Author:Richard Savage

Poetry

 * The Convocation, or the Battle of Pamphlets (1717)
 * A Poem on the Memory of George F (1727)
 * The Bastard (1728)
 * Nature in Perfection, or the Mother Unveiled (1728) [uncertain attribution]
 * The Wanderer (1729)
 * A Poem to the Memory of Mrs. Oldfield (1730) [uncertain attribution]
 * Verses occasioned by Lady Tyrconnel's Recovery from the Smallpox at Bath (1730)
 * On the Departure of the Prince and Princess of Orange (1734)
 * A Poem on the Birthday of the Prince of Wales (1735)
 * The Progress of a Divine (1735)
 * The Poet's Dependence on a Statesman in the ‘Gentleman's Magazine’ (1736, p. 225)
 * Of Public Spirit in regard to Public Works (1737)
 * A Poem Sacred to the Memory of Her Majesty (1738)
 * London and Bristol Delineated (1744)

Compilations

 * Miscellaneous Poems and Translations by Several Hands (1726)
 * Various poems. The wanderer, The triumph of mirth and health, and The bastard. To which is prefixed a preface giving some account of them (1761)
 * The works of Richard Savage, Esq., son of the Earl Rivers: with An account of the life and writings of the author (1777), in 2 vols. vol. 1 vol.2

Plays

 * Love in a Veil: a comedy (1718)
 * The Tragedy of Sir Thomas Overbury (1723)

Works about Savage

 * The Life of Mr. Richard Savage, who was condemn'd wih Mr. James Gregory, the last sessions at Old Baily, for the murder of Mr. James Sinclair, at Robinson's coffee-house at Charing-Cross (1727), by Charles Beckingham (attribution uncertain)
 * An Account of the Life of Mr Richard Savage, Son of the Earl Rivers (1744), by Samuel Johnson
 * "Richard Savage," in The Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets (1783), by Samuel Johnson, Volume 3, pp. 164–335