Thomas Brown
Active Years
Min year: 1688, Max year: 1799, Max count: 6
As Author
- 1688: The reasons of Mr. Bays changing his religion
- 1688: Heraclitus ridens redivivus: or, A dialogue between Harry and Roger concerning the times
- 1688: Heraclitus ridens redivivus; or, a dialogue between Harry and Roger, concerning the times
- 1688: Heraclitus ridens redivivus: or, A dialogue between Harry and Roger, concerning the times.
- 1688: Heraclitus ridens redivivus: or, A dialogue between Harry and Roger, concerning the times.
- 1689: Mr. Haynes his recantation-prologue upon his first appearance on the stage after his return from Rome
- 1690: The reasons of Mr. Joseph Hains the player's conversion & re-conversion
- 1690: The late converts exposed: or The reasons of Mr. Bays's changing his religion
- 1691: Novus reformator vapulans: or, The Welch Levite tossed in a blanket
- 1691: A congratulatory poem on His Majesty's happy return from Holland
- 1691: The reasons of the new convert's taking the oaths to the present government. By the author of the Reasons of Mr. Bay's conversion. In a dialogue
- 1691: Novus reformator vapulans: or, the Welch Levite tossed in a blanket
- 1691: The reasons of Mr. Bays changing his religion
- 1691: The reasons of Mr. Joseph Hains the player's conversion & re-conversion
- 1693: The Salamanca wedding: or, A true accouut [sic] of a swearing doctor's marriage with a Muggletonian widow in Breadstreet
- 1697: Tho. Brown's recantation of his satyr on the French King. Facit recantatio versum.
- 1697: Physick lies a bleeding, or The apothecary turned doctor
- 1699: A collection of miscellany poems, letters, &c
- 1699: A collection of miscellany poems, letters, &c. By Mr. Brown, &c. To which is added, a character of a latitudinarian
- 1700: Commendatory verses, on the author of The two Arthurs, and the Satyr against wit
- 1700: A description of Mr. D-n's funeral
- 1700: A collection of miscellany poems, letters, &c. By Mr. Tho. Brown
- 1700: A description of Mr. D--n's funeral
- 1700: A description of Mr. D-n's funeral·
- 1700: Amusements serious and comical, calculated for the meridian of London. By Mr. Brown
- 1701: Advice to the Kentish long-tails
- 1701: Advice to the Kentish long-tails
- 1701: Advice to the Kentish long-tails
- 1701: Dialogues of the living and the dead
- 1701: Advice to the Kentish long-tails
- 1702: Amusements serious and comical
- 1702: Commendatory verses
- 1703: An elegy upon the lamented death of Edward Millington
- 1703: Amusements serious and comical
- 1703: The mourning poet
- 1704: The dying thoughts and last reflections of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1704: A collection of all the dialogues written by Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1704: The stage-Beaux toss'd in a blanket
- 1704: Certamen epistolare; or, VIII letters between an attorney at lavv, and a dead parson
- 1705: A legacy for the ladies or, Characters of the women of the age
- 1706: A dialogue between the pillory and Daniel Defoe
- 1707: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1708: The last works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1708: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1708: The third volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown, containing, Amusements serious & comical, calculated for the meridian of London. To which is added, ten letters, on several subjects, Together with His Pocket-Book of Common Places. His Walk round London and Westminster, pleasantly exposing the Vices and Follies of several parts of the Town. Letters translated from Aeneas Sylvius, Poet-Laureat to the Emperor, who was after that created Pope, (pius II.) with his Satyr on Women of the Town. A Declamation in Defence of Gaming, &c. against Drunkenness. The Dispensary; or, The Quacks: a Farce, wrote in the Year 1697. His Diverting Letters, Billet-Deux, both Originals and Translations, to Gentlemen and Ladies. His Voyage on the Thames; or, the Water-Dialect. Poems, Translations, Lampoons, and Satyrs on several Occasions, in Latin and English. A Continuation of the Quaker's Sermon. His London and Lacedemonian Oracles, resolving many Nice and Curious Questions
- 1708: The fourth volume of the works of Mr. Tho. Brown: consisting of the reasons of Mr. Dryden's conversion. ... To which is added, verses on several occasions.
- 1709: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1709: The fourth volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown, serious, moral, comical, and satyrical
- 1710: The compleat works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1711: The fourth volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1711: The fourth volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown, which compleats the whole sett. ... Together with his translation of Horace, ... To which is added, an essay on humor in comedy; in a letter to Mr. Dennis, written by William Congreve, Esq
- 1711: The fourth volume of The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1712: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1712: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1713: The fourth and last volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown,
- 1713: Tom Brown's letter from the shades
- 1715: The fourth and last volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1715: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1715: The third volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown, serious and comical, in prose and verse.
- 1719: The third volume of the works of Mr. Tho. Brown
- 1720: The fourth and last volume of The works of Mr. Tho. Brown
- 1720: The second volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown, serious and comical in prose and verse. Adorn'd with cuts
- 1720: The remains of Mr. Tho. Brown
- 1720: The fourth and last volume of The works of Mr. Thomas Brown, serious and comical in prose and verse. Adorn'd with cuts
- 1720: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1720: The third volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown, serious and comical in prose and verse. Adorn'd with cuts
- 1721: The fourth volume of The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1721: The fifth volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1725: Amusements serious and comical
- 1730: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1744: The second volume of the works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1744: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1760: A plain narrative of the uncommon sufferings, and remarkable deliverance of Thomas Brown, of Charlestown, in New-England
- 1760: A plain narrative of the uncommon sufferings, and remarkable deliverance of Thomas Brown, of Charlestown, in New-England
- 1760: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1760: A plain narrative of the uncommon sufferings, and remarkable deliverance of Thomas Brown, of Charlestown, in New-England
- 1761: Answers for Thomas Brown cooper in Linlithgow, to the petition of John Brown smith there
- 1773: A key to the evangelical sense of the Old and New Testament books
- 1778: The works of Mr. Thomas Brown
- 1787: The storm
- 1791: A history of the shires in Scotland, in a series of letters, written by Thomas Brown, a travelling merchant in Scotland, during the course of the years 1790 and 1791
- 1794: General view of the agriculture of the county of Derby
- 1798: Observations on the zoonomia of Erasmus Darwin, M.D. By Thomas Brown, Esq
- 1798: Disputatio medica inauguralis, de hydarthro
- 1799: Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de hydrope anasarca
Thu Dec 07 08:33:34 CST 2023