- Thoughts on the Present Discontents, and Speeches, etc.
- The persistence of empire, British political culture in the age of the American Revolution, Eliga H. Gould
- The American crisis
- Lord North
- John Wilkes, the scandalous father of civil liberty, Arthur H. Cash
- English radicals and the American Revolution
- Common sense ;, The crisis, Thomas Paine
- Independence, the struggle to set America free, John Ferling
- Cui bono?, or, An inquiry, what benefits can arise either to the English or the Americans, the French, Spaniards, or Dutch, from the greatest victories, or successes, in the present war, being a series of letters, addressed to Monsieur Necker, late controller general of the finances of France, by Josiah Tucker .
- Extra official state papers, addressed to the Right Hon. Lord Rawdon, and the other members of the two houses of Parliament, associated for the preservation of the constitution and promoting the prosperity of the British empire, by a late under secretary of state
- Observations on a late state of the nation
- Letters from Cicero to Catiline the second, with corrections and explanatory notes
- Four letters on important national subjects, addressed to the Right Honourable the Earl of Shelburne, His Majesty's First Lord Commissioner of the Treasury, by Josiah Tucker
- A letter to Lord George Germain, [an Englishman]
- Reasons why Lord **** should be made a public example, addressed to every free-born Englishman : to which is subjoined, an authentic extract of the preliminaries, signed the third of November, 1762, at Fontainebleau; with some comparative remarks between them and the terms offered by France last year
- Speech of Edmund Burke, Esq., at the Guildhall, in Bristol, previous to the late election in that city, upon certain points relative to his parliamentary conduct
- Reflections on the domestic policy, proper to be observed on the conclusion of a peace
- The Humble address of the Right Honourable the lords spiritual and temporal, in Parliament assembled, presented to His Majesty on Wednesday the nineteenth day of November, 1760; with His Majesty's most gracious answer
- The People's answer to the court pamphlet: entitled A short review of the political state of Great Britain
- A Letter to His Grace the Duke of N********, on the present crisis in the affairs of Great Britain, containing reflections on a late great resignation
- Thoughts on the letter of Edmund Burke, Esq; to the sheriffs of Bristol, on the affairs of America, by the Earl of Abingdon
- An address to the people of England, Scotland, and Ireland, on the present important crisis of affairs, by Catharine Macaulay
- An examination into the conduct of the present administration, from the year 1774 to the year 1778, and a plan of accomodation with America, by a member of Parliament
- Letters on the American war, addressed to the right worshipful the mayor and corporation, to the worshipful the wardens and corporation of the Trinity-House, and to the worthy burgesses of the town of Kingston-upon-Hull, by David Hartley, Esq. .
- Political considerations; being a few thoughts of a candid man at the present crisis, in a letter to a noble lord retired from power
- A letter to the Right Honourable the Earl of Shelburne, First Lord of the Treasury
- A speech of Edmund Burke, Esq. at the Guildhall, in Bristol, previous to the late election in that city, upon certain points relative to his parliamentary conduct
- A short history of the opposition during the last session of Parliament
- An Enquiry [i]nto the merits of the supposed preliminaries of peace, signed on the 3d instant
- An Essay on constitutional liberty, wherein the legal means of preventing the unconstitutional influence of the Crown are pointed out
- Authentic specimens of all the addresses that have been; and all that will be, presented to the Right Hon. Wm. Pitt, and the virtuous and uncorrupted majorties in both houses of Parliament, who have voted themselves in possession of all rights of the people, and prerogatives of the Crown of England
- Thoughts on the origin and nature of government, occasioned by the late disputes between Great Britain and her American colonies : written in the year 1766
- A letter from Lieut. Gen. Burgoyne to his constituents, upon his late resignation, with the correspondences between the secretaries of war and him, relative to his return to America
- A Collection of interesting, authentic papers relative to the dispute between Great Britain and America, shewing the causes and progress of that misunderstanding from 1764 to 1775
- A Dialogue on the principles of the constitution and legal liberty, compared with despotism, applied to the American question; and the probable events of the war, with observations on some important law authorities
- The beauties of Fox, North and Burke, selected from their speeches, from the passing of the Quebec Act, in the year 1774, down to the present time; with a copious index to the whole, and an address to the public
- An address to the Cocoa-tree, from a Whig [i.e. John Butler], and a consultation on the subject of a standing-army, held at the King's-Arms Tavern, on the twenty-eighth day of February, 1763
- A letter from Lieut. Gen. Burgoyne to his constitutents upon his late resignation, with the correspondences between the secretaries of war and him, relative to his return to America : also, a letter to Lieut. Gen. Burgoyne on his letter to his constituents, and a reply to Lieut. Gen. Burgoyne's letter to his constitutents
- Speech of Edmund Burke, Esq., member of Parliament for the city of Bristol, on presenting to the House of Commons (on the 11th of February, 1780) a plan for the better security of the independence of Parliament, and the oeconomical reformation of the civil and other establishments
- Thoughts on the letter of Edmund Burke, Esq; to the sheriffs of Bristol, on the affairs of America, by the Earl of Abingdon
- Characters, containing an impartial review of the public conduct and abilities of the most eminent personages in the Parliament of Great-Britain, considered as statesmen, senators, and public speakers
- The Opposition to the late minister vindicated, from the aspersions of a pamphlet intitled, Considerations on the present dangerous crisis
- The Debate in the House of Commons, on Wednesday, February 27, 1771, on the bill to repeal a clause in the Act for quieting the possession of the subject, commonly called the Nullum Tempus Act
- A letter to His Grace the Duke of Grafton on the present situation of public affairs
- Observations on a late state of the nation
- City petitions, addresses, and remonstrances, &c. &c. &c. commencing in the year M.DCC.LXIX, and including the last petition for the burial of the Right Hon'ble the Earl of Chatham in St. Paul's Cathedral, with His Majesty's answers. Also Mr. Alderman Beckford's speech to the king on the twenty-third of May, 1770
- Speech of Edmund Burke, Esq. on American taxation, April 19, 1774
- A dialogue on the actual state of Parliament
- An Authentic account of the part taken by the late Earl of Chatham in a transaction which passed in the beginning of the year 1778
- Thoughts on the present proceedings of the House of Commons