And
three of his Dramatic Pieces not published in his Works.
three of his Dramatic Pieces not published in his Works.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v10
)
1761. Critical Reflections on the Old English Dramatic Writers. Addressed
to David Garrick, Esq. (Anon. In vol. I of The Dramatic Works of
Philip Massinger, compleat, ed. by Coxeter, T. , 4 vols. , 1761. )
1765. The Comedies of Terence, Translated into Familiar Blank Verse.
[Various edns. ]
1778. The Dramatick Works of Beaumont and Fletcher; Collated with all
the former editions. 10 vols. Preface by Colman,
## p. 430 (#456) ############################################
430
Bibliography
1783. Q. Horatii Flacci Epistola ad Pisones, De Arte Poetica. The Art of
Poetry: an Epistle to the Pisos. Translated from Horace. With Notes.
1787. Prose on Several Occasions; accompanied with Some Pieces in Verse.
3 vols.
1841. Memoirs of the Colman Family, including their Correspondence with
the most distinguished personages of their time. By Richard Brinsley
Peake. 2 vols.
Posthumous Letters . . . addressed to Francis Colman, and George Colman,
the Elder. 1820.
Samuel Crisp (d. 1783)
[Often, erroneously, called 'Henry' Crisp. ]
1754. Virginia. T. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
Elijah Fenton
1723. Mariamne. T. (Lincoln's inn fields. )
Henry Fielding
See bibliography to chap. II, ante.
Samuel Foote
A. Plays
1752. Taste. C. of two acts. (Drury lane. )
1753. The Englishman in Paris. C. in two acts. (Covent garden. )
1754. The Knights. C. in two acts. (Drury lane. )
1756. The Englishman return'd from Paris, Being the Sequel to the
Englishman in Paris. F. in two acts. (Covent garden. )
1757. The Author. C. of two acts. (Drury lane. )
1760. The Minor. C. (New Theatre, Haymarket. ) By Authority from the
Lord Chamberlain.
1762. The Orators. (New Theatre, Haymarket. )
1764. The Lyar. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1764. The Mayor of Garret. C. in two acts. (Drury lane. )
1764. The Patron. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1765. The Commissary. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1770. The Lame Lover. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1776. The Bankrupt. C. in three acts.
1778. The Devil upon Two Sticks. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1778. The Maid of Bath. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
Also, an earlier edn, anon. , unauthorised, 1778.
1778. The Nabob. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1778. The Cozeners. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
This and the three preceding plays were published by Colman. Of
The Cozeners there also appeared an earlier edn, anon. , unauthorised,
1778.
1778. A Trip to Calais. C. in three acts. As Originally Written, and
Intended for Representation, by the late Samuel Foote, Esq. To which
is annexed, The Capuchin. (Haymarket. ) Altered from The Trip to
Calais, by the late Samuel Foote, Esq. and now published by Mr Colman.
For some previously unprinted pieces by Foote, see Wilkinson, Tate: The
Wandering Patentee; or, A History of the Yorkshire Theatres from 1770 to
## p. 431 (#457) ############################################
Chapter IV
431
the Present Time, 4 vols. , York, 1795. Vol. IV contains The Second Act of
Diversions of the Morning (Drury lane), 1758-9. Vol. I contains : As
Acted 1763, at the Hay-Market Theatre. Tragedy A-La-Mode, being the
Second Act of Mr Foote's Diversions of the Morning, and substituted in
lieu of the former second act in his farce called Tea. Acted by Mr Foote
and Mr Wilkinson, in Drury-Lane Theatre, 1758-9. See, also, under Cooke,
William, sec. C, post.
For An Occasional Prologue, performed at the opening of the Theatre-
Royal in the Haymarket, 1767, not inserted in the editions of Foote's
Works, see The Monthly Mirror, vol. XVII, 1804.
[1787? ] Dramatic Works. [Individual plays assembled from various edns,
1770-86. ) 4 vols. (Other 4 vol. collections similarly assembled from
different edns of different dates. )
1799. Works. 2 vols.
1809. Dramatic Works; to which is prefixed a Life of the Author. 2 vols.
1830. Works. With remarks on each play, and an Essay on the Life,
Genius, and Writings of the Author. By Jon Bee, Esq. (pseud. of John
Badcock]. 3 vols.
B. Other Works
1747. The Roman and English Comedy Consider'd and Compar'd. With
remarks on the Suspicious Husband. And an Examen into the Merit of
the present Comic Actors.
1762. The Comic Theatre. Being a Free Translation of all the Best French
Comedies. By Samuel Foote, Esq. and Others. 5 vols. (According to
the Advertisement: 'One Comedy in each Volume of this work was
translated by Foote. ')
C. Biography and Criticism
[1777? ] Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Samuel Foote, Esq. ; the
English Aristophanes: to which are added the Bon Mots, Repartees,
and Good Things said by that great Wit and Excentrical Genius.
1778. Aristophanes . . . containing the Jests, Gibes, Bon-Mots, Witticisms,
and most extraordinary Anecdotes of Samuel Foote, Esq.
Cooke, William, Memoirs of Samuel Foote, Esq. With a Collection of
his genuine Bon-Mots, Anecdotes, Opinions, &c. mostly original.
And
three of his Dramatic Pieces not published in his Works. 3 vols. 1805.
Another edn. 2 vols. 1806.
Forster, John. Samuel Foote. In Historical and Biographical Essays,
vol. II, pp. 293-437, 1858.
Fitzgerald, Peroy. Samuel Foote, a biography. 1910.
Thomas Francklin (1721-1784)
A. Plays
1766. The Earl of Warwick. T. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1775. Matilda. T. (Drury lane. ) By the Author of the Earl of Warwick.
1776. The Contract. C. of two acts. (Haymarket. ) (Anon. )
B. Other Works
1761 etc. The Works of M. de Voltaire. Translated from the French. With
Notes, Historical and Critical, by T. Smollett, M. D. , T. Francklin, M. A.
and others.
1765. Sermons on the Relative Duties. 4th edn, Dublin, 1788.
## p. 432 (#458) ############################################
432
Bibliography
David Garrick
A. Plays
1742. The Lying Valet; in two acts. As it is performed Gratis, at the
Theatre in Goodman's-Fields.
1745. Lethe: or, Esop in the Shades. As Acted at the Theatres in London,
with Universal Applause. Written by Mrs Garick (sic).
[MS note in British Museum copy: This is the first Sketch of
Mr Garrick's Lethe and seems to have been surreptitiously printed the
year he was absent in Ireland. ]
1747. Miss in her Teens: or, The Medley of Lovers. F. in two acts.
(Covent garden. ) (Anon. )
1749. Lethe. A Dramatic Satire. (Drury lane. )
1757. Lilliput. A Dramatic Entertainment. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1757. The Male-Coquette: or, Seventeen Hundred Fifty-Seven. In two acts.
(Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1759. The Guardian. C. of two acts. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1760. The Enchanter; or Love and Magic. A Musical Drama. (Drury
lane. ) (Anon. ) Music by Smith, John Christopher.
1762. The Farmer's Return from London. An Interlude. (Drury lane. )
(Anon. ) 2nd edn.
1766 (with George Colman, the elder). The Clandestine Marriage. C.
(Drury lane. )
1766. Neck or Nothing. F. in two acts. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1767. Cymon. A Dramatic Romance. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
This piece was later altered, under the title:
1792. Cymon. A Dramatic Romance. Written originally by David
Garrick, Esq. and first performed as an Opera . . . Dec. 31, 1791.
1767. A Peep Behind the Curtain; or, The New Rehearsal. (Drury lane. )
(Anon. )
1772. The Irish Widow. In two acts. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1774. A New Dramatic Entertainment, called A Christmas Tale. In five
parts. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1775. Bon Ton; or, High Life above Stairs. C. in two acts. (Drury lane. )
(Anon. )
1775. May-day: or, The Little Gipsy. A Musical F. of one act. To which
is added the Theatrical Candidates. A Musical Prelude. Both: (Drury
lane. ) (Anon. )
1768. Dramatic Works; now first collected. In three volumes. Carefully
corrected.
1774. [Another edn. ] 2 vols.
1798. Dramatic Works. To which is prefixed a Life of the Author. 3 vols.
[Vol. 111 includes High Life Below Stairs, by Townley, James. ]
B. Dramatic Adaptations
1750. Romeo and Juliet. By Shakespear. With Alterations, and an
additional Scene. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. ) 1753 edn reads: ‘By D.
Garrick. '
1752. Every Man in his Humour. C. Written by Ben Jonson. With
Alterations and Additions. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1755. The Fairies. 0. Taken from A Midsummer Night's Dream, Written
by Shakespear. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. ) The Songs from Shakespeare,
by Milton,,Waller, Dryden, Lansdown, Hammond, &c. Music by Smith,
John Christopher.
## p. 433 (#459) ############################################
Chapter IV
433
1756. The Tempest. 0. Taken from Shakespear. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
The Songs from Shakespear, Dryden, &c. Music by Smith, John
Christopher.
1756. Catherine and Petruchio. C. in three acts. (Drury lane. ) Alter'd
from Shakespear's Taming of the Shrew. (Anon. )
1757. Isabella: or, The Fatal Marriage.
1761. Critical Reflections on the Old English Dramatic Writers. Addressed
to David Garrick, Esq. (Anon. In vol. I of The Dramatic Works of
Philip Massinger, compleat, ed. by Coxeter, T. , 4 vols. , 1761. )
1765. The Comedies of Terence, Translated into Familiar Blank Verse.
[Various edns. ]
1778. The Dramatick Works of Beaumont and Fletcher; Collated with all
the former editions. 10 vols. Preface by Colman,
## p. 430 (#456) ############################################
430
Bibliography
1783. Q. Horatii Flacci Epistola ad Pisones, De Arte Poetica. The Art of
Poetry: an Epistle to the Pisos. Translated from Horace. With Notes.
1787. Prose on Several Occasions; accompanied with Some Pieces in Verse.
3 vols.
1841. Memoirs of the Colman Family, including their Correspondence with
the most distinguished personages of their time. By Richard Brinsley
Peake. 2 vols.
Posthumous Letters . . . addressed to Francis Colman, and George Colman,
the Elder. 1820.
Samuel Crisp (d. 1783)
[Often, erroneously, called 'Henry' Crisp. ]
1754. Virginia. T. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
Elijah Fenton
1723. Mariamne. T. (Lincoln's inn fields. )
Henry Fielding
See bibliography to chap. II, ante.
Samuel Foote
A. Plays
1752. Taste. C. of two acts. (Drury lane. )
1753. The Englishman in Paris. C. in two acts. (Covent garden. )
1754. The Knights. C. in two acts. (Drury lane. )
1756. The Englishman return'd from Paris, Being the Sequel to the
Englishman in Paris. F. in two acts. (Covent garden. )
1757. The Author. C. of two acts. (Drury lane. )
1760. The Minor. C. (New Theatre, Haymarket. ) By Authority from the
Lord Chamberlain.
1762. The Orators. (New Theatre, Haymarket. )
1764. The Lyar. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1764. The Mayor of Garret. C. in two acts. (Drury lane. )
1764. The Patron. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1765. The Commissary. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1770. The Lame Lover. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1776. The Bankrupt. C. in three acts.
1778. The Devil upon Two Sticks. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1778. The Maid of Bath. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
Also, an earlier edn, anon. , unauthorised, 1778.
1778. The Nabob. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
1778. The Cozeners. C. in three acts. (Haymarket. )
This and the three preceding plays were published by Colman. Of
The Cozeners there also appeared an earlier edn, anon. , unauthorised,
1778.
1778. A Trip to Calais. C. in three acts. As Originally Written, and
Intended for Representation, by the late Samuel Foote, Esq. To which
is annexed, The Capuchin. (Haymarket. ) Altered from The Trip to
Calais, by the late Samuel Foote, Esq. and now published by Mr Colman.
For some previously unprinted pieces by Foote, see Wilkinson, Tate: The
Wandering Patentee; or, A History of the Yorkshire Theatres from 1770 to
## p. 431 (#457) ############################################
Chapter IV
431
the Present Time, 4 vols. , York, 1795. Vol. IV contains The Second Act of
Diversions of the Morning (Drury lane), 1758-9. Vol. I contains : As
Acted 1763, at the Hay-Market Theatre. Tragedy A-La-Mode, being the
Second Act of Mr Foote's Diversions of the Morning, and substituted in
lieu of the former second act in his farce called Tea. Acted by Mr Foote
and Mr Wilkinson, in Drury-Lane Theatre, 1758-9. See, also, under Cooke,
William, sec. C, post.
For An Occasional Prologue, performed at the opening of the Theatre-
Royal in the Haymarket, 1767, not inserted in the editions of Foote's
Works, see The Monthly Mirror, vol. XVII, 1804.
[1787? ] Dramatic Works. [Individual plays assembled from various edns,
1770-86. ) 4 vols. (Other 4 vol. collections similarly assembled from
different edns of different dates. )
1799. Works. 2 vols.
1809. Dramatic Works; to which is prefixed a Life of the Author. 2 vols.
1830. Works. With remarks on each play, and an Essay on the Life,
Genius, and Writings of the Author. By Jon Bee, Esq. (pseud. of John
Badcock]. 3 vols.
B. Other Works
1747. The Roman and English Comedy Consider'd and Compar'd. With
remarks on the Suspicious Husband. And an Examen into the Merit of
the present Comic Actors.
1762. The Comic Theatre. Being a Free Translation of all the Best French
Comedies. By Samuel Foote, Esq. and Others. 5 vols. (According to
the Advertisement: 'One Comedy in each Volume of this work was
translated by Foote. ')
C. Biography and Criticism
[1777? ] Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Samuel Foote, Esq. ; the
English Aristophanes: to which are added the Bon Mots, Repartees,
and Good Things said by that great Wit and Excentrical Genius.
1778. Aristophanes . . . containing the Jests, Gibes, Bon-Mots, Witticisms,
and most extraordinary Anecdotes of Samuel Foote, Esq.
Cooke, William, Memoirs of Samuel Foote, Esq. With a Collection of
his genuine Bon-Mots, Anecdotes, Opinions, &c. mostly original.
And
three of his Dramatic Pieces not published in his Works. 3 vols. 1805.
Another edn. 2 vols. 1806.
Forster, John. Samuel Foote. In Historical and Biographical Essays,
vol. II, pp. 293-437, 1858.
Fitzgerald, Peroy. Samuel Foote, a biography. 1910.
Thomas Francklin (1721-1784)
A. Plays
1766. The Earl of Warwick. T. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1775. Matilda. T. (Drury lane. ) By the Author of the Earl of Warwick.
1776. The Contract. C. of two acts. (Haymarket. ) (Anon. )
B. Other Works
1761 etc. The Works of M. de Voltaire. Translated from the French. With
Notes, Historical and Critical, by T. Smollett, M. D. , T. Francklin, M. A.
and others.
1765. Sermons on the Relative Duties. 4th edn, Dublin, 1788.
## p. 432 (#458) ############################################
432
Bibliography
David Garrick
A. Plays
1742. The Lying Valet; in two acts. As it is performed Gratis, at the
Theatre in Goodman's-Fields.
1745. Lethe: or, Esop in the Shades. As Acted at the Theatres in London,
with Universal Applause. Written by Mrs Garick (sic).
[MS note in British Museum copy: This is the first Sketch of
Mr Garrick's Lethe and seems to have been surreptitiously printed the
year he was absent in Ireland. ]
1747. Miss in her Teens: or, The Medley of Lovers. F. in two acts.
(Covent garden. ) (Anon. )
1749. Lethe. A Dramatic Satire. (Drury lane. )
1757. Lilliput. A Dramatic Entertainment. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1757. The Male-Coquette: or, Seventeen Hundred Fifty-Seven. In two acts.
(Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1759. The Guardian. C. of two acts. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1760. The Enchanter; or Love and Magic. A Musical Drama. (Drury
lane. ) (Anon. ) Music by Smith, John Christopher.
1762. The Farmer's Return from London. An Interlude. (Drury lane. )
(Anon. ) 2nd edn.
1766 (with George Colman, the elder). The Clandestine Marriage. C.
(Drury lane. )
1766. Neck or Nothing. F. in two acts. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1767. Cymon. A Dramatic Romance. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
This piece was later altered, under the title:
1792. Cymon. A Dramatic Romance. Written originally by David
Garrick, Esq. and first performed as an Opera . . . Dec. 31, 1791.
1767. A Peep Behind the Curtain; or, The New Rehearsal. (Drury lane. )
(Anon. )
1772. The Irish Widow. In two acts. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1774. A New Dramatic Entertainment, called A Christmas Tale. In five
parts. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1775. Bon Ton; or, High Life above Stairs. C. in two acts. (Drury lane. )
(Anon. )
1775. May-day: or, The Little Gipsy. A Musical F. of one act. To which
is added the Theatrical Candidates. A Musical Prelude. Both: (Drury
lane. ) (Anon. )
1768. Dramatic Works; now first collected. In three volumes. Carefully
corrected.
1774. [Another edn. ] 2 vols.
1798. Dramatic Works. To which is prefixed a Life of the Author. 3 vols.
[Vol. 111 includes High Life Below Stairs, by Townley, James. ]
B. Dramatic Adaptations
1750. Romeo and Juliet. By Shakespear. With Alterations, and an
additional Scene. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. ) 1753 edn reads: ‘By D.
Garrick. '
1752. Every Man in his Humour. C. Written by Ben Jonson. With
Alterations and Additions. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
1755. The Fairies. 0. Taken from A Midsummer Night's Dream, Written
by Shakespear. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. ) The Songs from Shakespeare,
by Milton,,Waller, Dryden, Lansdown, Hammond, &c. Music by Smith,
John Christopher.
## p. 433 (#459) ############################################
Chapter IV
433
1756. The Tempest. 0. Taken from Shakespear. (Drury lane. ) (Anon. )
The Songs from Shakespear, Dryden, &c. Music by Smith, John
Christopher.
1756. Catherine and Petruchio. C. in three acts. (Drury lane. ) Alter'd
from Shakespear's Taming of the Shrew. (Anon. )
1757. Isabella: or, The Fatal Marriage.
