John Maddison Morton
1811 – 1891
86 works on record
Works

Aunt Charlotte's Maid
1867

The three cuckoos

Grimshaw, Bagshaw, and Bradshaw

The mother and child are doing well

Which of the two?

John Dobbs

My wife's second floor

The midnight watch!

Box and Cox
The Two Bonnycastles
1851
Betsy Baker!
1850
A most unwarrantable intrusion
1849
Lend me five shillings
1846
After a storm comes a calm
Our Wife
Newington Butts!
Pouter's Wedding
A Desperate Game
The Pacha of Pimlico
A Capital Match
Brother Ben
A prince for an hour
Away with Melancholy
A husband to order
On the Sly
The Double-Bedded Room
Your Life's in Danger
The Alabama
The 'Alabama'
Sea-Bathing at Home
My Husband's Ghost
My Precious Betsy!
She Would and He Wouldn't
Slasher and Crasher!
Catch a Weazel
Aunt Charlotte's Maid And Other Farces In One Act
Woodcock's Little Game, a Comedy-Farce in Two Acts
My precious Betsy
The two buzzards; or, Whitebait at Greenwich
Plays for Home Performance
Betsy Baker ! or, Too Attentive by Half
The spitfire
Young England
From village to court
A thumping legacy
Old honesty
Where there's a will there's a way
Poor Pillicoddy
The midnight watch
Harlequin Hogarth
Betsy Baker! or, Too attentive by half
Dialogue, &c. in the grand, romantic, domestic, tragi-comic, Christmas pantomime entitled Harlequin & William Tell, or, The genius of the Ribstone Pippin
The muleteer of Toledo, or, King, queen, and knave
Dying for love
The barbers of Bassora
My wife's come!
Whitebait at Greenwich
Love and hunger
Sent to the tower!
Change partners
Aladdin and the wonderful lamp, or, Harlequin and the genie of the ring
A capital match!
Little mother
Betsy Baker, or, Too attentive by half
The wedding breakfast
A narrow squeak
Pepperpot's little pets!
If I had a thousand a year
Don't judge by appearances
Not if I know it!
Going it!
A day's fishing
Who's my husband?
Something to do
Our wife, or, The rose of Amiens
The original
My bachelor days
Kiss and be friends
Love and rain
The king and I!
Taken from the French
All that glitters is not gold
The two Puddifoots
Slight mistakes!
Drawing rooms, second floor, and attics
An Englishman's house is his castle