The history of suicide in England, 1650-1850

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The history of suicide in England, 1650-1850

Pickering & Chatto, 2012

  • : pt. 1
  • v. 1
  • v. 2
  • v. 3
  • v. 4
  • : pt. 2

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 14

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注記

Vol. 1. edited by Paul Seaver ; with a general introduction by Mark Robson -- v. 2. edited by Paul Seaver -- v. 3-4. edited by Kelly McGuire

Pt. 1. 1650-1750: v. 1. 1650-1673 -- v. 2. 1674-1699 -- v. 3. 1700-1716 -- v. 4. 1717-1750

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

: pt. 1 ISBN 9781851969807

内容説明

This two-part, eight-volume, reset edition draws together a range of sources from the early modern era through to the industrial age, to show the changes and continuities in responses to the social, political, legal and spiritual problems that self-murder posed.

目次

  • Part I: 1650-1750 Volume 1: 1650-1673 General Introduction - Mark Robson Introduction to Volumes 1 and 2 Suicide and the Broadside Ballad: Anon., The Faithful Lovers Downfal: The Death of Fair Phillis who Killed Her Self for Loss of her Philander (c.1644-80)
  • Anon., The Lamenting Ladies Last Farewell to the World (c.1650-80)
  • Anon., The Divils Cruelty to Mankind (1662)
  • Anon., A Godly Warning for All Maidens by the Example of Gods Judgements Shewed upon One Jermans Wife of Clifton in the County of Nottingham, Who Lying in Child-Bed, Was Born Away and Never Heard of After (c.1670)
  • Anon., The Dying Damsels Doleful Destiny: Or, True love Requited with Evil (c.1671-1704)
  • Anon., Loves Lamentable Tragedy (c.1671-1704)
  • Anon., The London Damsels fate by Unjust Tyrany: Or, The Rash Lover (c.1672-96)
  • Anon., A Tragical Story of Lord Thomas and Fair Ellinor (1677)
  • Anon., Loves Downfal (c.1678-80)
  • Anon., The Unnatural Mother: Being a True Relation of One Jane Lawson, Once Living at East-Barnet, in Middlesex
  • Who Quarreling with Her Husband, Urged Him to Strike Her, and Thereupon the Same Night, Being the First of Sept. 1680, Drowned Her Self and Two Poor Babies in a Well (c.1680-1)
  • Anon., The Damosels Tragedy: Or, True love in Distress (c.1682-1703)
  • Anon., The Fair Maid of Dunsmore's Lamentation (c.1683)
  • Anon., Whitney's Dying Letter to His Mistress That Betray'd Him: With Her Answer (1692). Thomas Beard, 'Of Such as Have Murdered Themselves' (1631)
  • William Denny, Pelecanicidium, or The Christian Advisor against Self-Murder (1653
  • Anon., A Sad Caveat to all Quakers. Not to Boast Any More That They Have God Almighty by the Hand, When They Have the Devil by the Toe (1657)
  • [Owen Stockton], Counsel to the Afflicted, Or Instruction and Consolation for Such as Have Suffered Loss by Fire (1667)
  • [J Shafte], The Great Law of Nature, or Self-Preservation Examined, Asserted, and Vindicated from Mr Hobbes His Abuses (1673)
  • Anon., A True Account of the Late, Most Doleful, and Lamentable Tragedy of Old Maddam Gwinn, Mother to Maddam Elenor Gwinn
  • Who Was Unfortunately Drowned, in a Fish-Pond, at Her Own Mansion-House, Near the Neat-Houses (1679)
  • John Collinges, Defensative Armour against Four of Sathan's Most Fiery Darts: Viz. Temptations to Atheistical and Blasphemous Impressions and Thoughts, Self-Murther, Despair, and Presumption (1680) Volume 2: 1674-1699 Short Texts: Anthony Wildgoose, The Young-Mans Second Warning-Peece (1643)
  • Anon., The Troubled-Spirited Mans Departing (1653)
  • Anon., Sad and Deplorable News from Fleet-Street (1674)
  • Anon., Sad and Lamentable News from Rumford (1674)
  • Anon., The Sad Effects of Cruelty Detected (1675)
  • Anon., Strange and Lamentable News from Dullidg-Wells (1678)
  • Anon., The Sad and Dreadful Relation of a Bloody and Cruel Murther (1684)
  • Anon., An Account of the Most Strange and Barbarous Action (1685)
  • Anon., A Sad and Dreadful account of the Self-Murther of Robert Long, Alias Baker (1685)
  • Anon., Sad and Dreadful News from Dukes-Place Near Aldgate (1686)
  • Anon., A Full and True Relation of the Murther of Doctor Urthwait (1689)
  • Anon., A Sad and Lamentable Account of the Strange and Unhappy Misfortune of Mr John Temple (1689). Thomas Philpot, Self-Homicide-Murther (1674) The Earl of Essex's Suicide: Anon., An Account of How the Earl of Essex Killed Himself in the Tower of London (1683)
  • Embroyan-fancy of anti-Jack Presbyter, A New Poem on the Dreadful Death of the Earl of Essex, Who Cut His Own Throat in the Tower (1683)
  • Anon., A True Narrative of the Bloody Murther of the Earl of Essex, Upon Himself, Being Now a Prisoner in the Tower (1683)
  • Henry Danvers, Murder Will Out (1689)
  • Robert Ferguson, An Enquiry into, and Detection of the Barbarous Murther of the Late Earl of Essex (1684)
  • Laurence Braddon, Essex's Innocency And Honour Vindicated (1690)
  • 'Notes on the Death of the Earl of Essex' (1683) John Child: John Child, A Second Argument, for a More Full and Firm Union amongst All Good Protestants (1684)
  • Anon., Sad and Lamentable News from Brick-Lane in the Hamlet of Spittle Fields (1684)
  • Thomas Plant and Benjamin Dennis (eds), The Mischief of Persecution Exemplified (1688). Charles Gildon, 'An Account of the Life and Death of the Author' (1695). Willis, The Occasional Paper: [Richard Willis], 'In a Letter to a Friend' (1697)
  • [Richard Willis], 'Concerning Self-Murder' (1698). Nathaniel Whaley, 'Of Murther Particularly Duelling and Self-Murther' (1698)
  • Anon., A Reply to the Hertford Letter (1699) Volume 3: 1700-1716 Introduction to Volumes 3 and 4 John Adams, An Essay Concerning Self-Murther (1700). Satires on Suicide: Anon., A Step to Oxford (1700)
  • W Withers, Some Thoughts Concerning Suicide, or Self-Killing (1711). John Jeffery, Felo de Se: Or a Warning against the Most Horrid and Unnatural Sin of Self-Murder (1702)
  • Anon., 'A Vindication of Self-Muder', Post Angel (1702)
  • Daniel Defoe, Review of the Affairs of France (1704)
  • J B, Apstophonia, or Self-Murther Arraigned and Condemned (1705)
  • John Dunton, 'That the Self-Murder of the Pagans was Justifiable', Athenian Sport (1707)
  • Thomas Knaggs, A Sermon against Self-Murder (1708)
  • John Prince, Self-Murder Asserted to be a Very Heinous Crime
  • in Opposition to all Arguments Brought by the Deists, to the Contrary (1709)
  • 'A Sin to Die for Love?', British Apollo (1709)
  • John Edwards, from Theologica Reformata (1713)
  • John Cockburn, A Discourse of Self-Murder (1716)
  • William Fleetwood, 'Three Sermons upon the Case of Self-Murder', Relative Duties to Parents and Children, Husbands and Wives, Masters and Servants (1716)
  • Sir George Mackenzie, 'Self-Murder', The Works (1716-22) Volume 4: 1717-1750 Newspapers: Reporting Suicide Religious and Moral Periodical Essays: Anon., 'Of Suicide' (1732)
  • Anon., The Prompter (1736)
  • James Mauclerc, 'Concerning Self-Murder' (1745)
  • Anon., 'Letter to the British Gazette' (1728)
  • Anon., Universal Spectator (1732). Diabolical Influence: Isaac Watts, Defense against the Temptation to Self-Murther (1726)
  • Anon., A Discourse upon Self-Murder (1732). Commentaries on 'Lunacy' and the Law: Matthew Bacon, 'Felo de se' (1736-66)
  • Philanthropus, 'To the Old Whig' (1737)
  • Philadelphus, 'To the Author of Read's Journal' (1731)
  • Ralph Freeman, 'The Merits of the Crafts-Men Consider'd' (1738)
  • Ralph Freeman, The Daily Gazetteer (1739)
  • Anon., Present State of the Republick of Letters (1728). Suicide and Free Thought: Anon., 'On Suicide' (1732)
  • Anon., Weekly Miscellany (1737)
  • Anon., The Christian Free-Thinker (1740)
  • Simon Berington, A Dialogue between the Gallows and a Freethinker (1744)
  • M Deslandes, 'If There Be Valour in Suicide?' (1745)
  • Alberto Radicati, Count of Passerano, A Philosophical Dissertation upon Death (1732)
  • Socrates, 'Remarks upon a Pamphlet Call'd A Philosophical Dissertation On Death, &c.' (1732). The Case of Richard and Bridget Smith: Anon., Gentleman's Magazine (1732)
  • Anon., 'Domestick Occurrences in April 1732' (1732)
  • Alexander Pope, One Thousand Seven Hundred and Thirty-Eight (1738). Cato: Anon., The Free-Thinker (1718)
  • Philadelphus, 'To the Author of Read's Journal' (1731)
  • John Henley, Cato Condemn'd (1730)
  • John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon, Cato's Letters (1733)
  • Philalethes, Cato. Two Letters (1721)
  • Anon., Universal Spectator (1734)
  • Samuel Catherall, Cato Major (1725). Duelling, Suicide and the 'Code of Honour': Anon., 'Self-Murther the Effect of Cowardice and Atheism' (1728)
  • James Foster, 'Of Duels and Self-Murder' (1744)
  • Hercules Vinegar, pseud [Henry Fielding], and T U, The Champion
  • or, The Evening Advertiser (1741)
  • Anon., Westminster Journal (1747)
  • Anon., 'Suicide: or Self-Murder' (1726). Fanny Braddock and Gambling: Anon., London Evening Post (1731)
  • Anon., 'Of the Unhappy Self-Murther of Mrs Fanny Braddock at Bath' (1731)
  • [Lydia Granger], Modern Amours (1733)
  • Anon., 'Mr Morgan' (1736). Women's Suicide: [Sarah Chapone], The Hardships of the English Laws in Relation to Wives (1735)
  • Septimus and Henry [Baker], Universal Spectator (1730)
  • [Eliza Haywood], Lady's Weekly Magazine (1747). Love Suicide and Literature: Richard Gwinnett, Pylades and Corinna (1732)
  • Anon., The Fair Suicide (1733)
  • Anon., The Oxfordshire Tragedy
  • or, The death of Four Lovers (c.1736-63)
  • Eliza Haywood, The British Recluse (1721)
  • Richard Savage, The Wanderer: A Vision (1729). The English Malady from Other Perspectives: Anon., 'Of Suicide or Self-Murder' (1732)
  • William Lloyd, Letters from a Moor at London to His Friend in Tunis (1726)
  • Anon., The German Spy (1740). Eustace Budgell, Liberty and Property (1732)
  • Zachary Pearce, A Sermon on Self-Murder (1736), John Tillard, 'Whether the Heathens Encouraged, or Approved of Self-Murder?' (1742)
巻冊次

: pt. 2 ISBN 9781851969814

内容説明

This two-part, eight-volume, reset edition draws together a range of sources from the early modern era through to the industrial age, to show the changes and continuities in responses to the social, political, legal and spiritual problems that self-murder posed.

目次

  • Part II: 1750-1850 Volume 5: 1750-1799: Sermons, Discourses, Essays and Treatises Introduction to Volumes 5 and 6 Part I: Sermons, Discourses, Essays and Treatises: Francis Ayscough, A Discourse against Self-Murder (1755)
  • Wellins Calcott, 'Suicide', Thoughts Moral and Divine (1761)
  • John Chorley Knowles, 'The Unreasonableness and Impiety of Suicide Considered', Twelve Sermons (1769)
  • Thomas Secker, 'The Sixth Commandment', Lectures on the Catechism of the Church of England (1769)
  • Matthew Henry Cooke, 'On Suicide', The Newest and Most Complete Whole Duty of Man (1773)
  • Caleb Fleming, A Dissertation upon the Unnatural Crime of Self-Murder (1773)
  • John Herries, An Address to the Public on the Frequent and Enormous Crime of Suicide (1774)
  • John Marks Moffatt, 'To the Distressed, Especially to the Person who is Tempted to Suicide', The Duty and Interest of Every Private Person (1778)
  • Manessah Dawes, An Essay on Crimes and Punishments (1782)
  • J Yonge, 'Essay XIX', Essays and Letters on the Most Important and Interesting Subjects (1783)
  • Anon., A Collection of Letters in Defence of Christianity and Its Distinguishing Doctrines (1784)
  • George Gregory, 'An Impartial Inquiry into the Reasonableness of Suicide', Essays (1785)
  • Richard Hey, A Dissertation on Suicide (1785)
  • William Paley, 'Suicide', Principles of Moral and Political Philosophy (1785)
  • Anon., A Caveat against Suicide (1786)
  • Edmund Burton, Suicide, a Dissertation (1790)
  • Charles Moore, A Full Inquiry into the Subject of Suicide (1790)
  • Anon., Short Expostulations and Thoughts on Suicide (1790)
  • Herbert Croft , A Sermon Preached at Prittlewell (1791)
  • Edward Barry, 'Self-Murder', Theological, Philosophical and Moral Essays (1792)
  • John Garnons, 'On Suicide', Sermons on Various Subjects (1792)
  • Vicesmus Knox, 'Against Despair and Suicide', Sermons (1792)
  • John Watkins, 'Enquiry into the Causes of Suicide', The Peeper, A Collection of Essays, Moral, Biographical, and Literary (1796)
  • George Beaver, A Sermon against Self-Murther (1797)
  • George Gregory, A Sermon on Suicide (1797)
  • Anon., 'On Suicide', Crude Thoughts on Prevailing Subjects (1798)
  • William Davy, 'Against Suicide, or Self-Murder', A System of Divinity (1799) Volume 6: 1750-1799: Legal, Medical, Literary and Miscellaneous Texts and Newspapers and Magazines Part II: Legal, Medical, Literary and Miscellaneous Texts: Anon., 'Inquisition on one who Hanged Himself ', The Coroner's Guide (1756)
  • Anon., The Durham Tragedy (1760)
  • Charles Collignon, 'Of Suicide', Medicina Politica (1765)
  • William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1769)
  • William Eden, 'Of Suicide', Principles of Penal Law (1771)
  • Anon., Suicide, a Poem (1773)
  • Anon., Suicide, an Elegy (1775)
  • Anon., 'Concerning the Laws and the Coroner's Practice in Cases of Suicide', Considerations on Some of the Laws Relating to the Office of a Coroner (1776)
  • Thomas Warton, 'The Suicide', Poems (1777)
  • [Herbert Croft ], Love and Madness (1780)
  • Anon., 'The Suicide', Adventures of a Hackney Coach (1781)
  • Anon., 'A Letter to a Gentleman who had Attempted to Commit Suicide', Literary Amusements (1782)
  • Anon., Reuben, or the Suicide (1787)
  • William Rowley, 'On Suicide', A Treatise on Female ... Diseases (1788)
  • Jane Timbury, 'The Suicide', The Philanthropic Rambler (1790)
  • John Coates, An Answer to the Justification of Suicide (1792)
  • Charles James, 'Suicide Rejected', Poems (1792)
  • Charles Pigott, 'Suicide', A Political Dictionary (1795)
  • Hannah More, Robert and Richard (1796)
  • [ John Gorton], Tubal to Seba: The Negro Suicide (1797)
  • [ Joseph James], Extraordinary Case of Suicide (1797)
  • 'Suicide', Encyclopedia Britannica (1797) Part III: Newspapers and Magazines: George Colman, 'The Genius', St. James's Chronicle, 10-12 October 1761
  • Thomas Chatterton, 'The Unfortunate Fathers', Town and Country Magazine (January 1770)
  • John Wesley, Letter to the General Evening Post, 22-4 July 1790 Anonymous and Pseudonymous Letters and Extracts: Letter to the London Daily Advertiser, 21 June 1751
  • General Evening Post, 17-20 August 1751
  • 'Of Suicide', Read's Weekly Journal, 14 October 1752
  • Letter to Gray's Inn Journal, 24 March 1753
  • Advertisement, Gentleman's Magazine, 25 (January 1755)
  • Connoisseur, 9 January 1755
  • Letter to the London Evening Post, 23-5 October 1755
  • 'Some Observations on the Causes of Suicide', Gentleman's Magazine (January 1756)
  • Letter to the World, 9 September 1756
  • Letter to the World, 23 September 1756
  • 'Reflections on Suicide', London Magazine (March 1762)
  • 'A Letter to a Friend, on Suicide and Madness', Gentleman's Magazine (April 1762)
  • 'Reflections on Suicide' (continued), London Magazine (April 1762)
  • 'Thoughts on Self-Preservation, with Regard to Suicide', Annual Register (1764)
  • Letter to the Public Advertiser, 23 June 1764
  • Letter to the Public Advertiser, 29 June 1765
  • Letter to the Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser, 26 December 1765
  • 'On Self-Murder', Public Advertiser, 16 August 1768
  • Letter to the Town and Country Magazine (February 1770)
  • Hoey's Dublin Mercury, 10-13 August 1771
  • Letter to Hoey's Dublin Mercury, 15-17 August 1771
  • 'An Essay on Suicide Committed by those in whom the Least Symptoms of Lunacy Never Appeared', Westminster Journal, December 1771
  • 'Thoughts on Suicide', Town and Country Magazine (January 1772)
  • 'Essay on Suicide', Westminster Journal, 4 January 1772
  • 'Essay on Suicide' (continued), Westminster Journal, 11 January 1772
  • 'Conclusion of an Essay on Suicide', Westminster Journal, 25 January 1772
  • 'On Suicide', Morning Chronicle, 25 July 1772
  • 'To Zeno', Morning Chronicle, 9 September 1772
  • Letter to the Morning Chronicle, 12 September 1772
  • Letter to the Town and Country Magazine (November 1772)
  • Letter to the Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser, 10 November 1772
  • 'Reflections on Suicide', Morning Chronicle, 1, 3, 8, 10, 15 August 1774
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 22 November 1774
  • Letter to the Morning Chronicle, 28 November 1774
  • Letter to the Public Advertiser, 12 December 1774
  • Letter to Lloyd's Evening Post, 14-17 April 1775
  • Letter to the Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser, 30 December 1777
  • 'On Suicide', Morning Chronicle, 21 July 1778
  • 'The Mock Suicide, a Ludicrous but Recent Anecdote', Morning Chronicle, 8 September 1778
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 17 November 1778
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 4 April 1779
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 9 November 1779
  • Whitehall Evening Post, 15 February 1780
  • 'A Petition without Committee or Association to the King, Lords, and Commons in Parliament Assembled', Public Advertiser, 20 March 1780
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 25 July 1780
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 10 August 1780
  • 'On Moral Obligation', Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser, 18 August 1781
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 20 October 1781
  • 'A Late Suicide', Public Advertiser, 30 March 1782
  • 'The Observer', Town and Country Magazine (January 1783)
  • [R Hart], 'An Essay on Suicide', Weekly Entertainer, 2 June 1783
  • 'Anecdotes of the late Mr. Powell, in a Letter Addressed to the Printer of the Bury Post', Gentleman's Magazine (July 1783)
  • 'Conclusion of the Evidence before the Coroner's Jury on Mr. Powell', Gentleman's Magazine (August 1783)
  • Deaths, Gentleman's Magazine (November 1784)
  • Letter to the Gentleman's Magazine (December 1784)
  • 'Suicide', Whitehall Evening Post, 29 September 1785
  • Letter to the Gentleman's Magazine (February 1786)
  • Letter to the Gentleman's Magazine (April 1786)
  • 'On Suicide', Public Advertiser, 3 June 1786
  • London Chronicle, 4-6 July 1786
  • 'A Melancholy Fact', The Times, 23-6 September 1786
  • London Recorder, 15 October 1786
  • 'On Self-Murder', Gentleman's Magazine (January 1787)
  • Extract from a letter from Dublin, World, 27 June 1787
  • 'Affecting Narrative of Murderers and Suicides, with an Observation on the Law of England, as to the Former Sin', World, 10 July 1787
  • Felix Fairley's Bristol Journal, 21 July 1787
  • 'Mr Hesse', World, 3 June 1788
  • New London Magazine, July 1788
  • 'Lord Say and Sele', World, 4 July 1788
  • 'Suicide', General Evening Post, 8-10 July 1788
  • Morning Chronicle, 23 July 1788
  • 'On Self-Murder', Morning Chronicle, 30 July 1788
  • Letter to the Morning Chronicle, 20 September 1788
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 25 September 1788
  • Letter to the Morning Chronicle, 27 September 1788
  • Letter to the St. James's Chronicle, 15 October 1789
  • Letter to the Gentleman's Magazine (November 1789)
  • 'Curious Hand-Bill', World, 17 November 1789
  • Letter to the Argus, 10 March 1790
  • Letter to the Public Advertiser, 13 March 1790
  • Letter to the General Evening Post, 29-31 July 1790
  • 'Bennet's Suicide', The Times, 6 August 1790
  • Letter to the General Evening Post, 21-4 August 1790
  • 'Observations on Suicide', General Evening Post, 24-6 August 1790
  • Letter to the General Evening Post, 7-9 September 1790
  • Letter to the General Evening Post, 18-21 September 1790
  • Letter to the General Evening Post, 21-3 September 1790
  • 'Reflections Occasioned by Reading Zimmermann's Treatise on Solitude, with an Interesting Anecdote Conveying an Antidote against Suicide', Whitehall Evening Post, 3 November 1791
  • Letter to the Public Advertiser, 25 October 1793
  • 'Considerations against Self-Murder', Asylum, 8 July 1795
  • 'Suicide', European Magazine (October 1796)
  • 'On the Frequency of Suicide', Oeconomist (1798) Volume 7: 1800-1850: Legal Contexts, Religious Writings and Medical Writers Introduction to Volumes 7 and 8 Legal Contexts: George Custance, A Concise View of the Constitution of England (1808)
  • Anthony Highmore, A Treatise on the Law of Lunacy and Idiocy (1807)
  • Anon., 'On the Punishment Annexed to Self-Murder' (1813)
  • 'An Act to Alter and Amend the Law relating to the Interment of the Remains of any Person Found Felo de Se' (1823)
  • John Impey, The Office and Duty of Coroners (1800) Religious Writings: Sydney Smith, 'On Suicide' (1809)
  • Anon., A Remedy for Self-Murder (1819)
  • Solomon Piggott, Suicide and its Antidotes (1824). Burial Rites Debate: Arthur Phillip Perceval, A Clergyman's Defence of himself, for Refusing to Use the Office for the Burial of the Dead Over One who Destroyed himself, Notwithstanding the Coroner's Verdict of Mental Derangement (1833)
  • Henry Woods, A Few Leading Facts, in Defense of Truth & Character, in a Letter Addressed to the Hon & Rev A P Perceval (1833) Medical Writers: George Man Burrows, 'Suicide' (1828)
  • John Gideon Millingen, 'Remarkable Suicides', Bentley's Miscellany (1839)
  • Forbes Winslow, The Anatomy of Suicide (1840) Appendix: Legal Abbreviations Volume 8: 1800-1850: Medical Writers (continued), Statistical Inquiries, Social Criticism, Poetic and Popular Representations and Cases Medical Writers (continued): Forbes Winslow, The Anatomy of Suicide, continued (1840) Statistical Inquiries: George Man Burrows, Observations on the Comparative Mortality of Paris and London (1815)
  • William Farr, 'Causes of Death in England and Wales. Letter to the Registrar-General from William Farr, Esq.' (1841) Social Criticism: Anon., 'Prospectus of a New Joint-Stock Company. The London Suicide Company' (1839)
  • William Johnson Fox, Two Lectures 'On Suicide' (1845) Poetic Representations: Anna Seward, 'Written in the Blank Page of the Sorrows of Werter', composed c.1785-6 (1810)
  • William Hart, Anti-Suicide, A Poem (1809)
  • Robert Pearse Gillies, Egbert
  • or, The Suicide ([c.1814])
  • William Combe, 'The Suicide' (1815) Popular Representations: Topical Broadsides: Anon., Dreadful Occurrence (1817)
  • Anon., Awful Depravity. Dreadful Account of Anne Graham (1822)
  • Anon., An Account of Three Awful Instances of Self-Murder (1823). Broadside Ballads: Anon., Sequel to Poll of Plymouth ([c.1800-2])
  • Anon., Fair Maria ([c.1796-1853])
  • Anon., The Cruel Father and Constant Lover ([c.1802-19])
  • Anon., William and Dinah ([c.1819-44])
  • John Lambern, The Suicide Club ([c.1840])
  • Anon., A New Hymn, Composed on a Factory Boy and Girl who were Found Drowned in the River Aire ([c.1847])
  • David Townshend, Lines Occasioned by the Death of William Murdin of Little Oakley, who was Found Drowned in a Pond in his Close On the 21st of December, 1847 ([c.1847]) Cases: Anon., 'Burial of the Suicide Williams' (1812)
  • Anon., 'Patricide and Suicide' (1824)
  • Anon., 'Death of Sir Samuel Romilly' (1818)
  • Anon., 'Death of Marquis of Londonderry' (1822). Margaret Moyes: Anon., Particulars of the Coroner's Inquest Held on the Body of Margaret Moyes (1839)
  • Anon., Dreadful Death of Margaret Moyes (1839)
  • Anon., Just Published! The Authentic Particulars of the Most Determined and Frightful Suicide, of Miss Moyes (1839)
  • Anon., Copy of Verses on the Melancholy Death of Margaret Moyes (1839)

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