A Select
Collection
of English Plays.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v10
(Drury lane.
) (Anon.
)
1774. Plays and Poems. 2 vols.
Edward Young
See bibliography to chap. VII, post.
## p. 439 (#465) ############################################
Chapter IV
439
II. ENGLISH ADAPTATIONS OF VOLTAIRE
Performed on the English Stage, 1734–1776
1735 [acted 1734]. Junius Brutus. T. (Drury lane. ) [Brutus, adapted by
William Duncombe. ]
1736. The Tragedy of Zara. (Drury lane. ) (Zaire, adapted by Aaron
Hill. ]
1736. Alzira. T. (Lincoln's inn fields. ) [Alzire, adapted by Aaron Hill. )
1744. Mahomet the Imposter. T. (Drury lane. ) [Le Fanatisme, ou
Mahomet le Prophète, adapted by James Miller and (? ) John Hoadly,
to whom is ascribed the fifth act. ]
1749. Meropé [sic]. T. (Drury lane. ) [Mérope, adapted by Aaron Hill. ]
1759. The Orphan of China. T. (Drury lane. ) [Orphelin de la Chine,
adapted by Arthur Murphy. )
1760. The English Merchant. c. (Drury lane. ) [L'Ecossaise, adapted by
George Colman, the elder. ]
1764. No One's Enemy but His Own. C. in three acts. (Covent garden. )
[L’Indiscret, altered by Arthur Murphy. ]
1765. Mahomet the Imposter. T. (Drury lane. ) [James Miller's 1744
version, altered by (? ) Garrick. ]
(1769 acted. Orestes. [Oreste, adapted by Thomas Francklin, and acted at
Covent garden, but not printed separately. Included in his translation
of Voltaire's Works. ])
1771. Almida. T. (Drury lane. ) By a Lady. [Tancrède, adapted by
Dorothea (Mallet) Celesia. ]
1771. Zobeide. T. (Covent garden. ) [Les Scythes, adapted by Joseph
Cradock. ]
1776. Semiramis. T. (Drury lane. ) [Sémiramis, adapted by George
Edward Ayscough. ]
In addition to translations and adaptations of Voltaire quoted above, other
English dramas show his influence, notably, e. g. , John Hoole's Cyrus (1768),
Arthur Murphy's Alzuma (1773). For a full discussion of Voltaire's relation
to English drama see Lounsbury, T. R. , Shakespeare and Voltaire, New York
and London, 1902. See also Ballantyne, A. , Voltaire's Visit to England,
1726–9, 1893, and Collins, J. Churton, Voltaire, Montesquieu and Rousseau in
England, 1908. (Revised from Bolingbroke, a Historical Study, and Vol-
taire in England, 1886. ) For a full bibliography of Voltaire, see that by
Anderson, J. P. , in Espinasse, F. , Life of Voltaire (Great Writers Series),
1892.
III. MINOR DRAMATIC PIECES ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE PERIOD
Clive, Mrs Catherine. The Rehearsal: or, Bays in Petticoats. C. in two
acts. (Drury lane. ) 1753.
Coffey, Charles. The Devil to Pay; or, The Wives Metamorphos’d. 0.
(Drury lane. ) 1731.
Dodsley, Robert. The Toy Shop. A Dramatick Satire. By Robert Dodsley,
Author of The Art of Charming. 1735.
For full bibliography, see Robert Dodsley, Poet, Publisher and Play-
wright, by Straus, R. , London and New York, 1910.
Johnson, Samuel (of Cheshire). Hurlothrumbo: or, The Super-Natural.
(New Theatre, Haymarket. ) 1729.
The Blazing Comet: The Mad Lovers; or, The Beauties of the Poets.
A Play. (New Theatre, Haymarket. ) 1732.
## p. 440 (#466) ############################################
440
Bibliography
Miller, James. The Humours of Oxford. C. As it is Acted at the Theatre-
Royal. . . . By a Gentleman of Wadham-College. 1730.
For Miller's Mahomet the Imposter see sec. II, ante (English
Adaptations of Voltaire).
Reed, Joseph. The Register Office. F. of two acts. 1761.
Pantomimes, etc.
A Dramatic Entertainment, call’d The Necromancer: or, Harlequin, Doctor
Faustus. (Lincoln's inn fields. ) 6th edn. 1724.
Argentina Strega per Amore: or Harlequin Multiply'd by Argentina's
Witchcraft, for Love. With their wonderful Flights and Apparitions ;
and the Magick Transformation of Silvio, Cittio, and Brighella. C.
(Haymarket. ) By the Company of Italian Comedians. 1726.
Perseus and Andromeda. With The Rape of Colombine: or, The Flying
Lovers. In five interludes; three Serious, and two Comic. The Serious
compos'd by Mons. Roger, and the Comic by Mr John Weaver, Dancing-
Masters. 1728.
Merlin, or The Devil of Stone-henge. An Entertainment. 1734. [Intro-
duces Harlequin. ]
A New Dramatic Entertainment called The Royal Chace; or, Merlin's Cave.
With several new Comic Scenes of Action introduced into the Grotesque
Pantomime of Jupiter and Europa. 1736.
Orpheus and Eurydice. 0. (Covent garden. ) Music by Lampe, J. F. 1739.
[Comic characters include Harlequin, Pantaloon, Colombine, etc. )
Harlequin Student: or The Fall of Pantomime, with the Restoration of the
Drama; an Entertainment, As it is now performing . . . at the late Theatre
in Goodman's Fields. With the Scenes of Action and Tricks . . . Also, A
Description of the Scenes and Machines. . . And the Words of the Songs
and Chorus's. 1741.
Harlequin Sorcerer: with the Loves of Pluto and Proserpine. (Covent
garden. ) 1752.
[Acted originally at Lincoln's inri fields, 1725. Words by Lewis
Theobald. ]
O'Hara, Kane. Midas; an English Burletta. (Covent garden. ) 1764.
The Golden Pippin: an English Burletta, in three acts. (Covent
garden. ) 1773.
Reed, Joseph. Tom Jones. C. O. (Covent garden. ) 1769. (Founded on
Fielding's novel. ]
I
IV. CONTEMPORARY AND EARLY COLLECTIONS OF PLAYS
(In chronological order)
This list excludes contemporary collections (e. g. Dodsley's) which
are confined to earlier English dramas.
A Select Collection of English Plays. 6 vols. Edinburgh. 1755.
A Select Collection of Farces, As Acted at London and Edinburgh. Edin-
burgh, 1762.
The English Theatre. . . . Containing the most valuable Plays which have been
acted on the London Stage. 8 vols. 1765.
The Theatre: or, Select Works of the British Dramatic Poets. . . . To which
are prefixed, the Lives of these celebrated Writers, and Strictures on
Most of the Plays. 12 vols. Edinburgh, 1768.
A Collection of New Plays by Several Hands. 4 vols. Altenburg, 1774-8.
## p. 441 (#467) ############################################
Chapter IV
441
The New English Theatre. . . containing the Most Valuable Plays which have
been Acted on the London Stage. 12 vols. 1776-7. [Separate plays
variously dated, 1775-88. ]
Bell's British Theatre, Consisting of the most esteemed English Plays.
24 vols. 1776, etc. 34 vols. 1791, etc.
A Collection of the most esteemed Farces and Entertainments performed on
the British Stage. A new edition. 6 vols. Edinburgh, 1786-8.
[Parsons's] The Minor Theatre: being a Collection of the most approved
Farces, Operas, and Comedies, in one, two, and three acts. With some
account of the respective authors. 7 vols. 1794.
Jones's British Theatre. 10 vols. Dublin, 1795. [Individual plays with
separate title-pages and pagination. ]
The British Drama; comprehending the best plays in the English language
[edited by Sir Walter Scott]. 3 vols. in 5 (vol. I, Tragedies, in two
parts; vol. 11, Comedies, in two parts; vol. 111, Operas and Farces]. 1804.
Sharpe's British Theatre. 18 vols. 1804.
The British Theatre; or, A Collection of Plays. . . with biographical and
critical remarks, by Mrs Inchbald. 25 vols. 1808.
A Collection of Farces and other Afterpieces. . . selected by Mrs Inchbald.
7 vols. 1809. [Another edn. 7 vols. 1815. ]
English Comedy: a Collection of the Most Celebrated Dramas, since the
Commencement of the Reformation of the Stage by Sir Richard Steele
and Colley Cibber. 6 vols. 1810.
The Modern British Drama. 5 vols. 1811.
The British Drama, a Collection of the most Esteemed Dramatic Productions,
with Biography of the Respective Authors; and Critique on each Play,
by Richard Cumberland, Esq. 14 vols. 1817.
Oxberry's New English Drama. 20 vols. 1818-25.
The British Drama, a Collection of the most esteemed [engraved title-
page reads 'approved'] Tragedies, Comedies, Operas, and Farces, in
the English Language. 2 vols. , 1824-6; 2 vols. , Philadelphia, 1837-8;
and other later edns.
Dolby's British Theatre. [Individual plays variously dated, 1823-5; frontis-
piece, 'published, Feb. 1825. '] [Bound in 7 vols. , unnumbered. ] 1825.
Cumberland's British Theatre, with Remarks, Biographical and Critical.
43 vols. 1826, etc.
British Theatre, comprising Tragedies, Comedies, Operas, and Faroes, from
the most classic writers; with Biography, Critical Account and Explana-
tory Notes by an Englishman ((? ) Owen Williams). Leipzig, 1828.
The London Stage; a Collection of the most reputed Tragedies, Comedies,
Operas, Melo-Dramas, Farces, and Interludes. Accurately printed from
acting copies, as performed at the Theatres Royal, and carefully collated
and revised. [Bound in 4 vols. ] [1830. ]
V. COLLECTIONS OF PROLOGUES AND EPILOGUES
(In chronological order)
The Court of Thespis; being a Collection of the most admired Prologues
and Epilogues. . . Written by some of the most Approved Wits of the
Age, viz. Garrick, Colman, Foote, Murphy, Lloyd, &c. 1769.
A Collection and Selection of English Prologues and Epilogues. Commencing
with Shakespeare and concluding with Garrick. 4 vols. 1771.
The Theatrical Bouquet: containing an alphabetical arrangement of the
Prologues and Epilogues, which have been published by Distinguished
Wits, from the time that Colley Cibber first came on the Stage, to the
present Year. 1780.
## p. 442 (#468) ############################################
442
Bibliography
VI. THEATRICAL HISTORIES, DICTIONARIES AND GENERAL RECORDS
(In chronological order)
This list excludes (1) general works not largely concerned with mid-
eighteenth century English drama, (2) specific works concerning
individual dramatists unless, like Cibber's Apology, they deal
broadly with general dramatic history and (3) minor publications
such as critical, satirical, and controversial tracts, treatises and
pamphlets. Some of the more important items under (1) and (2) are
entered in the next section of this bibliography. For the multitudinous
items under (3) see especially Lowe, R. W. , A Bibliographical
Account of English Theatrical Literature, 1888, and the catalogues
of leading libraries, especially under individual author headings-
e. g. the Colman tracts and Garrick items of the British Museum, the
Bodleian controversial pamphlets concerning Home's Douglas, etc.
Cibber, Colley. An Apology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, Comedian. . . .
With an Historical View of the Stage during his Own Time. Written
by Himself. 1740. [2nd edn. 1740. Edited, with Notes and Supple-
ment, by Lowe, R. W. 2 vols. 1889. ]
The History of the English Stage, from the Restauration to the Present
Time. . . . By Mr Thomas Betterton. [Probably not by T. B. ] 1741.
An Historical and Critical Account of the Theatres in Europe. . . . By the
famous Lewis Riccoboni of the Italian Theatre at Paris. . . 1741.
Chetwood, W. R. A General History of the Stage, from its Origin in Greece
down to the present Time. . . . Collected and Digested by W. R. Chetwood.
1749.
The British Theatre. Containing the Lives of the English Dramatic Poets
with an Account of all their Plays. . . . To which is prefixed, A Short View
of the Rise and Progress of the English Stage. Dublin, 1750. [Another
edn. London, 1752. ]
A General History of the Stage, from its Origin. . . . Translated from the
Eminent Lewis Riccoboni. . . . The Second Edition. To which is Prefixed,
An Introductory Discourse concerning the Present State of the English
Stage and Players. 1754.
Theatrical Records: or, An Account of English Dramatic Authors, and their
Works. Printed for R. and J. Dodsley. 1756.
The Theatrical Review: for the Year 1757, and Beginning of 1758. 1758.
A General View of the Stage. By Mr Wilkes (pseud. of Samuel Derrick].
1759.
An Essay upon the Present State of the Theatre in France, England and
Italy. 1760.
Victor (Benjamin).
1774. Plays and Poems. 2 vols.
Edward Young
See bibliography to chap. VII, post.
## p. 439 (#465) ############################################
Chapter IV
439
II. ENGLISH ADAPTATIONS OF VOLTAIRE
Performed on the English Stage, 1734–1776
1735 [acted 1734]. Junius Brutus. T. (Drury lane. ) [Brutus, adapted by
William Duncombe. ]
1736. The Tragedy of Zara. (Drury lane. ) (Zaire, adapted by Aaron
Hill. ]
1736. Alzira. T. (Lincoln's inn fields. ) [Alzire, adapted by Aaron Hill. )
1744. Mahomet the Imposter. T. (Drury lane. ) [Le Fanatisme, ou
Mahomet le Prophète, adapted by James Miller and (? ) John Hoadly,
to whom is ascribed the fifth act. ]
1749. Meropé [sic]. T. (Drury lane. ) [Mérope, adapted by Aaron Hill. ]
1759. The Orphan of China. T. (Drury lane. ) [Orphelin de la Chine,
adapted by Arthur Murphy. )
1760. The English Merchant. c. (Drury lane. ) [L'Ecossaise, adapted by
George Colman, the elder. ]
1764. No One's Enemy but His Own. C. in three acts. (Covent garden. )
[L’Indiscret, altered by Arthur Murphy. ]
1765. Mahomet the Imposter. T. (Drury lane. ) [James Miller's 1744
version, altered by (? ) Garrick. ]
(1769 acted. Orestes. [Oreste, adapted by Thomas Francklin, and acted at
Covent garden, but not printed separately. Included in his translation
of Voltaire's Works. ])
1771. Almida. T. (Drury lane. ) By a Lady. [Tancrède, adapted by
Dorothea (Mallet) Celesia. ]
1771. Zobeide. T. (Covent garden. ) [Les Scythes, adapted by Joseph
Cradock. ]
1776. Semiramis. T. (Drury lane. ) [Sémiramis, adapted by George
Edward Ayscough. ]
In addition to translations and adaptations of Voltaire quoted above, other
English dramas show his influence, notably, e. g. , John Hoole's Cyrus (1768),
Arthur Murphy's Alzuma (1773). For a full discussion of Voltaire's relation
to English drama see Lounsbury, T. R. , Shakespeare and Voltaire, New York
and London, 1902. See also Ballantyne, A. , Voltaire's Visit to England,
1726–9, 1893, and Collins, J. Churton, Voltaire, Montesquieu and Rousseau in
England, 1908. (Revised from Bolingbroke, a Historical Study, and Vol-
taire in England, 1886. ) For a full bibliography of Voltaire, see that by
Anderson, J. P. , in Espinasse, F. , Life of Voltaire (Great Writers Series),
1892.
III. MINOR DRAMATIC PIECES ILLUSTRATIVE OF THE PERIOD
Clive, Mrs Catherine. The Rehearsal: or, Bays in Petticoats. C. in two
acts. (Drury lane. ) 1753.
Coffey, Charles. The Devil to Pay; or, The Wives Metamorphos’d. 0.
(Drury lane. ) 1731.
Dodsley, Robert. The Toy Shop. A Dramatick Satire. By Robert Dodsley,
Author of The Art of Charming. 1735.
For full bibliography, see Robert Dodsley, Poet, Publisher and Play-
wright, by Straus, R. , London and New York, 1910.
Johnson, Samuel (of Cheshire). Hurlothrumbo: or, The Super-Natural.
(New Theatre, Haymarket. ) 1729.
The Blazing Comet: The Mad Lovers; or, The Beauties of the Poets.
A Play. (New Theatre, Haymarket. ) 1732.
## p. 440 (#466) ############################################
440
Bibliography
Miller, James. The Humours of Oxford. C. As it is Acted at the Theatre-
Royal. . . . By a Gentleman of Wadham-College. 1730.
For Miller's Mahomet the Imposter see sec. II, ante (English
Adaptations of Voltaire).
Reed, Joseph. The Register Office. F. of two acts. 1761.
Pantomimes, etc.
A Dramatic Entertainment, call’d The Necromancer: or, Harlequin, Doctor
Faustus. (Lincoln's inn fields. ) 6th edn. 1724.
Argentina Strega per Amore: or Harlequin Multiply'd by Argentina's
Witchcraft, for Love. With their wonderful Flights and Apparitions ;
and the Magick Transformation of Silvio, Cittio, and Brighella. C.
(Haymarket. ) By the Company of Italian Comedians. 1726.
Perseus and Andromeda. With The Rape of Colombine: or, The Flying
Lovers. In five interludes; three Serious, and two Comic. The Serious
compos'd by Mons. Roger, and the Comic by Mr John Weaver, Dancing-
Masters. 1728.
Merlin, or The Devil of Stone-henge. An Entertainment. 1734. [Intro-
duces Harlequin. ]
A New Dramatic Entertainment called The Royal Chace; or, Merlin's Cave.
With several new Comic Scenes of Action introduced into the Grotesque
Pantomime of Jupiter and Europa. 1736.
Orpheus and Eurydice. 0. (Covent garden. ) Music by Lampe, J. F. 1739.
[Comic characters include Harlequin, Pantaloon, Colombine, etc. )
Harlequin Student: or The Fall of Pantomime, with the Restoration of the
Drama; an Entertainment, As it is now performing . . . at the late Theatre
in Goodman's Fields. With the Scenes of Action and Tricks . . . Also, A
Description of the Scenes and Machines. . . And the Words of the Songs
and Chorus's. 1741.
Harlequin Sorcerer: with the Loves of Pluto and Proserpine. (Covent
garden. ) 1752.
[Acted originally at Lincoln's inri fields, 1725. Words by Lewis
Theobald. ]
O'Hara, Kane. Midas; an English Burletta. (Covent garden. ) 1764.
The Golden Pippin: an English Burletta, in three acts. (Covent
garden. ) 1773.
Reed, Joseph. Tom Jones. C. O. (Covent garden. ) 1769. (Founded on
Fielding's novel. ]
I
IV. CONTEMPORARY AND EARLY COLLECTIONS OF PLAYS
(In chronological order)
This list excludes contemporary collections (e. g. Dodsley's) which
are confined to earlier English dramas.
A Select Collection of English Plays. 6 vols. Edinburgh. 1755.
A Select Collection of Farces, As Acted at London and Edinburgh. Edin-
burgh, 1762.
The English Theatre. . . . Containing the most valuable Plays which have been
acted on the London Stage. 8 vols. 1765.
The Theatre: or, Select Works of the British Dramatic Poets. . . . To which
are prefixed, the Lives of these celebrated Writers, and Strictures on
Most of the Plays. 12 vols. Edinburgh, 1768.
A Collection of New Plays by Several Hands. 4 vols. Altenburg, 1774-8.
## p. 441 (#467) ############################################
Chapter IV
441
The New English Theatre. . . containing the Most Valuable Plays which have
been Acted on the London Stage. 12 vols. 1776-7. [Separate plays
variously dated, 1775-88. ]
Bell's British Theatre, Consisting of the most esteemed English Plays.
24 vols. 1776, etc. 34 vols. 1791, etc.
A Collection of the most esteemed Farces and Entertainments performed on
the British Stage. A new edition. 6 vols. Edinburgh, 1786-8.
[Parsons's] The Minor Theatre: being a Collection of the most approved
Farces, Operas, and Comedies, in one, two, and three acts. With some
account of the respective authors. 7 vols. 1794.
Jones's British Theatre. 10 vols. Dublin, 1795. [Individual plays with
separate title-pages and pagination. ]
The British Drama; comprehending the best plays in the English language
[edited by Sir Walter Scott]. 3 vols. in 5 (vol. I, Tragedies, in two
parts; vol. 11, Comedies, in two parts; vol. 111, Operas and Farces]. 1804.
Sharpe's British Theatre. 18 vols. 1804.
The British Theatre; or, A Collection of Plays. . . with biographical and
critical remarks, by Mrs Inchbald. 25 vols. 1808.
A Collection of Farces and other Afterpieces. . . selected by Mrs Inchbald.
7 vols. 1809. [Another edn. 7 vols. 1815. ]
English Comedy: a Collection of the Most Celebrated Dramas, since the
Commencement of the Reformation of the Stage by Sir Richard Steele
and Colley Cibber. 6 vols. 1810.
The Modern British Drama. 5 vols. 1811.
The British Drama, a Collection of the most Esteemed Dramatic Productions,
with Biography of the Respective Authors; and Critique on each Play,
by Richard Cumberland, Esq. 14 vols. 1817.
Oxberry's New English Drama. 20 vols. 1818-25.
The British Drama, a Collection of the most esteemed [engraved title-
page reads 'approved'] Tragedies, Comedies, Operas, and Farces, in
the English Language. 2 vols. , 1824-6; 2 vols. , Philadelphia, 1837-8;
and other later edns.
Dolby's British Theatre. [Individual plays variously dated, 1823-5; frontis-
piece, 'published, Feb. 1825. '] [Bound in 7 vols. , unnumbered. ] 1825.
Cumberland's British Theatre, with Remarks, Biographical and Critical.
43 vols. 1826, etc.
British Theatre, comprising Tragedies, Comedies, Operas, and Faroes, from
the most classic writers; with Biography, Critical Account and Explana-
tory Notes by an Englishman ((? ) Owen Williams). Leipzig, 1828.
The London Stage; a Collection of the most reputed Tragedies, Comedies,
Operas, Melo-Dramas, Farces, and Interludes. Accurately printed from
acting copies, as performed at the Theatres Royal, and carefully collated
and revised. [Bound in 4 vols. ] [1830. ]
V. COLLECTIONS OF PROLOGUES AND EPILOGUES
(In chronological order)
The Court of Thespis; being a Collection of the most admired Prologues
and Epilogues. . . Written by some of the most Approved Wits of the
Age, viz. Garrick, Colman, Foote, Murphy, Lloyd, &c. 1769.
A Collection and Selection of English Prologues and Epilogues. Commencing
with Shakespeare and concluding with Garrick. 4 vols. 1771.
The Theatrical Bouquet: containing an alphabetical arrangement of the
Prologues and Epilogues, which have been published by Distinguished
Wits, from the time that Colley Cibber first came on the Stage, to the
present Year. 1780.
## p. 442 (#468) ############################################
442
Bibliography
VI. THEATRICAL HISTORIES, DICTIONARIES AND GENERAL RECORDS
(In chronological order)
This list excludes (1) general works not largely concerned with mid-
eighteenth century English drama, (2) specific works concerning
individual dramatists unless, like Cibber's Apology, they deal
broadly with general dramatic history and (3) minor publications
such as critical, satirical, and controversial tracts, treatises and
pamphlets. Some of the more important items under (1) and (2) are
entered in the next section of this bibliography. For the multitudinous
items under (3) see especially Lowe, R. W. , A Bibliographical
Account of English Theatrical Literature, 1888, and the catalogues
of leading libraries, especially under individual author headings-
e. g. the Colman tracts and Garrick items of the British Museum, the
Bodleian controversial pamphlets concerning Home's Douglas, etc.
Cibber, Colley. An Apology for the Life of Mr Colley Cibber, Comedian. . . .
With an Historical View of the Stage during his Own Time. Written
by Himself. 1740. [2nd edn. 1740. Edited, with Notes and Supple-
ment, by Lowe, R. W. 2 vols. 1889. ]
The History of the English Stage, from the Restauration to the Present
Time. . . . By Mr Thomas Betterton. [Probably not by T. B. ] 1741.
An Historical and Critical Account of the Theatres in Europe. . . . By the
famous Lewis Riccoboni of the Italian Theatre at Paris. . . 1741.
Chetwood, W. R. A General History of the Stage, from its Origin in Greece
down to the present Time. . . . Collected and Digested by W. R. Chetwood.
1749.
The British Theatre. Containing the Lives of the English Dramatic Poets
with an Account of all their Plays. . . . To which is prefixed, A Short View
of the Rise and Progress of the English Stage. Dublin, 1750. [Another
edn. London, 1752. ]
A General History of the Stage, from its Origin. . . . Translated from the
Eminent Lewis Riccoboni. . . . The Second Edition. To which is Prefixed,
An Introductory Discourse concerning the Present State of the English
Stage and Players. 1754.
Theatrical Records: or, An Account of English Dramatic Authors, and their
Works. Printed for R. and J. Dodsley. 1756.
The Theatrical Review: for the Year 1757, and Beginning of 1758. 1758.
A General View of the Stage. By Mr Wilkes (pseud. of Samuel Derrick].
1759.
An Essay upon the Present State of the Theatre in France, England and
Italy. 1760.
Victor (Benjamin).
