In 1687, Ridpath published a new method of shorthand,
Shorthand yet Shorter, with a dedication to
Philip Wharton, 4th Baron Wharton, under whose roof the book had been written, while Ridpath was a servant there. The author also undertook to give lessons. A second edition of his manual appeared in 1696. as ''Scotland's Sovereignty asserted; being a dispute concerning Homage'', and in 1698 he translated N. de Souligné's
Political Mischiefs of Popery. In ''A Dialogue between Jack and Will, concerning the Lord Mayor's going to meeting-houses with the sword carried before him
, 1697, he defended Sir Humphry Edwin, a presbyterian lord mayor; and this was followed in 1699 by A Rowland for an Oliver, or a sharp rebuke to a saucy Levite. In answer to a sermon preached by Edward Oliver, M.A., before Sir Humphry Edwin. By a Lover of Unity
. A book called The Stage Condemned'', in support of
Jeremy Collier's
Short View of the Immorality and Profaneness of the English Stage, appeared in September 1698, and the author of a reply,
The Stage Acquitted, says it was by ''Mr. R[idpa]th, the formidable author of a scandalous newspaper, and the wretched retailer of mad
Prynne's enthusiastic cant.'' Ridpath's ''Scotland's Grievances relating to Darien, humbly offered to the consideration of the Parliament
, 1700, contained remarks about a foreign yoke. Next year came his The Great Reasons and Interests considered anent the Spanish Monarchy
, and in 1702 A Discourse upon the Union of England and Scotland. By a lover of his country
, in which Ridpath opposed a union. In 1703 he printed The Case of Scotsmen residing in England and in the English Plantations
, and An Historical Account of the ancient Rights and Power of the Parliament of Scotland
. These were followed by An Account of the Proceedings of the Parliament of Scotland, 1703
, 1704, and The reducing of Scotland by Arms … considered'', 1705. According to one of the replies to this last pamphlet, its author and publisher were bound over to appear at the queen's bench bar. In 1706 Ridpath wrote
Considerations upon the Union of the two Kingdoms, and was answered in Sir John Clerk's
Letter to a Friend, giving an Account how the Treaty of Union has been received here. With Remarks upon what has been written by Mr. H[odges] and Mr. R[idpath], a piece which has been erroneously attributed to Defoe. In 1704–5, Ridpath assisted
James Anderson, who was then preparing his
Historical Essay showing that the Crown and Kingdom of Scotland is Imperial and Independent; and in 1705, he commenced a correspondence with the Rev.
Robert Wodrow, chiefly on the subject of the union and the episcopal church in Scotland. ''The Scots' Representations to Her Majesty, against setting up the Common Prayer-Book in Scotland'', 1711, was written, according to a note in the copy in the Advocates' Library, by Ridpath,
William Carstares, and Defoe. Another piece attributed to Ridpath is
The Oath of Abjuration considered, Edinburgh, 1712. He was also employed in correcting Captain
Woodes Rogers's
Voyage; assisted in writing the periodical
History of the Works of the Learned; invented the "Polygraphy", a writing-engine, moved by the foot, by which six or more copies could be written at once; contributed to the
Medley in 1712; and was in constant strife with the Tory
Post Boy, published by
Abel Roper.
John Dunton, an admirer, described his style as excellent. In 1713, Ridpath wrote
Some Thoughts concerning the Peace, and the Thanksgiving appointed by authority to be observed for it; and certain observations on the address of the Highlanders to Queen Anne, which he complained was signed only by ten, four of whom were Catholics, called forth
The Honourable Chieftains of the Highland Clans vindicated from the false Aspersions and scurrilous Reflections thrown upon them by Ridpath, the scandalous and justly condemned Libeller, Edinburgh, 1713. In 1714, he published a book called
Parliamentary Right maintained, or the Hanover Succession justified, in answer to
Hilkiah Bedford's
Hereditary Right to the Crown of England asserted. His letters to the English minister at The Hague give an account of the difficulties in getting this work circulated (
Stowe MSS.). Copies were sent by various ships to different ports in England; but many were lost or thrown overboard by the captains, or were returned because no one dared receive them. He had political correspondence with persons in Scotland, and in April he wrote
The New Project examined, or the Design of the Faction to deprive the Hanover Family of the power to name Lord Justices anatomised, but it is doubtful whether this pamphlet was printed. In 1717 he was giving Wodrow advice in the preparation of the
History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland, and was himself proposing to write a continuation of
George Buchanan's
Scotch History. In 1719, when he was living in Greville Street, Holborn, he published
An Appeal to the Word of God for the Trinity in Unity.
Alexander Pope wrote (
Dunciad, i. 208): :To Dulness Ridpath is as dear as Mist. According to Wodrow, the dedication to the Lower House of Convocation, prefixed to the collected edition of the
Independent Whig, 1721, is by Ridpath. It is an attack on the unscriptural claims of the clergy, who are charged with teaching the need of giving endowments rather than plain morality and religion. ==Publications==