of the late King James
- 1701: The apostates
- 1702: A vindication of the observator, in answer to a scandalous libel, lately printed, called, The observator observ'd. Written by the author of the Observator
- 1702: The mouse grown a rat
- 1702: The mouse grown a rat
- 1702: The British muse: or tyranny expos'd
- 1702: The apostates
- 1702: The mouse grown a rat
- 1703: The whiskers whisk'd
- 1703: An historical and political treatise of the navy: with some thoughts how to retrieve the ancient glory of the navy of England
- 1703: The second part of the mouse grown a rat: or, the story of the city and country mouse. Newly transpos'd. In a dialogue betwixt Bays, Johnson, and Smith, in the present reign
- 1704: The tryal and examination of Mr. John Tutchin, for writing a certain libel, call'd the observator; before the Right Honourable the Lord Chief Justice Holt, &c. at Guild-Hall in the city of London, on Saturday the 4th of November 1704
- 1704: An historical and political treatise of the navy: with some thoughts how to retrieve the ancient glory of the navy of England
- 1704: An account of the proceedings on the tryal of Mr. John Tutchin
- 1704: A poem in the praise of folly and knavery
- 1705: England's happiness consider'd
- 1705: The western martyrology
Thu Dec 07 17:01:21 CST 2023