The Georgia Spec; or, Land in the Moon. A Comedy in Three Acts. Boston, 1797. 8vo.
This comedy was written to ridicule the speculating mania in wild Yazoo Lands, and was performed in Boston with success.

WALLACK, W. H.

Paul Jones; or, The Pilot of the German Ocean. A Melodrama in Three Acts, adapted to the New York Theatres. New York, 1828. 16mo, pp. 52.

WARREN, MERCY

Mercy Warren, born in Barnstable, Mass., September 25, 1728, died in Plymouth, Mass., October 19, 1814. She was the third child of Colonel James Otis. She married James Warren, of Plymouth, who was appointed high sheriff in 1757, which place he held up to the breaking out of the Revolution, when he became general of the American forces about Boston. She was one of the foremost friends of liberty, and corresponded with most of the great men of her time. She published a History of the American Revolution. Her correspondence with John Adams was published by the Massachusetts Historical Society, 1878.

The Adulateur. A Tragedy, as it is now acted in Upper Servia. [6 lines of poetry]. Boston: Printed and sold at the New Printing Office, near Concert Hall, 1773. 8vo, pp. 30.

The Group. As lately acted and to be re-acted to the wonder of all superior intelligences, nigh head-quarters at Amboyne. Boston: Printed and sold by Edes and Gill, in Queen Street, 1775.
A political satire in two acts in verse, published the day before the Battle of Lexington.
Another edition, New York: John Anderson, n. d. [1775]. With second and third scenes of Act II. omitted. 8vo, pp. 15.

The Blockheads; or, The Affrighted Officers. A Farce. Boston: Printed in Queen Street, 1776.
A counter-farce to Burgoyne's Blockade. Published without name (attributed to Mrs. Warren) in the Literary History of the Revolution. New York, 1897.

The Sack of Rome. A Tragedy.