Cross, Thomas, approximately 1660-approximately 1735
Cross, Thomas jun.
Thomas Cross
Cross, Thomas, asi 1660-asi 1735
VIAF ID: 78523210 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/78523210
Preferred Forms
-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Cross, Thomas, ‡d approximately 1660-approximately 1735
-
- 100 0 _ ‡a Thomas Cross
- 100 0 _ ‡a Thomas Cross
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (12)
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Alass! when charming Sylvia's gon | |
Albacinda drew the dart [Song] [[London], s.n. (Th. Cross junior)] | |
Amphitryon. | |
And in each track of glory | |
The bane of all pleasure | |
Behold, behold the man that with gigantick might | |
Beyond the desert mountains | |
Bonduca. | |
Bury delights my roving eye. A song [[London], s.n. (engrav'd by Thos. Cross, jun.)] | |
Caelia with an artfull care. A song. [[London], s.n. (T. Cross jun. sculp.)] | |
A cantata ... [p. 53-56 einer Sammlung] [s.l., s.n. (Thomas Cross junior sculp.)] | |
Celemene, pray tell me | |
Celia has a thousand, thousand, thousand charms | |
Dear, dear, pretty, pretty, pretty youth | |
A dialogue in the second part of the Conquest of Granada | |
Dioclesian. | |
Don Quixote | |
Drunk I was last night [Song]. Words made to a tune of M|r Hen: Purcell's. [s.l., s.n. (Th. Cross junior)] | |
Fair Iris and her swain | |
Fool's preferment. | |
From rosie bow'rs ... [Song]. [[London], John Cullen (Th. Cross junior)] | |
From rosy bowers | |
Go perjured man | |
How happy, how happy is she, how happy, how happy is she that early | |
I'll sail upon ye dog-star | |
Incidental music | |
King Arthur | |
Lessons | |
Lessons for the harpsichord or spinet; containing an overture, a ground, and a chacoon, with several almands and airs. [London, author (Th. Cross junior); London, author (Th. Cross junior)] | |
Let the dreadful engines of eternall will | |
The mad dialogue | |
The moderate man, 1710: | |
The morose reformer | |
Oh lead me to some peaceful gloom | |
Philomela | |
Il Pirro e Demetrio | |
The pow'r of wine [Song], set for 3 voices [[London], s. n. (T. Cross junior)] | |
The Prophetess | |
Pyrrhus and Demetrius | |
Richmond heiress. | |
Rival sisters. | |
[Sing all ye muses] | |
So fair, so fair, young Caelia's charms you'd swear. | |
A song in The campaigners | |
Song in the Emperor of the moon | |
Song in the farce called the Spanish wives | |
A song in the first part of Massaniello / set by Mr. Danniel Purcell ; sung by Mrs. Lindsey ; and exactly engrav'd by Tho: Cross. | |
Song in The taming of the shrew, or, Sauny the Scot | |
Songs | |
Synopsis musicae | |
SYNOPSIS MUSICÆ | OR | The Musical Inventory | Being a Collection of the choicest and newest Ayres, Jiggs, | Borees, Alemands, Gavots, Entries, Rounds O's Horn-pipes, Trumpet-Tunes | and Scotch Tunes, for the Recorder or Flute. To which are added | several new Songs and Catches Compos'd by the most able Masters. | LONDON | Engraven, Printed and sold by Tho. Cross in Three Horse-Shoe Court in Pye | Corner near West Smithfield, and are to be sold by M.|r Crouch at the Three | Lutes in Princes Street nere Covent Garden and by M.|r Man Book-seller at the | Heart and Bible in Cornhill near the Royal Exchange. 1693. | |
Tell me why, tell me why my charming fair | |
Tempest. | |
Tho Jockey su'd me long. A Scotch song to a play-house tune. [s.l., s.n. (engrav'd by T. Cross jun.)] | |
Thy genius lo | |
To arms, & Britains strike home | |
The town rak's : a song | |
Triumphs of virtue. | |
What life can compare with the jolly town rakes | |
When Myra sings. A song for two voices. [s.l., s.n. (Th. Cross junior)] | |
Where oxen do low | |
Young Philander woo'd me long |