Graves was a collector of poems, a translator, essayist and correspondent. The book's full title was ''The Spiritual Quixote, or the Summer's Ramble of Mr. Geoffry Wildgoose, a Comic Romance'' (anon.), 1773, 1774 (two editions), 1783, and 1792. It was in
Anna Barbauld's collection
British Novelists, and in Walker's
British Classics. It ridiculed the intrusion of the laity into spiritual functions and the
enthusiasm of the Methodists. The hero has been identified with
Sir Harry Trelawny, 5th Baronet (unlikely by chronology),
Joseph Townsend and his own brother Charles Caspar Graves. The novel is said to have arisen out of the arrival in the parish of Claverton of a shoemaker from
Bradford-on-Avon, who held a meeting in the village. The rambles in the novel brought Wildgoose to Bath, Bristol, the Leasowes of Shenstone, and the Peak District. A key to several of the personages was supplied by
Alleyne FitzHerbert to
John Wilson Croker. Graves's own love life was portrayed in vol. ii.
Other works Graves from early life wrote verses for magazines, and some of his poems appeared in the collections of
Robert Dodsley (iv. 330–7) and George Pearch (iii. 133–8). He also wrote several plays, while his prose works were popular in his day. He published: •
The Festoon; a Collection of Epigrams (anon.), 1766 and 1767 •
Galateo, or a Treatise on Politeness, translated from
Il Galateo overo de’ costumi of
Giovanni della Casa, 1774 •
The Love of Order; a Poetical Essay, in three cantos (anon.), 1773. Dedicated to William James of Denford, Berkshire •
Euphrosyne; or Amusements on the Road of Life, 1776; 3rd edition vol. i. 1783; 2nd edition vol. ii. 1783, with appendix of pieces written for the Poetical Society at
Batheaston •
Columella; or the Distressed Anchoret, a Colloquial Tale, 1779. In praise of an active life as superior to that of a small country gentleman, and possibly suggested by the career of Shenstone •
Eugenius; or Anecdotes of the Golden Vale (anon.), 1785, 2 vols. A tale of life in a Welsh valley •
Lucubrations, consisting of Essays, Reveries, &c., by the late Peter of Pontefract, 1786 •
Recollections of some particulars in the Life of the late William Shenstone, in a Series of Letters from an intimate Friend of his [i.e. Graves] to … esq., F.R.S. [William Seward], 1788 •
The Rout; or a Sketch of Modern Life, from an Academic in the Metropolis to his Friend in the Country, 1789 •
Plexippus; or the Aspiring Plebeian (anon.), 1790, 2 vols. • ''Fleurettes; a translation of Fénelon's "Ode on Solitude".'' •
Meditations of the Emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, a new translation from the Greek original, with a Life, Notes, &c., by R. Graves, 1792; new edition, Halifax, 1826; from the
Meditations by
Marcus Aurelius •
Hiero on the Condition of Royalty, a Conversation from the Greek of Xenophon, by the Translator of Antoninus, 1793 •
The Heir-Apparent, or the Life of Commodus, from the Greek of Herodian, with a preface adapted to the present time, 1789 •
The Reveries of Solitude, consisting of Essays in Prose, a new translation of the "Muscipula", and Original Pieces in Verse, 1793 •
The Coalition; or the Opera Rehearsed, a Comedy in three acts, 1794. This work included
Echo and Narcissus, a dramatic pastoral which originally appeared in
Euphrosyne, vol. ii • ''The Farmer's Son; a Moral Tale, by the Rev. P. P., M.A.'', 1795 •
Sermons, with
A Letter from a Father to his Son at the University, Bath, 1799 •
Senilities, or Solitary Amusements in Prose and Verse, with a Cursory Disquisition on the Future Condition of the Sexes, by the Editor of the "Reveries of Solitude", 1801 •
The Invalid, with the Obvious Means of Enjoying Health and Long Life, by a Nonagenarian, editor of the "Spiritual Quixote," 1804; dedicated to Prince Hoare • ''The Triflers, consisting of Trifling Essays, Trifling Anecdotes, and a few Poetical Trifles, to which are added "The Rout" and "The Farmer's Son." By the late Rev. R. Graves'', 1805 Graves wrote the 30th number, on "grumbling", in
Thomas Monro's
Olla Podrida In the ''
Gentleman's Magazine, 1815, pt. ii. p. 3, are some Lines written by him under an hour-glass in the grotto at Claverton''. ==Family==