Edward Ward
Active Years
Min year: 1689, Max year: 1800, Max count: 28
As Author
- 1689: The pleasures of matrimony
- 1690: The school of politicks: or, The humours of a coffee-house
- 1691: The poet's ramble after riches, or, A nights transactions upon the road
- 1691: The school of politicks: or, The humours of a coffee-house·
- 1691: The school of politicks. Or the humours of a coffee-house
- 1692: The miracles perform'd by money
- 1693: A country scuffle over a pot of ale
- 1694: On the death of the late Lieutenant General Talmach
- 1695: Female policy detected. Or, The arts of a designing woman laid open
- 1695: The auction, or the poet turn'd painter
- 1698: Ecclesia & factio
- 1698: A curry-comb for a cocks-comb: or, the Trip to Holland detected. By the author of The trip to Jamaica
- 1698: O raree-show, O pretty show: or, the city feast
- 1698: A trip to Jamaica
- 1698: The poet's ramble after riches
- 1698: Sot's paradise: or, The humours of a Derby-ale-house
- 1698: A trip to Jamaica
- 1698: Ecclesia & factio
- 1698: Ecclesia & factio
- 1698: A trip to Jamaica
- 1699: The poet's ramble after riches
- 1699: Sot's paradise: or, The humours of a Derby-ale-house
- 1699: A walk to Islington
- 1699: [A] hue and cry after a man-midwife
- 1699: The world bewitch'd
- 1699: Modern religion and ancient loyalty: a dialogue
- 1699: A trip to Jamaica
- 1699: The cock-pit combat: or, The baiting of the tiger
- 1699: A trip to New-England
- 1699: A walk to Islington
- 1699: A journey to Scotland
- 1699: A hue and cry after a man-midwife
- 1700: The wealthy shop-keeper: or, The charitable citizen
- 1700: A journey to Hell: or, A visit paid to the Devil
- 1700: The rambling rakes: or, London libertines. By the author of The step to the bath
- 1700: Labour in vain: or, What signifies little or nothing
- 1700: The paradice of pleasure: or, An encomium upon Darby-ale
- 1700: The insinuating bawd: and the repenting harlot
- 1700: A step to Stir-Bitch-Fair
- 1700: The metamorphos'd beau: or, The intrigues of Ludgate·
- 1700: A step to the Bath
- 1700: A collection of the writings
- 1700: A trip to Jamaica
- 1700: Sot's paradise: or, The humours of a Derby-ale-house
- 1700: A journey to H----: or, A visit paid to, &c
- 1700: The grand mistake: or, All men happy if they please
- 1700: The reformer. Exposing the vices of the age: in several characters
- 1700: A frolick to Horn-Fair
- 1700: The dancing-school
- 1700: Helter skelter, or, The Devil upon two sticks
- 1700: The insinuating bawd: and the repenting harlot
- 1700: A step to the Bath
- 1700: A journey to Hell: or, A visit paid to the devil
- 1701: Æsop at Paris, his letters and fables. Translated from the original French
- 1701: Battel without bloodshed
- 1701: The pleasures of a single life
- 1701: Three nights adventures
- 1701: The insinuating bawd: and the repenting harlot
- 1701: A walk to Islington
- 1701: The reformer: or, the vices of the age expos'd
- 1701: The character of a covetous citizen
- 1701: Æsop at Paris
- 1701: The revels of the gods
- 1701: The pleasures of a single life
- 1701: The poet's ramble after riches
- 1701: The kentish fable of the lion and the foxes
- 1701: The reformer
- 1701: The pleasures of a single life
- 1701: The pleasures of a single life
- 1702: The pleasures of a single life
- 1702: The London-spy compleat
- 1702: The city madam, and the country maid
- 1702: Bribery and simony; or, a satyr against the corrupt use of money. By the author of The London spy
- 1702: Hob turn'd courtier. A satyr
- 1702: Female policy detected
- 1703: In imitation of Hudibras. The dissenting hypocrite
- 1703: The secret history of the Calves-Head Clubb
- 1703: The secret history of the Calves-Head Club
- 1703: The london-Spy
- 1703: The secret history of the Calves=head club, or The republican unmasqu'd
- 1703: The rise and fall of Madam Coming-Sir
- 1703: The pleasures of matrimony
- 1703: The auction, or the poet turn'd painter
- 1704: The London-spy
- 1704: A journey to H-ll: or, A visit paid to the D----l
- 1704: The secret history of the Calves-Head Club
- 1704: Helter skelter
- 1704: A journey to h-ll
- 1704: All men mad
- 1704: A trip to the devil's summer-house, or, A journey to May-fair ...
- 1704: A satyr against wine
- 1704: Helter skelter
- 1704: Female policy detected
- 1704: The libertine's choice
- 1704: The dissenter
- 1705: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the times. Part the first
- 1705: More priestcraft
- 1705: Fortune's bounty
- 1705: Fortune's bounty: or, An everlasting purse for the greatest cuckold in the kingdom
- 1705: Hudibras redivivus
- 1705: More priestcrast: being a new whip for an old whore, or, A Protestant scourge for a popish jacket. A poem
- 1705: Fortune's bounty
- 1705: Hudibras redivivus
- 1705: The secret history of the Calves-Head Club
- 1705: The secret history of the Calves-Head-Club
- 1705: Honesty in distress
- 1705: The secret history of the Calves-Head-Club
- 1705: Helter skelter
- 1705: The secret history of the Calves-Head Club
- 1705: The pleasures of a single life, or, The miseries of matrimony
- 1705: A fair shell, but a rotten kernel: or, a bitter nut for a factious monkey
- 1705: Hudibras redivivus
- 1706: The rambling fuddle-caps
- 1706: Hudibras redivivus
- 1706: Hudibras redivivus
- 1706: The London-spy
- 1706: The secret history of the Calves-Head Club
- 1706: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1706: Hudibras redivivus
- 1706: Miss Prue in her tempting pinner; or, the true character of a citizens daughter
- 1706: Hudibras redivivus: or, A Burlesque poem on the times
- 1706: Hudibras redivivus
- 1706: Hudibras redivivus: or, A Burlesque poem on the times
- 1706: The rambling fuddle-caps
- 1706: The third volume, consisting of poems on divers subjects: Viz. The I, II, and III Parts of the Journey to H-The Charitable Citizen. All Men Mad. Helter Skelter. Honesty in Distress. A Satyr against Wine. A Poem in Praise of Small-Beer On the Success of the Duke of Marlborough. Fortune's Bounty. A Protestant Scourge. A Musical Entertainment. A Satyr against the Corrupt use of Money. A Dialogue between Britanniae and Prudence. The Libertine's Choice. With several other Poems never before Printed. By the author of the London Spy
- 1706: The riddle
- 1706: A satyr against wine. With a poem in praise of small beer. Written by a gentleman in a fever; occasion'd by hard drinking. Publish'd for the benefit of all Her Majesty's good subjects; to prevail with them, to avoid supporting the publick oppressor of mankind, the implacable tyrant of France
- 1706: Hudibras redivivus
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: The barbacue feast
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: The wooden world dissected
- 1707: Friendly correspondences: or, Epistolary satyrs upon vertue and vice in several letters
- 1707: Female policy detected
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: The secret history of the Calves-Head Club, compleat: or, The republican unmask'd
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: The London terræ-filius: or, The satyrical reformer
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: The London terræfilius: or, The satyrical reformer
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A Burlesque poem on the times
- 1707: The london Terraefilius
- 1707: The london Terraefilius
- 1707: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the various humours of town and country
- 1707: The secret history of the Calves-Head Club
- 1708: The modern world disrob'd
- 1708: The Dutch riddle
- 1708: Honesty in distress
- 1708: The wooden world dissected
- 1708: Marriage-dialogues
- 1708: The pleasures of a single life
- 1708: Honesty in distress
- 1708: The reformer
- 1708: The modern world disrob'd
- 1708: The wars of the elements: or, a description of a sea storm
- 1708: Marriage-dialogues
- 1708: Honesty in distress
- 1708: Honesty in distress
- 1708: Hudibras redivivus: or, A burlesque poem on the times
- 1708: The modern world disrob'd
- 1708: The wooden world dissected
- 1709: The [p]leasures of a single life, or, The miseries of Matrimony
- 1709: Mars stript of his armour or, The army display'd in all its true colours
- 1709: The second part, of the London clubs; containing, the No-Nose Club, the Beaus Club, the Farting Club, the Sodomites, or Mollies Club. The Quacks Club, by the author of The London spy
- 1709: Hudibras redivivus: or, a Burlesque poem on the times
- 1709: The pleasures of a single life
- 1709: The secret history of the Calves-Head Club
- 1709: The pleasures of a single life
- 1709: The pleasures of a single life, or, The miseries of matrimony: occasionally writ upon the many divorces lately granted by Parliament
- 1709: The rambling fuddle-caps
- 1709: The libertine's choice
- 1709: Hudibras redivivus
- 1709: The vanity of upstarts: or, an honest enquiry into ignoble greatness. An ode
- 1709: Mars stript of his armour
- 1709: Hudibras redivivus: or, a Burlesque poem on the times
- 1709: The secret history of clubs
- 1709: The fourth volume of the writings of the author of the London-Spy
- 1709: The history of the London clubs, or, The citizens' pastime
- 1709: Marriage-dialogues
- 1709: The island of content
- 1709: The forgiving husband
- 1709: The wars of the elements: or, a description of a sea-storm
- 1709: The pleasures of a single life
- 1709: The vanity of upstarts: or, an honest enquiry into ignoble greatness. An ode
- 1709: The fourth volume of the writings of the author of the London-spy. Prose and verse
- 1709: The london-Spy
- 1709: The rambling fuddle-caps
- 1709: The history of the London club[s] or, The citizens pastime
- 1709: Mars stript of his armour: or, The army display'd in all its true colours. Containing the characters of 1. An army in general. 2. A regiment, or battalion. 3. A Captain-general. 4. A lieutenant-general. 5. A major-general. 6. A brigadier-General. 7. A colonel. 8. A lieutenant-colonel. 9. A major. 10. A captain of the guards. 11. An aid de camp. 12. A partizan. 13. A spy. 14. A captain. 15. A lieuetenant. 16. An ensign. 17. An adintant. 18. A quarter-master. 19. The chaplain of a regiment. 20. The surgeon. 21. A serjeant. 22. A grenadier. 23. A private centinel. 24. A provost. By a lover of the mathematicks
- 1710: Honesty in distress
- 1710: Honesty in distress
- 1710: Honesty in distress, but reliev'd by no party
- 1710: Vulgus Britannicus
- 1710: The fourth part of Vulgus Britannicus
- 1710: Vulgus Britannicus
- 1710: Pulpit-war: or, Dr. S-ll, the High-Church trumpet, and Mr. H-ly, the Low-Church drum, engaged. By way of dialogue between the fiery dragon, and aspiring grashopper [sic]
- 1710: The poet's ramble after riches
- 1710: The fifth and last part of Vulgus Britannicus
- 1710: Vulgus Britannicus
- 1710: A true history of the honest Whigs
- 1710: The poet's ramble after riches
- 1710: Matrimony unmask d [sic]
- 1710: Wine and wisdom
- 1710: Vulgus Britannicus
- 1710: Vulgus Britannicus
- 1710: The life and notable adventures of that renown'd knight, Don Quixote de la Mancha
- 1710: Satyrical reflections on clubs
- 1710: Nuptial dialogues and debates
- 1710: A true history of the honest Whigs
- 1710: The tipling philosophers
- 1710: The beau's choice
- 1710: The pleasures of single life; or, The miseries of matrimony
- 1710: The galloper
- 1711: Vulgus Britannicus
- 1711: The religious turn-coat, or, The triming observator
- 1711: Miscellaneous writings, in verse and prose, both serious and comical, containing, twenty one excellent poems upon very diverting Subjects. Also several pleasant letters upon various Occasions both in Town and Country. With merry observations and predictions upon every month, and every remarkable Day throughout the Year. By Mr. Edward Ward. Vol. III
- 1711: The life and notable adventures of that renown'd knight Don Quixote de la Mancha
- 1712: The quack-Vintners
- 1712: A satyr against wine. With a poem, in praise of small beer. Written by a gentleman in a fever, occasion'd by hard drinking
- 1712: Female policy detected
- 1713: The turncoat. To the tune of John Anderson my jo
- 1713: A small parcel of very rare books, in Greek, Latin, and Italian; of the most valuable editions, viz. Aldus, H. & R. Stephens, Vascosan, Colineus and other famous printers; ... Which will be sold by auction ... on Monday the 14th of December, 1713, ... by Thomas Ballard
- 1713: The life and notable adventures of that renown'd knight, Don Quixote de la Mancha
- 1713: The whigs unmask'd: being the secret history of the Calf's-Head-Club
- 1713: The history of the grand rebellion
- 1714: Adam and Eve stript of their furbelows
- 1714: Matrimony unmask'd
- 1714: The republican procession; or The tumultuous cavalcade
- 1714: The republican procession
- 1714: The republican procession
- 1714: The hudribrastick [sic] brewer: or, A preposterous union between malt and meter
- 1714: The republican procession
- 1714: The field-spy: or, the walking observator. A poem. By the author of the London-spy
- 1714: The whigs unmask'd: or, the history of the Calf's-Head-Club farther expos'd
- 1714: The mourning prophet: or, Drooping faction reviv'd, by the death of Queen Anne. A poem. By E.W
- 1714: Hudibras redivivus
- 1714: The whole pleasures of matrimony
- 1714: The republican procession
- 1714: The republican procession
- 1714: The republican procession
- 1715: The Lord Whiglove's elegy: to which is added a pious epitaph upon the late Bishop of Addlebury
- 1715: Female policy detected
- 1715: Adam and Eve stript of their furbelows
- 1715: The history of the grand rebellion
- 1716: St. Paul's Church; or, The protestant ambulators. A burlesque poem
- 1716: Female policy detected
- 1716: St. Paul's Church; or, The protestant ambulators. A burlesque poem
- 1717: A collection of historical and state poems, satyrs, songs, and epigrams. Being the [fifth] volume of miscellanies. By the author of the London-Spy. Consisting of the following Poems: I. The Cavalcade, &c. II The Hudibrastic Brewer. III. The L. Whiglove's Elegy. IV. An Epitaph upon the late Bishop of - V. St. Paul's Church, &c. VI. The British Wonders. Vii. Rustica Academiae Oxoniensis, &c. Latin and English. Viii. The Warwick Lady. IX. The Cuckoldy Yeoman. X. The English Foreigners. XI. The Conforming Parson. XII. An humble Offering to the best of Queens, &c. In all Seventy odd Poems, besides some Prose
- 1717: British wonders
- 1717: The Tory Quaker: or, Aminadab's new vision in the fields, after a cup of the creature
- 1717: The lord Clarendon's History of the grand rebellion
- 1717: Miscellaneous writings, in verse and prose, both serious and comical
- 1717: A collection of the writings of Mr. Edward Ward
- 1717: The tower of Babel
- 1717: British wonders
- 1718: T---- B------'s last letter to his witty friends & companions
- 1718: The London-spy compleat
- 1718: Miscellaneous writings
- 1718: The whole pleasures of matrimony
- 1719: Satyrical reflections on clubs
- 1719: Rightful Monarchy, and revolution tyranny discuss'd
- 1720: The delights of the bottle
- 1720: A south-sea ballad
- 1720: A south-Sea ballad
- 1720: The second part of the history of the London clubs. Particularly, the Farting Club, the No-Nos'd Club, the Misers Club, the Atheistical Club. With a comical relation of the devil in a bear skin
- 1720: The delights of the bottle
- 1720: Poem upon the south-sea stock jobbers
- 1720: The delights of the bottle
- 1720: A south-sea ballad: or, Merry remarks upon Exchange-Alley bubbles. To a new tune, call'd the grand elixir, or the philosopher's stone discover'd
- 1720: A [lo]oking-glass for England
- 1720: A south-sea ballad
- 1720: A south-Sea ballad
- 1720: A list of the bubbles
- 1720: The tipling philosophers, set by Mr. Leveridge, and sung at the theatre in Dublin
- 1720: The delights of the bottle
- 1720: The pleasures of a single life: or, The miseries of matrimony
- 1720: The contending candidates
- 1720: The Lord Clarendon's History of the grand rebellion
- 1720: The rise and fall of madam Coming-Sir
- 1721: Honesty in distress
- 1721: A list of the bubbles
- 1721: Wine and wisdom
- 1721: The northern cuckold, or, The garden house intrigue
- 1721: The vanity of upstarts, or an honest inquiry into ignoble greatness. An ode. To which is prefix'd an epistle to a noble lord
- 1721: The Whigs unmask'd
- 1721: Honesty in distress: but reliev'd by no party
- 1721: The merry travellers
- 1721: The northern cuckold: or, The gardenhouse intrigue
- 1722: The parish gutt'lers
- 1722: The wand'ring spy
- 1722: Hudibras redivivus
- 1722: The parish gutt'lers
- 1722: The parish gutt'lers
- 1723: Nuptial dialogues and debates
- 1723: The wandering spy: or The merry travellers
- 1723: The wandering spy: or the merry travellers. A trip upon ten-toes, from Moorfields to Bromley. An humorous poem. The second edition. Part I. By the author of The cavalcade
- 1723: The wandering spy: or the merry travellers. A trip upon ten-toes, from Moorfields to Bromley. An humorous poem. Part I. By the author of The cavalcade
- 1724: The poet's ramble after riches
- 1724: The merry travellers
- 1724: The wandring spy: or, The merry observator
- 1724: The dancing devils
- 1725: A riddle
- 1725: A dialogue between a surly husband, and a condescending wife
- 1725: The riddle
- 1725: Female policy detected
- 1725: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1725: The parish gutt'lers
- 1726: News from Madrid
- 1727: The wandring spy: or, the merry observator
- 1727: An old maid's fortune: or, the bride at her wits-end
- 1727: The republican procession, or, The tumultuous cavalcade
- 1728: Durgen
- 1729: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1729: Apollo's maggot in his cups
- 1729: The wandring spy
- 1729: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1729: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1730: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1730: The pleasure of a single life; or, The miseries of matrymony
- 1730: To the Right Honourable Humphrey Parsons lord mayor of the city of London
- 1730: The wars of the elements: or, a description of a sea storm
- 1730: The pleasures of a single life; or, The miseries of matrymony
- 1730: The poet's ramble after riches
- 1730: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1730: None but fools marry: or, a vindication of the batchelor's estimate; in answer to the objections made against it
- 1731: The ambitious father
- 1732: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life. In a letter to a friend. Being an answer to a proposal of marrying a lady with 2000l. fortune
- 1732: Truth in rhyme, to suit the time
- 1732: The parish-Gutt'lers
- 1734: The complete vintner; or The delights of the bottle
- 1734: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1735: A dialogue, between a depending courtier, who would have sacrific'd the chastity of his wife to a certain great man, in hopes of preferment, and his virtuous lady, who was avers'd to a compliance. To which is added, Moral reflections thereon
- 1735: A nuptial dialogue, between a pert young lady, and an old fumbling libertine
- 1737: All men mad
- 1737: Nuptial dialogues and debates
- 1737: Helter skelter
- 1737: The poet's ramble after riches
- 1737: Little Merlin's cave
- 1737: The riddle
- 1740: The insinuating bawd
- 1741: The modern courtier
- 1741: The ladies advocate
- 1741: The modern courtier
- 1742: The cudgel, or, A crab-tree lecture
- 1743: The delights of the bottle
- 1743: The pleasures of matrimony
- 1744: The wooden world dissected
- 1744: The wooden world dissected
- 1745: A compleat and humorous account of all the remarkable clubs and societies in the cities of London and Westminster, from the R-l-s-y down to the Lumber-Troop, &c
- 1746: A trip to Germany
- 1746: A compleat and humorous account of all the remarkable clubs and societies in the cities of London and Westminster
- 1746: A compleat and humorous account of all the remarkable clubs and societies in the cities of London and Westminster, [f]rom the R-l-S-y down to the Lumber-Troop, &c
- 1747: The pleasures of a single life
- 1747: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1749: Female policy detected: or, The arts of a designing woman laid open
- 1749: The wooden world dissected
- 1751: Wine and wisdom
- 1751: The wooden world dissected
- 1752: The wooden world dissected
- 1753: The London spy
- 1753: The London spy
- 1753: The London spy
- 1754: The batchelor's protest: or matrimony in disgrace
- 1755: Female policy detected
- 1755: Hudibras redivivus: or, a burlesque poem on the times. In twenty four parts. With an apology, and some other improvements throughout the whole. The fourth edition. To which is now added, The rambling fuddle-caps: or a tavern strugle [sic] for a kiss. By E. Ward
- 1756: The wooden world dissected
- 1756: The wooden world dissected
- 1756: A compleat and humorous account of all the remarkable clubs and societies in the cities of London and Westminster
- 1758: The pleasures of matrimony
- 1758: The insinuating bawd, and the repenting harlot
- 1759: Nuptial dialogues and debates
- 1760: The batchelor's estimate of the expences of a married life
- 1760: Honesty, in distress; but relieved by no party. :Giving an account how she went to court, but was scorn'd and slighted
- 1760: The pleasures of matrimony
- 1760: The wooden world dissected
- 1760: The pleasures of a single life or, The misers of matrimony[.]
- 1761: The wooden world dissected
- 1761: Female policy detected
- 1765: Mars stript of his armour
- 1765: Mars stript of his armour
- 1765: The pleasures of a single life: or The misery of matrimony
- 1767: The pleasures of a single life: or The misery of Matrimony
- 1770: The pleasures of a single life
- 1771: The wooden world
- 1772: The noble cuckolds; or The pleasures of a single life, and the miseries of matrimony
- 1773: Matrimony, [a] poem
- 1773: The wooden world dissected
- 1779: Neptune and Mars
- 1779: The wooden world dissected
- 1779: Mars stript of his armour
- 1784: Female policy detected
- 1786: Female policy detected
- 1787: Female policy detected
- 1790: Female policy detected: or The arts of a designing woman laid open
- 1791: Female policy detected; or, The arts of a designing woman laid open
- 1792: Female policy detected
- 1794: Female policy detected
- 1795: The wooden world dissected
- 1795: Female policy detected
- 1800: Female policy detected: or, The arts of a designing woman laid open
Fri Dec 08 19:43:23 CST 2023