Author:Percival Stockdale

Works

 * A Poetical Address to the Supreme Being (Berwick [1764])
 * The Constituents: a poem (1765)
 * Life of Edmund Waller, prefixed to the poet's Works (1772)
 * The Poet: A Poem (1773) 2nd ed.
 * Three Discourses: two against Luxury and Dissipation, one on Universal Benevolence (1773)
 * Six Discourses, to which is prefixed an introduction containing a view of the genuine Ancient Philosophy, London, 1777
 * An Enquiry into the Nature and Genuine Laws of Poetry; including a particular defence of the Writings and Genius of Mr. Pope (1778)
 * Miscellanies in Prose and Verse (1778)
 * Letters from Lord Rivers to Sir C. Cardigan (1778), translation from Marie Jeanne Riccoboni
 * An Examination of the Important Question whether Education at a Great School or by Private Tuition is preferable, (1782)
 * Essay on Misanthropy, (1783)
 * Sermons on Important and Interesting Subjects (1784)
 * Three Poems (1784)
 * Ximenes, (1788)
 * Thirteen Sermons to Seamen, preached on board H.M.S. Leander in the Bay of Gibraltar (1791)
 * Letter to Granville Sharp, suggested by the present Insurrection of the Negroes in the Island of St. Domingo (1791)
 * Observations on the Writings and Conduct of our present Political and Religious Reformers (1792)
 * Poetical Thoughts and Views on the Banks of the Wear (1792)
 * Letters between the Honourable and Right Reverend Shute, by Divine Providence, Lord Bishop of Durham ... and Percival Stockdale, (1792)
 * Letter to Mr. Bryant, occasioned by his late Remarks on Mr. Pope's Universal Prayer, (1793)
 * (ed.) Seasons by James Thomson (1793)
 * Letter to a Gentleman of the Philanthropic Society on the Liberty of the Press (1794)
 * The Invincible Island: a poem, with introductory Observations on the present War, (1797)
 * A Letter to the Honourable and Right Reverend the Lord Bishop of Durham; on the Slave-Trade (1799)
 * A Discourse on the Duties and Advantages of Old Age, (1801)
 * A Remonstrance against Inhumanity to Animals, and particularly against the Savage Practice of Bull-Baiting, (1802)
 * Verses on the abolition of the slave trade (1804)
 * Lectures on the truly eminent English Poets (1807)
 * Poems, a selection (1808)
 * Memoirs of his Life and Writings, containing many interesting Anecdotes of the Illustrious Men with whom he was connected, (1809).

As translator

 * The Amyntas of Tasso, by Torquato Tasso (1770)
 * Antiquities of Greece, from the Latin of Lambert Bos, (1772)
 * Institutions, Manners, and Customs of the Ancient Nations, French original by Sabbathier