Cobden's early work
A Letter from a Minister to his Parishioner, upon his Building a Meeting-House, London, 1718 marked him out as a
High Churchman. It was followed by
A Poem on the death of
Joseph Addison, 1720. In 1753 appeared
Concio ad Clerum, and in 1755
An Essay tending to promote Religion, London, a piece half prose and half verse, making clear show his disappointment at not having a canonry of
St Paul's Cathedral to add to the archdeaconry. He speaks of his chaplaincy, and affirms that the reward received for his 22 years' service was one meal a fortnight and no salary. Cobden published nine sermons separately. One, delivered at St. James's before George II in 1748 on , led eventually to the resignation of his chaplaincy. He published it in 1749, under the title
A Persuasive to Chastity. It had been censured, and the preacher had been lampooned in a court ballad.
William Whiston calls it "that seasonable and excellent sermon" delivered "when crime between the sexes was at its greatest height". In 1748, he published a volume entitled
Poems on several Occasions, London, printed for the widow of a clergyman, formerly his curate. In this work he eulogises
Stephen Duck's poetic fame, glorifies somebody's squirrel and a lady's canary, and laments over a dead cow. In 1756, Cobden published
A Poem sacred to the Memory of Queen Anne for her Bounty to the Clergy, London. In 1757, he published a collection called
Twenty-eight Discourses on various Subjects and Occasions, London, and the next year, when residing at Acton, he republished the whole of his works, under the title of
Discourses and Essays in Prose and Verse. ==References==