
1821: "The Sport of Fortune"
"Confessions of an English Opium Eater" (in a magazine)
1822: "Confessions of an English Opium Eater" (as a book)
1823: "Letters to a Young Man Whose Education Has Been Neglected"
"Notes from a Pocket Book of a Late Opium-Eater"
"Mr. Schnackenberger, or Two Masters for One Dog"
"Malthus on the Measure of Value"
1824: "Dialogues of Three Templars on Political Economy"
1825: "Walladmor" (Translation an adaptation of the german version of the Walter Scott´s novel)
1826: "Laocoön: or, on the Limits of Painting and Poetry"
1827: "On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts"
"The last days of Immanuel Kant"
1828: "The Toilette of the Hebrew Lady"
"Rhetoric"
"West Indian Property"
1829: "Sketch of Professor Wilson"
1830: "Kant in his Miscellaneous Essays"
"Richard Bentley"
"France and England"
"Political Anticipations"
1831: "Dr. Parr and His Contemporaires, or Whiggism in its Relations to Literature"
1832: "Klosterheim, or The Masque"
"The Caesars"
1833: "Mrs. Hannah More"
1834: "Samuel Taylor Coleridge"
"Sketches of Life and Manners from the Autobiography of a Late Opium-Eater"
1835: "A Tory´s Account of Toryism, Whiggism and Radicalism"
1837: "The Revolt of The Tartars"
Artículos sobre Goethe, Schiller, Shakespeare y Pope para la Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
1838: "The Household Wreck"
"The Avenger"
1839: "Supplementary Paper on Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts"
"Lake Reminiscences"
"Recollections of Charles Lamb"
"The English Language"
1840: "Style"
"The Opium Question with China in 1840"
1842: "Ricardo Made Easy"
1844: The Logic of Political Economy
1845: "Coleridge and Opium-Eating"
"Suspiria de Profundis"
"On Wordsworth´s Poetry"
1846: "The System of the Heavens as Revealed by Lord Rosse´s Telescope"
1847: "The Nautico-Military Nun of Spain"
1848: "The Poetry of Pope"
"Sortilege and Astrology"
1849: "The English Mail-Coach"
1856: "Confessions of an English Opium-Eater (versión aumentada y revisada)
1857: "China, by Thomas de Quincey"
"On the Present State of the English Language"