Thelwall, John
1764 – 1834
53 works on record
Works

Incle and Yarico and The Incas : two plays
2006

The politics of English Jacobinism
1995

The poetical recreations of the Champion
1978

Selections for the illustration of a course of instructions on the rhythmus and utterance of the English language
1812

A letter to Henry Cline, Esq., on imperfect developments of the faculties, mental and moral
1810

A letter to Francis Jeffray on certain calumnies and misrepresentations in the Edinburgh review
1804

Selections, and original articles, read and recited, in illustration of Mr. Thelwall's lectures on the science and practice of elocution
1802

Poems chiefly written in retirement
1801

Sober reflections on the seditious and inflammatory letter of the Right Hon. Edmund Burke, to a noble Lord
1796

Rights of nature, against the usurpations of establishments
1796

The peripatetic
1793
Poems chiefly written in retirement 1801
1989
Ode to science ; John Gilpin's ghost ; Poems ; The trident of Albion
1978
The fairy of the lake
1953
The poetical recreations of the Champion, and his literary correspondents
1822
The vestibule of eloquence
1810
Monody on the right honourable Charles James Fox
1806
The black bowl, Feb. 3, 1208
1802
The rights of nature against the usurpations of the establishments
1796
The rights of nature, against the usurpations of establishments. A series of letters to the people of Great Britain, occasioned by the recent effusions of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke. By John Thelwall. Letter the first. ..
1796
An address to the inhabitants of Yarmouth
1796
An appeal to popular opinion
1796
The rights of nature against the usurpation of establishments
1796
Prospectus of a course of lectures
1796
Peaceful discussions, and not tumultuary violence the means of redressing national grievances
1795
The natural and constitutional right of Britons to annual parliaments, universal suffrage, and the freedom of popular association
1795
Poems written in close confinement in the tower and Newgate, under a charge of high treason
1795
John Gilpin's ghost; or, the warning voice of King Chanticleer: an historical ballad: written before the late trials, and dedicated to the treason-hunters of Oakham. By J. Thelwall
1795
Peaceful discussion, and not tumultuary violence the means of redressing national grievance
1795
The speech of John Thelwall, at the general meeting of the friends of Parliamentary reform
1795
The tribune
1795
Citizen Thelwall, fraternity and unanimity to the friends of freedom
1795
The trial at large of John Thelwall
1795
The speeches of John Thelwall at the general meetings of the London Corresponding Society, in the neighbourhood of Copenhagen-House, on Monday, Oct. 26, and Thursday, Nov. 12
1795
The speech of John Thelwall, at the second meeting of the London Corresponding Society
1795
The natural and constitutional right of Britons to annual Parliaments, universal suffrage, and the freedom of popular association: being a vindication of the motives and political conduct of John Thelwall, and of the London Corresponding Society, in general. Intended to have been delivered at the bar of the Old Bailey, in confutation of the late charges of high treason
1795
Poems written in close confinement in the Tower and Newgate, under a charge of high treason. By John Thelwall
1795
Political lectures
1794
The peripatetic; or, sketches of the heart, of nature and society; in a series of politico-sentimental journals, in verse and prose, of the eccentric excursions of Sylvanus Theophrastus; supposed to be written by himself
1793
An essay towards a definition of animal vitality
1793
Ode to science
1791
Poems on various subjects
1787
The rights of nature, against the usurpations of establishments ..
The Speech of John Thelwall
Sketches of the history of prosecutions for political opinion
The daughter of adoption
The trial of John Thelwall, on a charge of high treason
Peaceful discussion and not tumultuary violence the means of redressing national grievance
The trial of John Thelwall
An appeal to popular opinion, against kidnapping & murder
Political lectures (no. i.) On the moral tendency of a system of spies and informers, and the conduct to be observed by the friends of liberty during the continuance of such a system
Political lectures, (no. ii.) Sketches of the history of prosecutions for political opinion
Peaceful discussion and not tumultuary violence the means of redressing national grievances