The Famous History of the Rise and Fall of
Massaniello
in two parts.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v08
1695.
The Mourning Muse of Alexis. A Pastoral lamenting the death of Queen
Mary. 1695.
The Justice of the Peace; or a vindication of Peace from several late pam-
phlets. 1697.
Amendments apon Mr Collier's false and imperfect citations. 1698.
The Birth of the Muse. A Poem. 1698.
Incognita: or Love and Duty Reconciled. 1700.
The Judgment of Paris. A Masque. 1701. Another ed. 1778.
A Hymn to Harmony, written in honour of St Cecilia's Day. 1703.
A Pindarique Ode, humbly offer'd to the Queen, on the victorious progress of
her Majesty's arms, under the conduct of the Duke of Marlborough. To
which is prefixed a discourse on the Pindarique Ode. 1706.
Ovid's Art of Love. Book III. Translated by W. C. 1709.
Ovid's Metamorphosis. Translated by J. D. , W. C. and others. 1717.
l'he Dramatick Works of Dryden, J. Ed. by W. Congreve. 1717.
La Fontaine. Tales and Novels in Verse from the French by several hands.
[Congreve and others. ] 1762.
:
## p. 428 (#450) ############################################
428
Bibliography
The Story of Semele. An Opera, in three parts and in verse. Alter'd from
the Semele of W. Congreve and set to Musick by Mr G. F. Handel. 1764.
Poems. In Johnson's ed. of the English Poets. 1781.
(3) Biography and Criticism.
Bennewitz, A. Congreve and Molière. 1890.
Berkeley, Monck. Literary Relics. 1789.
Congreve, William. Mr Congreve's Last Will and Testament; with the
characters of his writings by Mr Dryden, Sir R. Blackmore, Mr Addison,
and Major Pack. To which are added two pieces, viz. I. of rightly im-
proving the present time, an epistle in Verse from Mr Congreve. . .
II. The game of Quadrille, an allegory. 1729.
Dennis, J. Letters upon several occasions. 1696.
Letters written by and between Mr Congreve and Mr Dennis. 1721.
Jacob, Giles. Poetical Register. 1719.
Gosse, E. William Congreve. 1888.
Hayman, Sam. New Handbook for Youghal. 1852.
Lamb, Charles. The Essays of Elia. 1821.
Macaulay, T. B. Critical and Miscellaneous Essays. Ed. Montague, F. C.
1903.
Meredith, G. An Essay on Comedy and the Uses of the Comio Spirit. 1897.
Schmid, D. Congreve, sein Leben und seine Lustspiele. Vienna, Leipzig,
1897,
Temple, R. An Epistle to Lord Viscount Cobham, in memory of his friend
W. Congreve. 1750.
Thackeray, W. M. Congreve and Addison. English Humourists of the
18th century. Works, Biographical ed. , vol. VII. 1898.
Voltaire, F. M. A. de. Lettres sur les Anglais. 1731.
Wilson, Charles. Memories of Congreve. 1730.
Thomas D'Urfey
(1) Plays
The Siege of Memphis, or the Ambitious Queen. A Tragedy. 1676.
The Fool turn'd Critick. 1678.
Trick for Trick; or the Debauch'd Hypocrite. 1678.
Sir Barnaby Whigg; or No Wit like a Woman'& A Comedy. 1679.
Squire Oldsapp. A Comedy. 1679.
The Virtuous Wife or Good Luck at last. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the
Dukes Theater. By His Royal Highness His servants. 1680.
Madame Fickle or the Witty False One. A Comedy. As it is acted at His
Royal Highness the Duke's Theatre. 1682.
The Injured Princess; or the Fatal Wager. A play. . . adapted from Shake-
speare's Cymbalin. 1682.
The Royalist. 1682.
A Fond Husband : or the Plotting Sisters. A Comedy. 1685.
A Commonwealth of Women. 1686.
The Banditti, or a Ladies Distress. A play. 1686.
A Fool's Preferment; or the three Dukes of Dunstable. A Comedy. Together
with the Songs and notes to 'em . . . composed by H. Purcell. 1688.
Bussy d'Ambois . . . newly revised by T. D'Urfey. 1691.
Love for Money or the Boarding School. A Comedy. 1691.
The Marriage Hater Match'd. A Comedy acted at the Theatre Royal by
their Majesties Servants. With a letter (by C. Gildon) to Mr D.
occasioned by The Marriage Hater Matched. 1692.
:
## p. 429 (#451) ############################################
Chapter VI
429
I
The Richmond Heiress; or a woman once in the right. A Comedy. 1693.
The Comical History of Don Quixote (with the Marriage of Mary the
Buxome). A Comedy. Parts I and II. 1694. Part III. 1696.
The Intrigues at Versailles; or a jilt in all humours; A Comedy. 1697.
The Campayners; or the pleasant adventures at Brussels. A Comedy with a
familiar preface upon a late reformer of the stage. Ending with a
Satyrical fable of the Dog and the Ottor. 1698.
The Famous History of the Rise and Fall of Massaniello in two parts. 1700.
The Bath, or the Western Lass. A Comedy. 1701.
The Modern Prophets: or New Wit for a Husband. A Comedy. 1709.
The Old Mode and the New; or the County Miss with her Furbiloe. A
Comedy. 1709.
The Grecian Heroine: or, the Fate of Tyranny. 1718.
(2) Other Works
New Songs and Poems. 1683.
Malcontent, The. A Satyr. 1684.
Colin's Walk through London. 1690.
New Poems. 1690.
Comical History of Don Quixote, The. 2 pts. 1694.
Tales tragical and comical. 1704.
Stories moral and comical. [1706. ]
Songs compleat . . . 1719.
Wit and Mirth, or Pills to purge Melancholy; being a collection of Ballads
and Songs . . . 4th ed. 5 vols. 1719.
New Operas, with Stories and Poems. 1721.
George Farquhar
(1) Plays
(a) Early Editions
Love and a Bottle. A Comedy, as it is Acted in the Theatre-Royal in Drury-
Lane, by his Majesty's Servants. 1699.
The Constant Couple or a Trip to the Jubilee. A Comedy Acted at the
Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane by His Majesty's Servants. 1699. 2nd
ed. , in which is added a new scene to the part of Wildair. 1700.
Sir Harry Wildair : being the sequll of the Trip to the Jubilee. A Comedy.
1701.
The Inconstant: or the Way to win him. A Comedy. 1702.
The Twin Rivals. A Comedy acted at the Theatre Royal. By Her Majesty's
Servants. 1703.
The Stage Coach. 1705.
The Recruiting Officer. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre Royal
in Drury-Lane, by Her Majesty's Servants. 1706. Other eds. 1711,
1714 ff.
The Beaux Stratagem. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Queen's Theatre
in the Hay-Market. By Her Majesty's Sworn Comedians. 1707. The
9th ed. appeared in 1707.
Comedies. 1710. Other eds. 1711, 1714.
The Works of George Farquhar, containing all his poems, letters and Comedies.
1718, 1728, 1742 ff. [The edition of 1775, printed at Dublin contains
Farquhar's life by Wilkes, T. ]
## p. 430 (#452) ############################################
430
Bibliography
(6) Modern Editions
George Farquhar. Ed. , with an introduction and notes, by Archer, W.
(Mermaid Series. ) 1908.
Farquhar, G. Dramatic Works. Ed. Ewald, A. C. 1891.
See, also, under Congreve (1) (b), ante.
(2) Other Works
The Adventures of Covent Garden. 1699.
Barcellona, a poem, or the Spanish Expedition under the Command of
Charles, Earl of Peterborough. 1707.
Love and Business: in a collection of occasionary verses, and epistolary prose.
A discourse likewise upon comedy in reference to the English Stage.
1702.
(3) Biography and Criticism
Robertson, J. G. Lessing and Farquhar. The Modern Language Review,
vol. II. Cambridge, 1907.
Schmid, D. George Farquhar. Leipzig, 1904.
Thackeray, W. M. Congreve and Addison. English Humourists of the
18th century. Works, Biographical ed. , vol. VII. 1898.
Thomas Shadwell
(1) Plays
The Sullen Lovers: or, The Impertinents. A Comedy, Acted by His Highness
the Duke of York's Servants. 1668.
The Royal Shepherdess: a Tragi-Comedy, as it is Acted by their Majesties
Servants. 1669.
The Humorists, A Comedy. Acted by His Royal Highnesses Servants. 1671.
A Comedy called The Miser: Acted at the Theatre Royal. 1672.
Epsom Wells, a Comedy, Acted at the Duke's Theatre. 1673.
Psyche, A Tragedy, acted at the Duke's Theatre. 1675.
The Virtuoso, a Comedy, acted at the Duke's Theatre. 1676.
The Libertine, A Tragedy by His Royal Highness's Servants. 1676.
The History of Timon of Athens, the Man-Hater: as it is acted by Their
Majesties Servants. 1678.
A True Widow, a Comedy, acted by the Duke's Servants. 1679.
The Woman Captain, a Comedy, Acted by His Royal Highnesses Servants.
1680. Reissued in 1744 as The Prodigal.
The Lancashire Witches, and Tegue O’Divelly, the Irish Priest. A Comedy.
Part the First. Acted by their Majesties Servants. 1682.
The Squire of Alsatia, A Comedy, as it is acted by Their Majesty's Servants.
1688.
Bury Fair, a Comedy as it is acted by his Majesty's Servants. 1689.
The Amorous Bigotte: with the Second Part of Tegue O‘Divelly, a Comedy,
acted by their Majesty's Servants. 1690.
The Scowrers; A Comedy, Acted by Their Majesties Servants. 1691.
The Volunteers; or, the Stock-Jobbers: a Comedy as it is Acted by Their
Majesties Servants, at the Theatre Royal. 1693.
As to Shadwells adaptation of the Tempest as an opera, 1674 and later
editions, see chap. 1, p. 28 note, and Lawrence, W. J. , Did Thomas Shadwell
write an opera on "The Tempest, Anglia, volg. xxvII and xxix, Halle,
1904-6.
Works in one volume in the method in which they were first published.
1693. [Various editions of Shadwell's seventeen plays, with a general
title prefixed. ]
## p. 431 (#453) ############################################
Chapter VI
431
Works. With Prefatory Memoir by his Son. 4 vols. 1720.
Select plays. Ed. Saintsbury, G. , with introduction and notes. (Mermaid
Series. ) 1903.
(2) Other Works
For Controversial Works see Drydeniana in bibl. to chap. I, ante.
(3) Biography and Criticism
Brady, N. Sermon at Shadwell's funeral. 1693.
Shadwell's Plays. Retrospective Review, Second Ser. vol. 11. 1828.
Thomas Shadwell. Colburn's Monthly Magazine, New Ser, vol. III. 1873.
Sir John Vanbrugh
(1) Plays
(a) Early Editions
The Relapse; or Virtue in Danger. Being the sequel of the Fool in Fashion.
A Comedy acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. By the author of
a late Comedy called the Provok'd Wife. 1697.
The Provok'd Wife. A Comedy as it is acted at the New Theatre, in little
Lincolns-Inn-Fields.
The Mourning Muse of Alexis. A Pastoral lamenting the death of Queen
Mary. 1695.
The Justice of the Peace; or a vindication of Peace from several late pam-
phlets. 1697.
Amendments apon Mr Collier's false and imperfect citations. 1698.
The Birth of the Muse. A Poem. 1698.
Incognita: or Love and Duty Reconciled. 1700.
The Judgment of Paris. A Masque. 1701. Another ed. 1778.
A Hymn to Harmony, written in honour of St Cecilia's Day. 1703.
A Pindarique Ode, humbly offer'd to the Queen, on the victorious progress of
her Majesty's arms, under the conduct of the Duke of Marlborough. To
which is prefixed a discourse on the Pindarique Ode. 1706.
Ovid's Art of Love. Book III. Translated by W. C. 1709.
Ovid's Metamorphosis. Translated by J. D. , W. C. and others. 1717.
l'he Dramatick Works of Dryden, J. Ed. by W. Congreve. 1717.
La Fontaine. Tales and Novels in Verse from the French by several hands.
[Congreve and others. ] 1762.
:
## p. 428 (#450) ############################################
428
Bibliography
The Story of Semele. An Opera, in three parts and in verse. Alter'd from
the Semele of W. Congreve and set to Musick by Mr G. F. Handel. 1764.
Poems. In Johnson's ed. of the English Poets. 1781.
(3) Biography and Criticism.
Bennewitz, A. Congreve and Molière. 1890.
Berkeley, Monck. Literary Relics. 1789.
Congreve, William. Mr Congreve's Last Will and Testament; with the
characters of his writings by Mr Dryden, Sir R. Blackmore, Mr Addison,
and Major Pack. To which are added two pieces, viz. I. of rightly im-
proving the present time, an epistle in Verse from Mr Congreve. . .
II. The game of Quadrille, an allegory. 1729.
Dennis, J. Letters upon several occasions. 1696.
Letters written by and between Mr Congreve and Mr Dennis. 1721.
Jacob, Giles. Poetical Register. 1719.
Gosse, E. William Congreve. 1888.
Hayman, Sam. New Handbook for Youghal. 1852.
Lamb, Charles. The Essays of Elia. 1821.
Macaulay, T. B. Critical and Miscellaneous Essays. Ed. Montague, F. C.
1903.
Meredith, G. An Essay on Comedy and the Uses of the Comio Spirit. 1897.
Schmid, D. Congreve, sein Leben und seine Lustspiele. Vienna, Leipzig,
1897,
Temple, R. An Epistle to Lord Viscount Cobham, in memory of his friend
W. Congreve. 1750.
Thackeray, W. M. Congreve and Addison. English Humourists of the
18th century. Works, Biographical ed. , vol. VII. 1898.
Voltaire, F. M. A. de. Lettres sur les Anglais. 1731.
Wilson, Charles. Memories of Congreve. 1730.
Thomas D'Urfey
(1) Plays
The Siege of Memphis, or the Ambitious Queen. A Tragedy. 1676.
The Fool turn'd Critick. 1678.
Trick for Trick; or the Debauch'd Hypocrite. 1678.
Sir Barnaby Whigg; or No Wit like a Woman'& A Comedy. 1679.
Squire Oldsapp. A Comedy. 1679.
The Virtuous Wife or Good Luck at last. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the
Dukes Theater. By His Royal Highness His servants. 1680.
Madame Fickle or the Witty False One. A Comedy. As it is acted at His
Royal Highness the Duke's Theatre. 1682.
The Injured Princess; or the Fatal Wager. A play. . . adapted from Shake-
speare's Cymbalin. 1682.
The Royalist. 1682.
A Fond Husband : or the Plotting Sisters. A Comedy. 1685.
A Commonwealth of Women. 1686.
The Banditti, or a Ladies Distress. A play. 1686.
A Fool's Preferment; or the three Dukes of Dunstable. A Comedy. Together
with the Songs and notes to 'em . . . composed by H. Purcell. 1688.
Bussy d'Ambois . . . newly revised by T. D'Urfey. 1691.
Love for Money or the Boarding School. A Comedy. 1691.
The Marriage Hater Match'd. A Comedy acted at the Theatre Royal by
their Majesties Servants. With a letter (by C. Gildon) to Mr D.
occasioned by The Marriage Hater Matched. 1692.
:
## p. 429 (#451) ############################################
Chapter VI
429
I
The Richmond Heiress; or a woman once in the right. A Comedy. 1693.
The Comical History of Don Quixote (with the Marriage of Mary the
Buxome). A Comedy. Parts I and II. 1694. Part III. 1696.
The Intrigues at Versailles; or a jilt in all humours; A Comedy. 1697.
The Campayners; or the pleasant adventures at Brussels. A Comedy with a
familiar preface upon a late reformer of the stage. Ending with a
Satyrical fable of the Dog and the Ottor. 1698.
The Famous History of the Rise and Fall of Massaniello in two parts. 1700.
The Bath, or the Western Lass. A Comedy. 1701.
The Modern Prophets: or New Wit for a Husband. A Comedy. 1709.
The Old Mode and the New; or the County Miss with her Furbiloe. A
Comedy. 1709.
The Grecian Heroine: or, the Fate of Tyranny. 1718.
(2) Other Works
New Songs and Poems. 1683.
Malcontent, The. A Satyr. 1684.
Colin's Walk through London. 1690.
New Poems. 1690.
Comical History of Don Quixote, The. 2 pts. 1694.
Tales tragical and comical. 1704.
Stories moral and comical. [1706. ]
Songs compleat . . . 1719.
Wit and Mirth, or Pills to purge Melancholy; being a collection of Ballads
and Songs . . . 4th ed. 5 vols. 1719.
New Operas, with Stories and Poems. 1721.
George Farquhar
(1) Plays
(a) Early Editions
Love and a Bottle. A Comedy, as it is Acted in the Theatre-Royal in Drury-
Lane, by his Majesty's Servants. 1699.
The Constant Couple or a Trip to the Jubilee. A Comedy Acted at the
Theatre Royal in Drury-Lane by His Majesty's Servants. 1699. 2nd
ed. , in which is added a new scene to the part of Wildair. 1700.
Sir Harry Wildair : being the sequll of the Trip to the Jubilee. A Comedy.
1701.
The Inconstant: or the Way to win him. A Comedy. 1702.
The Twin Rivals. A Comedy acted at the Theatre Royal. By Her Majesty's
Servants. 1703.
The Stage Coach. 1705.
The Recruiting Officer. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre Royal
in Drury-Lane, by Her Majesty's Servants. 1706. Other eds. 1711,
1714 ff.
The Beaux Stratagem. A Comedy. As it is Acted at the Queen's Theatre
in the Hay-Market. By Her Majesty's Sworn Comedians. 1707. The
9th ed. appeared in 1707.
Comedies. 1710. Other eds. 1711, 1714.
The Works of George Farquhar, containing all his poems, letters and Comedies.
1718, 1728, 1742 ff. [The edition of 1775, printed at Dublin contains
Farquhar's life by Wilkes, T. ]
## p. 430 (#452) ############################################
430
Bibliography
(6) Modern Editions
George Farquhar. Ed. , with an introduction and notes, by Archer, W.
(Mermaid Series. ) 1908.
Farquhar, G. Dramatic Works. Ed. Ewald, A. C. 1891.
See, also, under Congreve (1) (b), ante.
(2) Other Works
The Adventures of Covent Garden. 1699.
Barcellona, a poem, or the Spanish Expedition under the Command of
Charles, Earl of Peterborough. 1707.
Love and Business: in a collection of occasionary verses, and epistolary prose.
A discourse likewise upon comedy in reference to the English Stage.
1702.
(3) Biography and Criticism
Robertson, J. G. Lessing and Farquhar. The Modern Language Review,
vol. II. Cambridge, 1907.
Schmid, D. George Farquhar. Leipzig, 1904.
Thackeray, W. M. Congreve and Addison. English Humourists of the
18th century. Works, Biographical ed. , vol. VII. 1898.
Thomas Shadwell
(1) Plays
The Sullen Lovers: or, The Impertinents. A Comedy, Acted by His Highness
the Duke of York's Servants. 1668.
The Royal Shepherdess: a Tragi-Comedy, as it is Acted by their Majesties
Servants. 1669.
The Humorists, A Comedy. Acted by His Royal Highnesses Servants. 1671.
A Comedy called The Miser: Acted at the Theatre Royal. 1672.
Epsom Wells, a Comedy, Acted at the Duke's Theatre. 1673.
Psyche, A Tragedy, acted at the Duke's Theatre. 1675.
The Virtuoso, a Comedy, acted at the Duke's Theatre. 1676.
The Libertine, A Tragedy by His Royal Highness's Servants. 1676.
The History of Timon of Athens, the Man-Hater: as it is acted by Their
Majesties Servants. 1678.
A True Widow, a Comedy, acted by the Duke's Servants. 1679.
The Woman Captain, a Comedy, Acted by His Royal Highnesses Servants.
1680. Reissued in 1744 as The Prodigal.
The Lancashire Witches, and Tegue O’Divelly, the Irish Priest. A Comedy.
Part the First. Acted by their Majesties Servants. 1682.
The Squire of Alsatia, A Comedy, as it is acted by Their Majesty's Servants.
1688.
Bury Fair, a Comedy as it is acted by his Majesty's Servants. 1689.
The Amorous Bigotte: with the Second Part of Tegue O‘Divelly, a Comedy,
acted by their Majesty's Servants. 1690.
The Scowrers; A Comedy, Acted by Their Majesties Servants. 1691.
The Volunteers; or, the Stock-Jobbers: a Comedy as it is Acted by Their
Majesties Servants, at the Theatre Royal. 1693.
As to Shadwells adaptation of the Tempest as an opera, 1674 and later
editions, see chap. 1, p. 28 note, and Lawrence, W. J. , Did Thomas Shadwell
write an opera on "The Tempest, Anglia, volg. xxvII and xxix, Halle,
1904-6.
Works in one volume in the method in which they were first published.
1693. [Various editions of Shadwell's seventeen plays, with a general
title prefixed. ]
## p. 431 (#453) ############################################
Chapter VI
431
Works. With Prefatory Memoir by his Son. 4 vols. 1720.
Select plays. Ed. Saintsbury, G. , with introduction and notes. (Mermaid
Series. ) 1903.
(2) Other Works
For Controversial Works see Drydeniana in bibl. to chap. I, ante.
(3) Biography and Criticism
Brady, N. Sermon at Shadwell's funeral. 1693.
Shadwell's Plays. Retrospective Review, Second Ser. vol. 11. 1828.
Thomas Shadwell. Colburn's Monthly Magazine, New Ser, vol. III. 1873.
Sir John Vanbrugh
(1) Plays
(a) Early Editions
The Relapse; or Virtue in Danger. Being the sequel of the Fool in Fashion.
A Comedy acted at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. By the author of
a late Comedy called the Provok'd Wife. 1697.
The Provok'd Wife. A Comedy as it is acted at the New Theatre, in little
Lincolns-Inn-Fields.