Thelwall, John, 1764-1834
Thelwall, John
John Thelwall British writer (1764-1834)
VIAF ID: 37726570 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/37726570
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a John Thelwall ‡c British writer (1764-1834)
- 200 _ | ‡a Thelwall ‡b John ‡f 1764-1834
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Thelwall, John
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Thelwall, John ‡d 1764-1834
- 100 1 _ ‡a Thelwall, John ‡d 1764-1834
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Thelwall, John, ‡d 1764-1834
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Thelwall, John, ‡d 1764-1834
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Thelwall, John, ‡d 1764-1834
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (14)
5xx's: Related Names (1)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Thelwall, Cecil ‡c Mrs. ‡d -1863 ‡4 bezf ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#familialRelationship ‡e Beziehung familiaer
Works
Title | Sources |
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An address to the inhabitants of Yarmouth : on the violent outrage lately committed in their town, by a selected band of desperate ruffians. By John Thelwall. | |
Anakreontyki zaangażowane | |
An appeal to popular opinion : against kidnapping and murder; including a narrative of the late atrocious proceedings, at Yarmouth; with the statements, hand-bills, etc. pro and con. By John Thelwall. | |
Citizen Thelwall : fraternity and unanimity To the Friends of Freedom. | |
daughter of adoption | |
Dramatic pamphlets. | |
Early political pamphlets and lectures, 1793-1796 | |
An essay towards a definition of animal vitality : read at the theatre, Guy's Hospital, January 26, 1793; in which several of the opinions of the celebrated John Hunter are examined and controverted. By John Thelwall, Member Of The Physical Society, etc. | |
Incas | |
Incle and Yarico and The Incas : two plays | |
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. | |
John Thelwall selected poetry and poetics | |
Journal d'un piéton jacobin et romantique | |
Late journalism and writing on elocution and oratory, 1810-1832 | |
A letter to Francis Jeffray, Esq. on certain calumnies and misrepresentations in the Edinburgh Review; the conduct of certain individuals, on the night of Mr. Thelwall's probationary lecture, at Bernard's rooms, Edinburgh; and the ignorance of the new critical junto of the simplest elements of English composition and English grammar : with an appendix, containing outlines of a course of lectures on the science and practice of elocution | |
A letter to Henry Cline, Esq., on imperfect developments of the faculties, mental and moral, as well as constitutional and organic; and on the treatment of impediments of speech. | |
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. | |
Ode to science ; John Gilpin's ghost ; Poems ; The trident of Albion | |
Ode to science : Recited at the anniversary meeting of the Philomathian Society, June 20, 1791. Together with the song, sung by Brother Webb, on the same occasion. By Brother Thelwall. | |
Peaceful discussion, and not tumultuary violence the means of redressing national grievance | |
The peripatetic | |
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. | |
Poems chiefly written in retirement. The Fairy of the lake, a dramatic romance ; Effusions of relative and social feeling ; and specimens of the Hope of Albion, or Edwin of Northumbria, an epic poem | |
Poems on various subjects : By John Thelwall. In two volumes. | |
Poems. Selections | |
Poems written in close confinement in the Tower and Newgate, under a charge of high treason. By John Thelwall. | |
The poetical recreations of the Champion | |
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. By J. Thelwall. | |
Political lectures : Volume the first - part the first: containing the lecture on spies and informers, and the first lecture on prosecutions for political opinion. To which is prefixed a narrative of facts relative to the recent attempts to wrest from the people the palladium of their natural and constitutional rights, liberty of speech. By John Thelwall. | |
The politics of English Jacobinism : writings of John Thelwall | |
Prospectus of a course of lectures, delivered during the season of Lent, in strict conformity with Mr. Pitt's Convention Act : By John Thelwall. Second edition, with a postscript. Is is not the part of a good citizen to violate, from individual caprice, the provisions of a general law; but it is his duty to embrace every opportunity which the Legislature has not prohibited, of promoting principles conducive to the happiness of mankind. | |
Rights of nature. | |
A series of letters to the people, in reply to the false principles of Burke | |
Sober reflections on the seditious and inflammatory letter of the Right Hon. Edmund Burke, to a noble lord : Addressed to the serious consideration of his fellow citizens, By John Thelwall. | |
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. | |
Strike; but hear!!! : A dedication to His Majesty's Ministers the Crown Lawyers, and the majority of both Houses of Parliament. By John Thelwall. With a farewel address to the readers of the Tribune, etc. etc. | |
Thelwall's Lectures &c. | |
Trials for high treason : containing the whole of the proceedings at the Old-Bailey, from October 28, to December 5, 1794. Comprising the trials complete of Thomas Hardy, John Horne Tooke, and John Thelwall. Including the Examinations of Lord Camden, Duke of Richmond, Lord Fred. Campbell, Earl Stanhope, Mr. Pitt, Mr. Fox, Bishop of Gloucester, Major Cartwright, Mr. Sheridan, &c. &c. with the Speeches at Length of Mr. Erskine, Mr. Gibbs, the Attorney General, Mr. Serjeant Adair, &c. And also, the previous proceedings at the Sessions-House, Clerkenwell, and the Old-Bailey. Accurately taken in Short-Hand | |
The trials for high treason, of Thomas Hardy, John Horne Tooke, John Augustus Bonney, Stewart Kyd, Jeremiah Joyce, Thomas Holcroft, John Richter, John Thelwall, and John Baxter : to which are prefixed the Lord President's charge to the grand jury, the proceedings, first at Hick's Hall, and afterward at the Old Bailey, previous to the commencement of Mr. Hardy's trial, and a correct copy of the indictment : also, lists of the petty jurors, and of the witnesses on the part of the Crown | |
The tribune. | |
The Tribune a periodical publication consisting chiefly of the political lectures of J. Thelwall. | |
The vestibule of eloquence. Original articles, oratorical and poetical, intended as exercises in recitations, at the Institution, Bedford place, Russell square. |