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diff --git a/44962-0.txt b/44962-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..66d049f --- /dev/null +++ b/44962-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9267 @@ +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44962 *** + + EARLY AMERICAN POETRY + + 1610-1820 + + A LIST OF WORKS IN + THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY + + _COMPILED BY_ + JOHN C. FRANK + + NEW YORK + 1917 + + +_NOTE_ + +_This list includes titles of works in The New York Public Library on +August 1, 1917. They are in the Reference Department of the Library, +in the Central Building at Fifth Avenue and Forty-second Street._ + + REPRINTED OCTOBER 1917 + FROM THE + BULLETIN OF THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY + OF AUGUST 1917 + + form p-100 [x-10-17 3c] + + + + +EARLY AMERICAN POETRY, 1610-1820 + +A LIST OF WORKS IN THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY + + * * * * * + +COMPILED BY JOHN C. FRANK + + * * * * * + + +=Adams=, John, 1704-40. Poems on several occasions, original and +translated. By the late reverend and learned John Adams, M.A. Boston: +Printed for D. Goodkin, in Marlborough-Street, over against the Old +South Meeting House. 1745. 4 p.l., 176 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Adams=, John Quincy, 1767-1848. On the discoveries of Captain Lewis. +(In: The Monthly anthology and Boston review. Boston, 1807. 8º. v. 4, +p. 143-144.) + + =* DA= + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck's _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 395, _NBB._ + + +=Agricola=, pseud. _See_ The =Squabble=; a pastoral eclogue. + + +=Albany= Register. The humble address of the Carriers of the Albany +Register, to their generous customers, greeting them with a Happy New +Year. [Albany, N. Y.: Jan. 1, 1796.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + +=All= the world's a stage. A poem, in three parts. The stranger. +Newburyport: Printed by William Barrett. 1796. 15 [really 14] p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + The name "I. Storey" is written on the title in a + contemporary hand, in the place where the author's name is + usually printed; the reference being undoubtedly to Isaac + Story, who was born at Marblehead in 1774, and published his + first poem, _An Epistle from Yarico to Inkle_, in 1792. + + +=Allen=, Benjamin, 1789-1829. Miscellaneous poems, on moral and +religious subjects: By Osander [pseud. of Benjamin Allen]. Hudson: +Printed by Wm. E. Norman No. 2, Warren Street. 1811. 2 p.l., 7(1) p., +2 l., 11-180 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- New-York: Printed by J. Seymour, Sold by Griffin and Rudd, +agents for the publisher; 189, Greenwich-St. 1812. 4 p.l., 5-180 +p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + Published to aid the author to study for the ministry. + + +---- Urania, or The true use of poesy; a poem. By B. Allen, Jun. +New-York: Published by A. H. Inskeep, and Bradford & Inskeep. +Philadelphia. 1814. 3 p.l., (1)8-192 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + Page 8 is wrongly numbered p. 5. + + +=Allen=, Mrs. Brasseya, 1760 or 1762-18--? Pastorals, elegies, odes, +epistles, and other poems. By Mrs. Allen. (Copy right secured.) +Abingdon, (Md.): Printed by Daniel P. Ruff. 1806. 5 p.l., (1)10-163 p. +16º. + + =NBHD= + + Dedicated to Thomas Jefferson. + + +=Allen=, James, 1739-1808. An intended inscription written for the +monument on Beacon-Hill in Boston, and addressed to the passenger. +(In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. +p. 199-201.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 146-147, _NBH_, and in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of + American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 170-171, _NBH_. + + +---- Lines on the [Boston] massacre. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of +American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 162-165.) + + =NBH= + + Written in 1772 but not published till 1782. + + +---- [Poem] On Washington's visit to Boston, 1789. (In: Samuel +Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. p. 171-173.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Poem, written in Boston, at the commencement of the late +Revolution. (In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, +1793. 12º. p. 193-199.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The retrospect. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American +poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 165-170.) + + =NBH= + + +=Allen=, Paul, 1775-1826. Original poems, serious and entertaining. By +Paul Allen, A.M. Published according to act of Congress. Printed by +Joshua Cushing, Salem, 1801. 2 p.l., (i)vi-xi, 141 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + +---- A poem, delivered in the Baptist Meeting House in Providence, +September 4th A. D. 1793, being the anniversary commencement of Rhode +Island College. By Paul Allen. (In: Massachusetts magazine. Boston, +1793. 8º. October, 1793, p. 594-599.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Allston=, Washington, 1779-1843. The sylphs of the seasons, with +other poems. By W. Allston. First American from the London edition. +Boston: Published by Cummings and Hilliard, No. 1, Cornhill. +Cambridge.... Hilliard & Metcalf. 1813. 2 p.l., (i)vi-vii p., 1 l., +(1)12-168 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + The first edition was published in London, 1813. + + _Contents_: The sylphs of the seasons, a poet's + dream, p. 11-43.--The two painters, a tale, + p. 45-86.--Eccentricity, p. 87-113.--The paint-king, + p. 115-129.--Myrtilla, p. 131-141.--To a lady, who + spoke slightingly of poets, p. 143-147.--Sonnets, + p. 149-154.--The mad lover at the grave of his mistress, + 155-158.--First love, a ballad, p. 159-161.--The complaint, + p. p. 162-164.--Will, the maniac, a ballad, p. 165-168. + + +---- Lectures on art, and poems, by Washington Allston. Edited by +Richard Henry Dana, Jr. New York: Baker and Scribner, 1850. xi, +380 p. 8º. + + =NBI= + + In addition to the poems mentioned in the previous + entry, includes _America to Great Britain_. This poem, + written in 1810, was inserted by Coleridge in the first + edition of his _Sibylline leaves_, London, 1817, p. 276-278, + with the following note: "This poem, written by an American + gentleman, a valued and dear friend, I communicate to the + reader for its moral, no less than its poetic spirit." + + +=Alsop=, George, b. 1638. A character of the province of Maryland, +wherein is described in four distinct parts, (viz.) I. The situation, +and plenty of the province. II. The laws, customs, and natural +demeanor of the inhabitant. III. The worst and best usage of a +Maryland servant, opened in view. IV. The traffique, and vendable +commodities of the countrey. Also a small treatise on the wild and +naked Indians (or Susquehanokes) of Mary-Land, their customs, manners, +absurdities, & religion. Together with a collection of historical +letters. By George Alsop. London, Printed by T. J. for Peter Dring, +at the sign of the Sun in the Poultrey: 1666. 10 p.l., 118 p., 2 l., +1 port. (8º.) + + =Reserve= + + 1 facsimile portrait inserted. + + Poems on the following pages: p.l. 6-7; p. 26, 44-45, + 55, 75-80, 82-83, 103-104, 108-111. + + +---- ---- A new edition with an introduction and copious historical +notes. By John Gilmary Shea.... New York: William Gowans, 1869. +125 p., 1 map, 1 port. 8º. (Gowans' Bibliotheca Americana, no. 5.) + + =ISG= and =IAG= + + Includes a type-facsimile title-page. + + Reissued as _Fund publication_, no. 15, of the Mary-land + Historical Society, _IAA_. + + +---- ---- Reprinted from the original edition of 1666. With +introduction and notes by Newton D. Mereness.... Cleveland: The +Burrows Brothers Company, 1902. 113 p., 1 map, 1 pl., 1 port. 8º. + + =ISG= + + Includes a reduced photo-facsimile of original + title-page. + + No. 145 of 250 copies printed. + + +=Alsop=, Richard, 1761-1815. The charms of fancy: a poem in four +cantos, with notes. By Richard Alsop. Edited from the original +manuscripts, with a biographical sketch of the author, by Theodore +Dwight. New York: D. Appleton and Company, M.DCCC.LVI. xii p., 1 l., +(1)14-214 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + This poem was mostly written before 1788. + + +---- Elegy. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American +literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 497.) + + =NBB= + + +---- An elegy written in February 1791. (In: American poems, selected +and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 251-255.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 190-194, _NBH_. + +---- Extract from the Conquest of Scandinavia; being the introduction +to the fourth book. (In: American poems, selected and original. +Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 272-284.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Habakkuk, chap. III. (In: American poems, selected and original. +Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 263-264.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The incantation of Ulfo. From the Conquest of Scandinavia. (In: +Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, +p. 61-67.) + + =NBH= + + +---- A poem; sacred to the memory of George Washington, late president +of the United States, and commander in chief of the armies of the +United States. Adapted to the 22d of Feb. 1800. By Richard Alsop. +Hartford: Printed by Hudson and Goodwin. 1800. 23 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + This poem was delivered by Richard Alsop before the + citizens of Middletown, Conn., at the memorial service of + February 22, 1800. + + +---- Twilight of the Gods; or Destruction of the world, from the Edda, +a system of ancient Scandinavian mythology. (In: American poems, +selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 265-272.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Verses to the shearwater--on the morning after the storm at sea. +(In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. +v. 2, p. 60-61.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Versification of a passage from the fifth book of Ossian's +Temora. (In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. +12º. p. 255-262.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- _See also_ The =Echo=; The =Political= greenhouse for the year +1798. + + +An =American=, pseud. Crystalina; a fairy tale. _See_ Harney, John +Milton. + + +An =American=, pseud. _See_ =Oppression=, a poem. + + +An =American=, pseud. _See_ =Prime=, Benjamin Young. + + +=American= poems, selected and original. Vol. 1. Litchfield: Printed +by Collier and Buel. [1793.] (The copy right secured as the Act +directs.) viii, 304 p., 4 l. 12º. + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + No more published. + + "The first general collection of poetry ever attempted + in this country."--C. W. Everest, _Poets of Connecticut_, + Hartford, 1843, p. 103. + + The editorship is attributed by Everest to Dr. Elihu + Hubbard Smith, but the postscript to the preface of the work + p. [vi] refers to "the ill health of one of the editors." + + The Reserve copy contains the autographs of Daniel + Crocker, Samuel Austin, and Samuel G. Drake. + + _Contents_: Elegy on the times; Elegy on the death of + Mr. Buckingham St. John; Ambition; Prophecy of Balaam; + Downfall of Babylon; Speech of Proteus to Aristæus; by John + Trumbull.--Trial of faith; Address to genius of Columbia; + Columbia; The seasons moralized; A hymn; A song; The + critics; Epistle to Col. Humphreys; by Timothy Dwight.--The + prospect of peace; A poem spoken at commencement at Yale + College; Elegy on Titus Hosmer; by Joel Barlow.--Elegy + on burning of Fairfield, Connecticut; Elegy on Lieut. De + Hart; Mount Vernon; An ode addressed to Laura; Genius of + America; Epistle to Dr. Dwight; A song translated from the + French; by David Humphreys.--Epitaph on a patient killed by + cancer 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. + + =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_ +=Livingston=, Henry Brockholst. + + +=Aristocracy.= An epic poem. Philadelphia: Printed for the editor. +1795. 2 v. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + In two parts issued separately. + + [Part] 1 has 16 p. and is dated on p. vii: Philadelphia, + January 5, 1795. + + [Part] 2, without imprint, has 18 [really 17] p., pages + numbered 1-16, 18, and dated, on p. [4]: Philadelphia, March + 26th, 1795. + + +=Armstrong=, William Clinton, 1855--, editor. Patriotic poems of New +Jersey. [Newark, N. J., 1906.] 3 p.l., ii-v, 248 p., 5 pl., 3 ports. +8º. (Sons of the American Revolution.--New Jersey Society. New Jersey +and the American Revolution.) + + =NBH= + + +=Arnold=, Josias Lyndon, 1765-1796. Poems. By the late Josias Lyndon +Arnold, Esq; of St. Johnsbury (Vermont) formerly of Providence, and +a tutor in Rhode-Island College. Printed at Providence, by Carter +and Wilkinson, and sold at their bookstore, opposite the market. +M.DCC.XCVII. xii, (1)14-141 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Introduction by the editor, signed and dated: James + Burrill, jun. Providence, April, 1797. + + "The last words of Sholum; or, The dying Indian," + p. 46-49, is not by Arnold, but by Philip Freneau. + + Several of Arnold's poems are printed in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 77-82, _NBH_; also in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, + _Cyclopædia of American literature_, New York, 1866, + v. 1, p. 530, _NBB_. + + +=Arouet=, Poems of. _See_ =Ladd=, Joseph Brown. + + +The =Art= of domestic happiness and other poems: By the Recluse, +author of the Independency of the Mind, affirmed. Pittsburgh: +Published by Robert Patterson. 1817. 2 p.l., (i)vi p., 1 l., +(1)10-316 p., 1 l. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + Printed by Butler and Lambdin. + + +=Avalanche=, Sir Anthony, pseud. Fashion's analysis; or, The winter +in town. A satirical poem. By Sir Anthony Avalanche. With notes, +illustrations, etc. by Gregory Glacier, Gent. Part 1. New-York: +Printed for J. Osborn, No. 13 Park. 1807. 2 p.l., (1)6-84 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=B.=, B., Esq. Entertainment for a winter's evening. _See_ =Green=, +Joseph. + + +=Bacon's= epitaph, made by his man. (Massachusetts Historical Society. +Collections for 1814. Boston, 1838. 8º. series 2, v. 1, p. 58-59.) + + =IAA= + + This epitaph is in the manuscript account of Bacon and + Ingram's rebellion found among the papers of Capt. Nathaniel + Burwell, printed in this volume of the _Collections_. + + Also printed in Stedman and Hutchinson, _A library of + American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 1, p. 456-457, + _NBB_. + + +=Ballads= and poems relating to the Burgoyne campaign. Annotated by +William L. Stone.... Albany, N. Y.: Joel Munsell's Sons, 1893. 12, +359 p., 1 pl. (front.) 8º. (Munsell's historical series, no. 20.) + + =IAG= and =NBHD= + + +=Ballston= Springs. _See_ =Law=, Thomas. + + +=Banks=, Louis Albert. Immortal songs of camp and field. The story +of their inspiration together with striking anecdotes connected with +their history.... Cleveland: The Burrows Brothers Company, 1899. +298 p., 25 pl., 25 ports. 8º. + + =NBH= + + Contains the following songs, written before 1820: + + The American flag, by J. R. Drake, p. 17-24; Adams and + liberty, by R. T. Paine, p. 27-37; The Star-Spangled banner, + by F. S. Key, p. 53-63; Hail Columbia, by J. Hopkinson, + p. 67-77. + + +=Barlow=, Joel, 1754-1812. The Columbiad a poem. By Joel Barlow. +Printed by Fry and Kammerer for C. and A. Conrad and Co. Philadelphia; +Conrad, Lucas and Co. Baltimore. Philadelphia: 1807. 1 p.l., +(i)iv-xvi, 454 p., front, (port.), 11 pl. 4º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + The Reserve copy is extra illustrated, having 22 plates + and 58 portraits inserted. + + _The Columbiad_ is an amplification of the author's + _Vision of Columbus_. + + This work, which is a fine example of early American + bookmaking, was published at the expense of Robert Fulton, + the inventor, who also "designated the subjects to be + painted for engravings" at his own expense. + + +---- ---- Philadelphia: Published by C. and A. Conrad and Co. +Philadelphia; Conrad, Lucas and Co. Baltimore. Fry and Kammerer, +printers. 1809. 2 v. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + The Library has volume 2 only. v. 2. 2 p.l., (1)6-218 p. + + +---- ---- London: Printed for Richard Phillips, Bridge Street, +Blackfriars. 1809. 1 p.l., (i)iv-xxxiii p., 1 l., 428 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + Frontispiece, portrait of author, inserted. + + +---- ---- With the last corrections of the author. By Joel Barlow. +Paris: Printed for F. Schoell, Bookseller. 1813. 3 p.l., (i)vi-xl, 448 +p., 2 pl. (incl. front.), 2 ports. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- The conspiracy of kings; a poem: addressed to the inhabitants +of Europe, from another quarter of the World. By Joel Barlow, author +of the Vision of Columbus, Advice to the Privileged Orders &c. &c. +Printed and sold by Robinson & Tucker: Newburyport--1794. 30 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Inserted, the portrait of the author engraved by Edwin. + + Also printed in _The New-York magazine_, New-York, + 1792, v. 3, p. 375-382, _Reserve_; the author's _A letter + to the national convention of France, on the defects in + the constitution of 1791_, New York [1793?], p. 73-87, + _Reserve_; _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, p. 1-10, + _NBH_; and in _The political writings of Joel Barlow_, New + York, 1796, p. 237-238. _Reserve._ + + +---- Description of the first American congress; American Revolution; +American sages; American painters; American poets. (In: The Beauties +of poetry, British and American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 155-174.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 89-109, _NBH_. + + +---- An Elegy on the late honorable Titus Hosmer, Esq. one of the +Counsellors of the State of Connecticut, a Member of Congress, and +a Judge of the Maritime Court of Appeals for the United States of +America. (In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. +12º. p. 108-117.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The hasty-pudding: a poem, in three cantos. Written at Chambery, +in Savoy, January 1793. [By Joel Barlow. New Haven: Tiebout & O'Brien, +1796.] 2 p.l., (1)6-15 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + First printed in _The New-York magazine_. New York, + 1796, new series, v. 1, p. 41-49, _Reserve_. + + Also printed in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American + poetry_. Boston, 1829, v. 2, p. 13-21, _NBH_; E. A. and G. + L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of American literature_, New York, + 1866, v. 1, p. 400-403, _NBB_. + + +---- ---- Brooklyn: Published by Wm. Bigelow, 55 Fulton-Street. A. +Spooner, printer. 1833. 1 p.l., (i)iv-v, 6-22 p. 12º. + + =* C p.v. 724, no. 8= + + +---- ---- New York: C. M. Saxton [1852?]. 12 p. 12º. + + =VPC= + + Bd. with: R. L. Allen. The American farm book. New York, + 1852. 12º. + + +---- A poem, spoken at the public commencement at Yale-college, in +New-Haven, Sept. 12, 1781. (In: American poems, selected and original. +Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 94-107.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The prospect of peace. (In: American poems, selected and +original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 85-93.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 10-16, _NBH_. + + +---- The vision of Columbus; a poem in nine books. By Joel Barlow, +Esquire. Hartford: Printed by Hudson and Goodwin, for the author. +M.DCC.LXXXVII. 258 p., 6 l. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + This is the original edition, with twelve pages + containing the names of upwards of five hundred subscribers, + leading men of the day, including Washington, Franklin, + Burr, Gov. George Clinton, etc. + + +---- ---- Hartford, N. E. printed: London re-printed, for C. Dilly, in +the Poultry; and J. Stockdale, Piccadilly. M.DCC.LXXXVII. xx, 244 +p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + 2 portraits inserted. Frontispiece is portrait of Joel + Barlow, painted by Robert Fulton, engraved by A. B. Durand. + Facing p. 3, Portrait of Columbus painted by M. Macella, + engraved by P. Maverick. + + +---- ---- The second edition. Hartford: Printed by Hudson and Goodwin, +for the author. M.DCC.LXXXVII. 258 p., 3 l. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + The last three leaves contain the names of subscribers. + + +---- ---- The first edition, corrected.... To which is added, The +conspiracy of kings: a poem, by the same author. Paris: Printed at +the English Press, Rue de Vaugirard, No. 1214; and sold by Barrois, +Senior, Quai des Augustins; and R. Thomson, Rue de L'Anciene Comedie +Française, no. 42. 1793. 2 p.l., 304 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Lacks portrait. + + The conspiracy of kings, a poem, p. 277-304. + + +---- _See also_ The =Anarchiard=. + + +=Bartlett=, Joseph, 1762-1827. Physiognomy, a poem, delivered at the +request of the Society of Phi Beta Kappa, in the chapel of Harvard +University, on the day of their anniversary, July 18th, 1799. By +Joseph Bartlett. Boston, Printed by John Russell, 1799. 16 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Trimmed down from 4º, cropping text and margins. + + +The =Battle= of Bunkers Hill, a dramatic piece, in five acts. _See_ +=Brackenridge=, Hugh Henry. + + +=Battle= of Niagara, a poem. _See_ =Neal=, John. + + +The =Battle= of the Thames, October 5, 1813; from an unpublished poem, +entitled Tecumseh. By a young American. New York: Published at the Log +Cabin Office, No. 30 Ann-Street. 1840. 1 p.l., (1)4-15 p. 12º. + + =IIH p.v. 6, no. 1= + + +The =Bay= Psalm book. _See_ =Bible.= Old Testament: Psalms. English. +1640. + + +=Bayard.= Address to the robin redbreast. (In: The Beauties of poetry, +British and American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 201-204.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 177-181, _NBH_. + + +---- Woman's fate. Written in the character of a lady under the +influence of a strong, but unfortunate attachment. (In: The Beauties +of poetry, British and American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 127-130.) + + =Reserve= + + +The =Beauties= of poetry, British and American: containing some of the +productions of Waller, Milton, Addison, Pope, Shirley, Parnell, Watts, +Thomson, Young, Shenstone, Akenside, Gray, Goldsmith, Johnson, Moore, +Garrick, Cowper, Beattie, Burns, Merry, Cowley, Wolcott, Palmerton, +Penrose, Evans, Barlow, Dwight, Freneau, Humphreys, Livingston, J. +Smith, W. M. Smith, Bayard, Hopkinson, James, Markoe, Prichard, +Fentham, Bradford, Dawes, Lathrop, Osborne. Philadelphia: From the +press of M. Carey. No. 118, Market-Street. M.DCC.XCI. 3 p.l. (incl. +leaf of adv.), vii, viii, 244 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + American contributions include: + + Columbia, by Dwight.--Benevolence, by Dawes.--Woman's + fate, by Bayard.--Future state of the western territory; + American winter; On love and the American fair; Depredations + and destruction of the Algerines; by Humphreys.--Excellent + logic; British favours to America; Extreme humanity; + Omens; Nobility anticipated; by Trumbull.--Description + of the first American Congress; American Revolution; + American sages; American painters; American poets; by + Barlow.--Eulogium on rum, by Jos. Smith.--Faith, an ode; + Hope, an ode; Charity, an ode; by Markoe.--On a lady's + birth day, by W. M. Smith.--Description of Jehovah, from + the XVIIIth Psalm, by Ladd.--The Country meeting, by + T. C. James.--On the birth-day of Gen. Washington, by + Markoe.--Art and nature, by W. M. Smith.--The old soldier, + by Fentham.--The war-horse, by Ladd.--On the migration to + America and peopling the western country, by Freneau.--A + pastoral song, by Bradford.--The seasons moralized, by + Dwight.--Character of St. Tamany, by Pritchard.--A song, + by Dwight.--The Federal Convention.--A fair bargain, by + Hopkinson.--Song sung in St. Andrew's Society, New York, on + Tuesday August 22, 1790, when Colonel Alexander M'Gillwray + was present.--Address to the robin red-breast, by Bayard.--A + winter piece, by Lathrop.--Elegiac epistle on the death of + his sisters--and sent to another, by Osborn.--Hymn sung + at the Universal meeting house in Boston, Easter Sunday, + April 4, 1790.--The Deity, and his dispensations; Creation; + Original state of man; Three fold state of man emblematized; + Prospect of America; by Dwight.--Progress of science, by + Evans.--Philosophic solitude, by Livingston.--Sketches of + American history, by Freneau.--An Indian eclogue, by Jos. + Smith. + + +=Belknap=, Jeremy, 1744-1798. An eclogue, occasioned by the death of +the Reverend Alexander Cummings, A.M., on the 25th of August A. D. +1763. Ætat. 37.... (By J. Belknap, B.A.) Boston: Printed by D. & J. +Kneeland, for J. Edwards, 1763. 8 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Text cropped by trimming. + + +=Benedict=, David, 1779-1874. A poem delivered in Taunton, September +16th, A.D. 1807, at the anniversary election of the Philandrian +Society. By David Benedict. Boston: Belcher & Armstrong, printers, No. +70, State-Street. 1807. 1 p.l., (1)4-19 p. 8º. + + =NBH p.v. 26, no. 17= + + +---- The watery war: or, A poetical description of the existing +controversy between the Pedobaptists and Baptists, on the subjects and +mode of baptism. By John of Enon. Boston: Printed and sold by Manning +& Loring, No. 2, Cornhill. 1808. 2 p.l., (1)6-34 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Bernard=, Francis. _See_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +=Beveridge=, John. Epistolae familiares et alia quædam miscellanea. +Familiar epistles, and other miscellaneous pieces, wrote originally +in Latin verse, by John Beveridge, A.M. Professor of languages in +the College and Academy of Philadelphia. To which are added several +translations into English verse, by different hands, &c. Philadelphia. +Printed for the author by William Bradford, at the London +Coffee-House, at the corner of Market and Front-Streets. M,DCC,LXV. +xi, 88 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Bible.= Old Testament: Psalms. English. 1640. The whole booke of +Psalmes faithfully translated into English metre. Whereunto is +prefixed a discourse declaring not only the lawfullness, but also the +necessity of the heavenly ordinance of singing Scripture Psalmes in +the Churches of God. Imprinted, 1640. [Cambridge: Stephen Daye.] +147 l. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + + Slightly imperfect. + + The first book printed in English in North America. The + version of the Psalms was made about the year 1636, the + principal divines of the country each translating a portion. + The principal part of the work was committed to Mr. Richard + Mather, minister of the church in Dorchester, who probably + wrote the preface also, and to Mr. Thomas Weld and Mr. John + Eliot, associate ministers of the church in Roxbury. The + work of printing was completed in 1640, and the new Psalm + book was adopted at once by nearly every congregation in the + colony of Massachusetts Bay, and for that reason it came to + be known as the Bay Psalm book. Of this famous book there + are only ten copies known to be extant, of which only four + are perfect. + + For detailed statement and description see the facsimile + reprint with the introduction by Wilberforce Eames. + + +---- The Bay Psalm book; being a facsimile reprint of the first +edition, printed by Stephen Daye at Cambridge, in New England in 1640. +With an introduction by Wilberforce Eames. New York: Dodd, Mead & +Company, 1903. 1 p.l., v-xvii p., 147 l. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + One of 975 copies on plain paper. + + +---- ---- Prepared for the New England Society in the City of New York +[190-?]. 1 p.l., v-xvii p., 147 l. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + With an introduction by Wilberforce Eames. Introduction + dated: October, 1903. + + +---- A literal reprint of the Bay Psalm book, being the earliest +New England version of the Psalms, and the first book printed in +America.... Cambridge: C. B. Richardson, 1862. vii p., 149 l. 8º. + + =Stuart 4966= + + No. 40 of fifty copies printed. + + +=Bigelow=, Samuel, fl. 1776. A poem suitable for the present day, in +five parts, Worcester, 1776. New York: repr. for C. F. Heartman, 1915. +2 p.l., 7-26 p. 8º. (Heartman's historical series, no. 14.) + + =Reserve= + + Facsimile reprint, including title-page of original + edition, Worcester, 1776. + + No. 8 of forty copies printed on Fabriano hand-made + paper. + + +=Biglow=, William, 1773-1844. Commencement, a poem: or rather +commencement of a poem, recited before the Phi Beta Kappa Society, in +their dining hall, in Cambridge, Aug. 29, 1811. By a brother [i.e., +William Biglow]. Salem: Printed by Thomas C. Cushing. 1811. 1 p.l., +(1)4-8 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + With bookplate of Henry B. Anthony. + + +---- Education; a poem: spoken at Cambridge at the request of the Phi +Beta Kappa Society; July 18th 1799; By William Biglow. Salem: Joshua +Cushing. 1799. 2 p.l., (1)4-17 p. 8º. + + =NBH p.v. 26, no. 16= + + First 2 l. and last leaf lacking. Title-page supplied in ms. + + +---- Re-re-commencement: a kind of a poem: calculated to be recited +before an "assemblage" of New-England divines, of all the various +denominations; but which never was so recited, and in all human +probability never will be. By a friend of every body and every soul. +Salem: Printed by Thomas C. Cushing. 1812. 1 p.l., (1)4-8 p. 8º. + + =NBH p.v. 27, no. 13= + + +The =Bladensburg= races. Written shortly after the capture of +Washington City, August 24, 1814. [Probably it is not generally known, +that the flight of Mahomet, the flight of John Gilpin, and the flight +of Bladensburg, all occurred on the twenty-fourth of August.] Printed +for the purchaser. 1816. 1 p.l., 3-12 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Printed for the purchaser. 1816. 1 p.l., (1)4-16 p. 4º. + + =* IIH= + + A reprint issued in 1865. + + No. 35 of seventy-five copies. + + +---- n.t.-p. n.p., n.d. 8 p. 8º. + + =NBHD p.v. 5, no. 7= + + A reprint. + + +=Bland=, Theodoric, 1742-1790. [Patriotic poem on the battle of +Lexington.] (In: The Bland papers. Edited by Charles Campbell. +Petersburg, 1840. 8º. v. 1, p. xxi-xxiii.) + + =IG= + + +=Bleecker=, Mrs. Ann Eliza Schuyler, 1752-1783. An evening prospect. +(In: The New-York magazine. New-York. 1791. 8º. v. 2, p. 475-476.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Lines, written by the late Mrs. Ann E. Bleecker. (In: The +New-York magazine. New-York, 1791. 8º. v. 2, p. 294.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Lines, written by the late Mrs. Ann E. Bleecker. (In: The +New-York magazine. New-York, 1791. 8º. v. 2, p. 356.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- On reading Dryden's Virgil. [Written in 1778, by the late Mrs. +Ann E. Bleecker.] (In: The New-York magazine. New-York, 1791. 8º. +v. 2, p. 670.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The posthumous works of Ann Eliza Bleecker, in prose and verse. +To which is added, a collection of essays, prose and poetical, by +Margaretta V. Faugeres. New-York: Printed by T. and J. Swords, No. 27, +William-Street. 1793. 6 p.l., xviii, (1)20-375 p., front. (port.) 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Frontispiece, the portrait of Mrs. Bleecker engraved by + Tiebout. + + "Poetics," p. 185-262. + + Several of these poems have been reprinted in Samuel + Kettell, _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, + p. 213-219, _NBH_. + + +=Bonaparte=; with The storm at sea, Madaline, and other poems. +New-York: Published by Haly and Thomas, No. 142 Broadway. 1820. +1 p.l., (i)iv p., 1 l., (1)8-92 p. 8º. + + =NBH p.v. 28, no. 1= + + +=Boston Bard=, Poems of. _See_ =Coffin=, Robert Stevenson. + + +=Bosworth=, Benjamin. Signs of apostacy lamented. [By Benjamin +Bosworth.] n.t.-p. [Boston? 1693?] 4 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + "A caution to prevent scandal," p. 4. + + Signed and dated at end: "Benjamin Bosworth of + New-England. In the 81st year of my age, 1693." + + Photostat copy from an original in Brown University + Library. + + +=Botsford=, Mrs. Margaret. Viola or The heiress of St. Valverde, an +original poem, in five cantos. To which is annexed, patriotic songs, +sonnets, &c. By a lady of Philadelphia, author of Adelaide [i.e., Mrs. +Margaret Botsford]. Louisville, Ky. Printed by S. Penn, jr. 1820. +1 p.l., (1)4-96 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Bowdoin=, James, 1727-1790. A paraphrase on part of the oeconomy of +human life. Inscribed to his excellency Thomas Pownall, Esq; Governor +of the province of the Massachusetts-Bay. [By James Bowdoin.] +Boston New-England: Printed and sold by Green and Russell, at their +printing-office, in Queen-Street. MDCCLIX. 4 p.l., 3-88 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Woman. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, +1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 330-332.) + + =NBH= + + +---- _See also_ =Pietas= et gratulatio. + + +=Boyd=, William, 1777-1800. Woman: a poem, delivered at a public +exhibition, April 19, at Harvard University, in The College Chapel. By +William Boyd. Boston: Printed by John W. Folsom. M,DCC,XCVI. 2 p.l., +(1)6-15 p. 12º. + + =NBH p.v. 26, no. 15= + + Also printed in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American + poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, p. 83-86, _NBH_. + + +=Brackenridge=, Hugh Henry, 1748-1816. The Battle of Bunkers Hill. +A dramatic piece, of five acts, in heroic measure. By a gentleman +of Maryland ... [i.e., Hugh Henry Brackenridge.] Philadelphia: +Printed and sold by Robert Bell, in Third-Street, MDCCLXXVI. 3 p.l., +(1)6-49(1) p., 1 pl. (front.) 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Title-page lacking; supplied by a photostat facsimile. + Frontispiece imperfect. + + Contains the following poems: Prologue, p.l. 3; + Epilogue, p. 37-38; An ode on the battle of Bunkers-Hill, + p. 39-44; Speech by General Washington, on his entering + the town of Boston, p. 45-46; A military song by the army: + on General Washington's victorious entry into the town of + Boston, p. 47-49. + + The prologue and epilogue were written by John Parke. + + +---- The death of General Montgomery, at the siege of Quebec. A +tragedy. With an ode, in honour of the Pennsylvania militia, and the +small band of regular Continental troops, who sustained the campaign, +in the depth of winter, January, 1777, and repulsed the British forces +from the banks of the Delaware. By the author of a dramatic piece on +the Battle of Bunker's-Hill [i.e., Hugh Henry Brackenridge]. To which +are added, elegiac pieces, commemorative of distinguished characters. +Philadelphia: Printed and sold by Robert Bell, in Third-Street, next +door to St. Paul's Church. M,DCC,LXXVII. 4 p.l., (1)10-79(1) p., +2 l., front. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Contains the following poems: An ode in honour of + Pennsylvania militia, p. 54-64; Elegiac pieces commemorative + of distinguished characters, p. 65-68. + + The "Prologue on the death of General Montgomery" which + is at the end, was written by John Parke. + + +---- ---- Norwich: Printed by J. Trumbull, for and sold by J. Douglass +M'Dougall, on the West side of the Great-Bridge, Providence, 1777. +5 p.l., 11-68 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Contains the following poems: An ode in honour of + Pennsylvania militia, p. 50-58; Elegiac pieces commemorative + of distinguished characters, p. 58-68. + + +=Bradford=, William, 1588-1657. Certain verses left by ... William +Bradford ... penned by his own hand, declaring the dispensation +of God's providence towards him in the time of his life, and his +preparation and fittedness for death. (In: N. Morton, New-Englands +Memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. 12º. p. 144-145.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Copy of verses left by him for his children. (In: William and +Mary College quarterly. Richmond, Va., 1895. 8º. v. 4, p. 63-64.) + + =IAA= + + +---- A descriptive and historical account of New England in verse; +from a ms. of William Bradford, Governour of Plymouth Colony. +(Massachusetts Historical Society. Collections. Boston, 1794. 8º. +series 1, v. 3, p. 77-84.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Of Boston in New England; A word to New England. (Massachusetts +Historical Society. Collections. Boston, 1838. 8º. series 3, v. 7, +p. 27-28.) + + =IAA= + + +---- A pastoral elegy on O****. R***. (In: The New-York magazine. +New-York, 1795. 8º. v. 6, p. 570-571.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- A pastoral song. Ascribed to W. Bradford, esq. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 6. p. 334-335.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Beauties of poetry, British and + American_, Philadelphia, 1791, p. 193-195, _Reserve_; _The + Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, p. 175-177, _NBH_; _The + New-York magazine_, New York, 1795, v. 6, p. 569-570, + _Reserve_. + + +---- Providence and the Pilgrim. (In: E. C. Stedman and E. M. +Hutchinson, A library of American literature. New York, 1889. 8º. +v. 1, p. 115-116.) + + =NBB= + + +---- Some observations of God's merciful dealing with us in this +wilderness, and his gracious protection over us these many years. +(Massachusetts Historical Society. Proceedings, 1869-70. Boston, 1871. +8º. v. 11, p. 465-478.) + + =IAA= + + +---- A word to New Plymouth. (Massachusetts Historical Society. +Proceedings, 1869-70. Boston, 1871. 8º. v. 11, p. 478-482.) + + =IAA= + + +=Bradstreet=, Mrs. Anne Dudley, 1612-72. A dialogue between Old +England and New and other poems, by Mrs. Anne Dudley Bradstreet. +Boston [1905]. 20 p. 12º. (Old South leaflets. [General series.] +v. 7, no. 159.) + + =* R-Room 300= + + _Contents_: A dialogue between Old England and New + concerning their present troubles, anno 1642.--In honor + of that high and mighty Princess Queen Elizabeth of happy + memory.--To the memory of my dear and ever honored father + Thomas Dudley, Esq., who deceased July 31, 1653, and of his + age 77.--An epitaph on my dear and ever honored mother Mrs. + Dorothy Dudley, who deceased December 27, 1643, and of her + age 61.--The author to her book.--To my dear and loving + husband.--In reference to her children 23 June, 1659.--In + thankful remembrance for my dear husband's safe arrival, + September 3, 1662. + + +---- The poems of Mrs. Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672). Together with her +prose remains. With an introduction by Charles Eliot Norton. [New +York:] The Duodecimos, MDCCCXCVII. 2 p.l., xliv p., 2 l., 347 p., +1 l., 3 pl., 9 ports. 12º. + + =NBG= + + No. 132 of 132 copies on hand-made paper. + + Contains facsimiles of title-pages of the first three + original editions, and of the 1867 edition edited by J. H. + Ellis. + + +---- Several poems compiled with great variety of wit and learning, +full of delight; wherein especially is contained a compleat discourse, +and description of the four elements, constitutions, ages of man, +seasons of the year. Together with an exact epitome of the three first +monarchyes viz. The Assyrian, Persian, Grecian, and beginning of the +Romane Common-wealth to the end of their last king: with diverse other +pleasant & serious poems; By a Gentle-woman in New-England [i.e., Anne +Bradstreet]. The second edition, corrected by the author and enlarged +by an addition of several other poems found amongst her papers after +death. Boston, Printed by John Foster, 1678. 7 p.l., 255 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + Title-page mutilated; pages 247-255 lacking. + + +---- Several poems compiled with great variety of wit and learning, +full of delight; wherein especially is contained, a compleat discourse +and description of the four elements, constitutions, ages of man, +seasons of the year. Together with an exact epitome of the three first +monarchies, viz. the Assyrian, Persian, Grecian, and Roman common +wealth, from its beginning to the end of their last king. With divers +other pleasant and serious poems. By a Gentle-woman in New-England +[i.e., Anne Bradstreet]. The third edition, corrected by the author, +and enlarged by an addition of several other poems found amongst her +papers after her death. Re-printed from the second edition, in the +year M.DCC.LVIII. 1 p.l., iii-xiii, 233 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + p. 223-224, 229-230, 233 lacking. + + +---- The tenth muse lately sprung up in America. Or severall poems, +compiled with great variety of wit and learning, full of delight. +Wherein especially is contained a compleat discourse and description +of the four: elements, constitutions, ages of man, seasons of the +year. Together with an exact epitomie of the four monarchies, viz. The +Assyrian, Persian, Grecian, Roman. Also a dialogue between Old England +and New, concerning the late troubles. With divers other pleasant and +serious poems. [By Anne Bradstreet.] Printed at London for Stephen +Bowtell at the signe of the Bible in Popes Head-Alley. 1650. 7 p.l., +207 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- The works of Anne Bradstreet in prose and verse. Edited by John +Harvard Ellis. Charlestown: Abram E. Cutter, 1867. 3 p.l., vii-lxxvi, +434 p., 1 pl., 1 port. 4º. + + =NBHD= + + No. 192 of 250 copies printed. + + +=Branagan=, Thomas. Avenia, or A tragical poem, on the oppression +of the human species; and infringement on the rights of man. In +five books. With notes explanatory and miscellaneous. Written in +imitation of Homer's Iliad.--A new edition.--To which is added the +Constitution of the State of Pennsylvania. By Thomas Branagan. Author +of Preliminary essays, Serious remonstrance, Penitential tyrant, +&c. &c. Philadelphia: Printed, and sold by J. Cline, No. 125, South +Eleventh Street. 1810. 2 p.l., 5-324 p., front. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Branch=, William. Life, a poem in three books; descriptive of the +various characters in life; the different passions, with their moral +influence; the good and evil resulting from their sway; and of the +perfect man. Dedicated to the social and political welfare of the +people of the United States. By William Branch, junior, of Prince +Edward, Virginia. Richmond [Va.]: From the Franklin Press. W. W. Gray, +printer. 1819. 1 p.l., (i)iv-xii p., 1 l., 3-218 p., 1 l. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +The =Breechiad=, a poem. Theresa. Boston: Printed by Belcher and +Armstrong. State Street. 1807. 1 p.l., 11-22 p., 1 l. 12º. + + =NBH p.v. 24, no. 11= + + +=Brockway=, Thomas. The gospel tragedy: An epic poem. In four books. +[By Thomas Brockway.] Published according to act of Congress. Printed +at Worcester, Massachusetts, by James R. Hutchins, MDCCXCV. 1 p.l., +(i)iii-iv p., 1 l., (1)8-119 p., front. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Frontispiece, an engraving of the Crucifixion, by Amos + Doolittle. + + +A =Brother=, pseud. Commencement, a poem.... _See_ =Biglow=, William. + + +=Brown=, Charles Brockden, 1771-1810. Monody, on the death of Gen. +George Washington, delivered at the New-York Theatre [sic] on Monday +evening, Dec. 30, '99. [By Charles Brockden Brown.] (In: Commercial +advertiser, New York, Jan. 2, 1800. fº. no. 699, p. 3.) + + =Reserve= + + A poem in ninety-six lines. Title from caption. With + heading: For the Commercial advertiser. According to Dunlap, + _History of the American theatre_, 1832, p. 274, this was + written by C. B. Brown and delivered at the theatre by Mr. + Cooper. + + Reprinted in _The Spectator_, New York, Jan. 4. 1800, + no. 238, p. 1. + + +=Brown=, Solyman, 1790-1865. An essay on American poetry, with +several miscellaneous pieces on a variety of subjects, sentimental, +descriptive, moral, and patriotic. By Solyman Brown, A.M. New Haven: +Published by Hezekiah Howe, Flagg & Gray, printers. 1818. 1 p.l., +(1)4-191 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + With bookplate of Henry B. Anthony. + + Several of these poems are reprinted in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 351-353, _NBH_. + + +=Bryan=, Daniel. The mountain muse: comprising The adventures of +Daniel Boone; and The power of virtuous and refined beauty. By Daniel +Bryan. Of Rockingham County, Virginia. Harrisonburg: Printed for the +author: By Davidson & Bourne. 1813. 7 p.l., (1)16-252, 12 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Bryant=, William Cullen, 1794-1878. The embargo; or, Sketches of the +times. A satire. The second edition, corrected and enlarged. Together +with the Spanish Revolution, and other poems. By William Cullen +Bryant. Boston: Printed for the author, by E. G. House, No. 5, Court +Street. 1809. 2 p.l., (1)6-35(1) p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Thanatopsis. (In: The North American review for 1817. Boston, +1825. Second edition. 8º. v. 5, p. 338-340.) + + =* DA= + + Also in _Specimens of the American poets_, London, 1822, + p. 215-218, _NBH_. + + +=Bulkley=, Edward. A threnodia upon our churches second dark eclipse, +happening July 20, 1663 by deaths interposition between us and that +great light and divine plant, Mr. Samuel Stone, late of Hartford in +New-England. (In: N. Morton, New-Englands memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. +12º. p. 168-169.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Upon the death of that truely Godly, reverend, and faithful +servant of Christ, Mr. Jonathan Mitchell, pastor of the church at +Cambridge, who deceased July 9, 1668. (In: N. Morton, New-Englands +memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. 12º. p. 192-193.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Bulkley=, Peter. A lamentation for the death of that precious and +worthy minister of Jesus Christ, Mr. Thomas Hooker, who died July 7, +1647, as the sun was setting: the same hour of the day died blessed +Calvin, that glorious light. (In: N. Morton, New Englands memoriall. +Cambridge, 1669. 12º. p. 127-129.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Burgoyne's= proclamation. _See_ =Livingston=, William. + + +=Burk=, John Daly, d. 1808. Bunker-Hill; or, The death of General +Warren: an historic tragedy, in five acts. By John Burk, late of +Trinity-College, Dublin. As performed at the theatres in America, +for fourteen nights, with unbounded applause. New-York: Published +by D. Longworth, at the Dramatic Repository, Shakespeare-Gallery. +July--1817. 44 p., 1 l. 16º. + + =NCO p.v. 250, no. 4= + + First published in 1808. + + "Ode for the fourth March, 1817. Written for the + occasion by Mr. Samuel Woodworth, and sung by Mr. Abraham + Stage." 1 l. following p. 42. + + +=Byles=, Mather, 1706-1788. The comet: a poem. [By Mather Byles.] +Boston: Printed and sold by B. Green and Comp. in Newbury-Street, and +D. Goodkin, at the Corner of Water-street, Cornhil. 1744. 4 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Woodcut on title-page of a comet. + + Also printed in _The Massachusetts magazine_, Boston, + 1790, v. 2, p. 565, _Reserve_. + + +---- The conflagration. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American +poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 126-129.) + + =NBH= + + +---- A full and true account of how the lamentable wicked French and +Indian pirates were taken by the valliant Englishmen. (In: E. A. and +G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. +8º. v. 1, p. 118.) + + =NBB= + + +---- The God of tempest and earthquake. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens +of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 129-131.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Hymn written during a voyage. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of +American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 132.) + + =NBH= + + First appeared in _A Collection of poems, by several + hands_, Boston, 1744. + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 121, + _NBB_; Stedman and Hutchinson, _A library of American + literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 432, _NBB_. + + +---- To His Excellency Governour Belcher, on the Death of His Lady. +An Epistle. By the Reverend Mr. Byles. [Boston, 1736.] 1 p.l., ii, +6 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American + poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 131-132, _NBH_. + + +=C.=, E., Gent. Sotweed redivivus. _See_ =Cook=, Ebenezer. + + +=C.=, G. A little looking-glass for the times; or, A brief +remembrancer for Pennsylvania. Containing some serious hints, +affectionately addressed to the people of every rank and station in +the province: with an appendix, by way of supplication to Almighty +God. By G. C. Wilmington, Printed and sold by James Adams, 1764. +24 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted with a type-facsimile title-page in _Magazine + of history with notes and queries_, extra no. 22, p. 67-93, + _IAG_. + + +=Caldwell=, Charles, 1772-1853. An elegiac poem on the death of +General Washington. By Charles Caldwell, A.M. M.D. Philadelphia: +Printed at the office of "The True American." 1800. 2 p.l., 12 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + With the statement on the second leaf that "part of the + following poem has been already printed in a hand bill, and + circulated, at the commencement of the present year, among + patrons of _The True American_," a copy of which, upon + satin, is described and quoted in _The Historical magazine_, + Boston, 1857, v. 1, p. 233-234, _IAA_. + + +The =Camp= meeting. The extravagant zeal of religious fanatics and +the licentious rioting of unprincipled people who attend these +meetings, deserve the severest censure: but the truly pious of all +denominations, both in the camp and out of it, will ever be respected +and revered. By the Druid of the Lakes. The meeting here celebrated +was held in a deep forest of wild woods, five miles from the east bank +of the Cayuga lake, in the western district of New-York. Printed in +the Year 1810. To be had at No. 40 North Fourth-street. 2 p.l., +5-12 p. 16º. + + =NBH p.v. 23, no. 11= + + +=Capen=, Joseph, 1658-1725. Funeral elegy, upon the much to be +lamented death and most deplorable expiration of the pious, learned, +ingenious, and eminently usefull servant of God, Mr. John Foster, who +expired and breathed out his soul quietly into the arms of his blessed +Redeemer, at Dorchester, Sept. 9th, Anno Dom: 1681. Ætatis anno 33. +(In: T. C. Simonds, History of South Boston. Boston, 1857. 12º. +p. 38-39.) + + =IQH= + + +=Carey=, Mathew, 1760-1839. The porcupiniad: a hudibrastic poem. +In three cantos. Addressed to William Cobbett, by Mathew Carey. +Philadelphia: Printed and sold by the author. 1799. 2 v. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Issued separately. + + Title taken from canto II and III; canto I reads: In + four cantos. + + Canto I dated: March 2, 1799; l. of adv., front., viii, + (1)10-52 p. + + Canto II and III dated: April 15, 1799; front., iv, + (1)6-44 p. + + +---- The prayer of an American citizen. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 2, p. 411-413.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Carpenter=, William. A poem on the execution of William Shaw, at +Springfield, December 13th, 1770, for the murder of Edward East in +Springfield gaol, by William Carpenter. [New York:] C. F. Heartman, +1916. 6 l., folded fac. 8º. (Heartman's historical series, no. 21.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Case=, Wheeler. Revolutionary memorials, embracing poems by the Rev. +Wheeler Case, published in 1778.... Edited by the Rev. Stephen Dodd. +New York: M. W. Dodd, 1852. iv p., 4 l., (1)14-69 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Includes reprint of original title-page (with author's + name inserted): Poems, occasioned by several circumstances + and occurrences in the present grand contest of America for + liberty. New Haven: Printed by Tho. and Samuel Green. 1778. + + _Contents_: A contest between the eagle and the crane. + Composed February, 1776.--A dialogue between Col. Paine + and Miss Clorinda Fairchild, when taking leave of her to + go on the northern expedition.--St. Clair's retreat, and + Burgoyne's defeat.--The first chapter of the lamentations + of General Burgoyne.--The fall of Burgoyne.--The vanity of + trusting in an arm of flesh.--The tragical death of Miss + Jane M'Crea, who was scalped and inhumanly butchered by + a scouting party of Burgoyne's army, on his way towards + Albany.--An answer for the messengers of the nation. + + +=Caustic=, Christopher, pseud. _See_ =Fessenden=, Thomas Green. + + +=Church=, Benjamin, 1734-1776. The choice: a poem, after the manner of +Pomfret. Written in the year 1757. By Dr. Benjamin Church, while at +college, and at the age of eighteen years. Printed at Worcester: By +Isaiah Thomas, jun. April--1802. 1 p.l., (1)4-16 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of + American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 231-233, + _NBB_. + + +---- Lines on the accession of George II. (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1. p. 156-160.) + + =NBH= + + +---- The times a poem. [By Benjamin Church. Boston, 1765.] 16 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Title-page lacking, supplied with a photostat facsimile. + + A satire on and against the Stamp Act. + + Reprinted in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American + poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 149-156, _NBH_. + + +---- _See also_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +=Church=, Edward. The dangerous vice ******* (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 343-347.) + + =NBH= + + +A =Citizen= of Baltimore, pseud. Original poems. _See_ =Townsend=, +Richard H. + + +A =Citizen= of Boston, pseud. The Declaration of Independence; a poem. +_See_ =Richards=, George. + + +The =Clerical= candidates. A poem. Washington City, Nov. 14, 1801. +32 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + This poem was written to point out "the advantages + to society, of a clergy whose lives have been devoted to + literature and a preparation for their profession, over any + to be expected from upstart pretenders without any solid + qualification, other than external effrontery." + + +=Cleveland=, Aaron, 1744-1815. The family blood. A burlesque. (In: +Charles W. Everest. The poets of Connecticut. New York, 1860. 8º. +p. 32-34.) + + =NBH= + + First published in C. W. Everest, _The poets of + Connecticut_, Hartford, 1843. + + Also printed in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 3, + p. 304-306, _NBB_. + + +---- The philosopher and boy. (In: Charles W. Everest, The poets of +Connecticut. New York, 1860. 8º. p. 25-32.) + + =NBH= + + Written when the author was nineteen years of age. + + First published in C. W. Everest, _The poets of + Connecticut_, Hartford, 1843. + + +=Cliffton=, William, 1772-1799. The group: or An elegant +representation illustrated. Embellished with a beautiful head of S. +Verges, C.S. Philadelphia: Printed for Thomas Stevens, by Lang and +Ustick. M.DCC.XCVI. 3 p.l., (1)8-35(1) p., front. (port.) 12º. + + =Reserve= + + A satire in support of Jay's treaty. + + +---- Poems, chiefly occasional, by the late Mr. Cliffton. To which are +prefixed, introductory notices of the life, character and writings, +of the author, and an engraved likeness. New-York: Printed for J. W. +Fenno, by G. & R. Waite. 1800. xviii, 119(1) p., front. (port.) 12º. + + =Reserve= + + The leaf preceding p. [71] is a special title reading: + Some account of a manuscript, found among the papers of a + French emigrant in London, entitled Talleyrand's descent + into Hell. "From the Anchor Club." + + Frontispiece, the portrait of the author engraved by D. + Edwin, after Field. + + Library has another copy in _NBHD_, lacking portrait. + + Some of Cliffton's poems are printed in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 87-93, _NBH_; also in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck. + _Cyclopædia of American literature_, New York, 1866, + v. 1, p. 604-609, _NBB_. + + +---- To William Gifford, esquire. (In: William Gifford, The Baviad, +and Mæviad. Philadelphia, 1799. 16º. p. v-xi.) + + =Reserve= + + Written for this edition of Gifford's _Baviad, and + Maviad_, at the request of the publisher, William Cobbett. + Signed and dated: C. Philadelphia 13th May, 1799. + + Reprinted in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of + American literature_, v. 1, p. 606-607, _NBB_. + + +=Club= of Odd Volumes. Early American poetry [reprints]. v. 1-5. +Boston: The Club of Odd Volumes, 1894-98. 5 v. sq. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + [v.] I. Tompson, Benjamin. New-England's crisis. + [v.] II. Morrell, William. New-England. + [v.] III. Mather, Cotton. A poem and an elegy. + [v.] IV. Elegies and epitaphs, 1677-1717. + [v.] V. Wolcott, Roger. The poems of Roger Wolcott, Esq., 1725. + + +=Cobbett=, William, 1762-1835. French arrogance; or "The cat let out +of the bag"; a poetical dialogue between the envoys of America, and +X. Y. Z. and the lady. [By William Cobbett] Philadelphia: Published +by Peter Porcupine, opposite Christ-Church, and sold by the principal +booksellers. 1798. [Price 25 cents.] [Copyright secured according to +law.] 2 p.l., (1)6-31 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted with type-facsimile title-page in _Magazine of + history with notes and queries_, extra no. 44, p. 383-408, + _IAG_ + + +=Cobby=, John. Poetic essays on the glory of Christ, and on the +divinity and work of the Holy Spirit. By John Cobby. Price eight +cents. New-York: Printed by John Tiebout, No. 358, Pearl-Street, for +the author. 1797. 1 p.l., (1)4-16 p. 8º. + + =NBH p. v. 26, no. 14= + + An hymn, composed for, and sung on New-Year's day, 1797, + p. [15]-16. + + +=Cockloft=, Pindar, pseud. _See_ =Irving=, William. + + +=Coffin=, Robert Stevenson, 1797-1827. The miscellaneous poems of the +Boston Bard [i.e., Robert Stevenson Coffin]. Philadelphia: Printed for +the author, by J. H. Cunningham. 1818. 1 p.l., (i)iv-xv(i), +(1)18-156 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Cogswell=, Mason F. _See_ The =Echo=. + + +=Colman=, Benjamin, 1673-1747. On Elijah's translation, occasioned by +the death of the reverend and learned Mr. Samuel Willard. (In: Samuel +Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, +p. 55-61.) + + =NBH= + + +---- A quarrel with fortune. (In: Ebenezer Turell, The life and +character of the Reverend Benjamin Colman. Boston, 1729. 8º. p. 24-25.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in Stedman and Hutchinson, _A library of + American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 296, _NBB_. + + +---- To Urania on the death of her first child. (In: E. A. and G. L. +Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. +v. 1, p. 74.) + + =NBB= + + First published in Ebenezer Turell, _The life and + character of the Reverend Benjamin Colman_, Boston, 1729, + p. 188-191, _Reserve_. + + +=Columbia's= naval triumphs. New-York: Published by Inskeep & +Bradford, No. 128 Broadway. J. Seymour, printer. No. 149 John-street. +1813. 3 p.l., (1)3-132 p. nar. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +The =Columbiad=: Or a poem on the American war. _See_ =Snowden=, +Richard. + + +The =Columbian= muse. A selection of American poetry from various +authors of established reputation. New York: Printed by J. Carey, for +Mathew Carey, Philadelphia. 1794. 2 p.l., 224 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + _Contents_: Conspiracy of kings; Prospects of peace; + by Joel Barlow.--Philosophic solitude, by William + Livingston.--An oration which might have been delivered to + students in anatomy on the late rupture between the two + schools of Philadelphia, by Francis Hopkinson.--Address + to the Genius of America; Columbia; Seasons moralized; by + Timothy Dwight.--Elegy on the times; Elegy on the death + of Mr. Buckingham St. John; Ambition; The critics; by + John Trumbull.--Epistle to Col. Humphreys, by Timothy + Dwight.--Sketches of American history, by Philip + Freneau.--Description of the first American congress; + American Revolution; American sages; American painters; + American poets; by Joel Barlow.--Eulogium on rum, by Joseph + Smith.--An elegy on the burning of Fairfield, Connecticut; + Elegy on Lieut. De Hart; Mount Vernon; An ode to Laura; + Genius of America; by David Humphreys.--The country + meeting, by T. C. James.--Poem written at sea, by Philip + Freneau.--The American warrior; Doctrine of consequences; + Song; by a South Carolinian aged 17.--Stanzas on the + President's birthday.--The fire fly.--The thunder storm.--An + epistle to Dr. Dwight; A song translated from the French: by + David Humphreys.--Epitaph on a patient killed by a cancer + quack; Hypocrite's hope; by Lemuel Hopkins.--An intended + inscription, by James Allen.--Depredations and destruction + of the Algerines, by David Humphreys.--A winter piece, + by Lathrop.--An Indian eclogue, by Joseph Smith.--Future + state of the western territory; American winter; On love + and the American fair; by David Humphreys.--Benevolence, + by Dawes.--The old soldier, by Fentham.--The war-horse, + by Doctor Ladd.--On the migration to America, by Philip + Freneau.--A pastoral song, by Bradford.--Address to the + robin red-breast, by Bayard.--Progress of science, by + Evans.--On a lady's birthday, by W. M. Smith.--Description + of Jehovah, by Doctor Ladd.--Nature and art, by W. M. + Smith.--Cololoo, by William Dunlap.--An elegy, written in + February 1791, by Richard Alsop.--The Deity; Creation; + New England described; Picture of a New England village; + House of sloth; A female worthy; Miseries of war; by + Timothy Dwight.--Ella, a Norwegian tale, by William + Dunlap.--The country school.--Invocation to Hope.--Prayer to + Patience,--Character of St. Tamany, by William Pritchard. + + +The =Columbian= naval melody; a collection of songs and odes, composed +on the late naval victories and other occasions. Boston: Printed by +Hans Lund. 1813. 1 p.l., (1)3-94 p., 1 l. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +The =Comet=: a poem. _See_ =Byles=, Mather. + + +=Commencement=, a poem. _See_ =Biglow=, William. + + +=Commercial= Advertiser, New York. The embassina; addressed to +the patrons of the Commercial Advertiser, by the carriers--with +the compliments of the season. January 1, 1800. (In: Commercial +Advertiser. New-York, Jan. 2, 1800. fº. no. 699, p. 1.) + + =Reserve= + + A poem relating to the events of the preceding year, and + Washington's death. + + Reprinted in _The Spectator_, New-York, Jan. 4, 1800, + no. 238, p. 1. + + +=Cook=, Ebenezer. An elegy [on] the death of the Honourable Nicholas +Lowe, Esq: By E. Cooke. Laureat. (Maryland Historical Society. Fund +publication, no. 36, p. 53-56.) + + =IAA= + + This elegy appeared originally in the _Maryland + Gazette_, December 24, 1728. + + +---- The sot-weed factor: or, A voyage to Maryland. A satyr. In which +is describ'd, the laws, government, courts and constitutions of the +country; and also the buildings, feasts, frolicks, entertainments +and drunken humours of the inhabitants of that part of America. In +burlesque verse. By Eben. Cook, Gent. London: Printed and sold by B. +Bragg, at the Raven in Pater-Noster-Row. 1708. (Price 6 d.) 1 p.l., +21 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in 1731 in "The Maryland Muse. Containing + the History of Colonel N. Bacon's Rebellion in Virginia. + Done into Hudibrastic verse from an old ms. II. The Sotweed + Factor or, Voyage to Maryland. Annapolis: Printed by + William Parks. 1731. fº." + + Reprinted in 1865 in number two of Shea's _Early + Southern tracts, ISG_. + + Third reprint, in modern type, with a photo-facsimile + title-page in Maryland Historical Society, _Fund + publication_, no. 36, _IAA_. + + +---- Sotweed redivivus: or the Planters looking-glass. In burlesque +verse. Calculated for the meridian of Maryland. By E. C. Gent, [i.e., +Ebenezer Cook.] Annapolis: Printed by William Parks, for the Author. +M.DCC.XXX. vii, 28 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in modern type, with a photo-facsimile + title-page in Maryland Historical Society, _Fund + publication_, no. 36, p. 32-52, _IAA_. + + +=Cooper=, Samuel. _See_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +=Corlet=, Elijah. Epitaphium Thomas Hooker. (In: Cotton Mather, +Johannes in Eremo.... Boston, 1695. 8º. p. 44-45.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Cotton=, John, 1585-1652. [Elegy] On my reverend and dear brother, +Mr. Thomas Hooker, late pastor of the church at Hartford on +Conecticot. (In: N. Morton, New-Englands memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. +12º. p. 125-126.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- [An epitaph for Sara and Roland Cotton.] (In: Cotton Mather, +Magnalia Christi Americana. London, 1702. 4º. book 3, p. 31.) + + =Reserve= + + Also in the Hartford, 1820, edition, v. 1, p. 260-261 + and Hartford, 1855, edition, v. 1, p. 285 of the _Magnalia + Christi Americana_. + + Also reprinted in Stedman and Hutchinson, _A library + of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 1, p. 253-254, + _NBB_. + + +---- Upon the death of that aged, pious, sincere-hearted Christian +John Alden, Esq: late magistrate of New-Plimouth colony, who dyed Sept +12th. 1687. being about eighty nine years of age. [By] J. C. [i.e., +John Cotton.] n.p., n.d. Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Photo-facsimile. Text in two columns, enclosed in + mourning borders. + + +A =Country= treat upon the second paragraph in His Excellency's +speech. _See_ =M.=, S. + + +=Cow-chace=, in three cantos. _See_ =André=, John. + + +=Crafts=, William, 1787-1826. A selection, in prose and poetry, from +the miscellaneous writings of the late William Crafts. Charleston: C. +C. Sebring and J. S. Burges, 1828. 1, 384 p. 8º. + + =NBG= + + Poetry, p. 229-384. + + +The =Croakers=. _See_ =Drake=, Joseph Rodman, and FITZ-GREENE HALLECK. + + +=Croswell=, Joseph. An ode to liberty. Composed by Mr. Joseph +Croswell, and sung at the Civic Feast at Plymouth, January 24, 1793. +(In: Chandler Robbins, An address delivered at Plymouth, on the 24th +day of January, 1793.... Boston, 1793. 8º. p. 19-20.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Crystalina=; a fairy tale. _See_ =Harney=, John Milton. + + +=Currie=, Helen. Poems, by Helen Currie. Philadelphia: Printed by +Thomas H. Palmer. 1818. 2 p.l., (i)vi-viii p., 1 l., (1)8-150 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Dabney=, Richard, 1787-1825. Poems, original and translated. By +Richard Dabney. Second edition. Philadelphia: Published by M. Carey, +No. 121, Chestnut Street. 1815. 1 p.l., (i)iv-viii p., 1 l., +(1)8-172 p. nar. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Danforth=, John. Ad politum literaturæ, atque sacrarum literaturum +antistitem. Angliæque Americanæ antiquarium callentissimum, reverendum +dominum, D. Cottonum Matherum. (In: Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi +Americana. London, 1702. 4º.) + + =Reserve= + + Text in Latin and English. + + Also in later editions of the _Magnalia Christi + Americana_, as follows: Hartford, 1820, v. 1, p. 19; + Hartford, 1855, v. 1, p. 21. + + +---- An elegy upon the much lamented decease of the reverend and +excellent Mr. Joseph Belcher. Late faithful pastor of the church of +Christ in Dedham, N. E. Qui obiit, April 27. Anno Dom. 1723. Ætat. +suæ 53. (In: Cotton Mather, A good character. Or, A walk with God +characterized. With some dues paid unto the memory of Mr. Joseph +Belcher.... Boston, 1723. 8º. p. [25-27.]) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in Ebenezer Burgess, editor, _Dedham pulpit_, + Boston, 1840, p. 217-218, _ZIY_. + + +---- Greatness & goodness elegized, in a poem, upon the much lamented +decease of the honourable & vertuous Madam Hannah Sewall, late +consort of the Honourable Judge Sewall, in Boston, in New-England. +She exchanged this life for a better, October, 19th. Anno Dom. 1717. +Ætatis suæ 60. [Boston? 1717.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Text in two columns, enclosed in mourning borders. + + +=Danforth=, Samuel, 1626-1674. An almanack for the year of our Lord +1647.... Cambridge by Mathew Day. Are to be solde by Hez. Usher at +Boston. 1647. 8 l. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Photostat facsimile copy. + + Poems on leaves 2-7. + + +---- An almanack for the year of our Lord 1648.... Printed at +Cambridge, 1648. 8 l. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Photostat facsimile copy. + + Poems on leaves 2-7. + + +---- An almanack for the year of our Lord 1649.... Printed at +Cambridge. 1649. 8 l. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Poems on leaves 2-7. + + +=Danforth=, Samuel, 1666-1727. An elegy in memory of the worshipful +Major Thomas Leonard Esq. of Taunton in New-England; who departed this +life on the 24th. day of November, Anno Domini 1713. In the 73d. year +of his age. [By] Samuel Danforth. [Boston: Printed by B. Green? 1713.] +Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Photo-facsimile. + + Text in two columns, enclosed in mourning borders. + + +The =Dartmoor= massacre. _See_ =W.=, I. H. + + +=D'Aubigne=, Richard. _See_ =Dabney=, Richard. + + +=Davis=, Abijah. An oration, delivered at Port-Elizabeth, State of +New-Jersey, on the 21st day of March, 1801. By the Rev. Abijah Davis. +Philadelphia: Printed for Mathew Carey, No. 118, High-Street, Robert +Carr, printer. 1801. 1 p.l., (1)4-24 p. 12º. + + =IO(1801) p.v. 1, no. 4= + + p. 15-24 in verse. + + +=Davis=, John, 1721-1809? Coosohatchie. (In: The Monthly magazine and +American review for the year 1800. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 2, p. 80.) + + =Reserve= + + The village of Coosohatchie is situated about half way + between Charleston and Savannah. + + +---- Horace, Book 1, ode 5, imitated; The shipwreck, a wandering of +fancy. (In: The Monthly magazine and American review for the year +1800. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 2, p. 400.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Ode to Charleston College; Ode to a cricket; Horace imitated, ode +xi, b. 1; Swift imitated, to Lucus George. (In: The Monthly magazine +and American review for the year 1800. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 3, +p. 158-159.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Ode on home; Ode to a medical friend; Ode to the mocking-bird; +Plague at Philadelphia; In me-ipsum. (In: The Monthly magazine and +American review for the year 1800. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 2, +p. 239-240.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Ode to Lucus George, on his arrival at New-York from +South-Carolina; To Flavia; Ad puerum; Horace imitated, Book II +ode xxii; Ode to Lucus George written in South-Carolina; Sonnet +to Charlotte Smith, written at Savannah, in Georgia; Ode to the +Honourable Judge Grimke, of South-Carolina. (In: The Monthly magazine +and American review for the year 1800. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 2, +p. 319-320.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Ode to a medical friend. (In: The Monthly magazine and American +review for the year 1800. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 3, p. 397.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Sonnet to the chick-willow. (In: The Monthly magazine and +American review for the year 1800. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 2, p. 480.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- To the evening star; Paraphrase of Buchanan's Latin epigram from +the Greek; Ode on Ashley river; On my house at Sullivan's Island; Ode +to a cricket. (In: The Monthly magazine and American review for the +year 1800. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 2, p. 159-160.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Davis=, Richard Bingham, 1771-1799. Poems by Richard B. Davis; with +a sketch of his life. New York: Printed and sold by T. and J. Swords, +No. 160 Pearl-Street. 1807. 3 p.l., (i)viii-xxxi p., 1 l., 154 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Edited by John T. Irving. + + Reviewed in _The monthly anthology and Boston review_, + Boston, 1807, v. 4, p. 269-272, * _DA_. + + +=Dawes=, Thomas, 1757-1825. Benevolence. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1790. 8º. v. 7, appendix 1, p. 33-35.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Beauties of poetry, British and + American_, Philadelphia, 1791, p. 126-127, _Reserve_ and in + _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, p. 169-170, _NBH_. + + +---- The law given at Sinai. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of +American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, p. 35-37.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Ode on the opening of the bridge over Charles river, from Boston +to Charlestown, on the 17th day of June, 1786, being the eleventh +anniversary of the Battle of Bunker's-Hill. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 1, p. 183-184.) + + =Reserve= + + +The =Day= of doom. _See_ =Wigglesworth=, Michael. + + +=Deane=, Samuel. Pitchwood Hill. A poem. Written in the year 1780. By +Samuel Deane, D.D. Printed at Portland. 1806. 2 p.l., (1)6-11 p. 16º. + + =NBH p.v. 20, no. 8= + + "The following elegant little poem is now published + without the knowledge of the author. It appeared originally + in the _Cumberland Gazette_, March 5, 1785...."--_Editor_. + + +---- _See also_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +The =Death= of General Montgomery, at the siege of Quebec. _See_ +=Brackenridge=, Hugh Henry. + + +The =Declaration= of Independence; a poem. _See_ =Richards=, George. + + +=Democracy=: an epic poem. _See_ =Livingston=, Henry Brockholst. + + +The =Democratiad=, a poem. _See_ =Hopkins=, Lemuel. + + +=Denison=, Edward. The lottery, a poem, in two parts. And an ode to +war. By St. Denis Le Cadet [pseud. of Edward Denison]. Baltimore: +Printed by J. Robinson, for the author. 1815. 1 p.l., (1)4-71(1) p. +12º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Dennie=, Joseph, editor. _See_ The =Spirit= of the Farmers' museum, +and lay preacher's gazette. + + +=De Peyster=, Arent Schuyler, 1736-1799. Miscellanies, by an officer. +Volume 1. Dumfries. Printed at the Dumfries and Galloway Courier +Office, By C. Munro. 1813. 277 p. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + No more published. + + Reprinted, New York: A. E. Chasmar & Co. 1888. 80, ccii, + 6 p., 1 map, 2 ports. 4º., _HBC_. + + +=De Sillè=, Nicasius. Memoir and poems. (In: Henry C. Murphy, +Anthology of New Netherland. New York, 1865. 8º. p. 185-195.) + + =NBH= + + +=Dexter=, Samuel, 1761-1816. The progress of science. (In: Samuel +Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, +p. 40-42.) + + =NBH= + + +=Diabolou= machia; or Battle of Dragon. _See_ =Hill=, George. + + +A =Dialogue= between a Southern delegate, and his spouse, on his +return from the grand Continental Congress. A fragment, inscribed to +the married ladies of America, by their most sincere, and affectionate +friend, and servant, Mary V. V. [New York:] Printed in the year +M,DCC,LXXIV. [By James Rivington?] 14 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Attributed to Thomas Jefferson, by J. Sabin. + + +=Dinsmore=, Robert, 1757-1836. A short view of Burgoyne's expedition. +(In: Ballads and poems relating to the Burgoyne campaign. Albany, +N. Y., 1893. 8º. p. 62-66.) + + =NBHD= + + +=Dodge=, Paul. A poem: delivered at the commencement of Rhode-Island +College, September 6, A.D. 1797. By Paul Dodge, A.B. Published by +request. Providence: Printed by Carter and Wilkinson, and sold at +their Book-Store, opposite the Market. 1797. 8 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Drake=, Joseph Rodman, 1795-1820. The American flag. By Joseph +Rodman Drake. Illustrated from original drawings by F. O. C. Darley. +Illuminated cover by John A. Davis. Music from Bellini, by Geo. +Danskin. New York: James G. Gregory, 1861. 4 f., 2 l. 4º. + + =NBH p.v. 29, no. 16= + + Written in 1819, and published in The New York _Evening + Post_, May 29, 1819. + + Also printed in _The Croakers_. + + +---- The culprit fay and other poems. New-York: George Dearborn, +publisher. 1835. 3 p.l., 84 p., 1 port. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + Has also an engraved title-page. + + Written in 1819. + +---- ---- New-York: George Dearborn, publisher. 1836. 4 p.l., +(1)10-92 p., 1 port. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + Also has engraved title-page. + + +---- ---- New-York: Van Norden and King, 45 Wall Street. 1847. 4 p.l., +(1)10-92 p., 1 port. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + Has also an engraved title-page. + + +---- The culprit fay. New York: Rudd & Carleton, 1859. 5 p.l., +(1)14-62 p., front. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- New York: Rudd & Carleton, 1860. 5 p.l., (1)14-62 p., front. +16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- New York: Rudd & Carleton, 1862. 5 p.l., (1)14-62 p., front. +16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- New York: Carleton, Publisher (Late Rudd & Carleton.) 1865. +5 p.l., (1)14-62 p., front. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- New York: Kilbourne Tompkins, 1875. 12 l. sq. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Drake=, Joseph Rodman, and FITZ-GREENE HALLECK. The croakers. First +complete edition. New York, MDCCCLX. 2 p.l., (i)vi-viii, 191 p., +2 ports. 4º. (Bradford Club series. Number two.) + + =NBHD= + + No. 15 of 100 club copies. + + The Library has a second copy, no. 122 of 150 + subscriber's copies, _NBHD_; also a third copy, no. 8 of 100 + club copies, which has inserted 1 pl., 10 ports., _IAG_; + also a fourth copy with 12 ports. inserted, in _Reserve_. + + _The Croakers_ was published originally in the New York + _Evening Post_, March 10-July 19, 1819; _New York Mirror_, + Jan. 28, 1828; New York _Evening Post_, Nov. 16, 1830; _Home + journal_, May 27, 1856. Some unpublished poems are also + included in this edition. + + +---- Poems by Croaker, Croaker & Co. and Croaker, Jr. as published in +the Evening Post. 1 l., 499-506 p., 1 l. + + =* NBI= + + Excerpt: Waldie's octavo library. + + +The =Druid= of the Lakes, pseud. _See_ The =Camp= meeting. + + +=Dudley=, Thomas, 1574-1653. [Epitaph.] (In: N. Morton, New-Englands +memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. 12º. p. 140.) + + =Reserve= + + "These verses were found in his pocket after his death." + + Reprinted in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 1, + p. 290-291, _NBB_. + + +=Dunlap=, William, 1766-1839. Cololoo,--an Indian tale, thrown into +English verse. (In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, +1793. 12º. p. 287-296.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + "This poem was originally published, in an imperfect + state, in no. 20 of the 3d volume of the _Gazette of the + United States_, for July 6th, 1791...." + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 187-190, _NBH_. + + +---- Ella, a Norwegian tale. (In: American poems, selected and +original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 226-232.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 215-218, _NBH_ + + +=Dutton=, Warren, 1774-1857. The present state of literature; a poem, +delivered in New-Haven, at the public commencement of Yale-College, +September 10, 1800. By Warren Dutton. Hartford: Printed by Hudson and +Goodwin. 1800. 1 p.l., (1)4-16 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Dwight=, Theodore, 1765-1846. Lines addressed to a mother, who had +been absent from home several weeks, on her seeing her infant child. +(In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. +v. 2, p. 73-74.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Lines on the death of Washington. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens +of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, p. 71-73.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Ode to conscience. (In: American poems, selected and original. +Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 284-287.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Picture of African distress. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 6, p. 328.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American + poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, p. 67-68. _NBH_. + + +---- _See also_ The =Echo=; The =Political= green-house for the year +1798. + + +=Dwight=, Timothy, 1752-1817. Address of the genius of Columbia to the +Continental convention. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1787. +8º. v. 1, p. 563-566.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _American poems, selected and original_, + Litchfield, 1793, p. 55-62, _NBH_; _The Columbian muse_. New + York, 1794, p. 43-48, _NBH_. + + +---- Columbia. [By Timothy Dwight.] (In: The Salem gazette. Thursday, +January 8, 1784. fº. p. 1.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _The American museum_, Philadelphia, 1787, + v. 1, p. 566, _Reserve_; _The Beauties of poetry, British + and American_, Philadelphia, 1791, p. 125-126, _Reserve_; + _American poems, selected and original_, Litchfield, 1793, + p. 62-64, _NBH_; _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 48-49, _NBH_. + + +---- The conquest of Canäan; a poem, in eleven books. By Timothy +Dwight. Hartford: Printed by Elisha Babcock. M,DCC,LXXXV. 4 p.l., +304 p., 1 l. 16º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + Dedicated to George Washington. + + +---- Creation. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. 16º. +p. 196-199.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The critics, a fable. Written September 1785. (In: American +poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 70-75.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + This poem was first printed in _The Gazette of the + United States_, July 13, 1791. + + +---- The Deity, and his dispensations. (In: The Columbian muse. New +York. 1794. 16º. p. 194-196.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The destruction of the Pequods; The farmer's advice to the +villagers; Columbia; The critics, a fable; The worship of the +Gibeonites; Battle before the walls of Ai; Evening after a battle; +Procession of Israelitish virgins to meet the returning army; +Lamentation of Selima for the death of Irad. (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 232-259.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Epistle from Dr. Dwight to Col. Humphreys, Greenfield, 1785. +(In: David Humphreys, The miscellaneous works of Colonel Humphreys. +New-York, 1790. 8º. p. 102-110.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _American poems, selected and original_. + Litchfield, 1793, p. 75-84, _NBH_, and in _The Columbian + muse_, New York, 1794, p. 73-80. _NBH_. + + +---- A female worthy. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. 16º. +p. 207-209.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Greenfield hill: a poem, in seven parts. I. The prospect. +II. The flourishing village. III. The burning of Fairfield. IV. +The destruction of the Pequods. V. The clergyman's advice to the +villagers. VI. The farmer's advice to the villagers. VII. The vision, +or Prospect of the future happiness of America. By Timothy Dwight, +D.D. New-York: Printed by Childs and Swaine. 1794. 183 [really 175] +(1) p. 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + Written mainly in 1787; introduction dated June 13, 1794. + + Dedicated to Vice-President Adams. + + Advertised in _New York Daily Advertiser_, October 14, + 1794, p. 2, col. 4. + + +---- The house of sloth. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. 16º. +p. 205-207.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Reprinted in _The Port folio_, Philadelphia, 1804, + v. 4, p. 327, * _DA_; _The American poetical miscellany_, + Philadelphia, 1809, p. 176-178, _NBH_. + + +---- A hymn sung at the public exhibition of the scholars, belonging +to the academy in Greenfield, May 2, 1788. By Dr. Dwight. (In: The +American museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 6, p. 171-172.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Message of Mordecai to Esther. From a manuscript poem. (In: +American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. +p. 299-304.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The miseries of war. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. +16º. p. 209-214.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- New-England described. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. +16º. p. 199-204.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Ode on the glory of Columbia. (In: David Humphreys, The +miscellaneous works of Colonel Humphreys. New-York, 1790. 8º. +p. 181-183.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Picture of a New-England village. (In: The Columbian muse. New +York, 1794. 16º. p. 204-205.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also in _The New-York magazine_, New-York, 1795, v. 6, + p. 509-510, _Reserve_. + + +---- The seasons moralized. (In: The American magazine. New York, +1787. 12º. December, 1787, p. 58-59.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The American museum_. Philadelphia, + 1789, v. 5, p. 302-303, _Reserve_; _American poems, selected + and original_. Litchfield, 1793, p. 64-66; _The Columbian + muse_, New York, 1794, p. 50-51, _NBH_. + + +---- The seasons moralized; A song; The Deity, and his dispensations; +Creation; Original state of man; Three fold state of man emblematized; +Prospect of America. (In: The Beauties of poetry, British and +American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 195-198, 209-219.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The trial of faith. (In: American poems, selected and original. +Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 33-54.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + In three parts: Part I, Daniel, chap, I; Part II, + Daniel, chap, II; Part III, Daniel, chap. III. + + This poem appeared originally in the following numbers + of _The New-Haven Gazette, and Connecticut Magazine_: Part I. + Sept. 21, 1786, v. 1, no. 32, p. 245-246; Part II. Oct. 12, + 1786, v. 1, no. 35, p. 269-270; Part III. Oct. 19, 1786, + v. 1, no. 36, p. 277-278. + + +---- The triumph of infidelity: a poem. Supposed to be written by +Timothy Dwight, D.D. of Greenfield in Connecticut, in 1788. London: +Printed for J. Mathews, No. 18, Strand. MDCCXCI. 27 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Eastburn=, James Wallis, 1797-1819, and ROBERT CHARLES SANDS, +1799-1832. Yamoyden, a tale of the wars of King Philip: in six cantos. +By the late Rev. James Wallis Eastburn, A.M. and his Friend [i.e., +Robert Charles Sands]. New York: Published by James Eastburn, Clayton +& Kingsland, printers. 1820. 2 p.l., (i)vi-xii, 339(1) p., front. 16º. + + =NBHD= and =HBC= + + Engraved title-page. + + +=Eaton=, Theophilus. Review of New-York, or Rambles through the City. +Original poems. Moral, religious, sarcastic, and descriptive. By Th. +Eaton. Second edition. New-York: Printed and published by John Low, +No. 17 Chatham-Street. 1814. 1 p.l., (i)iv, (1)6-144 p. nar. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +The =Echo=, with other poems. [Printed at the Porcupine press by +Pasquin Petronius.] 1807. 2 p.l., (i)iv-xv, 331 p., 5 l., 7 pl. 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + The Reserve copy has inserted, 33 plates (1 double). + + Contains poems by Theodore Dwight, Richard Alsop, Mason + F. Cogswell, and L. Hopkins. + + "The first number of 'The Echo' appeared in 'The + American Mercury,' at Hartford, in August, 1791. It was + written at Middletown, by Richard Alsop and Theodore Dwight. + The authors, at the time of writing it, had no expectation + of its being published. Their sole object was to amuse + themselves and a few of their personal friends. The general + account of its origin and design is given in the preface to + the volume, in which the numbers were afterward collected + and published in New York. With the exception of a few lines + written by Drs. Mason F. Cogswell and Elihu H. Smith, and a + part of one or two numbers by Dr. Lemuel Hopkins, the entire + work was the production of Messrs. Alsop and Dwight. Judge + Trumbull never wrote a line in it."--C. W. Everest, _Poets + of Connecticut_. + + +An =Eclogue=, occasioned by the death of the Rev. Alexander Cummings. +_See_ =Belknap=, Jeremy. + + +=Eggleston=, George Cary. American war ballads and lyrics. A +collection of the songs and ballads of the Colonial wars, the +Revolution, the War of 1812-15, the war with Mexico and the Civil war. +Edited by George Cary Eggleston. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1889. +xiv p., 1 l., 278 p., 1 pl. 16º. + + =NBI= + + +=Eleazar.= In obitum viri verè reverendi D. Thomæ Thacheri, qui ad +Dom. ex hac vitâ migravit, 18, 8, 1678. (In: Cotton Mather, Magnalia +Christi Americana. London, 1702. 4º. Book 3, p. 153.) + + =Reserve= + + Composed by Eleazar, an Indian youth who was then a + student at Harvard. + + Reprinted in later editions of the _Magnalia Christi + Americana_, as follows: Hartford, 1820, v. 1, p. 448; + Hartford, 1855, v. 1, p. 496. + + Text in Latin and English. + + +=Elegiac= ode, sacred to the memory of General [Nathanael] Greene. +(In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1788. 8º. v. 4, p. 386-388.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Elegiac= verses on the decease of his late excellency ... General +George Washington. _See_ =Searson=, John. + + +An =Elegie= upon the death of the Reverend Mr. Thomas Shepard. _See_ +=Oakes=, Urian. + + +=Elegies= and epitaphs, 1677-1717. [By Cotton Mather and Urian Oakes.] +Boston: The Club of Odd Volumes, 1896. 16 p., 3 l., 16 p., 3 l., +43-46 p., 2 l., 29-35 p., 1 l., [26]-34 p., 2 l., 43-46 p. sq. 8º. +(The Club of Odd Volumes. Early American poetry. [Reprints. v.] 4.) + + =Reserve= + + No. 81 of one hundred copies on hand-made paper. + + _Contents_: Elegie on the Reverend Thomas Shepard, 1677. + By the Reverend Urian Oakes. Three elegies and an epitaph, + by Cotton Mather: [1.] On the Rev. John Wilson. From + _Johannes in Eremo_, 1695; [2.] On seven young ministers. + From _Vigilantius_, 1705; [3.] On Ezekiel Cheever. From + _Corderius Americanus_, 1708; [4.] On the Hon. Wait + Winthrop. From _Hades look'd into_, 1717. + + +=Elegy= on the death of brigadier general [Hugh] Mercer, of Virginia, +slain in the action near Princeton, January 3, 1777. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1791. 8º. 1792, part 1, Appendix 1, p. 19-21.) + + =Reserve= + + +An =Elegy= on the death of General George Washington. (Colonial +Society of Massachusetts. Publications. Boston, 1905. 8º. v. 7, +p. 196-198.) + + =IAA= + + A poem of eight stanzas of six lines each. Printed from + a contemporary manuscript belonging to the Boston Athenæum. + + +=Elegy= on the death of General Washington. (In: The Port folio. +Philadelphia, 1805. 4º. v. 5, p. 136.) + + =* DA= + + +An =Elegy= on the much-to-be-deplored death of ... Reverend Nathaniel +Collins. _See_ =Mather=, Cotton. + + +An =Elegy= on a Patriot. Occasioned by the awful and untimely death of +the honourable William Wimble, who by the coroner's inquest was found +to have come to his end by suffocation. (In: The New-Haven Gazette, +and the Connecticut magazine. New Haven, 1787. 4º. March 22, 1787, +v. 2, no. 5, p. 31.) + + =Reserve= + + +An =Elegy= upon His Excellency William Burnet, Esq; who departed +this life Sept. 7th. 1729. Ætat. 42. Boston: Printed and Sold by T. +Fleet in Pudding-Lane, near the Town-House, where may be had His +Excellency's Character [1729]. Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Nine stanzas; text enclosed in mourning borders. + + +=Elisha=, Patrick N. I. Patent right oppression exposed; or, Knavery +detected. In an address, to unite all good people to obtain a repeal +of the patent laws. By Patrick N. I. Elisha, Esq. To which is added an +alarming law case; also, reflections on the patent laws. Illustrated +with notes and anecdotes by the author. Philadelphia: Published by R. +Folwell, 1813. xi(i), 189(1) p. 16º. + + =Patent Room= + + +An =Emetic= for aristocrats! or A chapter, respecting Governor Jay, +and his treaty. Also, a history of the life and death of independence. +To which is added, a poem on the treaty. Boston. Printed, 1795. +23 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + A poem on Jay's treaty, p. 19-23. + + +=Entertainment= for a winter's evening. _See_ =Green=, Joseph. + + +=Epistle= to his excellency general Washington. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 2, p. 513-514.) + + =Reserve= + + +An =Epistle= to the Hon. Arthur Dobbs, Esq; in Europe. From a +clergyman in America. [In three parts.] London: Printed for the +author, and sold by R. Dodsley, in Pall-mall, and M. Cooper, in +Pater-noster-row. 1752. 2 p.l., iii-v, 7-95 p., 1 l. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Epistle= from the Marquis de La Fayette, to General Washington. +Edinburgh: Printed by Mundell & Son, Royal Bank Close; for Mundell +& Son, Edinburgh; and Longman & Rees, and J. Wright, London. 1800. +2 p.l., 32 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + According to _Sabin_ 38570 "this exceedingly rare + poetical piece was written during the lifetime of General + Washington, but was not printed until after his death." + + Attributed to George Hamilton. + + +An =Epistle= to a member of the General Court of Massachusetts, for +1809. n.t.-p. [n.p., 181-?] 1 p.l., (1)4-32 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + Half-title only. + + +An =Epistle= from Yarico to Inkle. _See_ =Story=, Isaac. + + +An =Epistle= to Zenas. _See_ =Gardiner=, John S. T. + + +=Estlake=, Restore, pseud. Ethick diversions. In four epistles to +Emphasian, R. T. To which is added, The Convent. By Restore Estlake. +New-York: Printed by T. and J. Swords, No. 160 Pearl-Street. 1807. +2 p.l., (1)6-70 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Evans=, Nathaniel, 1742-1767. Elegy to the memory of [Mr. Thomas +Godfrey]. (In: Thomas Godfrey, Juvenile poems on various subjects. +Philadelphia, 1765. 8º. p. 5-7.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Poems on several occasions with some other compositions. By +Nathaniel Evans, A.M. Late missionary (appointed by the Society +for Propagating the Gospel) for Gloucester County, in New Jersey; +and Chaplain to Lord Viscount Kilmorey, of the Kingdom of Ireland. +Philadelphia: Printed by John Dunlap, in Market-Street. M.DCC.LXXII. +xxviii, 160, 24 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Leaf of errata lacking. + + Some of these poems are reprinted in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 106-118, _NBH_. + + +---- Progress of science. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. +16º. p. 181-182.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Not in his _Poems on several occasions_. + + Also in _The Beauties of poetry, British and American_, + Philadelphia, 1791, p. 219-220, _Reserve_. + + +=Everett=, David, 1769-1813. A branch of maple. (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, p. 113-114.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Daranzel; or, The Persian patriot. An original drama. In five +acts. Boston: John Russell, 1800. 66 p., 1 l. 8º. + + =NBL p.v. 13, no. 5= + + +=Ewing=, Samuel. Reflections in solitude. (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 347-349.) + + =NBH= + + +=Extracts= in prose and verse, by a lady of Maryland. Together with a +collection of original poetry, never before published, by citizens of +Maryland. In two volumes. Annapolis: Printed by Frederick Green. 1808. +2 v. 12º. + + =NBF= + + v. 1. 2 p.l., (1)6-364 p., 4 l.; v. 2. 1 p.l., + (1)4-359 p., 6 l. + + The last 3 leaves of v. 2 contain a list of 375 + subscribers. + + The poems by American authors include the following: + + v. 1. Epitaph on Mrs. Grove, of Litchfield, by William + Grove, p. 41-42. A Similie, by J. L. B. Esq. of Md., + p. 248-249.--To Lady Harriet Ackland, on her coming into + the American camp to attend her husband, by Miss Lee, of + Md., p. 264-266. + + v. 2. Sonnet to Mr.--, in India, by Miss Lee, of Md., + p. 3-4.--Sonnet to the memory of her sisters, Mrs. F-nd-l + and Mrs. Pl-t-r, by Miss Lee, of Md., p. 4-5.--The genius + of America; Pyrocles to Lucinda; Impromptu; Epigram on + a young gentleman; Chloe; To Monimia; An imitation of + Horace, bk. iii, ode xxix; Epitaph on a miser; To Amanda; + [Lines] written under a young lady's picture; Thoughts at + Christmas; Absence; An ode to a friend; An ode, 1759; Song, + to the tune of The Flowers of the Forest; On the taking + of Louisburgh by Admiral Boscawen, 1758; Verses written + at Mount Radnor, April, 1764; A hymn to Monimia; A song + to the tune Wae's my heart that we should sunder; by John + Thomas, of Md., p. 154-189.--Verses on presenting Mr. J. T. + with a piece of work to wear in his watch, by Miss Lee, of + Md., p. 189-190.--To a young lady, on receiving from her a + watch-paper, by John Thomas, of Md., p. 190-192.--To a young + lady, on the author's omitting to send her as promised, a + present of flowers, on May-Day, 1762, by John Thomas, of + Md., p. 245-247.--On the vicissitudes of human life, an + elegy, addressed to a friend by Mr. Smith of Phila., + p. 276-281.--The enamour'd philosopher, by a maniac in the + hospital at Philadelphia, p. 315-317.--Lampoon, by Mr. + Smith, of Phila., p. 317-319.--The student's sigh; To Miss + A. T.; Morning, a hymn; The student's resolve; Elegy on the + death of Hon. J. Rogers; Despair, an elegy; A burlesque + invitation; To Miss A. O., by ---- of Anne-Arundel county, + p. 340-354.--To Miss H. Hill; On the death of Mrs.--'s + humming bird; by Miss Lee, of Md., p. 355-358.--Sonnet by + Charlotte Smith, p. 359. + + +A =Family= tablet: containing a selection of original poetry. Boston: +Printed and sold by William Spotswood. 1796. 6 p.l., 81 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Edited by Abiel Holmes. + + This collection was almost entirely composed by members + of the family of President Stiles, and Dr. Holmes and his + wife were the largest contributors.--Dexter, _Yale annals_. + + _Contents_: Elegy.--A dirge.--On the sudden death of + a lovely child.--Lines addressed to Miss S. W. on the + death of her brother who fell in battle at Miami Village, + 1790.--Lines occasioned by the war, 1777.--André's + ghost.--Epistle to Myra.--Lines presented to the parents + of Mr. J. F.--Lines to the memory of Mrs. T. H.--Elegy + to memory of Mrs. T. W.--Elegiac sonnet.--Farewell.--The + adieu.--Invocation to religion.--Hymn written at + sea.--Invocation to piety.--Lines written in a gale + at sea.--Birth-day reflection.--Hymn, My times are + in Thy hand.--Conscience.--To Myra.--Origin of the + fire-screen.--A fragment.--Inscription on a mall at + C.--The flower-de-luce.--Reply.--To Myron with a + purse.--Reply.--To Myra with a paper-basket.--Lines + accompanying a needle-book.--To a gentleman, who presented + Myra seven robins.--Address to a young robin.--To Myron, + with a jonquil.--Reply.--On reading the above pieces.--The + transformation of Eliza into a poplar.--The soldier.--The + seasons.--To a gentleman, who presented Louisa with a + pen.--Reply.--To Strephon.--To Amanda.--Lines occasioned + by seeing a portrait of the Goddess of Liberty.--Elegiac + fragment on the death of E. S.--Elegiac sonnet on Mrs. K. T. + S.--Elegy on Doctor *******--Yaratildia: an epic poem. + + +=Fanny= [a poem]. _See_ =Halleck=, Fitz-Greene. + + +=Farmer=, Henry Tudor. The battle of the isle. (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, p. 174-179.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Imagination; The maniac's dream, and other poems; By Henry T. +Farmer, M.D. member of the Historical Society of New-York. New-York: +Published by Kirk & Mercein, and John Miller, Covent Garden, London. +William A. Mercein, printer. 1819. 2 p.l., (i)viii-xi, (1)14-163 p. +12º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Fashion's= analysis; or, The winter in town. _See_ =Avalanche=, Sir +Anthony, pseud. + + +=Father= Abbey's will. _See_ =Seccomb=, John. + + +=Faugeres=, Margaretta V., 1771-1801. Essays, in prose and verse. +By Margaretta V. Faugeres. (In: The posthumous works of Ann Eliza +Bleecker. New-York, 1793. 16º. p. 263-375.) + + =Reserve= + + Poems, p. 275-375. + + +=Fenno=, Miss J. Original compositions, in prose and verse. On +subjects moral and religious. By Miss J. Fenno, of Boston. Printed +in Boston, by Joseph Bumstead, at his office, No. 20, Union-Street. +MDCCXCI. 1 p.l., iii, 125 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Fentham.= The old soldier. (In: The Beauties of poetry, British and +American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 190-191.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_. New York, 1794, + p. 171-172, _NBH_. + + +=Fessenden=, Thomas Green, 1771-1837. Democracy unveiled; or, Tyranny +stripped of the garb of patriotism. By Christopher Caustic, L.L.D. +[pseud. of Thomas Green Fessenden.] Second edition. Boston: Printed by +David Carlisle, for the author. 1805. 2 p.l., (i)iv-viii, 220 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Canto I. The tocsin; II. Illuminism; III. Mobocracy; IV. + The Jeffersoniad; V. The gibbet of satire; VI. Monition. + + +---- ---- In two volumes. Third edition, with large additions. +New-York: Printed for I. Riley & Co. 1806. 2 v. in 1. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + v. 1. xxiv, 179 p.; v. 2. 238 p., 1 l. + + The Library has another copy of this edition in which + v. 1 is dated 1806; v. 2, dated 1805. + + +---- The modern philosopher; or Terrible tractoration! In four cantos, +most respectfully addressed to the Royal College of Physicians, +London. By Christopher Caustick [pseud. of Thomas Green Fessenden], +Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians, Aberdeen and Honorary +member of no less than nineteen very learned societies. Second +American edition, revised, corrected, and much enlarged by the +author. Philadelphia: From the Lorenzo press of E. Bronson. 1806. +2 p.l., (i)vi-xxxii, 272 p., 2 pl. (incl. front.) 8º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- Original poems. By Thomas Green Fessenden, Esq. Author of +Terrible Tractoration, or Caustic's petition to the Royal College +of Physicians, and Democracy unveiled. Philadelphia: Printed at the +Lorenzo press of E. Bronson. 1806. 2 p.l., (i)vi-xii, 203(1) p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Some of Fessenden's poems are printed in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 115-121, _NBH_. + + +---- Pills, poetical, political and philosophical. Prescribed for +the purpose of purging the publick of piddling philosophers, of +puny poetasters, of paltry politicians, and petty partisans. By +Peter Pepper-Box, poet and physician [i.e., Thomas Green Fessenden]. +Philadelphia: Printed for the author. 1809. 1 p.l., (i)iv-xviii, +136 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- Poetical dialogue between Lionel Lovelorn, Esq. and Geoffry +Ginger, Esq. (In: The Port folio. Philadelphia, 1805. 4º. v. 5, +p. 22-24.) + + =* DA= + + +---- Terrible tractoration!! A poetical petition against galvanising +trumpery, and the Perkinistic institution. In four cantos. Most +respectfully addressed to the Royal College of Physicians, by +Christopher Caustic.... First American from the second London +edition.... New York: S. Stansbury, 1804. xxxv(i), 192 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + First published in London, 1803. + + +The =Field= of Orleans, a poem. _See_ =Hutton=, Joseph. + + +=First= Church of Universalists, Boston, Mass. Ode performed ... on +the day devoted to funeral testimonies of respect to the memory of ... +Washington. (In: The Independent Chronicle. Boston, Jan. 23, 1800.) + + =Reserve= + + A poem of eight stanzas. + + +=Fitch=, Elijah, 1745-1788. The beauties of religion. (In: Samuel +Kettell, Specimens of American literature. Boston, 1829. 12º. +p. 300-301.) + + =NBH= + + +---- The choice. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of +American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 258-259.) + + =NBB= + + First published in Providence, 1789. + + +---- The true Christian. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of +American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 258.) + + =NBB= + + +=Folger=, Peter, 1617-1690. A looking-glass for the times, or the +former spirit of New England revived in this generation. By Peter +Folger. April 23, 1676. 10 l. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + "This was reprinted in 1763. Copies of it are very rare. + We are indebted for the one from which we have reprinted, to + a ms. copy in possession of Mr. Bancroft." + + Excerpt from: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck's _Cyclopædia of + American literature_. + + Also printed in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 1, + p. 479-485, _NBB_. + + +=Forrest=, Michael. Travels through America. A poem. By Michael +Forrest. Philadelphia: Printed by Johnston & Justice, at Franklin's +Head, No. 41, Chestnut-Street. M.DCC.XCIII. 3 p.l., (1)8-50 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Address to fortune (supposed to have been written by + an old bachelor), p. 43-44; Verses addressed to a young + gentleman at the Charleston College academy, in 1790, + p. 44-45; A specimen of unlimited sublime poetry, p. 45-49; + Man shall be free. A new song written February 25, 1793, p. 50. + + +=Franklin=, Benjamin, 1706-1790. The mechanic's song. (In: E. A. and +G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. +8º. v. 1, p. 115.) + + =NBB= + + +---- The mother country. (In his: Select works. By Epes Sargent. +Boston, 1854. 12º. p. 378.) + + =IAW= + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 115, _NBB_. + + +---- My plain country Joan. (In his: Select works. By Epes Sargent. +Boston, 1854. 12º. p. 377.) + + =IAW= + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 114-115, + _NBB_. + + +---- Paper: a poem. (In his: Works. London, 1793. 8º. p. 101-104.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _The Massachusetts magazine_, Boston, + 1794, v. 8, p. 501, _Reserve_; Samuel Kettell, _Specimens + of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 173-174, _NBH_; + and in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of American + literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 114, _NBB_. + + Also printed in many editions of Franklin's _Works_. + + +=French= arrogance; or "The cat let out of the bag." _See_ =Cobbett=, +William. + + +=Freneau=, Philip, 1752-1832. The American village. A poem by Philip +Freneau. Reprinted in facsimile from the original edition published +at New York in 1772, with an introduction by Harry Lyman Koopman +and bibliographical data by Victor Hugo Paltsits. Providence, Rhode +Island, 1906. xxi p., 2 l., 69 p. 8º. (Club for Colonial Reprints of +Providence, Rhode Island. Third publication.) + + =IAG= + + No. 39 of 100 copies printed. + + +---- A collection of poems, on American affairs, and a variety of +other subjects, chiefly moral and political; written between the year +1797 and the present time. By Philip Freneau, author of Poems written +during the Revolutionary War, Miscellanies, &c. &c. In two volumes. +New-York: Published by David Longworth, at the Dramatic Repository, +Shakspeare-Gallery. 1815. 2 v. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + v. 1. 2 p.l., v-viii, (1)14-188 p., 2 l. of adv.; v. 2. + 2 p.l., (1)10-176 p. + + +---- The miscellaneous works of Mr. Philip Freneau. Containing his +essays, and additional poems. Philadelphia: Printed by Francis Bailey, +at Yorick's Head, in Market Street. MDCCLXXXVIII. xii, 429 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- The poems of Philip Freneau. Written chiefly during the late war. +Philadelphia: Printed by Francis Bailey, at Yorick's Head, in Market +Street. MDCCLXXXVI. vii(i), 407 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- The poems of Philip Freneau poet of the American Revolution. +Edited for the Princeton Historical Association by Fred Lewis +Pattee.... Princeton, N. J.: The University Library, 1902. 3 v. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- Poems relating to the American Revolution by Philip Freneau. With +an introductory memoir and notes. By Evert A. Duyckinck. New York: W. +J. Middleton, publisher, 1865. 1 p.l., (i)vi-xxxviii, 288 p., 2 ports. +(incl. front.), 1 fac. 4º. + + =NBHD= + + No. 73 of 100 copies printed. + + +---- Poems on various subjects, but chiefly illustrative of the events +and actors in the American War of Independence. By Philip Freneau. +Reprinted from the rare edition printed at Philadelphia in 1786. With +a preface. London: John Russell Smith, Soho Square. 1861. 2 p.l., +(i)vi-xxii, 362 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- Poems written between the years 1768 & 1794, by Philip +Freneau, of New Jersey. A new edition, revised and corrected by +the author; including a considerable number of pieces never before +published. Monmouth [N. J.] Printed at the press of the author, at +Mount-Pleasant, near Middletown-Point; M,DCC,XCV: and, of--American +Independence--XIX. 2 p.l., (i)x-xv, 455(1) p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Advertised by Freneau in his newspaper, _The Jersey + Chronicle_, no. 12, July 18, 1795. + + The Library has a second copy of this edition; both were + formerly owned by Evert A. Duyckinck, who annotated them, + in pencil, for his edition of Freneau's poems published in + 1865. The annotations of the one supplement those of the + other. + + +---- Poems written and published during the American Revolutionary +war, and now republished from original manuscripts; interspersed +with translations from the ancients, and other pieces not heretofore +in print. By Philip Freneau. The third edition in two volumes. +Philadelphia: From the press of Lydia R. Bailey, No. 10, North-Alley. +1809. 2 v. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + v. 1. 1 p.l., (1)4, iv, (1)6-280 p., front.; v. 2. 1 + p.l., (1)4-302, xii p., front. + + +=G.=, G. The Shunamite. _See_ =Green=, G. + + +=Gardiner=, John S. J., 1765-1830. An epistle to Zenas. [By John S. J. +Gardiner, Assistant Rector, Trinity Church, Boston.] Boston: Printed +by Peter Edes [1784?]. 1 p.l., ii, (1)6-15(1) p., 1 l. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Cerberus. Very curious and uncommon character, p. [16-17]. + + +---- [Funeral poem on Fisher Ames.] (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, +Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, +p. 536-537.) + + =NBB= + + +A =Gentleman= of Connecticut, pseud. The democratiad, a poem. _See_ +=Hopkins=, Lemuel. + + +A =Gentleman= of Maryland, pseud. _See_ =Brackenridge=, Hugh Henry. + + +A =Gentleman= of Rhode Island Colony, pseud. Verses on Doctor Mayhew's +book of observations on the charter and conduct of the Society for the +Propagation of the Gospel. _See_ =Goddard=, William. + + +The =Ghost= of Christopher Columbus, visiting the United States in the +year 1811. A poem. Cop. 1811. 1 p.l., 3-6 p. 8º. + + =* C p.v. 988= + + Bd. with: M. L. Weems, The philanthropist or political + peacemaker. Philadelphia, 1809. + + Page 1-2 lacking. + + +=Goddard=, William, 1739-1817. Verses on Doctor Mayhew's Book of +observations on the charter and conduct of the Society for the +Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts: with note, critical and +explanatory. By a gentleman of Rhode-Island Colony [i.e., William +Goddard]. Providence, in New-England: Printed and sold by William +Goddard, at the Signe of Shakespear's Head, 1763. 19 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Godfrey=, Thomas, 1736-1763. Juvenile poems on various subjects. With +the Prince of Parthia, a tragedy. By the late Mr. Thomas Godfrey, +Junr. of Philadelphia. To which is prefixed some account of the author +and his writings [by N. Evans]. Philadelphia, Printed by Henry Miller, +in Second-Street. MDCCLXV. xxvi p., 1 l., 223 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + "Elegy to the memory of Mr. Thomas Godfrey," by J. + Green, p. 1-4; "Elegy, to the memory of the same," by N. + Evans, October 1, 1763, p. 5-7. + + +=Good= news from Nevv-England: with an exact relation of the first +planting that countrey: a description of the profits accruing by +the worke. Together with a briefe, but true discovery of their +order both in church and common-wealth, and maintenance allowed the +painfull labourers in that vineland of the Lord. With the names of +the severall towns, and who be preachers to them. London; Printed by +Mathew Simmons, 1648. 1 p.l., 25 p. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + Pages 9, 19, 22, 23 wrongly numbered 19, 11, 14, 25. + + Reprinted with modern type-facsimile title-page in + Massachusetts Historical Society, _Collections for 1852_, + Boston, 1852, series 4, v. 1, p. 194-218, _IAA_. + + The identity of the author has been lost, except that he + is known to have been a resident of Plymouth colony. + + +The =Gospel= tragedy: an epic poem. See =Brockway=, Thomas. + + +=Gratitude=, a poem spoken at the Boston Theatre, by Mrs. Whitlock. +(In: The Polyanthos. Boston, 1814. 8º. v. 4, p. 316-326.) + + =* DA= + + This poem appeared in _The Mirror of taste_ in 1811. + + +=Green=, G. The shunamite. Recommended to the candid perusal of all +denominations of Christians. By G. G.--, [i.e., G. Green] M.M.M. New +York: Printed by Southwick and Pelsue. No. 3, New-Street. 1810. +1 p.l., (1)6-16 p. 12º. + + =NBHD p.v. 4, no. 7= + + p. 1-2 lacking. + + +=Green=, Joseph, 1706-1780. Elegy to the memory of Mr. Thomas Godfrey. +(In: Thomas Godfrey, Juvenile poems on various subjects. Philadelphia, +1765. 8º. p. 1-4.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Entertainment for a winter's evening being a full and true +account of a very strange and wonderful sight seen in Boston on the +twenty-seventh of December at noon-day. The truth of which can be +attested by a great number of people, who actually saw the same with +their own eyes. By Me, the Hon^{ble} B. B. Esq. (Joseph Green).... +Boston: Printed and sold by G. Rogers, next to the Prison in +Queen-street. Tarrytown, New York. Reprinted William Abbatt, 1917. +13 p. 4º. (In: Magazine of history with notes and queries, extra +no. 57, p. 67-79.) + + =IAG= + + Modern type reprint with type facsimile of title-page. + + +---- A mournful lamentation for the death of Mr. Old Tenor. (In: +Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, +p. 136-139.) + + =NBH= + + Also printed in Stedman and Hutchinson, _A library of + American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 435-437, + _NBB_. + + +---- A parody on Mather Byles's Stanzas written at sea. (In: E. A. and +G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. +8º. v. 1, p. 121-122.) + + =NBB= + + Also printed in Stedman and Hutchinson, _A library of + American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 433-434, + _NBB_. + + +---- The poet's lamentation for the loss of his cat, which he used to +call his muse. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American +literature. New York. 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 122-123.) + + =NBB= + + Also printed in Stedman and Hutchinson. _A library of + American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 434-435, + _NBB_. + + +The =Group=: or An elegant representation illustrated. _See_ +=Cliffton=, William. + + +=Guest=, Moses. Poems on several occasions. To which are annexed, +extracts from a journal kept by the author while he followed the sea, +and during a journey from New-Brunswick, in New-Jersey, to Montreal +and Quebec. By Moses Guest. Cincinnati: Looker & Reynolds, printers; +1824. 1 p.l., (i)iv, (1)8-160 p. 2. ed. 16º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + +The =Guillotina=, or a democratic dirge, a poem. _See_ =Hopkins=, +Lemuel. + + +=Haight=, Mrs. Sarah. A medley of joy and grief; being a selection of +original pieces in prose and verse, chiefly on religious subjects. By +a lady of New-York [i.e., Mrs. Sarah Haight]. New-York: Published by +W. B. Gilley, 92 Broadway. Gray & Bunce, printers. 1822. 298 p., 1 l. +12º. + + =NBF= + + Includes the following pieces written before 1820: + + A retrospect of past and present mercies, Jan. + 1st, 1819, p. 10-24.--Meditation, June, 1815, + p. 29-31.--Meditation, a walk to Mount Olivet on a summer's + eve, July, 1815, p. 59-80.--Complaint, etc. under pain + and trouble, February, 1815, p. 90-91.--Complaint under + great bodily pain, and darkness of mind, Greenwich, April, + 1815, p. 92-93.--On the death of Mrs. M. Wilkinson, + 1815, p. 93-94.--All is vanity but the Creator, 1814, + p. 95-96.--Complaining of hardness of heart. Mount Pleasant, + August, 1814, p. 96-97.--To Rosamond, on her departure for + England, June, 1811, p. 125-127.--Reflections, May, 1816, + p. 158-159. + + +=Halleck=, Fitz-Greene, 1790-1867. Fanny. [By Fitz-Greene Halleck.] +New-York: Published by C. Wiley & Co. No. 3 Wall-Street. Clayton & +Kingsland, printers. 1819. 1 p.l., (1)6-49 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Second edition. New-York: Published by Wiley & Halsted, No. +3, Wall-Street. William Grattan, printer. 1821. 1 p.l., (1)6-67 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- New York, 1866. 3 p.l., (1)8-84 p., 1 port. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + No. 16 of 70 copies printed for W. L. Andrews. + + Also printed in _Specimens of the American poets_. + London, 1822, p. 110-156, _NBH_. + + +---- Fanny, with other poems. [By Fitz-Greene Halleck.] New-York. +Harper & Brothers. 1839. 2 p.l., (1)6-130 p., 1 l. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Engraved title-page. + + +---- The poetical writings of Fitz-Greene Halleck, with extracts +from those of Joseph Rodman Drake. Edited by James Grant Wilson. New +York: D. Appleton and Company, 1869. 2 p.l., (i)vi-xviii p., 1 l., +(1)14-389 p., 5 pl., 5 ports. (incl. front.) 4º. + + =* NBI= + + +=Hamilton=, George. _See_ =Epistle= from the Marquis de La Fayette to +General Washington. + + +=Hammon=, Jupiter, b. 1720? Jupiter Hammon, American negro poet; +selections from his writings and a bibliography, by Oscar Wegelin. New +York: C. F. Heartman, 1915. 2 p.l., 7-51 p., 5 facs. (incl. front.) +8º. (Heartman's historical series, no. 13.) + + =Reserve= + + One of 91 copies printed on Alexandra Japan paper. + + Facing p. 18, facsimile of broadside: An address to Miss + Philis Wheatley, Ethiopian poetess, in Boston, who came from + Africa at eight years of age, and soon became acquainted + with the gospel of Jesus Christ. Hartford, August 14, 1778. + Text in two columns. Text also printed on p. 32-36. + + Facing p. 28 facsimile of broadside: An evening thought. + Salvation by Christ, with penetential cries. Composed ... + 25th of December, 1760. Text in two columns. Text also + printed on p. 29-31. + + A poem for children with thoughts on death, p. 37-40; A + dialogue intitled the kind master and the dutiful servant + [in verse], p. 41-46. + + +=Harney=, John Milton, 1789-1825. Crystalina; a fairy tale. By an +American [i.e., John Milton Harney]. New-York: Printed by George F. +Hopkins. 1816. 3 p.l., 112 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Harwood=, John Edmund, 1771-1809. Poems by John Edmund Harwood. +New-York: Published by M. & W. Ward, No. 4 City-Hotel, for Joseph +Osborn, 1809. 2 p.l., (1)4-107 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Elegies, p. 1-20; Odes, p. 21-48; Miscellaneous pieces, + p. 49-105. + + +=Haslett=, Andrew. Original poems, by A. Haslett. Author of various +miscellaneous pieces. Baltimore: Printed by R. Gamble--No. 12 +Light-Street. 1812. 2 p.l., ii(i), viii-ix, (1)14-95 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Hastings=, Sally. Poems, on different subjects. To which is added, a +descriptive account of a family tour to the West; in the year, 1800. +In a letter to a lady. By Sally Hastings. Lancaster, Printed and sold, +By William Dickson, for the benefit of the authoress. 1808. 1 p.l., +(1)4-220 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +The =Hasty-pudding=: a poem. _See_ =Barlow=, Joel. + + +=Haven=, Nathaniel Appleton, 1790-1826. The remains of Nathaniel +Appleton Haven. With a memoir of his life, by George Ticknor. +[Cambridge: Milliard, Metcalf & Company,] MDCCCXXVII. xl, 351 p. 8º. + + =NBG= + + Poems written during the years 1807-1815, p. 233-263. + + +---- ---- Second edition. Boston: Hilliard, Gray, Little, and Wilkins. +1828. viii, 368 p. 12º. + + =NBG= + + Poems written during the years 1807-1815, p. 257-273. + + +=Hazard=, Joseph. Poems, on various subjects. By Joseph Hazard. +Brooklyn, N. Y. Published by the author, [A. Spooner, printer.] 1814. +2 p.l., (1)6-187 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +The =Heroes= of the lake. A poem, in two books. Written in the autumn +of 1813. New-York: Printed and published by S. Woodworth & Co. War +Office, 26 Chatham-street. 1814. 2 p.l., (1)5-108 p., front. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Hill=, George, 1796-1871. Diabolou machia; or Battle of dragon. [A +poem written at Yale College, 1815, by George Hill?]. n.t.-p. 1875. +2 l. 8º. + + =SSX p.v. 1, no. 6= + + This poem describes an affair in which several students + came to blows; it took place in a tavern on an evening of + the fall term of 1815. + + +=Hillhouse=, James Abraham, 1789-1841. The judgment, a vision. By the +author of Percy's Masque [i.e., James Abraham Hillhouse]. New-York: +Published by James Eastburn, 1821. 46 p., 1 front. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + This poem was delivered at the Yale College commencement + of 1812. + + +=Hine=, Benjamin. Miscellaneous poetry: or, The farmer's muse. By +Benjamin Hine. New-York: Printed for the author, by H. Ludwig, 72 +Vesey-St. 1835. 1 p.l., (i)iv-x p., 1 l., (1)14-273 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Poems written between 1789-1820, p. 13-154. + + +=Hitchcock=, David, b. 1773. A poetical dictionary; or popular terms +illustrated in rhyme; with explanatory remarks. For the use of society +in general, and politicians in particular. Part first. By David +Hitchcock, author of the "Shade of Plato," &c. From Lewis's Press, +Lenox. Henry Starr, printer. 1808. 1 p.l., (i)iv-vi, (1)8-113 p., 1 l. +of errata. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- The poetical works of David Hitchcock. Containing, the Shade of +Plato. Knight and quack, and the Subtlety of foxes. Boston: Published +by Etheridge and Bliss, No. 12, Cornhill. 1806. Oliver & Munroe, +printers. 1 p.l., (i)iv-xvi. (1)18-164 p., 1 l. of adv. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- The social monitor; or, A series of poems, on some of the most +important and interesting subjects. By David Hitchcock, author of the +"Shade of Plato." Second edition. New-York: Printed for Gould, Banks & +Gould, Prior & Dunning, Isaac Riley, and Collins & Co. 1814. 1 p.l., +(i)iv-v(i), (1)8-204 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Hoar=, Leonard, 1630-1675. [Verses in Latin.] (Massachusetts +Historical Society. Proceedings, 1864-1865. Boston, 1866. 8º. v. 8, +p. 14-15.) + + =IAA= + + The original verses are appended to the first triennial + catalogue of Harvard University, published in 1674, and were + undoubtedly prepared by Leonard Hoar. + + +=Holland=, Edwin C. The pillar of glory; Rise Columbia. (In: Samuel +Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston. 1829. 12º. v. 2, +p. 328-330.) + + =NBH= + + Originally published in the _Port folio_, Philadelphia, + 1813, series 3, v. 2, p. 552, * _DA_. + + +=Holme=, John. A true relation of the flourishing State of +Pennsylvania. (Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Bulletin. +Philadelphia, 1848. 8º. v. 1, 1845-47, p. 161-180.) + + =IAA= + + Written in 1686. + + Printed for the first time, from the original + manuscript. This poem is believed to be the first metrical + composition written in Pennsylvania. + + +=Holmes=, Abiel. _See_ A =Family= tablet: containing a selection of +original poetry. + + +=Holyoke=, Edward. _See_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +=Honeywood=, St. John, 1764-1798. A poem on reading the President's +Address; with a sketch of the character of a candidate for the +presidency. [By St. John Honeywood.] Philadelphia: Printed by Ormrod +& Conrad. No. 41 Chestnut-Street. 1796. 1 p.l., (1)4-7 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Poems by St. John Honeywood, A.M. With some pieces in prose. +Copyright secured. New-York: Printed by T. & J. Swords. No. 99 +Pearl-Street. 1801. 3 p.l., (i)viii, 159(1) p. 16º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + Reviewed in _The American review, and literary journal_ + for the year 1801, New York, 1801, v. 1, p. 297-303. + + +=Hopkins=, Lemuel, 1750-1801. The Democratiad, a poem, in retaliation, +for the "Philadelphia Jockey Club." By a Gentleman of Connecticut +[i.e., Lemuel Hopkins]. Philadelphia: Published by Thomas Bradford, +printer, 1795. iv, (1)6-22 p., 1 l. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + At head of title: Second edition. + + Also ascribed to William Cobbett. + + Contains sarcastic references to the Democrats in the + United States Senate who opposed Jay's treaty. + + +---- ---- Philadelphia: Published by Thomas Bradford, printer, +book-seller & stationer, No. 8 South Front Street. 1796. 1 p.l., +(i)iv, (1)6-28 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NBH p.v. 24, no. 15= + + At head of title: Third edition. + + +---- Epitaph on a patient killed by a cancer quack. (In: American +poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 137-139.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 3, + p. 414-415, _NBB_. + + +---- The guillotina, or a Democratic dirge, a poem. By the author of +the "Democratiad" [i.e., Lemuel Hopkins]. Philadelphia: Sold at the +Political Book-Store [By Thomas Bradford], South Front-Street, No. 8. +[1796.] 1 p.l., (1)4-14 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NBH p.v. 24, no. 16= + + A political satire, erroneously attributed to William + Cobbett. + + +---- The hypocrite's hope. (In: American poems, selected and original. +Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 139-141.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 144-146, _NBH_; Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American + poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 283-284, _NBH_; and in E. A. + and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of American literature_, + New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 322, _NBB_. + + +---- On General Ethan Allen. (In: American poems, selected and +original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 142.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 3, + p. 413-414, _NBB_. + + +---- A plea for union and the constitution. (In: E. A. and G. L. +Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. +v. 1, p. 321-322.) + + =NBB= + + +---- _See also_ The =Anarchiard=; The =Echo=; The =Political= +green-house for the year 1798. + + +=Hopkinson=, Francis, 1737-1791. The battle of the kegs. (In: The +American museum. Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 1, p. 85-86.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American + poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 202-205, _NBH_; and in E. A. + and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of American literature_, + New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 218-219, _NBB_. + + +---- An exercise, containing a dialogue and ode on the accession +of his present gracious Majesty George III. Performed at the +public commencement in the College of Philadelphia, May 18th 1762. +[By Francis Hopkinson.] Philadelphia. Printed by W. Dunlap, in +Market-Street, M,DCC,LXII. 8 p. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- A fair bargain. (In: The Beauties of poetry, British and +American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 198-199.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The miscellaneous essays and occasional writings of Francis +Hopkinson, Esq. Philadelphia: Printed by T. Dobson, at the +Stone-house, No. 41 Second-Street. M,DCC,XCII. 3 v. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + v. 3, after p. 215, "Poems on several subjects," 204 p. + + +---- The raising: a song for federal mechanics. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1788. 8º. v. 4, p. 95.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Howe=, Joseph. An ode, addressed to Miss ****. (In: American poems, +selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 297-298.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +=Humphreys=, David, 1752-1818. Address to the armies of the United +States of America. Written in the year 1782. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 1, p. 266-272.) + + =Reserve= + + First published in New Haven in 1782. Also in his _Life + of ... Israel Putnam_, New York, 1810, p. 189-218, _AN_; and + in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, + 1829, v. 1, p. 261-271, _NBH_. + + +---- American winter. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. 16º. +p. 165-166.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Depredations and destruction of the Algerines. (In: The Columbian +muse. New York, 1794. 16º. p. 147-158.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- An elegy on the burning of Fairfield, in Connecticut. Written on +the spot by Col. Humphreys. 1779. (In: The New-Haven gazette, and the +Connecticut magazine. New-Haven, 1786. 4º. June 29, 1786, v. 1, +no. 20, p. 159.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The American museum_, Philadelphia, + 1787, v. 1, p. 265, _Reserve_; _American poems, selected + and original_, Litchfield, 1793, p. 117-119, _NBH_; _The + Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, p. 112-114, _NBH_; and + _American poetical miscellany_, Philadelphia, 1809, + p. 63-65, _NBH_. + + +---- An elegy on Lieutenant De Hart, volunteer aid to Gen. Wayne. +(In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. +p. 120-122.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 114-116, _NBH_. + + +---- An elegy, on Lieutenant De Hart, volunteer aid-de-camp to General +Wayne. An ode, to Laura. A song, translated from the French. An +epitaph written the day after the capitulation of Lord Cornwallis, at +York-town in Virginia. An impromptu, for the pocket-book of a young +lady who expected to embark soon for Europe. The genius of America, +a song. The monkey, who shaved himself and his friends. (In: The +American museum. Philadelphia, 1788. 8º. v. 3, p. 273-279.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- An epistle to Dr. Dwight. On board the Courier de l'Europe, July +30, 1784. (In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, +1793. 12º. p. 129-134.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 136-140, _NBH_. + + +---- The farmers' harvest hymn. (In his: A discourse on the +agriculture of the state of Connecticut. New-Haven, 1816. 8º. p. 42.) + + =VPY= + + +---- Future state of the western territory. (In: The Columbian muse. +New York, 1794. 16º. p. 162-165.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Future state of the western territory; American winter; On love +and the American fair; Depredations and destruction of the Algerines. +(In: The Beauties of poetry, British and American. Philadelphia, 1793. +16º. p. 130-146.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The genius of America--an ode: inscribed to his excellency George +Washington, esq. on his return to Mount Vernon, December, 1783. (In: +The American museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 5, p. 101-104.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _American poems, selected and original_, + Litchfield, 1793, p. 127-129. _NBH_; _The Columbian muse_, + New York, 1794, p. 120-121, _NBH_. + + +---- The miscellaneous works of Colonel Humphreys. New-York: +Printed by Hodge, Allen, and Campbell, and sold at their respective +book-stores. M.DCC.XC. [With copy-right according to law.] 348 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + Contains the following poems: + + Address to the armies of the United States of America, + p. 12-29; A poem on the happiness of America, p. 30-66; + Mount Vernon: an ode, p. 68-70; The genius of America, + p. 70-72; An elegy on Lieutenant De Hart, p. 72-74; The monkey, + who shaved himself and his friends, p. 75-76; A letter to a + young lady in Boston, p. 90-97; An epistle to Dr. Dwight, + p. 97-102; Elegy on the burning of Fairfield in Connecticut, + p. 111-113. + + +---- The miscellaneous works of David Humphreys, late Minister +Plenipotentiary from the United States of America to the Court of +Madrid. New-York: Printed by T. and J. Swords, No. 160 Pearl-Street. +1804. xv, 394 p., 7 l., front. (port.) 8º. + + =NBG= + + +---- Mount Vernon, an ode, inscribed to General Washington. Written +at Mount Vernon, August 1786. (In: The New-Haven gazette, and the +Connecticut magazine. New-Haven, 1786. 4º. Nov. 16. 1786, v. 1, +no. 40, p. 314-315.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _American poems, selected and original_, + Litchfield, 1793, p. 123-125, _NBH_; _The Columbian muse_. + New York, 1794, p. 116-118, _NBH_; and E. A. and G. L. + Duyckinck. _Cyclopædia of American literature_, v. 1, + p. 377, _NBB_. + + +---- An ode, inscribed to General Washington. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1788. 8º. v. 3, p. 482-483.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- A poem on the death of General Washington, pronounced at the +house of the American legation in Madrid, on the 4. day of July, 1800. +[Signed D. Humphreys.] n.p. [1804.] 1 p.l., 151-187 p. 8º. + + =AN= + + Excerpt: The miscellaneous works of David Humphreys. + New-York: T. & J. Swords, 1804. + + +---- A poem, on the happiness of America; addressed to the citizens of +the United States. (In: The Boston magazine. Boston, 1786. 8º. July, +1786, p. 306-311; August, 1786, p. 348-352.) + + =Reserve= + + The poem was continued in later numbers of the magazine, + which the Library lacks. + + Also printed in _The American museum_, Philadelphia, + 1787, v. 1, p. 273-288, _Reserve_; and in the author's _Life + of Israel Putnam_, New York, 1810, p. 219-285, _AN_. + + +---- A poem on the happiness of America. Addressed to the citizens of +the United States. By Col. David Humphreys, aid-de-camp to General +Washington during the American Revolutionary War. New York: The New +York Printing Company, 1871. 1 p.l., (1)4-67 p. 8º. + + =NBI= + + +---- A poem on industry. Addressed to the citizens of the United +States of America. By Colonel David Humphreys, Minister resident at +the Court of Lisbon. Philadelphia: Printed for Mathew Carey, No. 118, +Market-Street. October 14, 1794. 1 p.l., (i)iv p., 1 l., (1)8-22 p., +1 l. of adv. 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + +---- Poems by Col. David Humphreys, late aid-de-camp to his Excellency +General Washington. Second edition:--with several additions. +Philadelphia: Printed by Mathew Carey. M,DCC,LXXXIX. 1 p.l., 90 p., +1 l. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- _See also_ The =Anarchiard=. + + +=Hunn=, Anthony. Sin and redemption. A religious poem, by Anthony +Hunn. Lexington: Printed by W. W. Worsley ... "Reporter" Press. 1812. +2 p.l., (1)6-25 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + "The following is an episode only of a much larger epic + poem entitled 'The Columbiad,' which is formed out of most + eminent scenes of the American Revolution and the hero of + which is the immortal Washington."--_Preface._ + + +=Huntley=, Lydia. _See_ =Sigourney=, Mrs. Lydia Howard Huntley. + + +=Hutton=, Joseph. The field of Orleans. A poem. By the author of +several fugitive pieces [i.e., Joseph Hutton].... Philadelphia: +Published by W. Anderson, 102, Cherry-Street. 1816. 31 p., 2 l. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Indian= songs of peace. _See_ =Smith=, William. + + +=Irving=, Washington, 1783-1859. [Lines spoken by Thomas A. Cooper, +on the night of the opening of the Park theatre. Sept. 9, 1807.] (In: +Washington Irving, Life and letters. New York, 1862. 8º. v. 1, +p. 204-208.) + + =AN= + + Also in the New York edition of the _Life and letters_ + of 1864, v. 1, p. 204-208. + + +=Irving=, William, 1766-1821. [Poems.] (In: Salmagundi. New York, +1807-08. 24º. v. 1. p. 35-37, 54-56, 70-80, 101-104, 136-140, 181-188; +v. 2, p. 250-254, 399-404.) + + =Reserve= + + The poems were written under the pseud. of "Pindar + Cockloft, Esq." + + The Library has many other editions of _Salmagundi_ + besides the one given here. + + +=Jacob=, Stephen. A poetical essay, delivered at Bennington, on the +anniversary of the 16th of August, 1777. By Stephen Jacob, A. B. 1778. +Hartford: Printed by Watson and Goodwin, M.DCC.LXXIX. 8 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=James=, T. C. The country meeting, or Friends' place of worship. (In: +The American museum. Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 1, p. 93-95.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Beauties of poetry, British and + American_, Philadelphia, 1791, p. 182-185, _Reserve_; + _American poems, selected and original_, Litchfield, 1793, + p. 234-238. _NBH_; _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 121-125, _NBH_; and _The American poetical miscellany_, + Philadelphia, 1809, p. 172-176, _NBH_. + + +The =Jeffersoniad=; or, An echo to the groans of an expiring faction. +By Democraticus. March 4, 1801: First year of the triumph of +Republican principle. Price--18 cents. 1 p.l., (1)4-18 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + "The author ... presents his best respects to his + fellow-citizens, and congratulates them on the event of the + late election [of Jefferson as president]...." + + "Theodore Dwight" is written in a contemporary hand on + verso of title-page. + + +=John of Enon=, pseud. _See_ =Benedict=, David. + + +=Johnson=, Edward, 1599-1672. A history of New-England. From the +English planting in the yeere 1628. untill the yeere 1652. Declaring +the form of their government, civill, military, and ecclesiastique. +Their wars with the Indians, their troubles with the Gortonists, +and other heretiques. Their manner of gathering of churches, the +commodities of the country, and description of the principall towns +and havens, with the great encouragements to increase trade betwixt +them and Old England. With the names of all their governours, +magistrates, and eminent ministers.... London, Printed for Nath: Brook +at the Angel in Corn-hill, 1654. 236 p., 2 l. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Better known by the running title: Wonder-working + providence of Sion's Saviour in New England. + + Contains many poems. + + +---- ---- (Massachusetts Historical Society. Collections. Boston, +1814-19. 8º. series 2, v. 2, p. 49-95; v. 3, p. 123-161; v. 4, +p. 1-51; v. 7, p. 1-58; v. 8, p. 1-39.) + + =IAA= + + +---- Johnson's Wonder-working Providence, 1628-1651. Edited by J. +Franklin Jameson.... New York: C. Scribner's Sons, 1910. viii p., +2 l., 3-285 p., 2 facs., 1 map. 8º. (Original narratives of early +American history.) + + =* R-HAE= + + +---- Wonder-working Providence of Sion's Saviour in New England.... +With an historical introduction and an index by William Frederick +Poole. Andover, Published by Warren F. Draper, 1867. 4 p.l., cliv l., +265 p., 1 fac. 8º. + + =IQ= + + This is a modern type-facsimile reprint. + + No. 140 of 200 copies on small paper. + + +=Johnson=, William Martin, 1771-1797. Poems. (In: Gabriel Harrison, +The life and writings of John Howard Payne. Albany, N. Y., 1875. 4º. +p. 296-333.) + + =AN= + + The following poems: On a snow-flake falling on a + lady's breast, Winter, Spring, Fame, Epitaph on a lady, + are printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of + American literature_. New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 586, _NBB_. + + +---- ---- (In: Gabriel Harrison, John Howard Payne ... his life and +writings. Philadelphia, 1885. 8º. p. 343-374.) + + =AN= + + +=Johnston=, Archibald. The mariner; a poem in two cantos. By Archibald +Johnston. Philadelphia: Published by Edward Earle, corner of Fourth +and Library streets. William Fry, printer. 1818. 3 p.l., (1)10-152 p. +16º. + + =NBHD= + + Has also an engraved title-page. + + Miscellanea, p. [97]-126. + + +=Jones=, Elizabeth C. Poems on different subjects, original and +selected. By Elizabeth C. Jones. Providence: H. H. Brown, printer. +1819. 1 p.l., (1)4-48 p. 12º. + + =NBH p.v. 55, no. 5= + + +=Josselyn=, John, fl. 1630-1675. New-Englands rarities discovered: in +birds, beasts, fishes, serpents, and plants of that country. Together +with the physical and chyrurgical remedies wherewith the natives +constantly use to cure their distempers, wounds, and sores. Also a +perfect description of an Indian squa, in all her bravery; with a +poem not improperly conferr'd upon her. Lastly a chronological table +of the most remarkable passages in that country amongst the English. +Illustrated with cuts. By John Josselyn, gent. London. Printed for G. +Widdowes at the Green Dragon in St. Paul's church-yard, 1672. 2 p.l., +114 p., 1 l., 1 pl. illus. (8º.) 16º. + + =Reserve= + + "The poem," p. 101-102. + + Reprinted in American Antiquarian Society, _Archæologia + Americana. Transactions and collections_, [Worcester,] 1860, + v. 4, p. 105-238, _IAA_. "The poem" appears on p. 232. + + +---- New-England's rarities discovered in birds, beasts, fishes, +serpents, and plants of that country. By John Josselyn, gent. With an +introduction and notes, by Edward Tuckerman. Boston: William Veazie, +1865. 2 p.l., (i)viii, 169 p. 8º. + + =IQ= + + One of 75 copies printed. + + "The poem," p. 158. + + +A =Journey= from Patapsco to Annapolis. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia. 1791. 8º. v. 9, appendix 1, p. 9-16.) + + =Reserve= + + +The =Judgment=, a vision. _See_ =Hillhouse=, James Abraham. + + +=Keimer=, Samuel, fl. 1723-1728. An elegy on the much lamented death +of the ingenious and well-beloved Aquila Rose, clerk to the honourable +assembly at Philadelphia, who died the 24th of the 4th month, 1723. +Aged 28. (In: The Register of Pennsylvania, edited by Samuel Hazard. +Philadelphia, 1828. 4º. Nov., 1828, p. 262-263.) + + =IAA= + + The original was printed in 1723 as a hand-bill with + imprint: Philadelphia: Printed, and sold by S. Keimer, in + High-Street. (Price two-pence.) + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 98-99, + _NBB_. + + +=Kettell=, Samuel. Specimens of American poetry, with critical and +biographical notices. Boston: S. G. Goodrich and Co., 1829. 3 v. 12º. + + =NBH= + + Contains selections from the works of the following + authors, writing before 1820: + + J. Adams, v. 1, p. 67-74; J. Allen, v. 1, p. 160-173; + W. Allston, v. 2, p. 149-155; R. Alsop, v. 2, p. 54-67; J. + L. Arnold, v. 2, p. 77-82; J. Barlow, v. 2, p. 1-27; A. E. + Bleecker, v. 1, p. 211-219; J. Bowdoin, v. 1, p. 330-332; + M. Byles, v. 1, p. 124-133; B. Church, v. 1, p. 145-160; + E. Church, v. 1, p. 343-347; W. Cliffton, v. 2, p. 86-93; + B. Coleman, v. 1, p. 49-61; W. Crafts, v. 2, p. 144-145; + R. Dabney, v. 2, p. 166-172; R. B. Davis, v. 1, p 351-353; + T. Dawes, v. 2, p. 35-37; S. Deane, v. 2, p. 398-403; R. + Devens, v. 2, p. 38-40; S. Dexter. v. 2, p. 40-42; Theodore + Dwight, v. 2, p. 67-74; Timothy Dwight, v. 1, p. 223-259; + N. Evans, v. 1, p. 104-118; D. Everett, v. 2, p. 113-114; + S. Ewing, v. 1, p. 347-349; H. T. Farmer, v. 2, p. 174-179; + M. V. Faugeres, v. 1, p. 220-223; T. G. Fessenden, v. 2, + p. 114-121; E. Fitch, v. 1, p. 300-301; B. Franklin, v. 1, + p. 173-174; P. Freneau, v. 1, p. 285-299; T. Godfrey, + v. 1, p. 88-104; J. Green, v. 1, p. 133-138; S. H. Hale, + v. 2, p. 296-302; J. A. Hillhouse, v. 2, p. 356-365; St. J. + Honeywood, v. 2, p. 43-47; L. Hopkins, v. 1, p. 272-284; + F. Hopkinson, v. 1, p. 201-210; J. Hopkinson, v. 1, + p. 350-351; D. Humphreys, v. 1, p. 259-272; F. S. Key, v. 2, + p. 288-289; H. C. Knight, v. 2, p. 285-289; J. B. Ladd, + v. 1, p. 334-342; John Lathrop, v. 2, p. 101-108; Joseph + Lathrop, v. 1, p. 326-357; E. Lincoln, v. 2, p. 303-314; J. + B. Linn, v. 2, p. 121-126; W. Livingston, v. 1, p. 139-145; + S. Low, v. 1, p. 318-324; J. Lowell, v. 1, p. 332-333; J. + D. M'Kinnon, v. 1, p. 312-318; C. Mather, v. 1, p. 1-17; + W. Maxwell, v. 2, p. 155-159; J. Maylem, v. 1, p. 83-88; + S. W. Morton, v. 2, p. 75-76; P. Oliver, v. 1, p. 333-334; + J. Osborn, v. 1, p. 118-124; S. Osborn, v. 2, p. 145-149; + R. T. Paine, v. 2, p. 93-100; J. K. Paulding, v. 2, + p. 179-184; H. Pickering, v. 2, p. 272-285; W. L. Pierce, + v. 2, p. 130-133; J. Pierpont, v. 2, p. 246-272; S. Porter, + v. 1, p. 301-305; B. Pratt, v. 1, p. 324-326; J. Ralph, v. 1, + p. 74-83; W. Ray, v. 2, p. 137-144; G. Richards, v. 2, + p. 27-31; R. C. Sands, v. 2, p. 228-241; L. M. Sargent, v. 2, + p. 134-137; J. M. Sewall, v. 1, p. 198-200; S. Sewall, v. 1, + p. 328-330; J. Shaw, v. 2, p. 126-130; L. H. Sigourney, + v. 2, p. 204-227; W. M. Smith, v. 1, p. 305-312; J. Story, + v. 2, p. 109-112; J. Trumbull, v. 1, p. 175-198; St. G. Tucker, + v. 1, p. 349-350; J. Turrell, v. 1, p. 61-37; R. Tyler, + v. 2, p. 47-54; W. B. Walter, v. 2, p. 161-166; K. A. Ware, + v. 2, p. 290-295; M. Warren, v. 2, p. 31-35; M. Wigglesworth, + v. 1, p. 35-49; R. Wolcott, v. 1, p. 19-35; S. Woodworth, + v. 2, p. 241-246. + + +=Key=, Francis Scott, 1780-1843. The star spangled banner. (In his: +Poems of the late Francis S. Key. New York, 1857. 12º. p. 31-33.) + + =NBHD= + + Also in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American poetry_, + Boston, 1829, v. 2, p. 288-289, _NBH_; E. A. and G. L. + Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of American literature_, New York, + 1866, v. 1, p. 663-664, _NBB_; and E. C. Stedman and E. M. + Hutchinson, _Library of American literature_. New York, + 1888, v. 1, p. 41. _NBD_. + + Written in 1814 during the bombardment of Fort McHenry + by the English. + + +=Knight=, Henry Coggswell, b. 1788. The broken harp; poems. By H. C. +Knight. Philadelphia: Published by J. Conrad and Co. 1815. 2 p.l., +(i)vi-x p., 1 l., (1)10-172 p., 2 l. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- The cypriad in two cantos: with other poems and translations. +By Henry C. Knight. Boston: J. Belcher, printer. 1809. 3 p.l., +(1)8-68 p. 8º. + + =NBH p.v. 25, no. 8= + + +=Knox=, Samuel. Ode to Education in seven stanzas. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 5, p. 405-408.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- An ode, most respectfully inscribed to his excellency, general +Washington, on being chosen president of the United States. (In: The +American museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 6, p. 85-86.) + + =Reserve= + + Dated: Bladensburgh, April 16, 1789. + + +=Ladd=, John. Lyric poems, chiefly in two books, never before +published. 1. A thought on man in paradise; his expulsion. A +compendium on his restoration by grace. The saints' travail through +time, and final state in glory. 2. Sacred to honor, virtue and +independence--and to the memory of the dead. The wild man and the +apes--a muthony. By John Ladd. Schenectady: Printed for the author. +1814. 1 p.l., (i)iv, (1)6-127(1) p., 2 l. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Ladd=, Joseph Brown, 1764-1786. Charlotte's soliloquy, to the manes +of Werter. Sweet Polly of Plymouth's lament. The wish. (In: The +American museum. Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 1, p. 180-181.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Description of Jehovah, from the XVIIIth Psalm. (In: The +Columbian muse. New York, 1794. 16º. p. 183-184.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Description of Jehovah, from the XVIIIth Psalm. The war-horse, +paraphrased from Job. (In: The Beauties of poetry, British and +American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 181-182, 191.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The dove, a fragment. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, +1787. 8º. v. 2, p. 203-204.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The incurable. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. +v. 1, p. 86.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The literary remains of Joseph Brown Ladd, M.D. Collected by his +sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Haskins, of Rhode Island. To which is prefixed, +a sketch of the author's life, by W. B. Chittenden. New York: H. C. +Sleight, Clinton Hall, 1832. xxiv, (1)14-228 p. 8º. + + =NBG= + + Poems, p. [13]-163. + + Some of these poems are reprinted in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, + p. 338-342, _NBH_, where they are credited to William + Ladd, the father of Joseph Brown. + + +---- On the resignation of his excellency General Washington. +Retirement. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 1, +p. 178-179.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The poems of Arouet [by Joseph Brown Ladd]. Charleston, South +Carolina: Printed by Bowen and Markland, No. 53, Church-Street, and +No. 11, Elliot-Street. 1786. 2 p.l, (i)viii-xvi, 128 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + + Half-title lacking. + + +---- The war-horse, paraphrased from Job. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 1, p. 183.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 172-173, _NBH_. + + +A =Lady= of New-York, pseud. A medley of joy and grief. _See_ +=Haight=, Mrs. Sarah. + + +A =Lady= of Philadelphia, pseud. Viola or The heiress of St. Valverde. +_See_ =Botsford=, Mrs. Margaret. + + +=Lathrop=, John, the younger, 1772-1820. The influence of civil +institutions on society and the moral faculties, a poem. Delivered +at the university in Cambridge, on the day of public commencement, +July 18, 1792. By John Lathrop, jun. (In: The Massachusetts magazine. +Boston, 1792. 8º. v. 4, July, 1792, p. 452-454.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- A monody, sacred to the memory of the Rev. John Lovejoy Abbot, +A.M. Pastor of the Church in Chauncey-Place, Boston; who died October +17, 1814, ætat. 31. By J. Lathrop, Jun.... Boston: Published by +Munroe, Francis & Parker, 1815. 16 p. 8º. + + =AN= + + +---- Ode for the twentieth anniversary of Massachusetts Charitable +Fire Society. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American +literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 613-614.) + + =NBB= + + +---- Speech of Canonicus. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American +poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, p. 102-108.) + + =NBH= + + +=Lathrop=, Joseph, 1731-1821. The existence of a Deity. (In: The +American museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 5, p. 101.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American + poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 326-327, _NBH_. + + +---- The majesty and grace of God. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1791. 8º. v. 9, appendix 1, p. 36-37.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Reflexions of a libertine reclaimed by sickness. (In: The +American museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 6, p. 172-174.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- A winter piece. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1790. 8º. +v. 8, appendix 1, p. 39-40.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Beauties of poetry, British and + American_, Philadelphia, 1791, p. 204-206, _Reserve_; and in + _The Columbian muse_. New York, 1794, p. 158-160. _NBH_. + + +=Law=, Thomas. Ballston springs. [By Thomas Law] New-York: Printed by +S. Gould, opposite the City-Hall. 1806. 3 p.l., 7-48 p. 16º. + + =NBH p.v. 22, no. 3= + + Last leaf mutilated. + + +=Lawson=, John. The maniac, with other poems. By John Lawson. +Philadelphia: Published by Hellings and Aitken. Dennis Heartt, +printer. 1811. 2 p.l., (i)vi-xiv p., 1 l., 101 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Le Cadet=, St. Denis, pseud. _See_ =Denison=, Edward. + + +=Lewis=, Mr. A description of Maryland, from Carmen Seculare, a poem, +addressed, anno 1732, to lord Baltimore, proprietor of that province. +By Mr. Lewis. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 6, +p. 413-416.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Liberty=: a poem, on the independence of America. Dedicated to his +excellency the President of the United States. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1790. 8º. v. 7, appendix 1, p. 23-29.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Lincoln=, Enoch. The village; a poem. [By Enoch Lincoln.] With an +appendix. Portland: Published by Edward Little and Co. 1816. C. Norris +& Co. printers. 4 p.l., (1)10-180 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + Extract reprinted in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of + American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, p. 303-314, _NBH_. + + +=Lines= on the death of Ebenezer Ball, who was executed at Castine, +October 31, 1811, for the murder of John Tileston Downs. Blue hill, +Nov. 1811. Printed, and for sale by A. H. Holland, Buckstown. +Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + +=Linn=, John Blair, 1777-1804. The death of Washington. A poem. In +imitation of the manner of Ossian. By Rev. John Blair Linn, A.M., +minister of the First Presbyterian Congregation of Philadelphia.... +Philadelphia: Printed by John Ormrod, 1800. iv, (1)6-26 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Miscellaneous works, prose and poetical. By a Young Gentleman +of New-York [i.e., John Blair Linn]. New-York: Printed by Thomas +Greenleaf. 1795, 6 p.l., (1)8-353 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- The powers of genius, a poem, in three parts. By John Blair +Linn, A.M. Co-pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in the city of +Philadelphia. Philadelphia: Published by Asbury Dickens, opposite +Christ-Church: H. Maxwell, printer, Columbia-House. 1801. 1 p.l., +(1)6-127 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Reviewed in _The American review, and literary journal_ + for the year 1801, New-York, 1801, v. 1, p. 201-209, + _Reserve_. + + +---- ---- Second edition, corrected and enlarged. Published by John +Conrad. & Co., No. 30, Chestnut-Street, Philadelphia; and sold by M. +and J. Conrad & Co. No. 140, Market-Street, Baltimore; and Washington +City. H. Maxwell, printer. 1802. 1 p.l., (1)6-191 p. 6º. + + =Reserve= + + Reviewed in _The American review, and literary journal_ + for the year 1802, New York, 1802, v. 2, p. 462-472. + + +---- ---- [London:] Albion Press: Printed by Cundee, Ivy Lane, for T. +Williams, Stationers'-Court, and T. Hurst, Paternoster-Row. 1804. 1 +p.l., (i)iv-xv p., 1 l., 155(1) p., 2 l. of adv., 3 pl. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- Valerian, a narrative poem: intended, in part, to describe the +early persecutions of Christians, and rapidly to illustrate the +influence of Christianity on the manners of nations. By John Blair +Linn, D.D. Late pastor of the First Presbyterian congregation, in +Philadelphia. With a sketch of the life and character of the author. +Philadelphia, Printed by Thomas and George Palmer, 116, High Street. +1805. 1 p.l., (i)iv-xxvi p., 1 l., 97 p., front. (port.) 4º. + + =NBHD= + + The frontispiece, portrait silhouette of J. B. Linn + engraved by B. Tanner. + + Reviewed in _The monthly anthology and Boston review_, + Boston, 1807, v. 4, p. 319-322. + + +A =Little= looking-glass for the times. _See_ =C.=, G. + + +=Livingston=, Henry Brockholst, 1757-1823. Democracy: an epic poem, by +Aquiline Nimble-Chops, Democrat [i.e., Henry Brockholst Livingston]. +Canto first. New-York: Printed for the author [1794]. 2 p.l., +(1)6-20 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Extracts from the first and second cantos of this poem + are reprinted in _The Echo_, New York, 1807, p. 195-207, + with the following notice prefixed: + + "The following extracts are from a poem entitled + _Democracy_, the first canto of which was printed in + New-York, in March, 1794, and at the time excited no + inconsiderable share of the public attention. This poem + was written in consequence of a tumultuous meeting of + the citizens of that place, instigated by a few popular + demagogues, for the purpose of prescribing to Congress the + adoption of hostile measures against Great Britain. The + second canto, which was of much greater length, was prepared + for the press immediately after the appearance of the first, + but the timidity of the booksellers, and the peculiar + circumstances of the times prevented its publication." + + +=Livingston=, William, 1723-1790. Address to his excellency general +Washington. By his excellency governor Livingston of New-Jersey. (In: +The American museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 5, p. 300-301.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- [Burgoyne's] Proclamation. (In: New York journal and the general +advertiser. Kingston, N. Y., 1777. fº. September 8, 1777, p. [4], +col. 1-2.) + + =Reserve= + + "A burlesque ballad by Governor William Livingston, of + New Jersey." + + Reprinted in _Ballads and poems relating to the Burgoyne + campaign_, Albany, N. Y., 1893, p. 7-15, _NBHD_. + + Also printed in Frank Moore, _Songs and ballads of the + American Revolution_, New York, 1856, p. 166-175, _NBH_. + + +---- A morning hymn. By his excellency William Livingston, esq. +governor of New-Jersey. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1789. +8º. v. 5, p. 100-101.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Philosophic solitude. (In: The Beauties of poetry, British and +American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 220-236.) + + =Reserve= + + First published in New York in 1747. + + Also in _American poems, selected and original_, + Litchfield, 1793, p. 154-176, _NBH_; _The Columbian muse_, + New York, 1794, p. 16-33, _NBH_; Samuel Kettell, _Specimens + of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 140-145, _NBH_. + + +=Lomax=, Judith. The notes of an American lyre. By Judith Lomax, +a native of the State of Virginia. Richmond: Printed by Samuel +Pleasants, near the Market-Bridge. 1813. 4 p.l., 9-70 p. nar. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + Inscribed to Thomas Jefferson. Page 54 misnumbered 34. + + +=Longstreet=, Augustus Baldwin. Patriotic effusions; by Bob Short +[pseud. of Augustus Baldwin Longstreet]. New-York: Published by L. and +F. Lockwood, No. 154 Broadway. J. & J. Harper, printers. 1819. 2 p.l., +(1)6-46 p., 1 l. nar. 24º. + + =NBH p.v. 20, no. 7= + + +The =Lottery=, a poem. _See_ =Denison=, Edward. + + +=Love=, Charles. A poem on the death of General George Washington, +late president of the United States. In two books. By Charles Love. +[Copy-right secured according to law.] Alexandria, Virginia, A.D. +M,DCCC. 60 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + Dedicated to John Adams. + + +=Lovell=, John. _See_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +=Lovett=, John. 1761-1818. A tribute to Washington, for February 22d, +1800. [By John Lovett.] Troy: Printed by R. Moffitt & Co. 1800. 15 p. +sm. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Washington's birth day: an historical poem, with notes and +appendix. By a Washingtonian [i.e., John Lovett]. Albany: Printed and +published by E. and E. Hosford. 1812. [Copy-right secured.] 1 p.l., +(i)iv-viii, (1)10-55, 11 p., front. (port.) sq. 12º. + + =NBI= + + Frontispiece, the portrait of George Washington, + engraved for the Washington Benevolent Society. + + Last 11 p. contain: "Odes for Washington's birth day." + + +=Low=, Samuel, b. 1765. Poems, by Samuel Low. New-York: Printed by T. +& J. Swords, No. 99 Pearl-Street. 1800. 2 v. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + v. 1. 4 p.l., (1)10-147 p.; v. 2. 6 p.l., (1)16-168 p. + + v. 1, p. 115-122 lacking, p. 147 mutilated; v. 2, one + leaf, probably half-title, lacking, p. 97 and 103 mutilated, + p. 159-160, lacking. + + +=Lowell=, John. _See_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +The =Loyalist= poetry of the Revolution. [Edited by Winthrop Sargent.] +Philadelphia: [Collins, printer,] 1857. xi, 218 p. 8º. + + =NBH= + + +The =Lyric= works of Horace, translated into English verse: to which +are added a number of original poems. _See_ =Parke=, John. + + +=M.=, S. A Country treat upon the second paragraph in His Excellency's +speech, Decemb. 17, 1730. [Boston, 1730?] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Photostat facsimile. + + Text in two columns. + + +=M'Fingal=: a modern epic poem. _See_ =Trumbull=, John. + + +=M'Kinnon=, John D. Descriptive poems, by John D. M'Kinnon. Containing +picturesque views of the State of New-York. New-York: Printed by T. & +J. Swords, No. 99 Pearl-Street. 1802. 4 p.l., (1)4-79 p., 1 l. of adv. +16º. + + =NBHD= + + Reviewed in _The American review and literary journal_ + for the year 1802, New-York, 1802, v. 2, p. 327-332, + _Reserve_. + + +=Mansfield=, Joseph. Hope, a poem, delivered in the chapel of Harvard +University, at a public exhibition, July 8th, 1800. By Joseph +Mansfield, a junior sophister. Cambridge. Printed by William Milliard. +1800. 1 p.l., (1)4-15 p. sq. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Markoe=, Peter. Faith, an ode. Hope, an ode. Charity, an ode, sacred +to the memory of William Penn. (In: The Beauties of poetry, British +and American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 176-180.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Ode on the birth-day of General Washington. (In: The Beauties of +poetry, British and American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 185-187.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The Times; a poem. [By Peter Markoe.] Philadelphia: Printed by +William Spotswood. M.DCC.LXXXVIII. 2 p.l., 22 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + "A considerable part of the following poem has already + appeared in one of the public papers." Preface dated, Jan., + 1788. + + +=Mather=, Cotton, 1663-1728. [Elegy on the death of seven young +ministers.] (In: Club of Odd Volumes. Early American poetry. +[Reprints.] Boston, 1896. 8º. [v.] 4, p. 29-35.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in type-facsimile, with facsimile of + title-page. + + Appeared originally in his _Vigilantius_. + + +---- [Elegy] Upon the death of Sir William Phips, Knt. Late +Captain General and Governour in Chief, of the Province of the +Massachuset-Bay, New England, who expired in London, Feb. 18, 1694/5. +3 l. (In his: Pietas in patriam: The life of His Excellency Sir +William Phips, Knt.... London, 1697. 8º.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- An elegy on the much-to-be-deplored death of that +never-to-be-forgotten person, the Reverend Nathanael Collins; who +after he had been many years a faithful pastor to the church at +Middletown of Connecticut in New-England, about the forty third year +of his age expired; on 28th. 10. moneth 1684. [By Cotton Mather.] +Boston in New-England. Printed by Richard Pierce for Obadiah Gill. +Anno Christi, 1685. 2 p.l., 20 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + The pages are numbered one to sixteen, eighteen to + twenty. By an oversight of the printer, the number of page + 17 was omitted; the number 18 inserted on page 17, and + continued consecutively, making but 19 pages of text. + + Reprinted in modern type, page for page, with a + facsimile title-page and a biographical sketch of the Rev. + N. Collins, in Club of Odd Volumes, _Early American poetry_ + [Reprints], Boston, 1896, v. 3, _Reserve_. + + +---- [Epitaph upon] The Excellent Wigglesworth, remembered by some +good tokens. (In his: A Faithful man, described and rewarded.... +Boston, 1705. 8º. p. 48.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Epitaphium [on the Honourable Wait Winthrop]. (In: Club of Odd +Volumes. Early American poetry. [Reprints.] Boston, 1896. 8º. [v.] 4, +p. 43-46.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in type facsimile, with facsimile of + title-page. + + Appeared originally in his _Hades look'd into_, Boston, + 1717. + + +---- Gratitudinis ergo. An essay on the memory of my venerable master; +Ezekiel Cheever. (In his: Corderius Americanus. Boston, 1708. 12º. +p. 26-34.) + + =Reserve= + + Epitaphium, p. 33-34. + + Reprinted in type facsimile, with facsimile of + title-page, in Club of Odd Volumes, _Early American poetry_ + [Reprints, v.] 4, p. 26-34, _Reserve_. + + +---- Magnalia Christi Americana: or, The ecclesiastical history of +New-England, from its first planting in the year 1620 unto the year of +our Lord, 1698. In seven books.... By the reverend and learned Cotton +Mather.... London: Printed for Thomas Parkhurst, at the Bible and +Three Crowns in Cheapside, MDCCII. 16 p.l., 75 p., 1 l., 238 p., 1 l., +125-222 p., 100, 88, 118 p., 1 l., 1 map. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + Contains elegies and epitaphs by various authors; also + the following three elegies by Cotton Mather: [Elegy] upon + the death of Sir William Phips ... who expired in London, + Feb. 18, 1694/5, Book 2, p. 74-75.--Some offers to embalm + the memory of ... John Wilson, Book 3, p. 50-51.--Remarks + on the bright and dark side of ... William Thompson ... who + triumphed on Dec. 10, 1666, Book 3, p. 119-120. + + +---- ---- In two volumes. First American edition, from the London +edition of 1702. Hartford: Published by Silas Andrus, Roberts & Burr, +printers, 1820. 2 v. 8º. + + =IQ= + + +---- ---- With an introduction and occasional notes, by the Rev. +Thomas Robbins and translations of the Hebrew, Greek, and Latin +quotations by Lucius F. Robinson. To which is added, a memoir of +Cotton Mather, by Samuel G. Drake.... Also, a comprehensive index by +another hand. In two volumes. Hartford: Silas Andrus and Son, 1855. +2 v. 8º. + + =IQ= + + +---- A poem and an elegy. By Cotton Mather. Boston: The Club of Odd +Volumes, 1896. 13 p., 2 l., 16 p., 3 l., 20 p. sq. 8º. (The Club of +Odd Volumes. Early American poetry. [Reprints. v.] 3.) + + =Reserve= + + No. 81 of one hundred copies on hand-made paper. + + Reprinted from copies in the Library of Brown University. + + Contains modern type reprints, page for page, with + facsimile title-pages of: + + A poem dedicated to the memory of ... Mr. Urian + Oakes.... Boston in New-England, Printed for John Ratcliff, + 1682. + + An elegy on the much-to-be-deplored death ... of ... the + Reverend Mr. Nathanael Collins.... Boston in New-England. + Printed by Richard Pierce for Obadiah Gill. 1685. + + +---- Some offers to embalm the memory of the truly reverend and +renowned, John Wilson [with] Epitaphium. (In his: Johannes in Eremo. +Boston, 1695. 24º. p. 42-46.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in The Club of Odd Volumes, _Early American + poetry_ [Reprints, v.] 4, _Reserve_. + + Also in his _Magnalia Christi Americana_, London, 1702, + book 3, p. 50-51, _Reserve_. + + +---- To the memory of the Reverend Jonathan Mitchel. (In his: +Ecclesiastes. The life of the reverend & excellent Jonathan Mitchel. +Boston, 1697. 8º. p. 109-111.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- _See_ also =Elegies= and epitaphs, 1677-1717. + + +=Maxwell=, William. Poems by William Maxwell, Esq. Philadelphia: +Published by M. Thomas, No. 52, Chestnut-Street. William Fry, printer. +1816. 2 p.l., (i)vi-vii p., 1 l., (1)4-168 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + Has also an engraved title-page. + + Several of these poems are printed in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 155-159, _NBH_. + + +=Maylem=, John. The conquest of Louisburg. (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 83-88.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Gallic perfidy: a poem. By John Maylem, philo-bellum. Boston: +New-England: Printed and sold by Benjamin Mecom, at the New +Printing-Office, July 13, 1758. Where may be had that noted little +book, called Father Abraham's Speech. 2 p.l., 7-15 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Lacks half-title. + + Has woodcut on title-page of Indian holding bow and + arrow. + + +=Mead=, Charles. Mississippian scenery; a poem, descriptive of the +interior of North America. By Charles Mead. Philadelphia: Published +by S. Potter and Co. No. 55, Chestnut Street. W. Fry, printer. 1819. +1 p.l., (i)vi-ix p., 1 l., (1)14-113 p., front. 16º. + + =NBH p.v. 23, no. 8= + + +A =Medley= of joy and grief. _See_ =Haight=, Mrs. Sarah. + + +The =Mercies= of the Year, Commemorated: A song for Little Children in +New-England. December 13th 1720. 3 l. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Facsimile reprint. + + "Reprinted December 13, 1910 to convey this season's + happier greetings to a few friends of George Parker Winship." + + +=Mills=, John Henry. Poetic trifles by John Henry Mills. Comedian. +Baltimore: Printed by G. Dobbin & Murphy, 10, Market-Street, for Cole +& I. Bonsal. 1808. 3 p.l., (1)8-116 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +The =Mirror= of merit and beauty. _See_ =Smith=, Isaiah. + + +The =Miscellaneous= poems of the Boston Bard. _See_ =Coffin=, Robert +Stevenson. + + +=Miscellaneous= poems on moral and religious subjects. _See_ =Allen=, +Benjamin. + + +=Miscellaneous= works, prose and poetical. _See_ =Linn=, John Blair. + + +=Miscellanies=, moral and instructive, in prose and verse; collected +from various authors, for the use of schools, and improvement of young +persons of both sexes. Philadelphia: Printed by Joseph James, in +Chestnut-Street, between Front and Second-Street. M.DCC.LXXX.VII. +202 pl., 1 l. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Review by B. Franklin on p. iv. + + +=Mitchel=, John, d. 1750. [Poem] On the following work [The Day +of Doom] and it's author [Michael Wigglesworth]. (In: Michael +Wigglesworth. The Day of Doom. Boston, 1701. 24º.) + + =Reserve= + + Also in the Boston ed. of 1751, p. 10-12; and the + Newburyport ed. of 1811, p. 16-17. + + +=Mitchel=, Jonathan, 1624-1668. [Elegy on Henry Dunster.] (In: Cotton +Mather, Ecclesiastes. The life of the reverend & excellent Jonathan +Mitchel. Boston, 1697. 8º. p. 70-71.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in Cotton Mather, _Magnalia Christi + Americana_, London, 1702, book 4, p. 175-176, _Reserve_. + + +---- Upon the death of that reverend, aged, ever-honoured, and +gracious servant of Christ, Mr. John Wilson, pastor of a church +in Boston: interred August 8, 1667. (In: N. Morton, New-Englands +memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. 12º. p. 185-188.) + + =Reserve= + + +The =Modern= philosopher; or Terrible tractoration. _See_ =Fessenden=, +Thomas Green. + + +=Monody.= On the decease of His Excellency George Washington. (In: +Bache's Philadelphia Aurora. Monday, December 30 [1799].) + + =Reserve= + + Signed and dated, R. N. Dec. 26, 1799. + + A poem in 15 stanzas. + + +=Monody=, on the death of Gen. George Washington. _See_ =Brown=, +Charles Brockden. + + +=Monody= on the death of George Washington. _See_ =Smith=, Elihu H. + + +A =Monumental= inscription on the first of March together with a few +lines on the enlargement of Ebenezer Richardson, convicted of murder. +[Worcester: Printed by Isaiah Thomas, 1771.] Broadside, fº. (In Emmet +Collection.) + + =Manuscript Div.= + + Reprinted in facsimile in Woodrow Wilson, _A history of + the American people_, New York, 1902, v. 2, p. 162. _IAE_. + + Known as "The Massacre Hand-Bill." + + +=Moore=, Frank, 1828-. Illustrated ballad history of the American +Revolution, 1765-1783. By Frank Moore. Volume 1. New York: Johnson, +Wilson & Company, 1876. 2 p.l., 384 p., 15 pl., 16 ports. (incl. +front.), 5 maps. 4º. + + =IG= + + This was to be completed in 30 parts. + + Parts 1-6 are all that were issued. + + Title on cover of part 1: Ballad history of the American + Revolution. By contemporary poets and prose writers. + Collected and arranged by Frank Moore. + + +---- Songs and ballads of the American Revolution. With notes and +illustrations by Frank Moore. New York: D. Appleton & Company, 1856. +2 p.l., (i)vi-xii, 394 p., front. 12º. + + =IG= + + Also has engraved title-page. + + +=Morrell=, William, fl. 1623. New-England or a briefe enarration +of the ayre, earth, water, fish and fowles of that country, with +a description of the natures, orders, habits, and religion of the +natiues; In Latine and English verse. [By William Morrell.] Boston: +The Club of Odd Volumes, 1895. 9 p.l., 24, 2 p. sq. 8º. (The Club of +Old Volumes. Early American poetry. [Reprints, v.] 2.) + + =Reserve= + + Originally published in London, 1625. + + This is a facsimile reprint of a copy in the British + Museum. + + No. 81 of one hundred copies printed on hand-made paper. + + This poem is also printed in the _Collections_ of + the Massachusetts Historical Society, v. 1, for 1792, + p. 125-139, but without title, address to the reader, + dedicatory epistle, postscript, or form, style, type, and + arrangement of the original. + + +=Morton=, Nathaniel, 1613-1685. New-Englands memoriall: or, A +brief relation of the most memorable and remarkable passages of +the providence of God, manifested to the planters of New-England +in America; with special reference to the first colony thereof, +called New-Plymouth. As also a nomination of divers of the most +eminent instruments deceased, both of church and common-wealth, +improved in the first beginning and after progress of sundry of the +respective jurisdictions in those parts; in reference unto sundry +exemplary passages of their lives, and the time of their death. +Published for the use and benefit of present and future generations, +by Nathaniel Morton, Secretary to the Court for the jurisdiction of +New-Plimouth.... Cambridge: Printed by S. G. and M. J. for John Usher +of Boston. 1669. 6 p.l., 198 p., 51. (4º.) 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Contains the following poems, elegies and epitaphs: + On ... Mr. Thomas Hooker ..., by J. C., p. 125-126.--A + lamentation for the death of ... Mr. Thomas Hooker ..., by + P. B., p. 127-129.--A funeral elegy upon the death of ... + Mr. John Cotton ..., by J. N., p. 136-137.--Upon the tomb + of ... Mr. John Cotton ..., by B. W., 137-139.--[Verses + found in his pocket after his death], by William Bradford, + p. 140.--Certain verses left by ... William Bradford ..., + p. 144-145.--[Poem] On ... William Bradford, by Josias + Winslow, p. 146-148.--A few verses ... on William Bradford, + p. 149-150.--[Elegy] presented at the funerall of Ralph + Partridge, p. 153-155.--[Elegy on Mr. William Paddy], + p. 156.--An elegie on the death of ... John Norton ..., by T. + S., p. 166-168.--A threnodia upon ... Samuel Stone ..., by + E. B., p. 168-169.--Upon the death of ... John Wilson ..., + by J. M., p. 185-188.--Upon the death of ... John Wilson + ..., by T. S., p. 188-190.--Upon the death of ... Jonathan + Mitchell ..., by E. B., p. 192-193.--To the memory of ... + Jonathan Mitchell ..., by F. D., p. 193-196.--An epitaph + upon the ... death of ... Jonathan Mitchell, by J. S., + p. 196. + +---- ---- Boston, Reprinted for Nicholas Boone, at the Signe of the +Bible in Cornhill. 1721. 5 p.l., 248 p., 1 l. (8º.) 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Boston: printed. Newport: Reprinted, and sold by S. +Southwick. M,DCC,LXXII. viii, 208 p., 4 l. (8º.) 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Plymouth, Mass. Reprinted by Allen Danforth, 1826. 204 p. +16º. + + =IQ= + + +---- ---- Fifth edition. Containing besides the original work, and the +supplement, annexed to the second edition, large additions in marginal +notes, and an appendix; with a lithographic copy of an ancient map. By +John Davis.... Boston: Printed by Crocker and Brewster, 1826. 481(1) +p., 1 map. 8º. + + =IQ= + + +---- ---- Sixth edition. Also Governor Bradford's History of Plymouth +Colony; portions of Prince's Chronology; Governor Bradford's Dialogue; +Gov. Winslow's visits to Massasoit; with numerous marginal notes and +an appendix containing numerous articles relating to the labors, +principles, and character of the Puritans and Pilgrims. Boston: +Congregational Board of Publication, 1855. xxii p., 1 l., 515 p., +1 pl. (front.), 1 port. 8º. + + =IQ= + + +---- ---- With an introduction by Arthur Lord. Boston: The Club of Odd +Volumes, 1903. 3 p.l., (1)6-21 p., 6 l., 198 p., 4 l. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + No. 62 of 150 copies printed. + + This is a facsimile reprint. + + +=Morton=, Sarah Wentworth Apthorp. The African chief. (In: Samuel +Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, +p. 75-76.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Descriptive lines, written at the request of a friend, upon the +surrounding 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 the inimitable author of the poems +under the signature of Delia Crusca; by Philenia, a lady of Boston. +(In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. +p. 176-185.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Invocation to Hope. Prayer to Patience. (In: The Columbian muse. +New York, 1794. 16º. p. 221-223.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- Lines written, at the request of a friend, on the view from +Beacon-hill, near Boston, where a sumptuous monument has lately been +erected to perpetuate the principal events of the late revolution. +(In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1791. 8º. v. 9, appendix 1, +p. 3.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Ouâbi: or The virtues of nature. An Indian tale. In four cantos. +By Philenia, a lady of Boston [i.e., Mrs. Sarah Wentworth Morton]. +Printed at Boston, by I. Thomas and E. T. Andrews, at Faust's Statue, +No. 45, Newbury Street. MDCCXC. 2 p.l., (i)iv-viii, (1)10-51(1) p., +front. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- The virtues of society. A tale founded on fact. By the author of +the Virtues of nature [i.e., Sarah Wentworth A. Morton]. Published +according to act of Congress. Boston. Printed by Manning & Loring, for +the author. 1799. 2 p.l., (1)6-46 p. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + Based upon an occurrence in the American Revolution, + contained in letters of General Burgoyne. + + Poem entitled "To Time," p. 39-46. + + +=Morton=, Thomas. New English Canaan, or New Canaan containing an +abstract of New England, composed in three bookes.... Written by +Thomas Morton.... Printed at Amsterdam, by Jacob Frederick Stam. In +the yeare 1637. 188 p., 2 l. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + Poems on pages 101-102, 121, 130-131, 133, 134-135, + 146-148, 167, 185. + + Reprinted in Peter Force, _Tracts and other papers_, + Washington, 1838, v. 2, no. 5, _IF_. + + +The =Mournfull= elegy of Mr. Jona. Frye, 1725. (New England historical +and genealogical register. Boston, 1861. 8º. v. 15, p. 91.) + + =APGA= + + Jonathan Frye was mortally wounded in "Lovewell's + Fight," at Fryeburg, Me., May 8th, 1725. + + These lines, tradition says, were written when the news + of Mr. Frye's death reached Andover, by a young girl to whom + he had engaged himself against the wishes of his parents + whose objections were, want of property and education. Her + name is lost. + + Reprinted in _Magazine of history with notes and + queries_, extra no. 5, p. 99-101, _IAG_. + + +=Munford=, William, 1775-1825. Poems, and compositions in prose on +several occasions. By William Munford, of the County of Mecklenburg, +and State of Virginia. Richmond: Printed by Samuel Pleasants, Jun. +1798. 3 p.l., (1)6-189(1) p. 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + +=Murphy=, Henry C. Anthology of New Netherland or Translations from +the early Dutch poets of New York with memoirs of their lives. By +Henry C. Murphy. New York, 1865. 209(1) p., 2 facs., 1 pl., 1 port. +8º. (Bradford Club series. no. 4.) + + =NBH= + + No. 72 of 75 copies printed. + + Memoir and poems of Jacob Steendam, p. 21-75.--Memoir + and poems of Henricus Selyns, p. 77-183.--Memoir and poems + of Nicasius De Sillè. p. 185-195. + + +A =Native= of America, pseud. Lyric works of Horace, translated into +English verse: to which are added, a number of original poems. _See_ +=Parke=, John. + + +=Neal=, John, 1793-1876. Battle of Niagara, a poem, without notes; +and Goldau, or The maniac harper. "Eagles and stars! and rainbows!" +By John O'Cataract, author of Keep cool, &c. [i.e., John Neal.] +Baltimore: Published by N. G. Maxwell. From the Portico press. Geo. W. +Grater, printer. 1818. 2 p.l., (i)vi-xiii, (1)16-143 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- The battle of Niagara: second edition--enlarged: with other +poems. By John Neal. Baltimore: Published by N. G. Maxwell. B. Edes. +printer. 1819. 3 p.l., (i)viii-lxvii, (1)70-272 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + Has also an engraved title-page. + + +A =Neighbour's= tears sprinkled on the dust of the amiable virgin, +Mrs. Rebekah Sewall. _See_ =Tompson=, Benjamin. + + +A =New= collection of verses applied to the first of November, A.D. +1765, &c. Including a prediction that the S---p A-t shall not take +place in North-America. Together with a poetical dream, concerning +stamped papers. New-Haven: Printed and sold by B. Mecom. [1765.] +24 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=New-England= or a briefe enarration of the ayre, earth, water, fish +and fowles of that country. _See_ =Morrell=, William. + + +A =New= history of a true book in verse. For sale at A. March's +Bookstore; price 6 cents single, and to those who buy to give away, +2 dols. pr. hundred. [Newburyport, 1800?] 12 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + A note on the title-page in a contemporary hand reads: + "V. Shepherd of Salisbury Plain by Mrs. H. More, p. 14." + + Possibly imperfect; pages after p. 12 may be lacking. + + +=New York= Gazette. The news-boy's verses, for New-Year's Day, 1763. +Humbly address'd to his patrons, to whom he carries the Thursday's +New-York Gazette. [New York: John Holt, 1762.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Fifty stanzas in three columns. + + +=Niles=, Nathaniel, 1741-1828. The American hero. A Sapphic ode. By +Nat. Niles, A.M. Norwich (Connecticut), Oct. 1775. (In: Wheeler Case, +Revolutionary memorials.... Edited by Stephen Dodd, New York, 1852. +12º. p. 66-68.) + + =NBHD= + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 440, + _NBB_; and in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A library + of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 3, p. 263-264, + _NBB_. + + +=Niles=, Samuel, 1674-1762. A brief and plain essay on God's +wonder-working providence for New-England, in the reduction of +Louisburg, and fortresses thereto belonging on Cape-Breton. With a +short hint in the beginning, on the French taking & plundering the +people of Canso, which led the several governments to unite and pursue +the expedition. With the names of the leading officers in the army +and the several regiments to which they belonged. By Samuel Niles. N. +London, Printed and sold by T. Green, 1747. 2 p.l., 34 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Nimble-Chops=, Aquiline, pseud. Democracy: an epic poem. _See_ +=Livingston=, Henry Brockholst. + + +=Norton=, John, 1606-1663. A funeral elegie upon the death of the +truely reverend Mr. John Cotton, late teacher of the Church of Christ +at Boston in New England. (In: N. Morton, New-Englands memoriall. +Cambridge, 1669. 12º. p. 136-137.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in John Scottow, _A narrative of the + planting of the Massachusetts Colony Anno 1628_. Boston, + 1694, p. 75-76, _Reserve_. + + +=Norton=, John, 1651-1716. A funeral elogy upon that pattern and +patron of virtue, the truely pious, peerless & matchless Gentlewoman +Mrs. Ann Bradstreet, right panaretes, mirror of her age, glory of +her sex, whose heaven-born-soul leaving its earthly shrine, chose +its native home, and was taken to its rest, upon 16th. Sept. 1672. +(In: Anne Bradstreet, The works of Ann Bradstreet in prose and verse. +Edited by John Harvard Ellis. Charlestown, 1867. 4º. p. 409-413.) + + =NBHD= + + This "Elogy" appears on pages 252-255 of the Boston, + 1678 edition of Anne Bradstreet's poems. The Library's copy + of this edition lacks these pages. + + Also reprinted under the title _Dirge for the Tenth + Muse_, in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A library of + American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 46-48, _NBB_. + + +=Noyes=, Nicholas, 1647-1717. A consolatory poem dedicated unto Mr. +Cotton Mather, soon after the decease of his excellent and vertuous +wife, Mrs. Abigail Mather. (In: E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, A +library of American literature. New York, 1889. 8º. v. 2, p. 206-208.) + + =NBB= + + Originally published in Cotton Mather's _Meat out of the + eater_, Boston, 1703, p. 187-190. + + +---- An elegy upon the death of the Reverend Mr. John Higginson, +pastor of the church of Christ in Salem, who dyed December, 9th. 1708. +In the ninety-third year of his age. [By Nicholas Noyes.] 8 p. (In: +Cotton Mather, Nunc dimittis, briefly descanted on.... Boston, 1709. +8º. 8 p. following p. 46.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _New England historical genealogical + register_, Boston, 1853, v. 7, p. 237-240, _* R-Room 328_. + + +---- An elegy upon the much lamented death of the Reverend Mr. Joseph +Green, pastor of the church at Salem village, who departed this life +November 26, 1715, aged forty years and two days. (Essex Institute. +Historical collections. Salem, 1868. 8º. v. 8, p. 168-174.) + + =* R-Room 328= + + Appeared originally in Joseph Capen, _A funeral sermon + occasioned by the death of Mr. Joseph Green_, Boston, 1717, + reprinted in the _Collections_ of the Topsfield Historical + Society, v. 12, p. 5-47, Topsfield, Mass., 1907, _IQH_. The + Elegy fills p. 32-46. + + +---- A prefatory poem, on that excellent book, entitled Magnalia +Christi Americana: Written by the Reverend Mr. Cotton Mather.... (In: +Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana. London, 1702. 4º.) + + =Reserve= + + Printed in later editions of the _Magnalia_ as follows: + Hartford, 1820, v. 1, p. 14-16; Hartford, 1855, v. 1, + p. 19-20. + + +=Nugent=, Henry. The orphans of Wyoming, or, The fatal prayer. A moral +poem. By the late Henry Nugent. With memoirs of the author. First +edition. City of Washington, Apollo press, printed and published by H. +C. Lewis. 1814. 1 p.l., (1)6-54 p. 12º. + + =NBH p.v. 53, no. 4= + + No title-page; title from cover. + + +=Oakes=, Urian, 1631-1681. An elegie upon the death of the Reverend +Mr. Thomas Shepard, late teacher of the church at Charlstown in +New-England: By a great admirer of his worth, and true mourner for his +death [i.e., Urian Oakes]. Cambridge. Printed by Samuel Green. 1677. +16 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in modern type, page for page, with a + facsimile title-page, in Club of Odd Volumes, _Early + American poetry_ [Reprints], Boston, 1896, [v.] 4, _Reserve_. + + Also reprinted in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, + p. 36-42, _NBB_. + + +---- _See also_ =Elegies= and epitaphs, 1677-1717. + + +=O'Cataract=, John, pseud. Battle of Niagara, a poem. _See_ =Neal=, +John. + + +An =Occasional= ode, sung at the Baptist Meeting-House in Wrentham, +February 22, 1800. (In: Benjamin Gleason, An oration, pronounced at +the Baptist Meeting-House in Wrentham, February 22, 1800.... Wrentham, +Mass., 1800. 8º. p. [32.]) + + =Reserve= + + +=Ode=, distributed among the spectators, during the federal +procession, at New-York, July, 1788. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1788. 8º. v. 4. p. 572-574.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Odell=, Jonathan, 1737-1818. The American times, a satire, in three +parts. In which are delineated the characters of the leaders of the +American Rebellion. Amongst the principal are Franklin, Laurens, +Adams, Hancock, Jay, Duer, Duane, Wilson, Pulaski, Witherspoon, Reed, +M'Kean, Washington, Roberdeau, Morris, Chase, &c. By Camillo Querno, +poet-laureat to the Congress. [New-York: Printed by James Rivington, +MDCCLXXX.] (In: John André. Cowchace. New York, 1780. 8º. p. 27-69.) + + =Reserve= + + Attributed by Wegelin to Rev. Jonathan Boucher. + + Reprinted in _The Loyalist poetry of the Revolution_, + Philadelphia, 1857, p. 1-37, _NBH_. + + +---- The congratulation. A poem. (In: The Royal gazette. New-York, +1779. fº. November 6, 1779, p. [2].) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in supplement to the _Royal Gazette_, November + 24, 1779, _Reserve_. + + Also reprinted in _The Loyal verses of Joseph Stansbury + and Doctor Jonathan Odell.... Edited by Winthrop Sargent_, + Albany, 1860, p. 45-50, _NBHD_. + + +---- The Feu de joie. A poem. (In: The Royal gazette. New-York, 1779. +fº. November 24, 1779, p. [2].) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _The Loyal verses of Joseph Stansbury and + Doctor Jonathan Odell.... Edited by Winthrop Sargent_, + Albany, 1860, p. 51-58, _NBHD_. + + +---- The loyal verses of Joseph Stansbury and Doctor Jonathan Odell; +relating to the American Revolution. _See_ =Stansbury=, Joseph. + + +---- To Sir James Wallace, on sending in the Dutch prize. (In: The +Royal Pennsylvania gazette. Philadelphia, 1778. fº. March 24, 1778, +p. [3].) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _The Loyal verses of Joseph Stansbury and + Doctor Jonathan Odell.... Edited by Winthrop Sargent_, + Albany, 1860, p. 35, _NBHD_. + + +---- The word of Congress, a poem. (In: The Royal gazette. New-York, +1779. fº. September 18, 1779, p. [2.]) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _The Loyalist poetry of the Revolution_, + Philadelphia, 1857, p. 38-55, _NBH_. + + +=Odiorne=, Thomas, 1769-1851. The progress of refinement, a poem, in +three books. To which are added, a poem on fame, and miscellanies. +By Thomas Odiorne. Boston: Printed by Young and Etheridge, opposite +the entrance of the Branch-Bank, State-Street. MDCCXCII. x p., 1 l., +(1)14-176 p., front. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Half-title probably lacking. + + Reviewed in _The Massachusetts magazine_, Boston, 1793, + v. 5, no. 4, p. 238-240, _Reserve_. + + +=Olio=; or, Satirical poetic-hodge-podge, with an illustrative or +explanatory dialogue, in vindication of the motive. Addressed to good +nature, humour, and fancy. Philadelphia, printed. 1801. 1 p.l., (i)iv. +(1)4-46 p. 8º. + + =ii p.v. 34, no. 6= + + With copy-right notice on title-page. + + Parody, p. 25-43. Dialogue between the author and his + friend, upon the subject of Olio, p. 44-46. + + +=Oliver=, Andrew. Elegy upon John Winthrop. (In: E. A. and G. L. +Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. +v. 1, p. 136.) + + =NBB= + + Written in 1779. + + +=Oliver=, Isabella. Poems, on various subjects. By Isabella Oliver, +of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. Carlisle: From the press of A. +Loudon, (Whitehall.) 1805. 1 p.l., (1)4-5, (i)vii-ix, (1)11-220 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Oliver=, Thomas. _See_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +=On= the death of the very learned, pious and excelling Gershom +Bulkley Esq. M.D. who had his mortality swallowed up of life, December +the second 1713. Ætatis suæ 78. New-London: Printed by T. Green, 1714. +Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Photo-facsimile. Text in two columns, enclosed in + mourning borders. + + +=One= year in Savannah; a poem. _See_ =Young=, Edward R. + + +=Oppression.= A poem. By an American. With notes, by a North Briton. +London: Printed for the author; and sold by C. Moran, in the Great +Piazza, Covent Garden. MDCCLXV. 1 p.l., 34 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Original= poems, by a citizen of Baltimore. _See_ =Townsend=, Richard +H. + + +=Osander=, pseud. Miscellaneous poems. _See_ =Allen=, Benjamin. + + +=Osborn=, John, 1713-1753. An elegiac epistle, written by John Osborn, +at college, in the year 1735, upon the death of a sister, aged 13, +and sent to another sister at Eastham. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 6, p. 486-487.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _The beauties of poetry, British and + American_, Philadelphia, 1791, p. 206-208, _Reserve_; and + in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, + 1829, v. 1, p. 122-124, _NBH_. + + +---- A whaling song. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of +American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 132-133.) + + =NBB= + + Also printed in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, + p. 364-365, _NBB_. + + +=Osborn=, Salleck, 1783-1826. Extract from an unfinished manuscript. +(In: The American poetical miscellany. Philadelphia. 1809. 12º. +p. 243-245.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Mercy. (In: The American poetical miscellany. Philadelphia, 1809. +12º. p. 109-110.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Poems by Salleck Osborn. Boston, I. P. Orcutt, printer [1823]. +1 p.l., x, 200 p., 1 l. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Has engraved title-page. + + The greater number of these poems were written before + 1820. + + Several of the poems are printed in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 147-149, _NBH_. + + +=Paine=, Robert Treat, 1773-1811. Adams and liberty. (In: The +Philadelphia monthly magazine. Philadelphia, 1798. 8º. v. 1, +p. 286-288.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The invention of letters: a poem, written at the request of the +president of Harvard University, and delivered, in Cambridge, on the +day of annual commencement, July 15, 1795. By Thomas Paine. Boston: +Printed for the subscribers. July 27, 1795. 15 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- A monody on the death of Lieut. General Sir John Moore. With +notes, historical and political. By R. T. Paine, Jun. Esq. To which is +prefixed, a sketch of the life of General Moore.... Boston, Published +by J. Belcher. 1811. 32 p. 8º. + + =AN= + + +---- The ruling passion: an occasional poem. Written by the +appointment of the Society the [Greek: =PhBK=], and spoken, on their +anniversary, in the chapel of the University, Cambridge, July 20, +1797. By Thomas Paine, A.M. Published according to act of Congress. +Boston: Printed by Manning & Loring, for the author. 1797. 2 p.l., +(1)6-32 p. sq. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- A second copy. + + =NBH p.v. 14, no 8.= + + +---- The works, in verse and prose, of the late Robert Treat Paine, +Jun. Esq. With notes. To which are prefixed, sketches of his life, +character and writings. Boston: Printed and published by J. Belcher. +1812. 1 p.l., (i)vi-lxxxviii p., 3 l., (1)6-464 p., 1 l., 1 port. 8º. + + =NBG= + + _Contents_: Sketches of the life, character and writings + of the late R. T. Paine, by Charles Prentiss.--Tributary + lines, to the memory of the late R. T. Paine.--Part + 1, Juvenile poems, consisting chiefly of college + exercises.--Part 2, Miscellaneous poems.--Part 3, Odes and + songs.--Part 4, Prose writings.--Notes. + + Part 2 includes the following: The prize prologue; + The invention of letters, a poem; The ruling passion, an + occasional poem; Dedicatory address spoken at the New + Federal Theatre; Monody on the death of Lieutenant General + Sir John Moore. + + +=Paine=, Thomas, 1737-1809. Miscellaneous poems. By Thomas Paine. +London: Printed and published by R. Carlile, 55, Fleet Street. 1819. +2 p.l., 24 p. 8º. + + =* C p.v. 403, no. 22= + + _Contents_: The Farmer's dog. Song on the death of + General Wolfe. The snow-drop and critic. Account of the + burning of Bachelor's Hall. Liberty tree. Verses on war. + Song to the tune of Rule Britannia. Lines occasioned by the + question--"What is love?" Epigram on a long-nosed friend. + On the British constitution. Story of Korah, Dathan, and + Abiram. A commentary on the eastern wise men. Lines from + "The castle in the air" to "The little corner of the world." + + Reprinted in _The writings of Thomas Paine_, edited by + M. D. Conway, New York, 1896, v. 4, p. 477-498, _IAW_, with + the addition of the following poems: The monk and the Jew, + The Boston patriotic song, Columbia, Contentment, Federalist + feast, and Lines extempore. + + The "Verses on war," which is printed in Conway's + edition under the title "An address to Lord Howe," is + printed under the title "To the king of England" in _The + Columbian museum_, Philadelphia, 1793, part 1, January to + June, p. 4-5, _Reserve_. "The Liberty tree" is also in _The + Pennsylvania magazine_, Philadelphia, May, 1775, p. 328-329, + _Reserve_, and in Stedman and Hutchinson's _A library of + American literature_. New York, 1889, v. 3, p. 234, _NBB_. + + +A =Paraphrase= on part of the oeconomy of human life. _See_ =Bowdoin=, +James. + + +=Parke=, John, 1750-1789. The lyric works of Horace, translated into +English verse: to which are added, a number of original poems. By a +Native of America [i.e., John Parke]. Philadelphia: Printed by Eleazer +Oswald, at the Coffee-House. M,DCC,LXXXVI. xli, 334 p., 8 l. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Prologue on the death of General Montgomery. By Colonel J. P. +[i.e. John Parke.] (In: H. H. Brackenridge, The death of General +Montgomery at the siege of Quebec. Philadelphia, 1777. 12º. 2 l. at +end.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Prologue and epilogue to the Battle of Bunkers-Hill. (In: H. H. +Brackenridge, The Battle of Bunkers-Hill. Philadelphia, 1776. 8º. +p.l. 3, p. 37-38.) + + =Reserve= + + +A =Parnassian= shop. _See_ =Story=, Isaac. + + +=Pasquin=, Anthony, pseud. _See_ =Williams=, John. + + +=Patriotic= effusions. _See_ =Longstreet=, Augustus Baldwin. + + +The =Patriots= of North-America: a sketch. With explanatory notes. +New-York: Printed in the Year M,DCC,LXXV. New York: Reprinted, William +Abbatt, 1914. 46 p. 8º. (Magazine of history with notes and queries, +extra no. 27.) + + =IAG (Magazine)= + + Only two copies of the original are known to exist in + the United States. + + +=Paulding=, James Kirke, 1779-1860. The backwoodsman. A poem. By J. K. +Paulding. Philadelphia: Published by M. Thomas, 52, Chestnut St. J. +Maxwell, printer. 1818. 5 p.l., (1)8-198 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Extract printed in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of + American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, p. 180-184, _NBH_. + + +---- The lay of the Scottish fiddle: a tale of Havre De Grace. +Supposed to be written by Walter Scott, Esq. [By James Kirke +Paulding.] First American from the fourth Edinburgh edition. +New-York: Published by Inskeep & Bradford, and Bradford & Inskeep, +Philadelphia. 1813. 1 p.l., (1)4-262 p. 32º. + + =NBHD= + + Reviewed in the _London quarterly_, v. 10, p. 463-467, + Jan., 1814. + + +---- The lay of the Scottish fiddle. A poem. In five cantos. Supposed +to be written by W--S--, Esq. [By James Kirke Paulding.] First +American from the fourth Edinburgh edition. London: Printed for James +Cawthorn, Cockspur-Street. 1814. 1 p.l., (i)iv-xvi, 222 p., 1 l. of +adv. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + "A free parody of the _Lay of the last minstrel_.... + The production is principally devoted to satirizing the + predatory warfare of the British on Chesapeake Bay, and, + what is somewhat remarkable, was published in a very + handsome style in London with a preface highly complimentary + to the author. The hero is Admiral Cockburn, and the + principal incident the burning and sacking of the little + town of Havre de Grace on the coast of Maryland. It had at + that time what might be called the distinction of provoking + a fierce review from the London Quarterly. It is clever as + a parody, and contains many passages entirely original and + of no inconsiderable beauty."--Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia of + American literature_, New-York, 1866, v. 2, p. 10. + + +=Payne=, John Howard, 1791-1852. The life and writings of John +Howard Payne, the author of Home, Sweet Home; The Tragedy of Brutus; +and other dramatic works. By Gabriel Harrison. Albany, N. Y.: Joel +Munsell, 1875. ix, 408 p., 1 l., 1 port. 4º. + + =AN= + + Lispings of the Muse: a selection of juvenile poems, + chiefly written at and before the age of sixteen, + p. 247-267.--Poems of later days, p. 269-292. + + +---- John Howard Payne, dramatist, poet, actor, and author of +Home, Sweet Home! His life and writings. By Gabriel Harrison. With +illustrations. Revised edition. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co., +1885. 404 p., front. (port.), 1 fac., 1 pl. 8º. + + =AN= + + Lispings of the Muse. Juvenile poems, p. 295-314.--Poems + of later days, p. 315-338. + + +=Payson=, Edward, 1657-1732. A small contribution to the memorial of +that truely worthy, and worthily man of God, Mr. Samuel Phillips, +pastor to the church of Christ in Rowley; who deceased, April 22d, +1696, ætatis 71. (In: Thomas Gage, The history of Rowley. Boston, +1840. 12º. p. 79-84.) + + =IQH= + + +=Peck=, John. A short poem, containing a descant on the universal +plan: also, lines on the happy end of the righteous, and the +prosperity and death of the rich man, spoken of in St. Luke's Gospel +... Chap. XVI. By John Peck. Boston: Printed for Nath'l Coverly. 1818. +1 p.l., 3-24 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Pennsylvania= Gazette. The New-Year verses of the Printers Lads, who +carry the Pennsylvania Gazette to the Customers. January 1, 1780. +[Philadelphia, 1779.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Text in two columns. + + +---- ---- January 1, 1781. [Philadelphia, 1780.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Text in one column. + + +---- ---- January 1, 1782. [Philadelphia, 1781.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Text in one column. + + +---- The New-Year verses of the Printers Lads, who carry about the +Pennsylvania Gazette to the Customers. January 1, 1783. [Philadelphia, +1782.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Text in one column enclosed in a border. + + +---- New-Year verses, for those who carry the Pennsylvania Gazette to +the Customers. January 1, 1785. [Philadelphia. 1784.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Text in one column enclosed in a border. + + +=Pepper-Box=, Peter, pseud. _See_ =Fessenden=, Thomas Green. + + +=Philenia=, a lady of Boston, pseud. _See_ =Morton=, Mrs. Sarah +Wentworth Apthorp. + + +=Phillis=, a servant girl, pseud. An elegiac poem on the death of ... +reverend and learned Mr. George Whitefield. _See_ =Wheatley=, Phillis. + + +=Pierce=, William. An epitaph--intended for the monument of major +general Greene. By William Pierce, esq. of Savannah. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1789. 8º. v. 6, p. 86.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Pierce=, William Leigh. The year: a poem, in three cantos. By William +Leigh Pierce, Esq. New-York: Published by David Longworth. At the +Shakspeare-Gallery. 1813. 3 p.l., (1)8-191 p., 1 l., (1)4-75 p., 1 l. +of adv. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + Extract printed in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of + American poetry_. Boston, 1829, v. 2, p. 130-133, _NBH_. + + +=Pierpont=, John, 1785-1866. Airs of Palestine; a poem: by John +Pierpont. Esq.... Baltimore: Published for the author. B. Edes, +printer. 1816. xxvi, 56 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + Has also an engraved title-page. + + Reprinted in _Specimens of the American poets_, London, + 1822, p. 25-69, _NBH_. + + +---- ---- Second edition. Boston: Published by Wells and Lilly, 1817. +58 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + Has also an engraved title-page. + + +---- ---- Third edition--revised. Boston: Published by Wells and +Lilly, 1817. 2 p.l., (i)iv-vii, (1)14-66 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + Has also an engraved title-page. + + +---- The portrait. A poem delivered before the Washington Benevolent +Society, of Newburyport, on the evening of October 27, 1812. By John +Pierpont, Esq. Boston: Published by Bradford and Read. T. B. Wait & +Co., printers. 1812. 36 p. 8º. + + =NBHD p.v. 1, no. 13= + + +=Pietas= et gratulatio Collegii Cantabrigiensis apud Novanglos. +Bostoni--Massachusettensium: Typis J. Green & J. Russell. MDCCLXI. +xiv p., 1 l., 106 p. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + These are poems addressed to His Majesty King George + III., on his accession to the throne, by the president and + fellows of Harvard College. + + There are thirty-one papers by the following + contributors: 1. By President Edward Holyoke; 2. By John + Lovell; 3. By Stephen Sewall; 4. By Benjamin Church; 5. By + Stephen Sewall; 6. By Francis Bernard; 7. By John Lowell; + 8-9. By James Bowdoin; 10. By Samuel Deane; 11. By Benjamin + Church; 12. By Stephen Sewall; 13. By Samuel Cooper; 14-16. + By Stephen Sewall; 17. By James Bowdoin; 18-20. By Francis + Bernard; 21-22. By John Lovell or Stephen Sewall; 23. By + Stephen Sewall; 24. By John Lovell or Stephen Sewall; 25. By + John Lovell; 26-27. By Samuel Deane; 28. By Samuel Cooper; + 29. By Thomas Oliver; 30. By James Bowdoin; 31. By Francis + Bernard. + + For fuller details about this work and its contributors + consult Duyckinck's _Cyclopædia of American literature_, New + York, 1866, v. 1, p. 11-14, _NBB_. + + Reviewed in _The Critical review_, London, 1763, v. 16, + p. 289-291, _NAA_; _The Monthly review_, London. 1763, + v. 29, p. 22-28, _NAA_. + + +=Pills=, poetical, political and philosophical. _See_ =Fessenden=, +Thomas Green. + + +=Pindar=, Jonathan, pseud. The probationary odes. _See_ =Tucker=, +Saint George. + + +A =Poem=, addressed to the people of Virginia, on New-Year's day, +1788. Alexandria, January 10, 1788. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1788. 8º. v. 3, p. 92-93.) + + =Reserve= + + +A =Poem= dedicated to the memory of the reverend and excellent Mr. +Urian Oakes. _See_ =Mather=, Cotton. + + +[=Poem=] On the death of Gen. George Washington. (In: The Monthly +magazine and American review for the year 1799. New-York, 1800. 8º. +v. 1, p. 477-478.) + + =Reserve= + + +A =Poem= on reading the President's address. _See_ =Honeywood=, St. +John. + + +A =Poem= presented to His Excellency William Burnet Esq; on his +arrival at Boston, n.p. [1728?] 1 p.l., 5 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + One of "Fifty copies reprinted from the edition of 1728." + + "The only known copy of this poem in America, so far + as the writer has been able to ascertain, is in the Boston + Public Library, where it was acquired a few years ago. The + British Museum has also a copy. The author is unknown. It + is quite inferior to the verses of Mather Byles on the same + occasion, and its publication lacks the Governor's sanction, + which was given to the former. Both poems are printed in + similar type, and probably were from the same press. The + rarity of this publication has induced the present reprint, + which is approximately in fac-simile of the original. + Paterson, N. J., July 1, 1897. William Nelson." + + +A =Poem=, upon the present times, with a brief [and] humble address +to the Almighty, in behalf of the [case] of our cause. Composed by +Philoleuthers Americanus. [1776?] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Text in three columns. + + +=Poem=, written in Boston, at the commencement of the late Revolution. +(In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1788. 8º. v. 4, p. 380-382.) + + =Reserve= + + +The =Poems= of Arouet. _See_ =Ladd=, Joseph Brown. + + +=Poems= moral and divine, on the following subjects: I. Man's fall +and exhaltation: or, The Christian triumph. In seven cantos, II. +Modern infidelity: or, The principles of atheism exposed and refuted. +Inscrib'd to a friend. III. A paraphrase on the following Psalms: +CXIX, CXLIII, CXLII, CXX, XIII, CXLIV and CXXX. IV. The prince and +the patriot. In three dialogues. By an American gentleman. To which +is added, some account of the author. London: Printed by Charles +Rivington, for John and James Rivington in St. Paul's Churchyard. +MDCCLVI. 3 p.l., 105(1) p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Poems=, occasioned by several circumstances and occurrences in the +present grand contest for liberty. _See_ =Case=, Wheeler. + + +=Poetic= testimonials of respect for the virtues and character of our +illustrious chief, Gen. George Washington, who died December 14, 1799. +The following Hymn and Ode were sung on the 9th of January, 1800, in +the Old South Meeting-House, in Boston, before a numerous concourse +of citizens. Hymn, by the Rev. John S. J. Gardner.--Ode, by Thomas +Paine. A.M.--A Monody, by John Lathrop, Esq.--Ode to Content.--Ode to +Science.--New-Year's Address.--Lines extracted from title-page of Mr. +Thomas Paine's Eulogy on Gen. Washington. (In: The Columbian phenix +and Boston review. Boston. 1800. 8º. v. 1 for 1800, p. 50-54.) + + =Reserve= + + +A =Poetical= description of song birds: interspersed with entertaining +songs, fables, and tales, adapted to each subject: for the amusement +of children. The first Worcester edition. Printed at Worcester, +Massachusetts, by Isaiah Thomas, sold at his bookstore in Worcester, +and by him and company in Boston. MDCCLXXXVIII. 88 p. illus. 32º. + + =Reserve= + + +A =Poetical= epistle to His Excellency George Washington ... from an +inhabitant of the State of Maryland. _See_ =Wharton=, Charles Henry. + + +The =Poetical= nosegay; or The swindler James Geo. Semple revived in +the person of Hugh Workman, a native of Ireland. Price for single +copy, 30 cents viz: for original--10 cents. Notes part 1 and 2 ditto. +Per dozen--two cents each copy--viz: for original 8 cents--notes 1 +and 2, 8 cents each. Copy-right secured, according to law. 1800. 5 +p.l., 20 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Lines on verso of title-page and dedication signed: D. W. + + A satire on the duel between Mathew Lyon and Roger + Griswold in Congress, Jan. 30 and Feb. 15, 1798. For a full + account of this affair see the _Historical magazine_, Jan., + 1864. + + All leaves after p. 20 lacking. + + +A =Poetical= picture of America. _See_ =Ritson=, Mrs. Anne. + + +The =Poetical= vagaries of a Knight of the Folding-Stick, of +Paste-Castle. To which is annexed, the History of the Garret, &c. &c. +translated from the hieroglyphics of the society. By a member of the +order of the Blue-String. Gotham. Printed for the author. 1815. +143 p., 2 pl. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Attributed to John Bradford by Wegelin. + + +The =Political= green-house, for the year 1798. Addressed to the +readers of the Connecticut Courant, January 1st, 1799. Published +according to act of Congress. Hartford: Printed by Hudson & Goodwin. +[1799.] 1 p.l., (1)4-24 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Written by Richard Alsop, Lemuel Hopkins, and Theodore + Dwight, in unequal proportions. + + Reprinted in _The Echo_, New York, 1807, p. 233-266, + _Reserve_ and _NBH_. + + +The =Political= nursery, for the year eighteen hundred two. +Packet-Office, Norwich, January 1st, 1802. 16 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Bd. with: The Jeffersoniad. 1801. 16º. + + +The =Political= passing bell. _See_ =Richards=, George. + + +The =Poor= man's advice to his poor neighbours: a ballad, to the tune +of Chevy-Chase. New York: Printed in the year M.DCC.LXXIV. 19 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Porter=, Jacob. Poems, by Jacob Porter. Hartford: Printed by Peter +Gleason and Co., 1818. 2 p.l., (1)6-27 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Porter=, Sarah. The royal penitent. Part II. (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 301-305.) + + =NBH= + + +=Pownall=, Mary A. Mrs. Pownall's address, in behalf of the French +musicians, delivered on her benefit concert night, at Oeller's +hotel, Chestnut-street, Philadelphia. To which are added, Pastoral +songs, written by herself at an early period of life. Also the songs +performed at the concerts ... New Theatre. Philadelphia: Printed and +sold at Story's office, (No. 36) Fourth-street nearly opposite the +Indian Queen tavern. [1793.] 1 p.l., (1)4-28 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + The "Pastoral songs," p. [5]-15, have a special + title-page, with imprint reading: Philadelphia, MDCCXIII + [i.e., 1793]. + + "New songs sung at the concerts. New Theatre, + Philadelphia," p. [17]-28. + + +=Pratt=, Benjamin, 1710-1763. Death. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of +American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 324-326.) + + =NBH= + + +=Prentiss=, Charles, 1774-1820. Child of Pallas: Devoted mostly to the +belles-lettres. By Charles Prentiss.--Baltimore--Printed weekly, By +Warner & Hanna. 1800. 288 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- New England freedom: a poem delivered before the Washington +Benevolent Society, in Brimfield, February 22d, 1813. By Charles +Prentiss. Brookfield: Printed by E. Merriam & Co. March, 1813. 1 p.l., +(1)4-28 p. 8º. + + =NBHD p.v. 1, no. 3= + + +---- A poem delivered at Brookfield, July 5th, 1813, before the +Washington Benevolent Societies of that and adjacent towns. By Charles +Prentiss. Published at the request of the audience. Brookfield: +Printed by E. Merriam & Co. 1813. 1 p.l., (1)4-14 p. 8º. + + =NBHD p.v. 1, no. 1= + + p. 14 wrongly printed 44. + + +=Prichard=, William. Character of St. Tamany. (In: The Beauties of +poetry, British and American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 196-197.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 223-224, _NBH_. + + +=Prime=, Benjamin Young, 1733-1791. Muscipula sive cambromyomachia: +The mouse-trap, or The battle of the Welsh and the mice; in Latin and +English: with other poems, in different languages. By an American +[i.e., Benjamin Young Prime]. New-York: Published by M. W. Dodd +[1840]. 96 p., 1 map. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + _Contents_: Preface.--Muscipula, The mouse-trap.--Dr. + Watts' Latin ode, English translation; English ode, + Latin translation.--Ode of Sappho in English; The same + in French.--Horatii, od. 22, lib. 1; same in Greek; + same in English.--Meditation over a dying patient.--A + Pindaric ode.--An elegy and palinody.--The desperate + wish.--A song for the Sons of Liberty.--To a certain brave + officer.--Appendix. + + +The =Probationary= odes of Jonathan Pindar. _See_ =Tucker=, Saint +George. + + +The =Progress= of dulness. _See_ =Trumbull=, John. + + +The =Progress= of society. A poem. In three parts. New-York: Published +by D. Longworth, 11 Park. Clayton & Kingsland, printers. 1817. 2 p.l., +(i)vi-vii p., 2 l., (1)14-62 p., 1 l. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Querno=, Camillo, pseud. _See_ =Odell=, Jonathan. + + +=Quince=, Peter, pseud. A parnassian shop. _See_ =Story=, Isaac. + + +=Quincey=, Vernon H. A parody on some of the most striking passages +in a late pamphlet, entitled "A Letter to a Federalist," with large +additions & improvements, by Vernon H. Quincey, Esq. Portsmouth, N. H. +Printed at the Oracle Press, 1805. 1 p.l., (i)vi-viii, (1)10-47 p. 8º. + + =IO(1805) p.v. 1, no. 4= + + A satire on democracy and its abettors. + + +=Ralph=, James, d. 1762. Clarinda: or The fair libertine. A poem. In +four cantos. London: Printed for John Gray, at the Cross-Keys in the +Poultry. 1729. 4 p.l., 43 p. 8º. (In his: Miscellaneous poems. London, +1779.) + + =Reserve= + + The author was a native of Pennsylvania. + + +---- Night: a poem. In four books.... By J. Ralph. The second edition. +London: Printed by C. Ackers, for W. Meadows at the Angel in Cornhill; +and S. Billingsley at the Judge's Head in Chancery-Lane. MDCCXXIX. +3 p.l., xi(i) p., 2 l., 68 p., 1 l. 8º. (In his: Miscellaneous poems. +London, 1729.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The tempest: or The terrors of death. A poem in blank verse. By +James Ralph. London: Printed for W. Meadows, at the Angel in Cornhill. +M.DCC.XXVII. ii, 27 p. 8º. (In his: Miscellaneous poems. London, 1729.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Zeuma: or The love of liberty. A poem. In three books. By James +Ralph. London: Printed by C. Ackers, for S. Billingsley at the +Judge's-Head in Chancery-Lane. 1729. 6 p.l., vi p., 1 l., 136 p. 8º. +(In his: Miscellaneous poems. London, 1729.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Ray=, William, 1771-1827. Horrors of slavery: or, The American +tars in Tripoli. Containing an account of the loss and capture of +the United States frigate Philadelphia; treatment and suffering +of the prisoners; description of the place; manners, customs, &c. +of the Tripolitans; public transactions of the United States with +that regency, including Gen. Eaton's expedition, interspersed with +interesting remarks, anecdotes, and poetry, on various subjects. +Written during upwards of nineteen months' imprisonment and vassalage +among the Turks. By William Ray. Troy: Printed by Oliver Lyon, for the +author. 1808. New York. Reprinted. William Abbatt, 1911. 295 p. 8º. +(The Magazine of history with notes and queries, extra number 14.) + + =IAG= + + The poetical pieces are the following: + + The American tars in Tripolitan slavery. Exordium, + p. 9-21.--Invocation to Neptune, p. 64.--The loaf, + p. 104-105.--Elegy on the death of John Hilliard, who died + Jan. 3d, 1804, in the prison of Tripoli, p. 112-113.--Elegy + on the death of Lieutenant James Decatur, who fell August + 3d, 1804, in an action with the Tripolitan gun-boats, + p. 148-149.--Song, p. 153-154.--Lines addressed to Gen. + Eaton, on reading the Congressional debate respecting his + Golden Medal, written on board the U. States frigate Essex, + p. 253-254.--Poetry, published in The Albany Register, during + the summer of 1807, p. 281-293.--Spring [published in the + Northern Budget, Troy, May 3, 1808], p. 294-295. + + Contains also many other poems without titles. + + +---- Tripoli; The way to be happy; Village greatness. (In: Samuel +Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, +p. 140-144.) + + =NBH= + + +=Re-re-commencement=: a kind of a poem: calculated to be recited +before an "assemblage" of New-England divines.... _See_ =Biglow=, +William. + + +The =Recluse=, pseud. _See_ The =Art= of domestic happiness. + + +The =Revelation= of nature, with the prophecy of reason. _See_ +=Stewart=, John. + + +=Rich=. R., fl. 1610. Newes from Virginia (1610). A tract in verse +by R. Rich, soldier. Reprinted after the only existing copy of the +original edition. London: Printed for private circulation, 1874. +19 p. 4º. + + =ITC= + + One of twenty-five copies printed. + + The first published metrical effusion relating to + America, by one who had lived in America. + + Original title-page reads: Nevves from Virginia. The + lost flocke triumphant. With the happy arriual of that + famous and worthy knight Sr. Thomas Gates: and the well + reputed and valiant captaine Mr. Christopher Newporte, and + others, into England. With the maner of their distresse in + the Iland of Deuils (otherwise called Bemoothawes) where + they remayned 42. weekes, and builded two pynaces, in which + they returned into Virginia. By R. Rich, gent., one of the + voyage. London Printed by Edw: Allde, and are to be solde by + Iohn Wright, at Christ-Church dore. 1610. + + Also printed in Stedman and Hutchinson, _Library of + American literature_. New York, 1889, v. 1, p. 22-24, _NBB_. + + +=Richards=, George, d. 1814. The Declaration of Independence; a poem: +accompanied by odes, songs, &c. Adapted to the day. By a citizen of +Boston [i.e., George Richards]. Printed at Boston [by Isaiah Thomas +and E. T. Andrews]. Faust's Statue, No. 45, Newbury Street, MDCCXCIII. +2 p.l, (1)6-24 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Library also has one of 50 copies reprinted, New York, + 1870, in _NBH p.v. 26, no. 5_. + + The Declaration of Independence is reprinted in Samuel + Kettell, _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 28-31, _NBH_. + + +---- Elegiac ode, sacred to the memory of General Greene. (In: +American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. +p. 201-205.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The political passing bell; an elegy. Written in a country +meeting house, April, 1789. Parodized from Gray; and accompanied +with a correct copy of the sublime original. For the entertainment +of those, who laugh at all parties. [By George Richards].... Boston: +Printed by Isaiah Thomas and company, 1789. Tarrytown, N. Y., +Reprinted, W. Abbatt, 1916. 19 p. 8º. (The Magazine of history with +notes and queries, extra number 48.) + + =IAG (Magazine)= + + Original edition published anonymously. In the present + reprint the facsimile of t.-p. of original has author's name + inserted in brackets. + + Gray's Elegy (including three verses usually omitted) + appears on alternate pages with the parody. + + +=Richmond=, William Ebenezer, 1786-1873. Mount Hope, an evening +excursion. By William E. Richmond, barrister at law. Providence: +Printed by Miller & Hutchens, 1818. 2 p.l., (1)6-69(1) p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + The poem was read, in an unfinished state, before the + Federal Adelphi Society, September, 1816. + + +=Ritson=, Mrs. Anne. A poetical picture of America, being observations +made, during a residence of several years, at Alexandria, and +Norfolk, in Virginia; illustrative of the manners and customs of the +inhabitants: and interspersed with anecdotes, arising from a general +intercourse with society in that country, from the year 1799 to 1807. +By a lady [i.e., Mrs. Anne Ritson]. London: Printed for the author; +and sold by Vernor, Hood, and Sharpe, 31, Poultry. 1809. 8 p.l., +(1)4-177 p. 16º. + + =NBI= + + _Contents_: A voyage across the Atlantic.--Passage up + the Patomak.--Alexandria.--Norfolk.--Manners and customs of + Norfolk.--Customs general in Virginia. + + +=Rivington's= New-York Gazetteer. Ode on the New Year 1774. Delivered +by Hugh Duncan, one of the Carriers of Rivington's New-York Gazetteer. +[New York, 1773.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Eight stanzas of four lines each. Text in one column. + + +=Rogers=, John, 1630-1684. [A poem.] Upon Mrs. Ann Bradstreet her +poems, &c. (In: Anne Bradstreet, Several poems compiled with great +variety of wit and learning.... Boston: John Foster, 1678. 24º. +p.l. 6-7.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in the _New England historical and + genealogical register_, Boston, 1851, v. 5, p. 138-139, _* + R-Room 328_ and in Stedman and Hutchinson's _A library of + American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 44-45, _NBB_. + + +=Rogers=, Robert, 1731-1795. Ponteach: or The savages of America. A +tragedy [by Major Robert Rogers]. London: Printed for the author; and +sold by J. Millan, opposite the Admiralty, Whitehall. M.DCC.LXVI. +[Price 2s. 6d.] 110 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NCO p.v. 222= + + Reviewed in _The Monthly review or literary journal_, + London, 1766, v. 34, p. 242, _NAA_. + + +---- ---- With an introduction and a biography of the author by Allen +Nevins. Chicago: The Caxton Club, 1914. 261 p., front. (port.) 8º. + + =Reserve= + + One of 175 copies on Old Stratford paper. + + +=Rose=, Robert H. Sketches in verse. [By Robert H. Rose.] Printed for +C. & A. Conrad & Co., Philadelphia, by Smith & Maxwell. 1810. 1 p.l., +(i)vi-viii, (1)10-184 p., 2 pl. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + Also has an engraved title-page. + + +=Rowson=, Mrs. Susanna Haswell, 1762-1824. Miscellaneous poems; by +Susanna Rowson, preceptress of the Ladies' Academy, Newton, Mass. +Author of Charlotte, Inquisitor, Reuben and Rachel, &c &c. Printed for +the author, by Gilbert and Dean, State-Street, sold by them, and by W. +P. and L. Blake, Cornhill, Boston.--1804. 1 p.l., (i)iv-x p., 1 l., +(1)14-227 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + Contains bookplate of Thomas Jefferson McKee. + + +=Rugeley=, Rowland. The story of Æneas and Dido burlesqued. [By +Rowland Rugeley.] Charlestown [i.e., Charleston, S. C.]. Printed and +sold by Robert Wells, 1774. xvi, 94 p. sm. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + The above copy has the author's name written in ink on + the title-page by a former owner. The preface, which is + dated "South-Carolina, 1774" shows by its contents that the + work is undoubtedly an American production. + + +=S.=, J. To the Rev^{end} Mr. William Hubbard on his most exact +History of New-Englands troubles. (In: William Hubbard, The present +state of New-England. London, 1677. 4º. p.l. 6.) + + =Reserve= + + Also in reprint of Hubbard's work, with notes by S. G. + Drake, Roxbury, 1865, v. 1, p. 21-22, _HBC_. + + Attributed to John Sherman by S. G. Drake and to + Jeremiah Shepard by J. L. Sibley. + + +=S.=, T. An almanack for the year of our lord 1656.... By T. S.... +Cambridg Printed by Samuel Green. 1656. 8 l. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Photostat facsimile of a copy in the library of the + American Antiquarian Society. + + Poems on leaves 2-7. + + Probably by Thomas Shepard of Charlestown. + + +---- An elegie on the death of that eminent minister of the Gospel, +Mr. John Norton, the reverend teacher of the church of Christ at +Boston, who exchanged this life for a better April 5, 1663. (In: N. +Morton, New Englands memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. 12º. p. 166-168.) + + =Reserve= + + +=St. Denis Le Cadet=, pseud. The lottery, a poem. _See_ =Denison=, +Edward. + + +=St. John=, Peter. American taxation, 1765. _See_ =American= taxation. + + +=St. John=, Samuel. American taxation, 1765. _See_ =American= taxation. + + +=Sands=, Robert Charles, joint author. _See_ =Eastburn=, James Wallis. + + +=Sargent=, Lucius Manlius, 1786-1867. Caelii symposii ænigmata. Hanc +novam editionem, juxta lectiones optimas diligenter congestam, curavit +Lucius M. Sargent. Bostoniae. Nov-Angl: Prelo Belcher et Armstrong. +MDCCCVII. 1 p.l., (i)iv, 5-35 p. 12º. + + =NBH p.v. 2, no. 6= + + +---- Hubert and Ellen. With other poems. The trial of the harp.... +Billowy water.... The plunderer's grave.... The tear-drop.... The +billow. By Lucius M. Sargent. Boston: Published by Chester Stebbins. +1813. 1 p.l., (1)4-135 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + "The plunderer's grave" is also printed in Samuel + Kettell, _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 134-137, _NBH_. + + +=Sargent=, Winthrop, 1753-1820. Boston. A poem. By Winthrop Sargent. +Second edition. Corrected and enlarged. Boston: Printed by Hosea +Sprague, sold at no 49, Marlboro' Street. 1803. 2 p.l., (i)vi, +(1)8-23 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Schoolcraft=, Henry Rowe, 1793-1864. Transallegania, or The groans of +Missouri. A poem. [By Henry Howe Schoolcraft.] New-York: Printed for +the author, by J. Seymour. 1820. 1 p.l., (1)4-24 p. 16º. + + =NBH p.v. 20, no. 2= + + Autograph inscription on cover reads: To E. A. Duyckinck + Esq. with the respects of the author H. R. Schoolcraft. + Washington, 9th May, 1854. + + +=Scott=, Jonathan M. Blue lights, or The convention. A poem, in four +cantos. By Jonathan M. Scott, Esq. New-York: Printed and published by +Charles N. Baldwin, Bookseller, Chatham, corner of Chamber-street. +1817. 3 p.l., (i)vi-xi p., 1 l., (1)16-150 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- The sorceress, or Salem delivered. A poem, in four cantos. By +Jonathan M. Scott, Esq. New-York: Printed and published by Charles N. +Baldwin, Bookseller, corner of Chamber and Chatham Street. 1817. +xii p., 1 l., (1)16-120 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Scott=, Moses Y. Fatal jest, a tale: and other poems. By Moses Y. +Scott. New-York: Published by Elam Bliss, 208 Broadway. J. Seymour, +printer. 1819. 2 p.l., (i)iv-vi p., 1 l., (1)10-142 p. 24º. + + =NBH= + + +=Sears=, Reuben. A poem on the mineral waters of Ballston and +Saratoga, with notes illustrating the history of the springs and +adjacent country. By Reuben Sears, A.M. Ballston Spa: Published by the +author, J. Comstock, printer. 1819. 3 p.l., (1)8-108 p. 24º. + + =IRM= + + p. [37]-95 contain: Notes illustrating the history of + the springs and adjacent country. + + p. 96-102 contain poem entitled: Philosoph; p. 103-108, + one entitled Immortality. + + +=Searson=, John. Elegiac verses on the decease of his late Excellency, +the illustrious and ever-memorable, great and good General George +Washington, of immortal memory. [By John Searson. Philadelphia, 1800?] +4 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Title from caption. + + Bound with and usually appended to, the author's _Mount + Vernon, a poem_.... Philadelphia [1799?]. + + +---- Mount Vernon, a poem: being the seat of his excellency George +Washington, in the state of Virginia; lieutenant-general and +commander in chief of the land forces of the United States of America. +This rural, romantic and descriptive poem of the seat of so great a +character, it is hoped may please, with a copper-plate likeness of the +General. It was taken from an actual view on the spot by the author, +15th May, 1799. Also a cursory view of Georgetown, city of Washington, +and the capitol. By John Searson, formerly of Philadelphia, merchant. +Philadelphia: Printed for the author by Folwell [1799]. vi p., 1 l., +(1)10-83, 4 p., front. (port.) 8º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + The last 4 p. contain: Elegiac verses on the decease + of his late Excellency the illustrious and ever-memorable, + great and good General George Washington, of immortal + memory. [Philadelphia, 1800?] + + Also contains the following poems: Thoughts in + Mount-Vernon garden, p. 28-29; Poetic address to the Deity, + p. 31-32; Spring hymn, in praise of the Creator, p. 32-36: + Poetic description of a grand parade, at Baltimore, on + the 7th of November, 1798: occasioned by his excellency + general Washington's passing through Baltimore, in his + way to the northward, on some public business, p. 36-37; + Acrostic on Mount-Vernon, the seat of his excellency George + Washington, p. 37-38; Alexandria, p. 38-39; George-Town, + p. 39; City Washington, p. 40-42; Lines on St. Tammany's Day, + p. 42-43; Ode to Liberty, p. 43-44; Advice to every member + of Congress, p. 44-45; On a rural life, p. 45-46; On the + dissolution of the world, p. 46; An evening hymn, p. 47; A + hymn of praise, or solemn address, to the God of seasons, + by James Thomson, p. 47-52; Paraphrase of part of the Book + of Job, p. 52-67; In imitation of Pope's Universal prayer, + p. 68-69; On the decease of his excellency general Anthony + Wayne, p. 69-70; On the return of the epidemic fever to + Philadelphia, in 1799, p. 80-82; Valedictory, p. 83. + + +---- Poems on various subjects and different occasions, chiefly +adapted to rural entertainment in the United States of America. By +John Searson, formerly of Philadelphia, merchant. Philadelphia: +Printed by Snowden & M'Corkle, No. 47 North Fourth-street. 1797. +vi, 7-94 p., 5 l. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Seccomb=, John, 1708-1792. Father Abbey's will; to which is added +a letter of courtship to his virtuous and amiable widow. [By John +Seccomb.] With historical and biographical notes [by John Langdon +Sibley]. Privately printed. Cambridge, 1854. 14 p. 8º. + + =AGZ p.v. 1, no. 1= + + The poem was first published in _The Gentleman's + magazine_, London, 1732, v. 2, p. 770, under the following + title: The last will of Mr. Mathew A ...y, late bed-maker + and sweeper in Cambridge. + + Reprinted in _The Massachusetts magazine_, Boston, 1794, + v. 6, no. 11, p. 696-697, _Reserve_. + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 127-128, + _NBB_; Stedman and Hutchinson, _A library of American + literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 352-356, _NBB_. + + +=Selyns=, Henricus, 1636-1701. In Jesu Christi Magnalia Americana, +digesta in septem libros, per magnum, doctissimumque virum, D. +Cottonum Matherum. (In: Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana. +London, 1702. 4º.) + + =Reserve= + + In Latin. + + Also in later editions of the _Magnalia_, as follows: + Hartford, 1820, v. 1, p. 20-21; Hartford, 1855, v. 1, p. 22, + with English translation on p. 23. + + +---- Memoir and poems. (In: Henry C. Murphy, Anthology of New +Netherland. New York, 1865. 8º. p. 77-183.) + + =NBH= + + +=Several= poems compiled with great variety of wit and learning. _See_ +=Bradstreet=, Mrs. Anne Dudley. + + +=Sewall=, Jonathan Mitchell, 1748-1808. Miscellaneous poems, with +several specimens from the author's manuscript version of the poems +of Ossian. By J. M. Sewall, Esq. Published agreeably to an act of +Congress. Portsmouth: Printed by William Treadwell, & Co for the +author. 1801. 2 p.l., (1)6-304 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Versification of President Washington's excellent +Farewell-Address to the citizens of the United States. By a gentleman +of Portsmouth, N. H. [i.e., Jonathan Mitchell Sewall.] Published +according to act of Congress. Portsmouth, New-Hampshire: Printed +and sold by Charles Peirce, at the Columbian Bookstore, No. 5. +Daniel-Street. 1798. 54 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Sewall=, Stephen, 1734-1804. [Poem.] On the death of George II. (In: +Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. +p. 328-330.) + + =NBH= + + +---- _See also_ =Pietas= et gratulatio.... + + +=Shaw.= John, 1778-1809. Poems by the late Doctor John Shaw. To which +is prefixed a biographical sketch of the author. [By John E. Hall.] +Published by Edward Earle, Philadelphia, and by Edward J. Coale, +Baltimore. Fry and Kammerer, printers. 1810. 1 p.l., (i)vi-viii, +252 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + Some of Shaw's poems are printed in Samuel Kettell, + _Specimens of American poetry_, Boston, 1829, v. 2, + p. 128-130, _NBH_. + + +=Shaw-Standish=, Thomas. A mournful song, occasioned by the shipwreck +of the schooner Armistice, Captain Douglass, on Cohasset rocks, August +31, 1815 ... bound from Portland for Baltimore ... on which occasion +five persons perished. By Thomas Shaw-Standish. n. p. [1815?] 11 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + At head of title: No. 1. [Cut of 5 coffins.] + + Cut of a ship on title-page. + + +---- Peace. [Verses, n.p., 1815?] Broadside. fº. + + =Reserve= + + +=Shepard=, Jeremiah. _See_ =S.=, J. + + +=Shepard=, Thomas, 1605-1649. [Extract from an Elegy on the death of +John Wilson.] (In: Cotton Mather, Johannes in Eremo. Boston, 1695. +24º. p. 36.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in The Club of Odd Volumes, _Early American + poetry_ [_Reprints_, v.] 4, _Reserve_. + + +=Sherman=, John. _See_ =S.=, J. + + +=Short=, Bob, pseud. Patriotic effusions. _See_ =Longstreet=, Augustus +Baldwin. + + +The =Shunamite=. _See_ =Green=, G. + + +=Shurtleff=, James, 1745-1832. The substance of a late remarkable +dream, in which were presented the celestial worlds and the infernal +regions, with the arch enemy of mankind, with his legions paraded, +together with his instructions to them, in which was discovered, +his deep-laid plot against the United States of America. [By James +Shurtleff.] Hallowell (District of Maine) Printed by Peter Edes. 1800. +16 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Introduction signed: James Shurtleff. Litchfield [Me.], + February, 1800. + + +=Signs= of apostacy lamented. _See_ =Bosworth=, Benjamin. + + +=Sigourney=, Mrs. Lydia Howard Huntley, 1791-1865. Moral pieces in +prose and verse. By Lydia Huntley. Hartford: Sheldon & Goodwin, 1815. +xii, 267(1) p., 4 l. 12º. + + =NBY= + + +The =Simple= cobler of Aggawam in America. _See_ =Ward=, Nathaniel. + + +=Sketches= in verse. _See_ =Rose=, Robert H. + + +=Smith=, Eaglesfield. William and Ellen: a poem in three cantos; +with other poetical works of an American [i.e., Eaglesfield Smith]. +Published for the benefit of a helpless child. New-York: Printed by +J. Seymour, No. 49, John-Street. 1811. 1 p.l. (i)vi-xii, +(1)14-158 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Smith=, Elihu Hubbard, 1771-1798. Epistle to the author of the +Botanic garden [Erasmus Darwin]. New York, March, 1798. (In: Erasmus +Darwin, The Botanic garden. A poem. New-York, 1798. 8º. p.l. 4-6.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 600-601, + _NBB_. + + +---- Monody on the death of George Washington. Delivered at the +New-York Theatre, on Monday evening, December 30, 1799. [By Elihu H. +Smith.] (In: The Monthly magazine and American review for the year +1799. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 1, p. 478-480.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Occasional address. Spoken by Mr. Hodgkinson, on the opening +of the New Theatre, in New-York, Monday, the 29th of January, 1798. +Written by the late Dr. E. H. Smith. (In: The Monthly magazine and +American review for the year 1799. New-York, 1800. 8º. v. 1. +p. 239-240.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- _See also_ The =Echo; American= poems, selected and original. + + +=Smith=, Isaiah. The mirror of merit and beauty: fifty female +sketches, drawn from nature. By a friend to the fair, I. S. M. D. +[i.e., Isaiah Smith.] New-York: Printed for the author, by D. & G. +Bruce. 1808. 79(1) p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Smith=, John, 1580-1631. The generall historie of Virginia, +New-England, and the Summer Isles: with the names of the adventurers, +planters, and governours from their first beginning an: 1584. to this +present 1624. With the proceedings of those severall colonies and the +accidents that befell them in all their journyes and discoveries. Also +the maps and descriptions of all those countryes, their commodities, +people, government, customes, and religion yet knowne. Divided into +six bookes. By Captaine John Smith sometymes Governour in those +countryes & admirall of New England. London. Printed by I. D. for +Michael Sparkes. 1624. 7 p.l., 248 p. fº. + + =Reserve= + + Poems on pages 9, 12, 13, 16, 18, 20, 25, 34, 35, 36, + 37, 43, 49, 50, 51, 53, 54, 66, 69, 78, 87, 90, 92, 93, 107, + 150, 151, 157, 159, 176, 193, 200, 227, 229, 230, 239. + + Reprinted in Capt. John Smith, _Works, 1608-1631. Edited + by Edward Arber_. Birmingham, 1884. 2 v. 12º. _* R-Room 300_. + + +---- ---- Richmond: Republished at the Franklin Press, William W. Gray +printer. 1819. 2 v. 8º. + + =ITC= + + +---- ---- Glasgow: James MacLehose and Sons, 1907. 2 v. 8º. + + =ITC= + + +---- The sea marke. (In his: Advertisements for the planters of +New-England, or anywhere. London, 1631. 4º. p.l. 3.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in Massachusetts Historical Society, + _Collections_, Cambridge, 1833, series 3, v. 3, p. 4, _IAA_. + + Also reprinted in Capt. John Smith, _Works. Edited by + Edward Arber_, Birmingham, 1884, v. 2, p. 922. _* R-Room + 300_. + +=Smith=, Joseph. Eulogium on rum. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1790. 8º. v. 7, appendix 1, p. 1-2.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Beauties of poetry, British and + American_, Philadelphia, 1791, p. 174-176, _Reserve_; + _American poems, selected and original_, Litchfield, 1793, + p. 231-234, _NBH_; _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 109-112. _NBH_; and _American poetical miscellany_, + Philadelphia, 1809, p. 169-172, _NBH_. + + +---- An Indian eclogue. Scene, the banks of the Ohio. (In: The +Beauties of poetry, British and American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. +p. 244.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 160-161, _NBH_. + + +=Smith=, William, 1727-1803. Art and nature. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 1, p. 181-182.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _The Beauties of poetry, British and + American_, Philadelphia, 1791, p. 187-189, _Reserve_; _The + Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, p. 184-186, _NBH_. + + +---- Indian songs of peace: with a proposal, in a prefatory epistle, +for erecting Indian schools. And a postscript by the editor, +introducing Yariza, an Indian maid's letter, to the principal ladies +of the Province and City of New-York. By the author of the American +fables [i.e., William Smith]. New-York: Printed by J. Parker, and W. +Wayman, at the New Printing-Office in Beaver-Street, MDCCLII. +27 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Smith=, William Moore, 1759-1821. The fall of Zampor, a Peruvian ode; +Ode to meditation; Lampoon. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American +poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 306-312.) + + =NBH= + + +---- The man of sorrow. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1787. +8º. v. 2, p. 517-518.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- On a lady's birthday. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. +16º. p. 183.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +=Snowden=, Richard. The Columbiad: or, A poem on the American war, in +thirteen cantoes. [By Richard Snowden.] Philadelphia: Printed by Jacob +Johnson & Co. 147, Market-Street. 1795. iv, 46 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Baltimore: Printed by W. Pechin, No. 10, Second-street. +[1800?] 44 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Bd. with his: The American Revolution. Baltimore. + [1800?]. 16º. + + +=Some= excellent verses on Admiral Vernon's taking the forts and +castles of Carthagena in the month of March last. Sold at the Heart +and Crown in Cornhill. [Boston, 1741.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Eighteen stanzas in two columns. + + +A =Song= made upon the election of new magistrates for this city.... +A song made upon the foregoing occasion. [New York. 1734.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + The two scandalous songs that figured in the + Zenger-Cosby affair, 1734. + + +A =Song=, on the surrendery of General Burgoyne, who gave up his whole +army to the brave General Gates, of glorious memory, October 17, 1777. +[1777.] Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Forty-six stanzas in three columns. + + +=Sotweed= redivivus: or the planters looking-glass. _See_ =Cook=, +Ebenezer. + + +=Specimens= of the American poets; with critical notices and a +preface. London: Printed for T. and J. Allman, 1822. iv, 283 p. 12º. + + =NBH= + + W. C. Bryant. Poems, p. 189-218.--R. Dabney. Poems, + p. 157-172.--J. W. Eastburn. Yamoyden, proem and canto II, + p. 219-249.--F. G. Halleck. Fanny, p. 109-156.--W. Maxwell. + Poems, p. 173-187.--J. K. Paulding. The Backwoodsman, + p. 71-108.--J. Pierpont. Airs of Palestine, p. 25-69. + + +The =Spirit= of the Farmers' museum, and lay preacher's gazette. Being +a judicious selection of the fugitive and valuable productions, which +have occasionally appeared in that paper, since the commencement of +its establishment. Consisting of a part of the essays of the Lay +Preacher, Colon and Spondee, American biography, the choicest efforts +of the American muse, pieces of chaste humour, the early essays of +the Hermit, the most valuable part of the weekly summaries, nuts, +epigrams, and epitaphs, sonnets, criticism, &c. &c. Walpole, (N. H.) +Printed, for Thomas & Thomas, by D. & T. Carlisle. 1801. 2 p.l., +(1)6-318 p., 2 l. of adv. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + p. 5-11 contain list of 199 subscribers. + + Edited by Joseph Dennie. + + +The =Spunkiad=: or Heroism improved. A congressional display of spit +and cudge. A poem, in four cantoes. By an American youth. Newburgh: +Printed and sold by D. Denniston. M,DCC,XCVIII. 1 p.l., (1)4-23 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + A satire on the duel between Mathew Lyon and Roger + Griswold in Congress, Jan. 30 and Feb. 15, 1798. For a full + account of this affair see the _Historical magazine_, Jan., + 1864. + + +The =Squabble=; a pastoral eclogue. By Agricola. With a curious and +well-design'd frontispiece. Printed [from the first edition] by Andrew +Steuart, in Second-street Philadelphia. [1764.] 8 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + The frontispiece, which is on page 4, is a crude woodcut + representing "Thyrsis with a Pr*sb*t*rian Nose. Conn, with + a Q**k*ronian Nose." + + +=Standish=, Miles, the younger, pseud.? The times; a poem, addressed +to the inhabitants of New-England, and of the state of New-York, +particularly on the subject of the present anti-commercial system of +the national administration. By Miles Standish, jun. Plymouth: Printed +for the author, 1809. 2 p.l., (1)6-27 p. 8º. + + =II= + + At head of title: No. 1. + + A poem on "the exterminating war, now carrying on by the + National Administration against commerce" of New York and + New England. + + Copyright notice on verso of title-page. + + +=Stansbury=, Joseph, and JONATHAN ODELL, 1737-1818. The loyal verses +of Joseph Stansbury and Doctor Jonathan Odell; relating to the +American Revolution. Now first edited by Winthrop Sargent. Albany: J. +Munsell, 78 State Street. 1860. 3 p.l., (i)x-xxi p., 1 l., 199 p. 8º. +(Munsell's historical series, no. 6.) + + =NBHD= + + Poems by Odell, p. 5-6, 7-9, 11-12, 35, 45-60. + + +The =State= triumvirate, a political tale. _See_ =Verplanck=, Gulian +Crommelin. + + +=Stearns=, Charles, 1753-1826. The ladies' philosophy of love. A poem, +in four cantos. Written in 1774. By Charles Stearns. A.B. Since +pastor of the Church, and preceptor of the Liberal School in Lincoln. +Now first published--according to act of Congress. Leominster, for the +author. 1797. 1 p.l., (i)iv, (1)6-76 p. sq. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Steendam=, Jacob, b. 1616. A memoir of the first poet in New +Netherland [i.e., Jacob Steendam] with his poems descriptive of the +colony. [By Henry C. Murphy.] The Hague, The Brothers Giunta D'Albani, +1861. 59 p., front, (port.) 8º. + + =AN= + + Poems in Dutch and English on opposite pages; the + "Complaint of New Amsterdam" and "The praise of New + Netherland" include reproductions of the original + title-pages. + + _Contents_: Memoir.--Poems on New Netherland: Complaint + of New Amsterdam in New Netherland, to her mother, 1659. The + praise of New Netherland, 1661.--Spurring-verses. + + +---- Memoir and poems. (In: Henry C. Murphy, Anthology of New +Netherland. New York, 1865. 8º. p. 21-75.) + + =NBH= + + +=Stewart=, John. The revelation of nature, with the prophesy of +reason. [By John Stewart.] New York: Printed by Mott & Lyon, for +the author. In the fifth year of intellectual existance, or the +publication of the apocalypse of nature, 3000 years from the Grecian +olympiads, and 4800 from recorded knowledge in the Chinese tables of +eclipses, beyond which chronology is lost in fable. [1796.] xxxix, +104 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Stiles=, Ezra. _See_ A =Family= tablet: containing a selection of +original poetry. + + +=Stoddard=, Amos, 1762-1813. The president's birth day ode. Performed +at Taunton, at the Civick Festival, February, 1793. Written by A. +Stoddard. (In: The Massachusetts magazine. Boston. 1793. 8º. v. 5, +no. 3, p. 178-179.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Stoddard=, Lavina, 1787-1820. The soul's defiance. (In: R. W. +Griswold, The female poets of America. Philadelphia, 1849. 8º. p. 44.) + + =NBH= + + +=Story=, Isaac, 1774-1803. An epistle from Yarico to Inkle, together +with their characters, as related in the Spectator. [By Isaac +Story.] Marblehead: Printed for the sons and daughters of Columbia. +M.DCC.XCII. 2 p.l., (1)6-31 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Printed at Salem. The monogram "I. S." appears above the + imprint. + + +---- A parnassian shop, opened in the Pindaric stile; By Peter Quince, +Esq. [pseud. of Isaac Story.] Copy right secured. Boston: Printed by +Russell and Cutler. 1801. 3 p.l., (i)viii, (1)10-155 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Reviewed in _The American review, and literary journal_ + for the year 1801, New York, 1801, v. 1, p. 460-465, + _Reserve_. + + +---- _See also_ =All= the world's a stage. A poem. + + +=Story=, Joseph, 1779-1845. Elegy to the memory of General George +Washington. (In his: An eulogy on General George Washington. Salem: J. +Cushing, 1800. 8º. p. [17]-24.) + + =Reserve= + + "The subsequent Elegy, added by advice of some friends, + was originally designed for newspaporial currency. As some + sentiments of it are perhaps enlarged on in the Eulogy, it + is necessary to observe, that it was written previous to the + suggestion of the other, and could not be altered without + impairing its structure." + + +---- The power of solitude. A poem. In two parts. By Joseph Story. A +new and improved edition. Salem: Published by Barnard P. Macanulty. +1804. 2 p.l., 260 p., front. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Extract printed in Samuel Kettell, _Specimens of + American poetry_. Boston, 1829, v. 2, p. 109-112, _NBH_. + + +The =Story= of Æneas and Dido burlesqued. _See_ =Rugeley=, Rowland. + + +The =Substance= of a late remarkable dream. _See_ =Shurtleff=, James. + + +=Sumner=, Charles Pinckney, 1766-1839. The compass. A poetical +performance at the Literary Exhibition in September. M,DCC,XCV, at +Harvard University. By Charles P. Sumner. Boston: Printed by William +Spotswood for the subscribers. [1795.] 1 p.l., (1)4-12 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- An ode for the sixth anniversary of the Massachusetts Charitable +Fire Society. Boston, May, 1800. (In: The Columbian phenix and Boston +review. Boston, 1800. 8º. v. 1 for 1800, p. 380.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Swanwick=, John. Poems on several occasions. By John Swanwick, Esq. +One of the Representatives in the Congress of the United States, from +the State of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Printed by F. and R. Bailey, +at Yorick's Head, No. 116. High-Street. MDCCXCVII. 2 p.l., 174 p. 32º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Sympson=, J. Science revived or The vision of Alfred. A poem in +eight cantos. With biographical notes. By the Rev. J. Sympson, B.D. +Philadelphia: Printed by John Bouvier, for John Wilson. 1810. 2 p.l., +(1)6-207 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=T.=, B. _See_ =Tompson=, Benjamin. + + +The =Tenth= Muse lately sprung up in America. Or several poems. _See_ +=Bradstreet=, Mrs. Anne Dudley. + + +=Terrible= tractoration!! A poetical petition against galvanising +trumpery.... _See_ =Fessenden=, Thomas Green. + + +=Theresa=, pseud. _See_ The =Breechiad=, a poem. + + +=Thomas=, Daniel. A poem, delivered in Middleborough, September 8th, +A.D. 1802. At the anniversary election of the Philandrian Society. +By Daniel Thomas, student of Rhode-Island College. Wrentham, (Mass.) +Printed by Nathaniel Heaton, Jun. 1802. 12 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Thomas=, John. The genius of America. Inscribed to his Excellency +General George Washington, on his return to Mount Vernon in December, +1783. [And other poems.] (In: Extracts in prose and verse, by a lady +of Maryland. Annapolis, 1808. 12º. v. 2, p. 154-189.) + + =NBB= + + +=Thomas=, Joseph. A poetical descant on the primeval and present +state of mankind; or, The pilgrim's muse. By Joseph Thomas, minister +of the Gospel. Winchester, Va. J. Foster, printer. 1816. 1 p.l., +(i)iv-vii(i), 9-219(1) p. 32º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Tileston=, Thomas. Funeral elegy, dedicated to the memory of his +worthy friend, the learned and religious Mr. John Foster, who deceased +in Dorchester the 9 of Septr. 1661. (In: T. C. Simonds, History of +South Boston. Boston, 1857. 12º. p. 34-37.) + + =IQH= + + +The =Times=, a poem. _See_ =Church=, Benjamin. + + +The =Times=; a poem. _See_ =Markoe=, Peter. + + +=Tompson=, Benjamin, 1642-1714. Celeberrimi Cottoni Matheri, +celebratio.... (In: Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana. London, +1702. 4º.) + + =Reserve= + + Text in Latin and English. + + Also in later editions of the _Magnalia_, as follows: + Hartford, 1820, v. 1, p. 17, and Hartford, 1855, v. 1, p. 20. + + Reprinted in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, + p. 35-36, _NBB_. + + +---- [Elegy] Upon the very Reverend Samuel Whiting. (In: Cotton +Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana. London, 1702. 4º. book III, +p. 160-161.) + + Also in later editions as follows: Hartford, 1820, v. 1, + p. 459-461; Hartford, 1855, v. 1, p. 510-511. + + +---- The grammarians funeral, or An elegy composed upon the death +of Mr. John Woodmancy, formerly a school-master in Boston: but now +published upon the death of the venerable Mr. Ezekiel Chevers, the +late and famous school-master of Boston in New-England; who departed +this life the twenty-first of August 1708. Early in the morning. In +the ninety-fourth year of his age. [By] Benj. Tompson. Broadside. (In: +S. A. Green, Ten fac-simile reproductions relating to New England. +Boston, 1902. fº.) + + =Reserve= + + Enclosed in mourning borders. + + Photo-facsimile, exact size. + + +---- A neighbour's tears sprinkled on the dust of the amiable +virgin, Mrs. Rebekah Sewall, who was born December 30. 1704. and +dyed suddenly, August 3. 1710. Ætatis 6. [By] B. T. [i.e., Benjamin +Tompson.] Broadside. (In: S. A. Green, Ten fac-simile reproductions +relating to New England. Boston, 1902. fº.) + + =Reserve= + + Thirty-two lines, enclosed in mourning border. + + Photo-facsimile, exact size. + + +---- New-England's crisis. By Benjamin Tompson. Boston: The Club of +Odd Volumes, 1894. 28 p., 1 l., (1)6-31 p. sq. 8º. (The Club of Odd +Volumes. Early American poetry [Reprints, v.] 1.) + + =Reserve= + + No. 81 of one hundred copies printed on hand-made paper. + + This is a modern type reprint, without title-page, of a + copy of the original, Boston, 1676, in the Boston Athenæum. + + The Boston _Evening Transcript_, July 13, 1910, records + the sale of the only known perfect copy, which was disposed + of at the sale of Thomas Gray's library, at Sotheby's on + June 25, 1910. + + +---- [Poem] Upon the elaborate survey of New-Englands passions from +the natives, by the imperial pen of that worthy divine Mr. William +Hubbard. 2 p. (In: William Hubbard, The present state of New-England. +Being a narrative of the troubles with the Indians.... London. 1677. +4º. p.l. 7.) + + =Reserve= + + Also in reprint of Hubbard's work, with notes by S. G. + Drake, Roxbury, 1865, v. 1, p. 23-26, _HBC_. + + +=Touchstone=, Geoffry, pseud. The house of wisdom in a bustle. A poem, +descriptive of the noted battle lately fought in C--ng--ss. By Geoffry +Touchstone. New-York: Printed for the purchasers. 1798. [Price 25 +cents.] 24 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + A satire on the duel between Mathew Lyon and Roger + Griswold in Congress, Jan. 30 and Feb. 15, 1798. For a full + account of this affair see the _Historical magazine_, Jan., + 1864. + + First published at Philadelphia, in 1798. + + +=Townsend=, Eliza. 1789-1854. An occasional ode. (In: The monthly +anthology, and Boston review. Boston, 1809. 8º. v. 7, p. 180-186.) + + =* DA= + + Also printed in R. W. Griswold, _The female poets of + America_, Philadelphia, 1849, p. 39-41, _NBH_. + + +=Townsend=, Richard? H. Original poems, by a citizen of Baltimore +[i.e., Richard? H. Townsend]. Published by Samuel Jefferis, 212, +Baltimore-Street. Robinson, printer. 1809. 2 p.l., (i)vi-x, 139(1) +p. 1 l. of adv. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Transallegania=, or The groans of Missouri. A poem. _See_ +=Schoolcraft=, Henry Rowe. + + +A =Tribute= to Washington, for February 22d, 1800. _See_ =Lovett=, +John. + + +The =True= American, Tom Tackle, Fair Kate of Portsmouth, Had Neptune, +Roger and Kate. New-York: Printed and sold at No. 38, and 64, +Maiden-Lane. 1811. 8 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Trumbull=, John, 1750-1831. Ambition, an elegy. (In: American poems, +selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. p. 17-20.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 65-68, _NBH_; and, under the title An elegy, in _The + American museum_, Philadelphia, 1787, v. 2, p. 206-207, + _Reserve_. + + +---- The critics, a fable. (In: The Columbian muse. New York, 1794. +16º. p. 69-73.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + +---- The downfall of Babylon.--An imitation of sundry passages in the +13th and 14th chapters of the prophecy of Isaiah, and the 18th chapter +of the Revelations of St. John. Written, anno 1775. (In: The American +museum. Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 2, p. 97-99.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _American poems, selected and original_, + Litchfield, 1793, p. 25-29, _NBH_. + + +---- An elegy on the death of Mr. Buckingham St. John, tutor of Yale +College, who was drowned in his passage from New Haven to Norwalk, May +the 5th, 1771. New York: C. F. Heartman, 1915. 2 p.l., 9-19 p., front, +(fold. fac.) 8º. (Heartman's historical series, no. 12.) + + =Reserve= + + Contains facsimile of original broadside. + + One of 31 copies printed on Fabriano hand-made paper. + + Also printed in _The American museum_, Philadelphia, + 1787, v. 2, p. 101-103, _Reserve_; _The Massachusetts + magazine_, Boston, April, 1791, p. 243-245, _Reserve_; + _American poems, selected and original_, Litchfield, 1793, + p. 13-17, _NBH_; _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 61-65, _NBH_. + + +---- Elegy on the times. First printed at Boston, Sept. 20th, 1774. +(In: American poems, selected and original. Litchfield, 1793. 12º. +p. 1-12.) + + =Reserve= and =NBH= + + Also printed in _The Columbian muse_, New York, 1794, + p. 51-61, _NBH_. + + +---- Excellent logic; British favours to America; Extreme humanity; +Nobility anticipated. (In: The Beauties of poetry, British and +American. Philadelphia, 1791. 16º. p. 146-155.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- McFingal: a modern epic poem. Or, The town meeting. [By John +Trumbull.] Philadelphia, printed: London, reprinted for J. Almon, +opposite Burlington-House, Piccadilly. MDCCLXXVI. [Price one +shilling.] 44 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + The first part was written in 1775 at the request of + some members of the American Congress, with a view to + influence public opinion in favor of the war then beginning + against the mother country. + + +---- M'Fingal: a modern epic poem, in four cantos. [By John Trumbull.] +Hartford: Printed and sold by Byail Webster, a few Rods South-East of +the Court-House, 1782. 96 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Hartford: Printed by Hudson and Goodwin, near the Great +Bridge, 1782. 100 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Boston: Printed by Peter Edes, in State-Street. MDCCLXXXV. +2 p.l., (1)6-110 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Philadelphia: From the Press of Mathew Carey. M.DCC.XCI. +95(1) p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + This is the first edition in which the author's name + appears on the title-page. + + +---- ---- The fifth edition, with explanatory notes. London: Printed +for J. S. Jordan, No. 166, Fleet-Street. M,DCC,XCII. xv, 142 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- The sixth edition, with explanatory notes. London: Printed +for Chapman and Co. No. 161, Fleet-Street. M,DCC,XCIII. 2 p.l., +(i)vi-xv, 142 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Embellished with nine copper plates; designed and engraved +by E. Tisdale. The first edition with plates, and explanatory notes. +New-York: Printed by John Duel, No. 132. Fly-Market. M,DCC,XCV. vii, +136 p., front. (port.), 8 pl. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Frontispiece, the portrait of the author. + + +---- ---- With explanatory notes. Boston: Printed by Manning & Loring, +for Ebenezer Larking, No. 47, Cornhill. 1799. 141(1) p., 1 l. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Embellished with plates. With explanatory notes. Baltimore. +Printed and sold by A. Miltenberger, No. 10, North Howard-street. +1812. 1 p.l., (i)iv-vi, (1)8-146 p., 3 pl. (incl. front.) 32º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- With explanatory notes. Albany: Printed by E. & E. Hosford. +1813. 1 p.l., (i)iv, (1)6-112 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- With explanatory notes. Published and sold by Ezekiel Goodale, at +the Hallowell Bookstore. 1813. vi, (1)8-138 p., 2 l. (one l. of adv.) +16º. + + =NBHD= + + Peter Edes, printer, Augusta. + + +---- ---- With explanatory notes and plates. Hudson: Published by W. +E. Norman. 1816. vi, (1)8-146 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + Ashbel Stoddard, printer. + + The Library has another copy of this edition, ending + with p. 145. The publisher probably had a number of copies + lacking the last leaf, and in order to sell them had the + missing part reprinted on one page, and inserted it. This + must have been done some years after the printing of the + original. This copy also has an engraved frontispiece. + + +---- ---- With explanatory notes. Boston: Printed by John G. Scobie, +1826. 1 p.l., (1)4-184 p. nar. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- With explanatory notes. Fine edition. Philadelphia: +Published by C. P. Fessenden. 1839. iv, (1)6-120 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- M'Fingal, a modern epic poem, revised and corrected, with copious +and explanatory notes, by John Trumbull, LL.D. With a memoir of the +author. Hartford: S. Andrus and Son, 1856. 1 p.l., (1)6-183 p., 3 l. +of adv., front. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- M'Fingal: an epic poem. By John Trumbull. With introduction +and notes, by Benson J. Lossing. New York: G. P. Putnam, 115 Nassau +Street, 1860. 322 p., front. (port.) 4º. + + =NBHD= + + Large paper copy. + + +---- ---- New York: G. P. Putnam: Hurd and Houghton, 1864. 322 p., +front. (port.) 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- New York: American Book Exchange, 1881. 322 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + Also printed in _The American museum_, Philadelphia, + 1787, v. 1, p. 353-382, _Reserve_. + + +---- Poems: The speech of Proteus to Aristæus, translated from the +fourth book of Virgil's Georgics, 1700; The downfall of Babylon, +written 1775; The prophecy of Balaam, written 1773; An elegy, on the +death of Mr. Buckingham St. John, who was drowned in his passage +from New-haven to Norwalk, May 5th, 1771. (In: The American museum. +Philadelphia, 1787. 8º. v. 2, p. 95-103.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The poetical works of John Trumbull, LL.D. Containing M'Fingal, +a modern epic poem, revised and corrected, with copious explanatory +notes; The Progress of dulness; and a collection of poems on various +subjects, written before and during the Revolutionary War. In two +volumes. Hartford: Printed for Samuel G. Goodrich, by Lincoln & Stone. +MDCCCXX. 2 v. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + v. 1. 3 p.l., (1)8-177 p., front, (port.), eng. t.-p.; + v. 2. 4 p.l., (1)9-235 p., 4 pl., eng. t.-p. + + _Contents_: v. 1. Memoir of the life and writings of + John Trumbull.--M'Fingal. v. 2. Progress of dulness.--Genius + of America.--Lines to Messrs. Dwight and Barlow.--Ode to + Sleep.--To a young lady, a fable.--Speech of Proteus, + translation.--Prophecy of Balaam.--Owl and sparrow, a + fable.--Prospect of the future glory of America.--On + the vanity of youthful expectations.--Advice to ladies + of a certain age.--Characters.--Elegy on the death of + Mr. St. John.--Destruction of Babylon.--Elegy on the + times.--Appendix. + + +---- The progress of dulness, part first, or The rare adventures of +Tom Brainless; shewing what his father and mother said of him; how he +went to college, and what he learned there; how he took his degree, +and went to keeping school; how afterwards he became a great man and +wore a wig; and how any body else may do the same. The like never +before published. Very proper to be kept in all families. [By John +Trumbull.] The second edition, corrected. Re-printed in the Year +M,DCC,LXXIII. vi, (1)8-20 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _The American magazine_, Dec., 1787, + p. 59-61, Jan., 1788, p. 117-119, _Reserve_. + + +---- The progress of dulness, part second: or An essay on the life and +character of Dick Hairbrain, of finical memory; being an astronomical +calendar, calculated for the meridian of New-York, north latitude, +41°. west longitude 72°: 30'; but which may serve without material +error, for any of the neighboring climates: containing, among other +curious and surprizing particulars, Dick's soliloquy on a college-life +... a description of a country-fop ... receipt to make a gentleman, +with the fop's creed and exposition, of the Scriptures.... Dick's +gradual progress from a clown to a coxcomb ... his travels, gallantry, +and opinion of the ladies ... his peripætia and catastrophe, with the +moral and application of the whole. [By John Trumbull.] Published for +the universal benefit of mankind. Printed in the Year M,DCC,LXXIII. x, +(1)12-27(1) p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- The progress of dulness, or The rare adventures of Tom Brainles. +By the celebrated author of McFingall [i.e., John Trumbull]. Printed +at Exeter, by Henry Ranlet, and sold at his office, also, by most of +the booksellers in Boston. MDCCXCIV. 72 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Lacks p. 3-4 (the preface), and 27-28. + + +---- The prophecy of Balaam. Numbers: Chap. XVIII, XIV. An irregular +ode. Written anno 1773. (In: The American museum. Philadelphia, 1787. +8º. v. 2, p. 99-101.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in _American poems, selected and original_, + Litchfield, 1793, p. 21-24, _NBH_. + + +---- _See also_ The =Anarchiard=. + + +=Tucker=, Saint George, 1752-1827. The probationary odes of Jonathan +Pindar, Esq. [pseud. of Saint George Tucker.] A cousin of Peter's, +and candidate for the post of Poet Laureat to the C. U. S. In two +parts. Philadelphia: Printed for Benj. Franklin Bache, M.DCC.XCVI. +[Copy-right secured.] viii, (1)10-103 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + Erroneously attributed to Philip Freneau. Part 1 + originally published in his _Gazette_, 1793. + + Page 47 is a special title reading: The probationary + odes of Jonathan Pindar.... Part second. With notes, + critical and explanatory by Christopher Clearsight, Esq. + + +---- Stanzas. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. +Boston. 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 349-350.) + + =NBH= + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 236, + _NBB_, and E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A library + of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 3, p. 444-445, + _NBB_. + + +=Turell=, Jane, 1708-1735. An invitation into the country, in +imitation of Horace. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American +poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 65-67.) + + =NBH= + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 125, _NBB_. + + This and the following poems appeared originally in + _Memoirs of the life and death of Mrs. Jane Turell_, by + Ebenezer Turell, Boston, 1735. + + +---- A paraphrase of the one hundred and thirty-fourth Psalm. (In: +Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, +p. 62-63.) + + =NBH= + + +---- On the poems of Sir Richard Blackmore. (In: Samuel Kettell, +Specimens of American poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 64-65.) + + =NBH= + + +---- On reading the warning by Mrs. Singer. On the incomparable Mr. +Waller. (In: E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, A library of American +literature. New York, 1889. 8º. v. 2, p. 359, 361.) + + =NBB= + + +---- To my muse. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry. +Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 1, p. 63-64.) + + =NBH= + + Also printed in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, _Cyclopædia + of American literature_, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 125, + _NBB_; Stedman and Hutchinson, _A library of American + literature_, New York, 1889, v. 2, p. 359, _NBB_. + + +=Two= New England poems. [The Mercies of the year, commemorated: a +song for little children in New-England. December 13th 1720, and Psalm +CVII, last part. Translated by the Reverend Mr. Isaac Watts and by +him intitled, A Psalm for New England.] Boston: The Merrymount Press, +1910. 2 l. fº. + + =Reserve= + + "One hundred copies reprinted in facsimile from the + original in the John Carter Brown Library for the patrons of + the Club for Colonial Reprints, Providence, Rhode Island, + December 13, 1910." + + +=Tyler=, Royal, 1756?-1825. Address to Della Crusca, humbly attempted +in the sublime style of that fashionable author. (In: E. A. and G. L. +Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1861. 8º. +v. 1, p. 417.) + + =NBB= + + Some of Tyler's poems appeared originally in _Spirit of + the Farmer's museum_, 1801, and _Columbian Centinel_, 1804. + + +---- Country ode for the fourth of July; My mistresses; Address to +Della Crusca; Choice of a wife; On a ruined house in a romantic +country; The town eclogue. (In: Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American +poetry. Boston, 1829. 12º. v. 2, p. 48-54.) + + =NBH= + + +---- Love and liberty. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of +American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 418.) + + =NBB= + + +---- Ode composed for the fourth of July, calculated for the meridian +of some country towns in Massachusetts, and Rye in New Hampshire. (In: +E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New +York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 417-418.) + + =NBB= + + +---- Spondee's mistresses. (In: E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia +of American literature. New York, 1866. 8º. v. 1, p. 417.) + + =NBB= + + +=Umphraville=, Angus, pseud.? The siege of Baltimore, and the battle +of La Tranche; with other original poems. By Angus Umphraville. Aged +nineteen. Baltimore: Printed by Schaeffer and Maund. 1817. 6 p.l., 144 +p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +The =Untaught= bard. An original work. New-York: Deare and Andrews, +printers. 1804. 260 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Upham=, Thomas Cogswell, 1799-1872. American sketches. By +Thomas C. Upham. New-York: Published by David Longworth, at the +Shakspeare-Gallery, for the author. Feb.--1819. vii, (1)6-120 +p. illus. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- [Poem written on visiting the scene of Lovewell's fate.] (In: +Magazine of history with notes and queries. New York, 1909. 4º. extra +no. 5, p. 101-102.) + + =IAG (Magazine)= + + +=Upon= the death of G. B. [i.e., General Bacon.] (Massachusetts +Historical Society. Collections for 1814. Boston, 1838. 8º. series 2, +v. 1, p. 59-60.) + + =IAA= + + This elegy is in the manuscript copy of an account of + Bacon and Ingram's rebellion found among the papers of + Capt. Nathaniel Burwell, printed in this volume of the + _Collections_. + + Also printed in Stedman and Hutchinson, _Library of + American literature_. New York, 1889, v. 1, p. 457-458, + _NBB_. + + +=Verplanck=, Gulian Crommelin, 1786-1870. The state triumvirate, a +political tale: and the epistles of Brevet Major Pindar Puff. [By +Gulian Crommelin Verplanck.] New-York: Printed for the author, and +sold by W. B. Gilley, No. 92 Broadway, and other booksellers. J. +Seymour, printer. 1819. 215 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Verses=, composed and sung at Trenton, on the delivery of the funeral +eulogium in honor of the memory of General George Washington. [1800?] +Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Text in two columns, enclosed in mourning borders. + + Facsimile. + + +=Verses= on Doctor Mayhew's Book of observations on the charter and +conduct of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign +Parts. _See_ =Goddard=, William. + + +=Verses=, sacred to the memory of Benjamin Franklin, L.L.D. (In: The +American museum. Philadelphia, 1790. 8º. v. 7, appendix 1, p. 35-38.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Versification= of President Washington's excellent Farewell-Address. +_See_ =Sewall=, Jonathan Mitchell. + + +The =Village=; a poem. _See_ =Lincoln=, Enoch. + + +=Viola= or The heiress of St. Valverde, an original poem. _See_ +=Botsford=, Mrs. Margaret. + + +=Virtues= of society. _See_ =Morton=, Mrs. Sarah Wentworth Apthorp. + + +=W.=, I. H. The Dartmoor massacre. By I. H. W. 1815. (In: Magazine of +history with notes and queries, extra no. 15, p. 61-71.) + + =IAG (Magazine)= + + Reprint with type-facsimile title-page of original. + + "Transposed in verse from the New York Commercial + Advertiser of the 6th June last and Boston papers of the + same month." + + "Being an authentic and particular account of the tragic + massacre at Dartmoor prison in England on the 6th of April, + last, 1815, in which sixty-seven American prisoners there + fell the victims of the jailor's revenge, for obtaining + their due allowance of bread which had been withheld from + them by the jailor's orders." + + +The =Wages= of sin; or, Robbery justly rewarded: a poem; occasioned by +the untimely death of Richard Wilson, who was executed on Boston Neck, +for burglary, on Thursday the 19th of October, 1732. Boston: Printed +and Sold at the Heart and Crown in Cornhill. n. d. Broadside. + + =Reserve= + + Photostat facsimile. + + Nineteen stanzas in two columns. + + +=Ward=, Nathaniel, c. 1580-1652. The simple cobler of Aggawam in +America. Willing to help 'mend his native country, lamentably +tattered, both in the upper-leather and sole, with all the honest +stitches he can take. And as willing never to bee paid for his work, +by old English wonted pay. It is his trade to patch all year long, +gratis. Therefore I pray gentlemen keep your purses. By Theodore de la +Guard [i.e., Nathaniel Ward]. London, Printed by John Dever & Robert +Ibbitson, for Stephen Bowtell, at the signe of the Bible in Popes +Head-Alley, 1647. 2 p.l., 80 p. sq. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- [Second edition.] London, Printed by J. D. & R. I. for +Stephen Bowtell, at the signe of the Bible in Popes Head-Alley, 1647. +2 p.l., 80 p. sq. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- The third edition, with some additions. London, Printed by +J. D. & R. I. for Stephen Bowtell, at the signe of the Bible in Popes +Head-Alley, 1647. 2 p.l., 80 p. sq. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- The fourth edition, with some amendments. London, Printed by +J. D. & R. I. for Stephen Bowtell, at the signe of the Bible in Popes +Head-Alley, 1647. 2 p.l., 89 p. sq. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Warren=, John, 1753-1815. An eulogy on the honourable Thomas Russell, +Esq. ... who died at Boston, April 8, 1796. Delivered, May 4, 1796.... +By John Warren. Boston: Printed by Benjamin Sweetser, corner of +Wings-lane. M,DCC,XCVI. 2 p.l., (1)6-31, 3 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Last three pages contain: A monody on the death of the + honourable Thomas Russell, Esq. sung after the eulogy of + Doctor John Warren ... May 4, 1796. + + +=Warren=, Mrs. Mercy Otis, 1728-1814. Poems, dramatic and +miscellaneous. By Mrs. M. Warren. Printed at Boston, by I. Thomas and +E. T. Andrews. At Faust's Statue, No. 45, Newbury Street. MDCCXC. +viii, (1)10-252 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + +=Washington's= birthday: an historical poem. _See_ =Lovett=, John. + + +A =Washingtonian=, pseud. Washington's birthday: an historical poem. +_See_ =Lovett=, John. + + +The =Washingtoniana=: containing a sketch of the life and death of the +late Gen. George Washington; with a collection of elegant eulogies, +orations, poems, &c. sacred to his memory. Also, an appendix, +comprising all his most valuable public papers, and his last will and +testament. Lancaster: Printed and Sold by William Hamilton, Franklin's +Head, in West King-Street. 1802. viii, (1)10-411 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Edited by F. Johnston and W. Hamilton. + + Frontispiece, the portrait of Washington, engraved by + David Edwin, after Stuart. + + p. 321-398 misnumbered 1-78, but total correct. + + Tribute by Doctor Aiken, p. 25; Elegiac ode, p. 154-155; + Extract from elegiac poem on the death of General George + Washington, by Charles Caldwell, p. 312-315; Extract from + a poem, sacred to the memory of General George Washington, + by Richard Alsop, p. 316-318; Tribute, by Mr. Paine, of + Massachusetts, p. 319; On the death of Washington from a + London newspaper, p. 319-320. + + +The =Watery= war: or A poetical description of the existing +controversy between the Pedobaptists and Baptists.... _See_ +=Benedict=, David. + + +=Webb=, George, fl. 1730-36. Batchelors' Hall: a poem. (In: E. A. and +G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature. New York, 1866. +8º. v. 1, p. 101-102.) + + =NBB= + + First published in 1731. + + +=Webster=, Noah, 1758-1843. To the author of the Conquest of Canaan. +(In: The American magazine. New York, 1788. 12º. March, 1788, +p. 265-266.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- To a lady on the approach of spring. (In: The American magazine. +New York, 1788. 12º. March, 1788, p. 266.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The triumph of infidelity. A poem. 1788. Addressed to Mon. de +Voltaire. (In: The American magazine. New York, 1788. 12º. July, 1788, +p. 588-590.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Verses on the New Year, January 1, 1788. (In: The American +magazine. New York, 1787. 12º. December, 1787, p. 56.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Weekes=, Refine. Poems, on religious and historical subjects. By +Refine Weekes. New-York: Printed for the author, by James Oram, No. 5 +Burling-Slip. 1820. 3 p.l., (1)4-388 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- ---- Second edition, corrected and enlarged. New-York: Printed +for the author, by Mahlon Day, No. 372, Pearl-Street. 1823. 2 p.l., +(i)vi, (1)8-418 p., 1 l. of adv. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Weems=, Mason Locke, 1760-1825. Hymen's recruiting sergeant; or, The +new matrimonial tattoo for old bachelors. Philadelphia: the author, +1821. 40 p., 1 pl. 7. ed. 8º. + + =* C p.v. 979= + + First published in 1805. + + +---- ---- Hartford, Ct.: Published by Andrus & Judd, 1833. 52 p. 16º. + + =SNV p.v. 33, no. 2= + + +---- ---- Hartford: S. Andrus and Son. 1845. 52 p. 16º. + + =NBY= + + +---- ---- Hartford: Silas Andrus and Son, 1851. 52 p., 2 l. 16º. + + =SNV p.v. 33, no. 3= + + +=Weller=, Catharine. The medley. By Catharine Weller. New-York: +Printed by T. & J. Swords, No. 160 Pearl-Street. 1810. 1 p.l., +(1)3-192 p. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + p. 135-142 lacking. + + Contains poems and prose selections. + + +=Wharton=, Charles Henry, 1748-1833. An elegy to the memory of +Mrs. Mary Wharton, who died at Philadelphia, on the second day of +June, 1798. By her husband. [Colophon:] Printed by John Ormrod, 41 +Chestnut-Street [1798]. 7 p. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + No title-page; title from caption. + + Signed C. H. W. + + Reprinted in _The remains of the Rev. Charles Henry + Wharton, D.D. With a memoir of his life by George Washington + Doane_, Philadelphia, 1834, v. 1, p. lxxix-lxxxi, _ZEP_. + + Also reprinted in George C. Perine, _The poets and verse + writers of Maryland_, Cincinnati, 1898, p. 7-12. _NBB_. + + +---- A poetical epistle to His excellency George Washington, Esq. +commander in chief of the armies of the United States of America, from +an inhabitant of the state of Maryland. [By Charles Henry Wharton.] +To which is annexed, a short sketch of General Washington's life +and character. [By John Bell of Md.] Annapolis printed 1779: London +reprinted for C. Dilly, in the Poultry; J. Almon, Piccadilly, W. +Tesseyman, York; T. and J. Merrill, Cambridge; R. Cruttwell, Bath; and +T. Becket, Bristol. MDCCLXXX. [Price half a crown.] 1 p.l., (i)iv, +(1)6-24 p., front. (port.) sq. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Frontispiece, the portrait of George Washington, + engraved by W. Sharp, from an original picture. + + Reprinted, New York, 1865, by J. Munsell, in an edition + of seventy-five copies, of which five were printed on + Whatman's drawing paper. No. 2 of five copies on Whatman's + drawing paper, _Reserve_; No. 4 of five copies on Whatman's + drawing paper, _AN_ (_Washington_) _p.v. 11, no. 3_. + + Also printed in George C. Perine, _The poets and + verse-writers of Maryland_. Cincinnati, 1898, p. 7-12, _NBB_. + + +---- ---- From the original manuscript belonging to David Pulsifer.... +With an appendix. Boston: Printed for David Pulsifer, 1881. 2 p.l., +(1)4-106 p. 12º. + + =AN= + + +=Wheatley=, Phillis, 1754-1784. An elegiac poem on the death of that +celebrated divine, and eminent servant of Jesus Christ, the reverend +and learned Mr. George Whitefield.... By Phillis, a servant girl of +seventeen years of age, belonging to Mr. J. Wheatley of Boston.... +(In: E. Pemberton, Heaven the residence of the saints. A sermon.... +Boston, printed: London, reprinted, 1771. 8º. p. [29]-31.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- The following thoughts on his Excellency Major General Lee being +betray'd into the hands of the enemy by the treachery of a pretended +friend; to the Honourable James Bowdoin Esq. are most respectfully +inscrib'd, by his most obedient and devoted humble servant, Phillis +Wheatley. Boston, Decr. 30, 1776. (Massachusetts Historical Society. +Proceedings, 1863-64. Boston, 1864. 8º. p. 166-167.) + + =IAA= + + Printed from original manuscript, found among the + Bowdoin Papers. + + +---- Memoir and poems of Phillis Wheatley, a native African and a +slave. Dedicated to the friends of the Africans. Second edition. +Boston: Light & Horton, 1 & 3 Cornhill. Samuel Harris, printer. 1835. +viii, (1)10-112 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- Phillis Wheatley (Phillis Peters), poems and letters. First +collected edition. Edited by Chas. Fred. Heartman. With an +appreciation by Arthur A. Schomburg. New York: C. F. Heartman [1915]. +2 p.l., 7-111 p., front. (port.) 8º. (Heartman's historical series, +no. 8.) + + =Reserve= + + No. 97 of 350 copies printed on Ben Day paper. + + Poems, p. 31-108. + + +---- The poems of Phillis Wheatley as they were originally published +in London, 1773. Re-published by R. R. and C. C. Wright. Philadelphia, +Pa. 1909. 1 p.l., 3-88 p., front. (port.) 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- Poems on various subjects, religious and moral. By Phillis +Wheatley, negro servant to Mr. John Wheatley, of Boston, in New +England. London: Printed for A. Bell, Bookseller, Aldgate; and sold by +Messrs. Cox and Berry, King-Street, Boston. MDCCLXXIII. 124 p., 2 l., +front. (port.) 12º. + + =Reserve= and =NBHD= + + +---- ---- Albany: Re-Printed, from the London edition, +by Barber & Southwick, for Thomas Spencer, Book-Seller, +Market-Street,--1793--viii, (1)10-89(1) p., 1 l. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- Dedicated to the Countess of Huntingdon. Philadelphia: +Printed by and for William B. Woodward, No. 17, Chestnut Street. 1801. +1 p.l., 169-244 p. 16º. + + =Reserve= + + The Library has a second copy bound in Joseph Lavallée, + _The negro equalled by few Europeans_, Philadelphia, 1801. + 16º. v. 2, p. [167]-244. Also in _Reserve_. + + +---- Six broadsides relating to Phillis Wheatley (Phillis Peters) with +portrait and facsimile of her handwriting. New York: C. F. Heartman, +1915. 2 p.l., front. (port.), 7 pl. fº. + + =Reserve= + + One of twenty-five copies printed. + + No. 1. An elegiac poem on the death of ... George + Whitefield.... By Phillis.... Sold by Ezekiel Russell, in + Queen-Street, and John Boyles, in Marlboro-Street. [1770?] + + No. 2. Phillis's poem on the death of Mr. Whitefield. + + No. 3. To Mrs. Leonard, on the death of her husband. + + No. 4. To the Rev. Mr. Pitkin, on the death of his lady. + Boston, June 16th, 1772. + + No. 5. To the Hon'ble Thomas Hubbard, Esq; on the death + of Mrs. Thankfull Leonard. Boston, January 2, 1773. + + No. 6. An address to Miss Phillis Wheatley.... Composed + by Jupiter Hammon. Hartford, August 4, 1778. + + No. 7. Facsimile of manuscript of "To the University of + Cambridge wrote in 1767." + + Nos. 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 are also in C. F. Heartman, _Phillis + Wheatley_, New York, 1915. 8º. (Heartman's historical + series, no. 7.) + + +---- Verses presented to his Excellency Gen. Washington, Providence, +Oct. 26, 1775. (In: The Pennsylvania magazine: or American monthly +museum. April, 1776, p. 193.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Whitman=, Benjamin, the younger. Hero of the North--or Battle of Lake +Erie. By Mr. Benjamin Whitman, jun. of Boston. (In: B. Badger, The +Naval temple. Boston, 1816. 2. ed. 8º. p. 313-317.) + + =VYE= + + +---- The heroes of the North, or The battles of Lake Erie, and +Champlain. Two poems. By Benjamin Whitman, Jr. Esq. Boston: Published +by Barber Badger, 1816. 4 p.l., (1)12-24 p., 3 pl. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + Two portraits inserted. + + +---- Victory on Lake Champlain. By Benjamin Whitman, jun. Esq. (In: B. +Badger, The Naval temple. Boston, 1816. 2. ed. 8º. p. 318-322.) + + =VYE= + + +=Whitwell=, Benjamin. Experience, or, Folly as it flies. A poem, +delivered at Cambridge, on the anniversary of the [Greek: PhBK] +Society. Aug. 28, 1806. By Benjamin Whitwell. Boston: Printed at the +Anthology Office, by Munroe & Francis. 1806. 2 p.l., (1)6-23 p. 8º. + + =NBH p.v. 5, no. 9= + + +=Wigglesworth=, Michael, 1631-1705. The day of doom: or, A description +of the great and last judgement. With a short discourse about +eternity. [By Michael Wigglesworth.] London, Printed by W. G. for John +Sims, at the Kings-Head at Sweetings-Alley-end in Cornhill, next House +to the Royal-Exchange, 1673. 2 p.l., 92 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + First edition was printed in 1662. + + _Contents_: The day of doom, p. 1-71.--A short discourse + on eternity, p. 72-77.--A postscript unto the reader, + p. 77-88.--Vanity of vanities, p. 89-91. + + +---- The day of doom: or, A poetical description of the great and +last judgement. With a short discourse about eternity. By Michael +Wigglesworth, teacher of the church at Maldon in N. E. The fifth +edition, enlarged with Scripture and marginal notes. Boston: Printed +by B. Green, and J. Allen, for Benjamin Eliot at his Shop under the +West End of the Town-House. 1701. 6 p.l., 80 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + Bd. with his: Meat out of the eater.... Boston, 1689. 4. + ed. 24º. + + Contents same as previous entry. + + +---- ---- By Michael Wigglesworth, A.M. teacher of the church +in Maldon, New-England. The seventh edition, enlarged. With a +recommendatory epistle (in verse) by the Rev. Mr. John Mitchel: also +Mr. Wigglesworth's character, by Dr. Cotton Mather. Boston: Printed +and sold by Thomas Fleet, at the Heart and Crown in Cornhill, 1751. +104 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + _Contents_: The day of doom, p. 1-72.--A short discourse + on eternity, p. 73-79.--A postscript to the reader, + p. 79-92.--Vanity of vanities, p. 92-96.--Death expected, and + welcomed, p. 96-97.--A farewell to the world, p. 97-99.--Mr. + Wigglesworth's character, by the Reverend Dr. Cotton Mather, + p. 99-104.--Epitaph, p. 104. + + +---- ---- By Michael Wigglesworth, A.M. teacher of the church at +Malden, N. E. To which is prefixed a biographical sketch of the +character of the author. From the sixth Boston edition, printed in +1715. Newburyport: Published by E. Little and Company, 1811. C. Norris +& Co. printers. 90 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- ---- By Michael Wigglesworth, A.M. teacher of the church at +Malden in N. E. From the sixth edition, 1715. Boston: Charles Ewer, +141 Washington Street. 1828. 95(1) p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- The day of doom; or, A poetical description of the great and last +judgement: with other poems. By Michael Wigglesworth, A.M. teacher +of the church at Malden in New England, 1662. Also a memoir of the +author, autobiography, and a sketch of his funeral sermon by Rev. +Cotton Mather. From the sixth edition, 1715. New York: American News +Company. 1867. 118 p., 1 l. 12º. + + =NBHD= + + +---- Death expected and welcome. (In: Cotton Mather, A faithful man, +described and rewarded. Boston, 1705. 8º. p. 45.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- A farewell to the world. (In: Cotton Mather, A faithful man, +described and rewarded. Boston, 1705. 8º. p. 46-48.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- Meat out of the eater or Meditations concerning the necessity, +end, and usefulness of afflictions unto Gods children. All tending +to prepare them for, and comfort them under the cross. By Michael +Wigglesworth. The fourth edition. Boston: Printed by R. P. for John +Usher. 1689. 208 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + Page 51 is a special title reading: Riddles unriddled, + or Christian paradoxes broke open.... + + Pages 7-10 mutilated; p. 23-24, 35-36, 55-56 lacking. + + Meat out of the eater, p. 3-50; Riddles unriddled, or + Christian paradoxes, p. 52-208. + + The first edition was probably published in 1669 or + early in 1670. + + +---- ---- Corrected and amended by the author in the year 1703. The +fifth edition. Boston, Printed by J. Allen, for N. Boone, at the sign +of the Bible in Cornhill. 1717. 143 p. 24º. + + =Reserve= + + +---- Upon the much lamented death of that precious servant of Christ, +Mr. Benjamin Buncker, pastor of the church at Maldon, who deceased +on the 3d of ye 12th moneth 1669. (New-England historical and +genealogical register.... Boston, 1872. 8º. v. 26, p. 11-12.) + + =* R-Room 328= + + "The original in the author's handwriting, is among + the Ewer Manuscripts, 1, 8-9 of the New England Historic + Genealogical Society." + + +=William= and Ellen: a poem. _See_ =Smith=, Eaglesfield. + + +=Williams=, John, 1761-1818. A bachelor's prayer. By Anthony Pasquin +[pseud.]. (In: The Columbian phenix and Boston review. Boston, 1800. +8º. v. 1 for 1800, p. 179-180.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- A dirge, or sepulchral service, commemorating the sublime virtues +and distinguished talents of General George Washington. Composed +at the request of the Mechanics Association of Boston. Words by +Anthony Pasquin [pseud.]. 4 p. (In: [Oliver Holden], Sacred dirges, +commemorative of the death of Washington. Boston [1800]. ob. 8º.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in _The Columbian phenix and Boston review_, + Boston, 1800, v. 1 for 1800, p. 178-179, _Reserve_. + + +---- The Hamiltoniad. By John Williams, (Anthony Pasquin.) New York: +Printed for the Hamilton Club, 1865. 5 p.l., 122 p., 1 port. 8º. +(Hamilton Club series, no. 3.) + + =AN (Hamilton)= + + One of 40 octavo copies printed. + + Includes type-facsimile title-page of original which was + published in Boston, 1804. + + The Library has another copy which is one of 20 quarto + copies printed, * _AN_. + + +---- An ode to the Union, as recited by the American Roscius, [Mr. +Hopkinson] at various theatres on the continent. By Anthony Pasquin +[pseud.]. (In: The Columbian phenix and Boston review. Boston, 1800. +8º. v. 1 for 1800, p. 115-120.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Williams=, Roger, 1607-1683. A key into the language of America: or, +An help to the language of the natives in that part of America, called +New-England. Together, with briefe observations of the customes, +manners and worships, &c of the aforesaid natives, in peace and warre, +in life and death. On all which are added spirituall observations, +general and particular by the authour, of chiefe and speciall use +(upon all occasions) to all the English inhabiting those parts; yet +pleasant and profitable to the view of all men: By Roger Williams of +Providence in New-England. London, Printed by Gregory Dexter, 1643. +8 p.l., 197(1) [correctly 207(1)] p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + p. 96 and 97 wrongly numbered 92 and 93; p. 115-207 + wrongly numbered 105-197. + + Poems on p. 10, 17, 21, 30-31, 48, 53, 61-62, 64, 67-68, + 78, 81, 84-85, 87-88, 95-96, 104, 108, 109, 113, 114, + 131-132, 137, 143, 150, 159, 162, 168-169, 173-174, 182-183, + 185, 192, 196. + + Reprinted in _Collections_ of the Rhode Island + Historical Society, Providence, 1827, v. 1, _IAA_. + + +=Wilson=, Alexander, 1766-1813. The foresters: a poem, descriptive of +a pedestrian journey to the Falls of Niagara, in the autumn of 1804. +By Alexander Wilson, author of American ornithology. West Chester, Pa. +Printed by Joseph Painter.--1838.--2 p.l., (1)6-104 p. 24º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Wilson=, John, 1588-1667. A copy of verses made by that reverend man +of God Mr. John Wilson, pastor to the First Church in Boston; on the +sudden death of Mr. Joseph Brisco, who was translated from earth to +Heaven Jan. 1. 1657. [Cambridge? Samuel Green? 1657?] Broadside. (In: +S. A. Green, Ten fac-simile reproductions relating to New England. +Boston, 1902. fº.) + + =Reserve= + + Enclosed in mourning borders. Photo-facsimile, exact + size. + + +---- [Extract from] A poem upon the death of the first and only child +of his daughter Mrs. Danforth. (In: Cotton Mather, Johannes in Eremo. +Boston, 1695. 24º. p. 30.) + + =Reserve= + + +---- In pientissimum, reverendissimumque virum, Johannem Harvardum, +è suggesto sacro Caroloensi ad coelos evectum, ad alumnos +Cantabrienses literatos, poëma. (In: Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi +Americana. London, 1702. 4º. book iv, p. 139.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in later editions of the _Magnalia_ as + follows: Hartford, 1820, v. 2, p. 28, and Hartford, 1855, + v. 2, p. 33. + + +---- A song of deliverance for the lasting remembrance of Gods +wonderful works never to be forgotten. Containing in it the wonderful +defeat of the Spanish-Armado, Anno, 1588. the woful plague, Anno, +1603. soon upon the entrance of King James of famous memory, unto the +Crown of England. With the discovery of the Powder Plot, Anno, 1605. +and down fall of Black Fryers, when an hellish crew of Papists met +to hear Drury a Popish priest, an 1623. Also the grievous plague, +Anno 1625. with poems both Latin and English, and the verses of that +learned Theodore Beza. By that reverend, and eminent man of God, Mr. +John Wilson, formerly Christs faithful shepherd in Sudbury, in Suffolk +in great Brittain, where these heavenly poems and spiritual songs were +compiled, and at London printed, Anno, 1626. since pastor to the First +church of Christ in Boston in New-England. For the sake of several +who have much desired to see and read this work it is reprinted.... +Boston; Printed in the year, 1680. 4 p.l. 1-36 p. 8º. + + =Reserve= + + All pages after p. 36 lacking. + + +=Winchester=, Elhanan, 1751-1797. The process and empire of Christ; +from his birth to the end of the mediatorial kingdom; a poem, in +twelve books. By Elhanan Winchester. Brattleboro. Printed by William +Fessenden. 1805. iv, (1)6-352 p. 16º. + + =NBHD= + + +=Winslow=, Josias. [Elegy] On the said William Bradford. (In: N. +Morton, New-Englands memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. 12º. p. 146-147.) + + =Reserve= + + +=Wolcott=, Roger, 1679-1767. A brief account of the agency of the +honourable John Winthrop, Esq. in the Court of King Charles the +Second, Anno Dom. 1662; when he obtained a charter for the colony +of Connecticut. Written by Roger Wolcott, Esq. his successor in the +government of Connecticut, from 1751-1754. (Massachusetts Historical +Society. Collections. Boston, 1795. 8º. series 1, v. 1, p. 262-298.) + + =IAA= + + Reprinted from his _Poetical meditations, being the + improvement of some vacant hours_, New-London, 1725, + p. 19-78, _Reserve_. + + +---- The poems of Roger Wolcott, Esq., 1725. Boston: The Club of Odd +Volumes, 1898. 14 p., 1 l., ii, 78 p., 1 l. sq. 8º. (The Club of Odd +Volumes. Early American poetry. [Reprints, v.] 5.) + + =Reserve= + + No. 81 of one hundred copies on hand-made paper. + + This is a modern type reprint, page for page, with + facsimile title-page, of the next entry. + + +---- Poetical meditations, being the improvement of some vacant hours. +By Roger Wolcott, Esq; with a preface by the Reverend Mr. Bulkley of +Colchester. New-London: Printed and sold by T. Green, 1725. 2 p.l., +lvi, ii, 78 p., 2 l. 12º. + + =Reserve= + + For a modern reprint see previous entry. + + +=Wood=, William. New Englands prospect. A true, lively, and +experimentall description of that part of America, commonly called +New England: discovering the state of that countrie both as it stands +to our new-come English planters; and to the old native inhabitants. +Laying downe that which may both enrich the knowledge of the +mind-travelling reader, or benefit the future voyager. By William +Wood. Printed at London by Tho. Cotes, for John Bellamie, and are to +be sold at his shop, at the three Golden Lyons in Cornehill, neere the +Royall Exchange. 1635. 4 p.l., 83(1) p., 2 l., 1 map. 4º. + + =Reserve= + + Poems on p. 14, 16, 23, 28. + + +=Woodbridge=, Benjamin, 1622-1684. Upon the tomb of the most reverend +Mr. John Cotton, late teacher of the church of Boston in New-England. +(In: N. Morton, New-Englands memoriall. Cambridge, 1669. 12º. +p. 137-139.) + + =Reserve= + + Reprinted in Cotton Mather, _Magnalia Christi + Americana_, London, 1702, book 3, p. 30-31, _Reserve_, + Hartford, 1820, v. 1, p. 258-259, and Hartford, 1855, v. 1, + p. 284. + + Also printed in E. C. Stedman and E. M. Hutchinson, _A + library of American literature_, New York, 1889, v. 1, + p. 359-361, _NBB_. + + +=Woodbridge=, Timothy. To the Reverend Cotton Mather on his History of +New England. (In: Cotton Mather, Magnalia Christi Americana. London, +1702. 4º.) + + =Reserve= + + Also printed in later editions as follows: Hartford, + 1820, v. 1, p. 18, and Hartford, 1855, v. 1, p. 21. + + +=Woodworth=, Samuel, 1785-1842. The poems, odes, songs, and other +metrical effusions, of Samuel Woodworth, author of "The Champions of +freedom," &c. New-York: Published by Abraham Asten and Mathias Lopez. +1818. xii, (1)14-288 p., front. (port.) 12º. + + =NBHD= + + Several of Woodworth's poems first appeared in _The + complete coiffeur_, by J. B. M. D. Lafoy, New York, 1817. + + +=Wright=, Judah. Poems on various subjects. By Judah Wright. Boston: +Printed by Samuel Avery, No. 91 Newbury Street. 1812. 48 p. 12º. + + =NBH p.v. 24, no. 8= + + Leaf of errata mounted on verso of title-page. + + +=Wright=, N. Hill. Monody, on the death of Brigadier General Zebulon +Montgomery Pike: and other poems. By N. Hill Wright. Middlebury, (Vt.) +Printed by Slade & Ferguson. 1814. 79 p. 8º. + + =NBHD= + + _Contents_: Monody, p. 9-24.--Lines on the battle + of the Enterprise and Boxer, p. 25-29.--The sailor's + dying hour, p. 30-32.--Ode on the capture of the British + frigate Java, by the United States' frigate Constitution, + December 29, 1812, p. 33-36.--Henry and Julia, a tale + of real life, p. 37-42.--Hymn for the anniversary of a + charitable institution, p. 43-44.--The slanderer's tomb, + p. 45-47.--The power of sympathy, p. 48-49.--The faded rose, + p. 50-52.--The hour of rest, p. 53-55.--Appeal to the + affluent, p. 56-58.--Lines addressed to a lady, p. 59-60.--To + misfortune, p. 61-63.--Lines on seeing a beautiful infant + expire in the arms of her mother, p. 64-65.--Tribute to + the memory of Mrs. Juliet R*****, p. 66-67.--Pity's tear, + p. 68-70.--Retrospection, p. 71-73.--Ode, written for the + Fourth of July, 1814, p. 74-76.--Freedom's natal day, an + ode, written for the Fourth of July, 1814, p. 77-79. + + +=Young=, Edward R. One year in Savannah; a poem in five parts. [By +Edward R. Young.] Providence: Printed by Brown & Danforth. 1820. +16 p. 8º. + + =NBH p.v. 2, no. 3= + + +A =Young= American. _See_ The =Battle= of the Thames. + + +A =Young= gentleman of New York, pseud. Miscellaneous works, prose and +poetical. _See_ =Linn=, John Blair. + + * * * * * + + Transcriber's Notes + + + Punctuation has been standardized. + + Italic text has been denoted by _underscores_ and bold + text by =equal signs=. + + Characters in small caps have been replaced by all caps. + + Non-printable superscripts are represented by a + caret followed by the character, i.e. x^n. + If the superscript is more than one character, + they will be placed in {}, i.e. x^{23}. + + The non-printable characters have been replaced as shown + below: + 'oe' ligature --> oe + 'ue' ligature --> ue + + Names, words, and copyright dates are presented in many + styles and spellings, apparently as copied from the + individual volumes that were printed at different times + and places. These variations have been left unchanged + except noted below: + Alsop - George + Replaced 'scituation' with 'situation' + Copyright - inconsistent use of spaces following punctuation + in Roman numerals has been standardized without + spaces for this ebook. + Fessenden - Thomas (---- Original poems.) + Replaced 'Authur' with 'Author' + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Early American Poetry 1610-1820, by +New York Public Library + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44962 *** |
