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قراءة كتاب Early American Poetry 1610-1820 A List of Works in the New York Public Library

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Early American Poetry 1610-1820
A List of Works in the New York Public Library

Early American Poetry 1610-1820 A List of Works in the New York Public Library

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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quack; Hypocrite’s hope; On general Ethan Allen; by Lemuel Hopkins.—An oration which might have been delivered to students in anatomy on the late rupture between two schools in Philadelphia, by Francis Hopkinson.—Philosophic solitude, by William Livingston.—Descriptive lines upon prospect from Beacon-Hill in Boston; Ode to the President on his visiting the Northern states; Invocation to Hope; Prayer to Patience; Lines addressed to Della Crusca; by Philenia, a lady of Boston.—Alfred to Philenia.—Philenia to Alfred.—Poem written in Boston at the commencement of the Revolution; An intended inscription for monument on Beacon-Hill in Boston; by James Allen.—Elegiac ode to General Greene, by George Richards. Country school.—Speech of Hesper.—[Poem on the distress of inhabitants of Guinea.]—New Year’s wish; From a Gentleman to a lady who had presented him with a cake heart; by Dr....—Utrum horum mavis elige.—Ella, a Norwegian tale, by William Dunlap.—Eulogium on rum, by J. Smith.—Country meeting, by T. C. James.—Written at sea in a heavy gale, by Philip Freneau.—To Ella, from Bertha.—An elegy written in February 1791; Versification of passage from fifth book of Ossian’s Temora; Habakkuk, chap. iii; Twilight of the Gods; Extract from Conquest of Scandinavia; by Richard Alsop.—Ode to conscience, by Theodore Dwight.—Collolloo, an Indian tale, by William Dunlap.—An ode to Miss ****, by Joseph Howe.—Message from Mordecai to Esther, by Timothy Dwight.

The American poetical miscellany. Original and selected. Philadelphia: Published by Robert Johnson, C. & A. Conrad & Co. and Mathew Carey, booksellers and stationers. 1809. 1 p.l., (1)4-304 p. 16º.

NBH

John Binns, printer.

Includes the following poems by American authors:

The burning of Fairfield, by D. Humphreys.—Mercy, by Salleck Osborn.—Eulogium on rum, by Joseph Smith.—The country meeting, by T. C. James.—The house of sloth, by Timothy Dwight.—Extract from a dramatic manuscript, by Salleck Osborn.

American taxation [a poem], 1765. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 461-463.)

NBB

Attributed to Samuel St. John of New Canaan, Connecticut, and to Peter St. John of Norwalk, Connecticut.

Also printed in Frank Moore, Songs and ballads of the American Revolution, New York, 1856, p. 1-17, NBH.

The American times, a satire, in three parts. See Odell, Jonathan.

An American youth, pseud. See The Spunkiad: or Heroism improved.

Ames, Nathaniel, 1708-1764. An essay upon the microscope. (In his: An astronomical diary, or An almanac for the year of our Lord Christ, 1741. Boston, 1741. 12º.)

Reserve

Reprinted in Stedman and Hutchinson, A library of American literature, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 425-427, NBB.

Additional poems without titles will be found in his An astronomical diary, or An almanac ... for the years 1731, 1733-35, 1737-50, 1752-75, copies of which are in the Reserve Room of the Library.

—— A poetical essay on happiness. (In his: Ames’s almanac revived and improved: or, An astronomical diary for the year of our Lord Christ, 1766. Boston, 1766. 12º.)

Reserve

—— Victory implor’d for success against the French in America. (In his: An astronomical diary, or An almanac for the year of our Lord Christ, 1747. Boston, 1747. 12º.)

Reserve

—— The waking of sun. (In his: An astronomical diary, or An almanac for the year of our Lord Christ, 1739. Boston, 1739. 12º.)

Reserve

Reprinted in Stedman and Hutchinson, A library of American literature, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 424-425, NBB.

The Anarchiard: a New England poem. Written in concert by David Humphreys, Joel Barlow, John Trumbull, and Dr. Lemuel Hopkins. Now first published in book form. Edited, with notes and appendices, by Luther G. Riggs. New Haven: Published by Thomas H. Pease, 323 Chapel Street. 1861. viii, 120 p. 24º.

NBHD

The Library has another copy with the following portraits inserted: David Humphreys, Joel Barlow, John Trumbull, Nathanael Greene, Robert Morris.

This poem was originally published in the following numbers of The New Haven Gazette and Connecticut Magazine: Oct. 26, Nov. 2, Dec. 28, 1786; Jan. 11, 25, Feb. 22, March 15, 22, April 5, May 24, Aug. 16, Sept. 13, 1787. The Library possesses all the numbers of the New Haven Gazette in which this poem appeared, except the last one, Sept. 13, 1787.

Nos. 1-4 of The Anarchiard were also printed in The American museum, Philadelphia, 1789, v. 5, p. 94-100, 303-305.

The projector of this poem was Colonel David Humphreys; and it was written in concert with Barlow, Trumbull, and Hopkins; but what particular installment or number was written by each has never been definitely ascertained.

André, John, 1751-1780. Cow-chace, in three cantos, published on occasion of the Rebel General Wayne’s attack of the Refugees Block-House on Hudson’s river, on Friday the 21st of July, 1780. [By Major John André.] New-York: Printed by James Rivington, mdcclxxx. 1 p.l., (1)4-69 p. 8º. p. 8º.

Reserve

Included with the Cow-chace, are the following poems: Yankee Doodle’s Expedition to Rhode Island, written at Philadelphia, p. 19-21; On the Affair between the Rebel Generals Howe and Gaddesden, written at Charlestown, p. 23-26; The American times, a satire. In three parts.... By Camillo Querno, p. 27-69.

Inserted, a portrait of André, engraved by Hapwood, from a drawing by Major André, ornamented by Shirt.

The Cow-chace appeared originally in The Royal Gazette, in the following numbers: Canto i, Aug. 16, 1780; Canto ii, Aug. 30, 1780; Canto iii, Sept. 23, 1780.

Also printed in William Dunlap, André; a tragedy, New York, 1798, p. 75-84, Reserve, and in Winthrop Sargent, The life of Major André, Boston, 1861, and New York, 1871, p. 236-249, IGM.

Andrews, Edward W. An address before the Washington Benevolent Society, in Newburyport, on the 22d. Feb. 1816. By Edward W. Andrews, A.M. Published by request of the society. Newburyport: Published by William B. Allen & Co. No. 13, Cornhill. 1816. 1 p.l., (1)4-15 p. 8º.

NBHD p.v. 5, no. 14

Aquiline Nimble-Chops, pseud. Democracy: an epic poem. See

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