Author:Henry Fielding

Plays

 * An Old Man Taught Wisdom (1735)
 * The Author's Farce (1730) as Scriblerus Secundus
 * The Coffee-house Politician (1730)
 * The Covent-Garden Tragedy (1732)
 * Deborah (1733)
 * Don Quixote in England (1734)
 * Eurydice (1737)
 * Eurydice Hissed (1737)
 * The Fathers (1741, unfinished; first acted 1778)
 * The Grub-Street Opera (1731)
 * The Historical Register for the Year 1736 (1737)
 * The Intriguing Chambermaid (1733)
 * The Letter-Writers (1731)
 * The Lottery (1731)
 * Love in Several Masques (1728)
 * The Miser (1733)
 * Miss Lucy in Town (1742)
 * The Mock Doctor (1732)
 * The Modern Husband (1732)
 * The Old Debauchees (1732)
 * Pasquin (1736)
 * Plutus, the God of Riches (1742)
 * Rape upon Rape (1730)
 * The Temple Beau (1730)
 * Tom Thumb (1730)
 * The Tragedy of Tragedies; or, The Life and Death of Tom Thumb (1731)
 * Tumble-Down Dick (1737)
 * The Universal Gallant (1735)
 * The Wedding-Day (1743)

Novels

 * An Apology for the Life of Mrs. Shamela Andrews (1741)
 * The History of the Adventures of Joseph Andrews and his Friend, Mr. Abraham Abrams (1742)
 * The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (1749)
 * The Life of Jonathan Wild the Great (1743)
 * Amelia (1751)

Poetry

 * The Masquerade (1728)
 * A-Hunting We Will Go (1738)
 * The Vernoniad (1741)

Published in Miscellanies, 1743:
 * Of True Greatness. An Epistle to George Dodington, Esq. (1741)
 * Of Good Nature. To His Grace The Duke of Richmond.
 * Liberty. To George Lyttleton, Esq.
 * To A Friend on the Choice Of A Wife
 * To John Hayes, Esq.
 * A Description of U-n G-, (alias New Hog's Norton) in Com. Hants. Written to a Young Lady in the Year 1728.
 * To The Right Honourable Sir Robert Walpole, (Now Earl Of Orford). Written in the Year 1730
 * To The Same Anno 1731
 * Written Extempore On A Halfpenny, Which a young lady gave a beggar, and the author redeemed for half-a-crown.
 * The Beggar. A Song.
 * An Epigram
 * The Question
 * J-n W-ts At A Play.
 * To Celia
 * On A Lady, Coquetting With A Very Silly Fellow.
 * On The Same.
 * Epitaph On Butler's Monument.
 * Another. On A Wicked Fellow, Who Was A Great Blunderer.
 * Epigram On One Who Invited Many Gentlemen To A Small Dinner.
 * A Sailor's Song
 * Advice To The Nymphs Of New S-m. Written in the year 1730.
 * To Celia. Occasioned by her apprehending her house would be broke open, and having an old fellow to guard it, who sat up all night, with a gun without any ammunition.
 * To The Same. On Her Wishing To Have A Lilliputian To Play With.
 * Similes. To The Same.
 * The Price. To The Same.
 * Her Christian Name. To The Same.
 * To The Same; Having Blamed Mr. Gay For His Severity On Her Sex.
 * An Epigram.
 * Another.
 * To The Master Of The Salisbury Assembly. Occasioned by a dispute whether the company should have fresh candles.
 * The Cat And Fiddle. To The Favourite Cat Of A Fiddling Miser.
 * The Queen of Beauty, t'other day
 * A Parody, From The First Aeneid.
 * A Simile, From Silius Italicus.
 * To Euthalia. Written in the year 1728.
 * Part of Juvenal's Sixth Satire, Modernised In Burlesque Verse
 * To Miss H-and At Bath. Written extempore in the pump-room, 1742.

Journalism

 * The Champion (1739-1740)
 * The True Patriot (1745-1746)
 * The Jacobite's Journal (1747-1748)
 * The Covent Garden Journal (1752)

Prose

 * The Crisis: a Sermon (1741?)
 * The Opposition (1741)
 * A Letter to a noble Lord (1742)
 * A Full Vindication of the Dutchess Dowager of Marlborough (1742)
 * Introduction to The Adventures of David Simple, by Sarah Fielding

Published in Miscellanies, 1743:
 * Preface to the Miscellanies and Poems
 * An Essay on Conversation
 * An Essay on the Knowledge of the Characters of Men
 * An Essay on Nothing
 * Philosophical Transactions, for the Year 1742-3
 * The First Olynthiac of Demosthenes
 * Of the Remedy of Affliction for the Loss of our Friends
 * A Dialogue between Alexander the Great, and Diogenes the Cynic
 * An Interlude between Jupiter, Juno, Apollo, and Mercury
 * A Journey from This World to the Next


 * Preface to The Adventures of 'David Simple' (1744)
 * A Serious Address to the People of Great Britain (1745)
 * A Dialogue between the Devil, the Pope, and the Pretender (1745)
 * The History of the Present Rebellion in Scotland (1745)
 * A Dialogue between a gentleman of London (1747)
 * A Proper Answer to a Late Scurrilous Libel (1747)
 * Ovid's Art of Love paraphrased (1747)
 * Preface to 'Familiar Letters' (1747)
 * A True State of the Case of Bosavern Penlez (1749)
 * A Charge delivered to the Grand Jury (1749)
 * An Enquiry into the Causes of the late Increase of Robbers (1751)
 * A Plan of the Universal Register Office (1752; with John Fielding)
 * Examples of the Interposition of Providence in the Detection and Punishment of Murder (1752)
 * A Proposal for Making an Effectual Provision for the Poor (1753)
 * A Clear State of the Case of Elizabeth Canning (1753)
 * The Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon (1755)


 * A Fragment of a Comment on Lord Bolingbroke's Essays

Biographies

 * Fielding (1907) by Henry Austin Dobson, part of the "English Men of Letters" series

On his works

 * "Tom Jones and Morality", by G. K. Chesterton in All Things Considered (1908)