American poetry: the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
Presents a collection of early American poetry in a tribute to the diversity and range of poetic traditions from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and includes regional music ballads and Native American translations.
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, NY
Libr. of America
2007
|
Ausgabe: | 1. print. |
Schriftenreihe: | The library of America
178 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | Presents a collection of early American poetry in a tribute to the diversity and range of poetic traditions from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and includes regional music ballads and Native American translations. |
Beschreibung: | XXIII, 952 S. |
ISBN: | 9781931082907 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a American poetry |b the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries |c [David S. Shields selected the contents and wrote the notes for this volume] |
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490 | 1 | |a The library of America |v 178 | |
520 | 3 | |a Presents a collection of early American poetry in a tribute to the diversity and range of poetic traditions from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and includes regional music ballads and Native American translations. | |
648 | 7 | |a Geschichte 1600-1800 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
George Sandys (1578-1644)
from Ovid s Metamorphoses,
1
Thomas Morton (c. rcSo-c.
1646)
from New English Canaan, or New Canaan
The Authors Prologue,
4
The Poem,
4
The
Songe,
5
John Smith
(1580-1631)
The Sea
Marke, 7
John
Wilson (1588-1667)
To God our twice-Revenger,
8
Anagram made by mr John Willson of Boston upon
the Death of Mrs Abigaill Tompson,
9
William Bradford (1590-1657)
A Word to New England,
12
Of Boston in New England,
12
Certain Verses left by the Honoured William
Bradford Esq;,
14
Christopher Gardiner (c. 1596-c.
1662)
Wolfes in
Sheeps clothing why will ye,
16
Edward Johnson (1598-1672)
New England s Annoyances,
17
You that have seen these wondrous works by Sions Savior
don,
20
from The Bay Psalm Book
(1640)
Psalme
19, 23
Psalme
23, 24
Psalme
107, 25
Roger Williams
(с.
1606-1683)
from A Key into the Language of America,
30
John
Fiske (1608-1677)
John Kotton
:
O, Honie Knott,
32
John Wilson
:
Won Sion-hil,
35
Xli CONTENTS
Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672)
The Prologue (from The Tenth Muse),
36
A Dialogue between Old England and New,
38
The Author to her Book,
45
Contemplations,
46
Before the Birth of one of her Children,
55
To my Dear and loving Husband,
55
In memory of my dear grand-child Elizabeth Bradstreet,
56
On my dear Grand-child Simon Bradstreet,
57
As weary pilgrim, now at rest,
57
To my dear children,
58
May.
13. 1657, 59
Upon my dear
&
loving husband his goeing into England,
60
In silent night when rest I took,
61
John Saffin (1626-1710)
Sweetly (my Dearest) I left
thee
asleep,
63
To his Excellency Joseph Dudley Eqr
Gover: &c,
64
Edmund Hickeringill (1631-1708)
from Jamaica Viewed,
67
Michael Wigglesworth (1631-1705)
A Song of Emptiness,
71
from The Day of Doom,
74
God s Controversy with New-England, hi
from Meat out of the Eater,
124
I Walk d and did a little Mole-hill view,
128
Urian Oakes (c. 1631-1681)
An
Elegie
Upon that Reverend, Learned, Eminently Pious,
and Singularly Accomplished Divine, my ever Honoured
Brother, Mr. Thomas Shepard,
132
George Alsop (1636-c.
1673)
The Author to His Book,
144
Trafique
is Earth s great Atlas, that supports,
146
Heavens bright Lamp, shine forth some of thy Light,
146
Benjamin Tompson (1642-1714)
The Grammarians Funeral,
148
from New-Englands Crisis,
150
To Lord
Bellamont
when entering Governour of the
Massachusetts,
153
Some of his last lines,
155
CONTENTS Xlii
James Revel (fl. c. 1659-1680)
The Poor Unhappy Transported Felon s Sorrowful Account
of His fourteen Years Transportation at Virginia,
156
Edward Taylor
(c.
1642-1729)
from Preparatory Meditations (First Series)
1.
Meditation,
164
3.
Meditation. Can.
1.3.
Thy Good Ointment,
164
4.
Meditation. Cant.
2.1.
I am the Rose of Sharon,
166
The Reflexion,
168
9.
Meditation.
Joh.
6.51.
I am the Living Bread,
169
23.
Meditation. Cant.
4.8.
My Spouse,
170
24.
Meditation. Eph.
2.18.
Through him we have
—
an
Access
—
unto the Father,
172
32.
Meditation.
1
Cor.
3.22.
Whether Paul or
Apollos,
or
Cephas,
173
39.
Meditation, from
1
Joh.
2.1.
If any man sin, we have
an Advocate,
175
46.
Meditation. Rev.
3.5.
The same shall be cloathed in
White Raiment,
176
from Preparatory Meditations (Second Series)
1.
Meditation. Col.
2.17.
Which are Shaddows of things
to come and the body is
Christs,
178
4.
Meditation. Gal.
4.24.
Which things are an
Allegorie,
179
12.
Meditation.
Ezek.
37.24.
David my Servant shall be
their King,
180
14.
Meditation. Col.
2.3.
In whom are hid all the
Treasures of Wisdom, and Knowledge,
182
18.
Meditation.
Heb 13.10.
Wee have an Altar,
183
Meditation
24.
Joh.
1.14.
έσκήνωσβν
ev
ήμίν
Tabernacled amongst us,
185
34.
Meditation. Rev.
1.5.
Who loved us and washed away
our Sins in his Blood,
187
60a. Meditation.
Joh.
6.51.
I am the Living Bread, that
came down from Heaven,
189
150.
Meditation. Cant.
7.3.
Thy two breasts are like two
young Roes that are twins,
190
from Gods Determinations
The Preface,
191
The Accusation of the Inward Man,
192
The Glory of and Grace in the Church set out,
194
XIV CONTENTS
Upon a Spider Catching a Fly,
195
Upon a Wasp Child with Cold,
196
Huswifery,
198
The Ebb and Flow,
198
Upon the Sweeping Flood.
Aug:
13.14. 1683, 199
Francis Daniel Pastorius (1651-1719)
In these Seven Languages I this my book do own,
200
A Token of Love and Gratitude,
200
Rachel Preston, Hannah Hill
&
Mary Norris,
202
As often as some where before my Feet,
207
Delight in Books from Evening,
207
When I solidly do ponder,
207
Epibaterium, Or a hearty Congratulation to William Penn,
209
If any honest Friend be pleased to walk into my poor
Garden,
214
John Norton Jr. (1651-1716)
A Funeral Elogy, Upon that Pattern and Patron of Virtue, the
truely pious, peerless
&
matchless Gentlewoman, Mrs.
Anne Bradstreet,
216
Samuel Sewall (1652-1730)
Once more! Our GOD, vouchsafe to Shine,
219
Upon the drying up that Ancient River, the River
Merrimak,
220
Benjamin Harris (c. 1655-c.
1720)
In Adam s Fall,
221
John Danforth (1660-1730)
A few Lines to fill up a Vacant Page,
224
Cotton Mather (1663-1728)
Go then, my Dove, but now no longer MineV
225
Grati
tudinis Ergo,
225
Singing at the Plow,
232
The Songs of Harvest,
233
Sarah Kemble Knight (1666-1727)
from The Journal of Madam Knight
I ask thy Aid,
О
Potent Rum!
234
Tho 111 at ease, A stranger and alone,
234
CONTENTS
XV
Robert Hunter (1666-1734)
from Androboros: A Biographical Farce,
235
Ebenezer Cook (c.
іббу-с.
1733)
The Sot-Weed Factor; or, A Voyage to Maryland, &c,
239
Lewis Morris II (1671-1746)
The Mock Monarchy; or, the Kingdom of the Apes,
259
Benjamin
Colman (1673-1747)
A Quarrel with Fortune,
271
A Poem, on Elijahs Translation,
271
Tom Law (fl. 1720s)
Lovewell s Fight,
280
Christopher
Witt (1675-1765)
From the
Hymn-Book
of Johannes Kelpius
Of the Wilderness of the Secret, or Private
Virgin-Cross-Love,
284
The Paradox and Seldom Contentment of the God
loving Soul,
293
Of the Power of the New Virgin-Body, Wherein the Lord
himself dwelleth and Revealeth his Mysteries,
297
Henry Brooke (1678-1736)
The New Metamorphosis, or Fable of the Bald Eagle,
299
To my Bottle-friends,
303
Modern Politeness,
304
An unwilling Farewel to Poesy,
306
Roger Wolcott (1679-1767)
from Meditations on Man s First and Fallen Estate, and the
Wonderful Love of God Exhibited in a Redeemer,
310
from A Brief Account of the Agency of the Honourable
John Winthrop, Esq; in the Court of King Charles the
Second,
313
Charles
Hansford (c. 1685-1761)
My Country s Worth,
329
George Berkeley (1685-1753)
Verses on the Prospect of planting Arts and Learning in
America,
346
XVI CONTENTS
George Seagood
(с.
1685-1724)
Mr. Blackmore s Expeditio
Ultramontana,
347
Joseph
Breintnall
(с.
1695-1746)
A plain Description of one single Street in this City,
353
The Rape of Fewel,
354
To the Memory of
Aquila
Rose, Deceas d,
357
James Kirkpatrick (1696-1770)
The Nonpareil,
366
Susanna Wright (1697-1784)
Anna Boylens Letter to King Henry the 8th,
371
On the Benefit of Labour,
373
On the Death of a little Girl,
374
My own Birth Day,
376
To Eliza Norris
—
at
Fairhill, 377
Richard Lewis (c. 1699-1734)
To Mr. Samuel Hastings, (Ship-wright of Philadelphia) on his
launching the Maryland-Merchant, a large ship built by
him at Annapolis,
380
A Journey from Patapsco to Annapolis,
386
Food for Criticks,
396
Thomas Dale
(1700-1750)
Prologue spoken to the Orphan,
401
Epilogue to the Orphan,
402
Ralpho Cobble (fl.
1732)
Learning that Cobweb of the Brain,
403
James Sterling (1701-1763)
from An Epistle to the Hon. Arthur Dobbs, Esq. in Europe
from a Clergyman in America,
405
William Dawson (1704-1752)
The Wager,
413
On the Corruptions of the Stage,
420
To a Friend, Who recommended a Wife to Him,
421
To a Lady, on a Screen of Her Working,
421
John Adams (1705-1740)
Melancholly discrib d and dispell d,
423
CONTENTS XVII
Archibald Home
(с.
1705-1744)
An Elegy On the much to be lamented Death of George
Fraser
of Elizabeth Town,
425
The Ear-Ring,
427
Black-Joke: A Song,
428
On killing a Book-Worm,
429
Joseph
Green (1706-1780)
To Mr.
В
occasioned by his Verse, to Mr. Smibert on
seeing his Pictures,
430
The Poet s Lamentation for the Loss of his Cat, which he us d
to call his Muse,
430
On Mr.
В
—
s s singing an Hymn of his own composing,
432
To the Author of the Poetry in the last Weekly Journal,
434
A True Impartial Account of the Celebration of the Prince of
Orange s Nuptials at Portsmouth,
435
Inscription under Revd. Jn. Checkley s Picture,
437
A fig for your learning, I tell you the Town,
437
The Disappointed Cooper,
437
Hail!
D
—
f
—
t
of wondrous fame,
440
Benjamin
Franklin (1706-1790)
Drinking Song,
443
I Sing My Plain Country Joan,
444
Three Precepts,
446
Mather Byles (1707-1788)
Hymn to Christ for our Regeneration and Resurrection,
447
To Pictorio, on the Sight of his Pictures,
448
The Conflagration,
450
Jane Colman
Turell (1708-1735)
To my Muse, December
29. 1725, 454
An Invitation into the Country,
454
Phoebus has thrice his Yearly Circuit run,
456
Mary Hirst Pepperell (1708-1789)
A Lamentation &c. On the Death of a Child,
458
John Seccomb (1708-1792)
Father Abbey s Will,
459
Proposal to Mistress Abbey,
462
Anon.
The Convert to Tobacco,
466
XVIII CONTENTS
Poor
Julian
Poor JuUeyoun s Warnings to Children and Servants,
470
Advice from the Dead to the Living,
473
Jupiter Hammon (1711-c.
1806)
An Address to Miss Phillis Wheatly, Ethiopian Poetess, in
Boston,
477
John Osborn (1713-1753)
A Whaling Song,
481
Thomas Cradock (1718-1770)
Hymn for Ascension,
484
from Maryland Eclogues in Imitation of Virgil s,
485
Charles Woodmason (c. 1720-c.
1777)
To Benjamin Franklin Esq; of Philadelphia, on his Experiments
and Discoveries of Electricity,
489
James Grainger (c. 1721-1766)
from The Sugar-Cane,
492
Samuel Davies (1723-1761)
What is great God and what is not,
516
While o er our guilty Land,
О
Lord,
517
While various Rumours spread abroad,
519
The Invitations of the Gospel,
520
Self-Dedication at the Table of the Lord,
521
A.L.M. (fl.
1744)
A College Room,
523
Thomas Clemson (fl.
1746)
From Thomas Clemson ran away,
526
Carolina, a young lady
On her Father having desired her to forbid all young Men the
House,
528
Joseph Dumbleton (fl. 1744-1749)
A Rhapsody on Rum,
529
William Livingston (1723-1790)
from Philosophic Solitude,
531
Proclamation,
538
CONTENTS XIX
Samson Occom
(1723-1792)
The Sufferings of Christ,
543
A Morning Hymn,
544
A Son s Farewell,
545
The Slow Traveller,
546
Anon.
A Description of a Winter s Morning,
548
Anon.
The Petition,
549
William Smith (1727-1803)
The Mock Bird and Red Bird,
550
The Cherry-Tree and Peach-Tree,
552
The Birds of different Feather,
554
Hannah Griffitts (1727-1817)
The female Patriots. Address d to the Daughters
of Liberty in America,
558
To Sophronia. In answer to some Lines she directed to be
wrote on my Fan,
559
The Cits Return from the Wilderness to the City,
559
Wrote on the last Day of February
1775, 561
Upon Reading a Book entituled Common Sense,
561
On reading a few Paragraphs in the Crisis,
562
Mary Nelson (fl.
1769)
Forty Shillings Reward,
564
Mercy Otis Warren (1728-1814)
A Thought on the Inestimable Blessing of Reason,
occcasioned by its privation to a friend of very
superior talents and virtues,
566
To Mr.
-------, 567
Lucy Terry (c. 1730-1821)
Bars Fight,
570
Ned Botwood (c. 1730-1759)
Hot Stuff,
571
Henry Timberlake
(1730-1765)
A Translation of the War-Song,
572
XX
CONTENTS
Benjamin
Banneker (1731-1806)
The Puzzle
of the Hare and Hound,
574
Thomas Godfrey Jr.
(1736-1763)
Verses Occasioned by a Young Lady s asking the Author, What
was a Cure for Love?,
576
Epistle to a Friend; from Fort Henry,
577
A Dithyrambic on Wine,
578
Annis Boudinot Stockton (1736-1801)
A Satire on the fashionable pompoons worn by the Ladies in
the year
1753.
by a Gentleman; Answered by a young Lady
of sixteen,
581
A Sarcasm against the ladies in a newspaper; An impromptu
answer,
582
Compos d in a dancing room,
583
A Poetical Epistle, addressed by a Lady of New-Jersey, to her
Niece, upon her Marriage, in this City,
584
To Miss Mary Stockton,
587
Sensibility, an ode,
588
John Singleton
(fl. c. 1750-1767)
from A General Description of the West-Indian Islands,
590
Francis Hopkinson (1737-1791)
My gen rous heart disdains,
598
An Epitaph for an Infant,
599
The Battle of the Kegs,
599
A Camp Ballad,
602
Jonathan Odell
(1737-1818)
The Word of Congress,
604
Thomas Paine (1737-1809)
Liberty Tree,
614
Yankee Doodle
Yankee Doodle, or (as now christened by the Saints of New
England), The Lexington March,
616
The Yankey s return from Camp,
618
Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson (1737-1801)
To Doctor Fothergill,
621
Robert Bolling (1738-1775)
Neanthe,
625
Occlusion,
639
CONTENTS XXI
Nathaniel Evans (1742-1767)
To Benjamin Franklin, Esq: L.L.D., Occasioned by hearing
him play on the Harmonica,
641
Joseph Stansbury (1742-1809)
Verses to the Tories,
643
The United States,
643
To Cordelia,
644
William Billings (1746-1800)
Chester,
646
John
André (1750-1780)
Cow-Chace,
647
John
Trumbull (1750-1831)
from The Progress of Dulness {from Part Third: The
Progress of Coquetry, or, The Adventures of Miss
Harriet Simper),
657
from M Fingal {from Canto Third, The Liberty Pole),
668
Ann Eliza Bleecker (1752-1783)
Written in the Retreat from Burgoyne,
680
On Reading Dryden s Virgil,
681
Return to Tomhanick,
682
Timothy Dwight (1752-1817)
from The Triumph of Infidelity,
684
from Greenfield Hill (Part II, The Flourishing Village),
687
from The Psalms of David
Shall man,
O God
of light, and life,
708
While life prolongs its precious light,
710
I love thy kingdom, Lord,
711
Anon.
from The
Philadelphiád
Country Clown,
713
Quaker,
714
The Universal Motive,
715
Bagnio,
716
The Emigrant,
717
Miss Kitty Cut-a-dash,
718
Anne Hecht
(fl.
1780s)
Advice to Mrs. Mowat,
720
XXII CONTENTS
Philip Freneau (1752-1832)
American Liberty, 723
Libera
nos, Domine
—
Deliver us,
О
Lord,
732
Female Frailty,
733
Stanzas Occasioned by the Ruins of a Country Inn,
739
The Dying Indian,
740
The Wild Honey Suckle,
742
The Indian Student, or Force of Nature,
743
Lines occasioned by a Visit to an old Indian Burying
Ground,
746
The Country Printer,
747
To Sir Toby, a Sugar-Planter in the interior parts of
Jamaica,
752
To
Mr. Blanchard,
754
The Republican Genius of Europe,
755
On a Honey Bee, Drinking from a Glass of Wine, and
Drowned Therein,
756
David Humphreys (1752-1818)
Mount-Vernon: An Ode,
758
The Genius of America,
760
The Monkey, Who Shaved Himself and His Friends,
761
St. George Tucker (1752-1827)
A Dream on Bridecake,
763
A Second Dream on Bridecake,
764
George Ogilvie (c. 1753-1801)
from Carolina; or, The Planter,
767
Phillis Wheatley (c. 1753-1784)
To Maecenas,
774
To the University of Cambridge, in New-England,
775
On being brought from Africa to America,
776
On the Death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield,
777
To the Right Honourable William, Earl of Dartmouth,
778
To
S. M., a
young African Painter, on seeing his Works,
780
A Farewel to America,
781
To a Gentleman of the Navy,
783
Philis s Reply to the Answer in our last by the Gentleman in
the Navy,
784
To His Excellency General Washington,
786
Liberty and Peace,
787
CONTENTS XXIII
Lemuel Haynes
(1753—1833)
The Battle of Lexington,
789
Joel Barlow (1754-1812)
Innumerable mercies acknowledged,
796
from The Conspiracy of Kings,
796
The Hasty-Pudding,
799
Royall
Tyler (1757-1826)
The Origin of Evil. An Elegy,
809
Ode Composed for the Fourth of July,
813
An Irregular Supplicatory Address to the American Academies
of Arts and Sciences,
815
Margaret Lowther Page
(1759-1835)
To Miss J. L.—
, 818
Sarah Wentworth Morton (1759-1846)
The African Chief,
820
Memento,
822
Joseph Hopkinson (1770-1842)
Song, Adapted to the President s March
( Hail Columbia! ),
823
Thomas Green Fessenden (1771-1837)
Jonathan s Courtship,
825
Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810)
Monody, On the death of Gen. George Washington,
828
Robert Treat Paine Jr. (1773-1811)
Adams and Liberty,
831
William Munford (1775-1825)
The Disasters of Richland,
834
Biographical Notes,
839
Note on the Texts,
881
Acknowledgements,
894
Notes,
898
Index of Titles and First Lines,
942
Index of Poets,
951
|
adam_txt |
Contents
George Sandys (1578-1644)
from Ovid's Metamorphoses,
1
Thomas Morton (c. rcSo-c.
1646)
from New English Canaan, or New Canaan
The Authors Prologue,
4
The Poem,
4
The
Songe,
5
John Smith
(1580-1631)
The Sea
Marke, 7
John
Wilson (1588-1667)
To God our twice-Revenger,
8
Anagram made by mr John Willson of Boston upon
the Death of Mrs Abigaill Tompson,
9
William Bradford (1590-1657)
A Word to New England,
12
Of Boston in New England,
12
"Certain Verses left by the Honoured William
Bradford Esq;,"
14
Christopher Gardiner (c. 1596-c.
1662)
"Wolfes in
Sheeps clothing why will ye,"
16
Edward Johnson (1598-1672)
New England's Annoyances,
17
"You that have seen these wondrous works by Sions Savior
don,"
20
from The Bay Psalm Book
(1640)
Psalme
19, 23
Psalme
23, 24
Psalme
107, 25
Roger Williams
(с.
1606-1683)
from A Key into the Language of America,
30
John
Fiske (1608-1677)
John Kotton
:
O, Honie Knott,
32
John Wilson
:
Won Sion-hil,
35
Xli CONTENTS
Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672)
The Prologue (from The Tenth Muse),
36
A Dialogue between Old England and New,
38
The Author to her Book,
45
Contemplations,
46
Before the Birth of one of her Children,
55
To my Dear and loving Husband,
55
In memory of my dear grand-child Elizabeth Bradstreet,
56
On my dear Grand-child Simon Bradstreet,
57
"As weary pilgrim, now at rest,"
57
To my dear children,
58
May.
13. 1657, 59
Upon my dear
&
loving husband his goeing into England,
60
"In silent night when rest I took,"
61
John Saffin (1626-1710)
"Sweetly (my Dearest) I left
thee
asleep,"
63
To his Excellency Joseph Dudley Eqr
Gover: &c,
64
Edmund Hickeringill (1631-1708)
from Jamaica Viewed,
67
Michael Wigglesworth (1631-1705)
A Song of Emptiness,
71
from The Day of Doom,
74
God's Controversy with New-England, hi
from Meat out of the Eater,
124
"I Walk'd and did a little Mole-hill view,"
128
Urian Oakes (c. 1631-1681)
An
Elegie
Upon that Reverend, Learned, Eminently Pious,
and Singularly Accomplished Divine, my ever Honoured
Brother, Mr. Thomas Shepard,
132
George Alsop (1636-c.
1673)
The Author to His Book,
144
"Trafique
is Earth's great Atlas, that supports,"
146
"Heavens bright Lamp, shine forth some of thy Light,"
146
Benjamin Tompson (1642-1714)
The Grammarians Funeral,
148
from New-Englands Crisis,
150
To Lord
Bellamont
when entering Governour of the
Massachusetts,
153
"Some of his last lines,"
155
CONTENTS Xlii
James Revel (fl. c. 1659-1680)
The Poor Unhappy Transported Felon's Sorrowful Account
of His fourteen Years Transportation at Virginia,
156
Edward Taylor
(c.
1642-1729)
from Preparatory Meditations (First Series)
1.
Meditation,
164
3.
Meditation. Can.
1.3.
Thy Good Ointment,
164
4.
Meditation. Cant.
2.1.
I am the Rose of Sharon,
166
The Reflexion,
168
9.
Meditation.
Joh.
6.51.
I am the Living Bread,
169
23.
Meditation. Cant.
4.8.
My Spouse,
170
24.
Meditation. Eph.
2.18.
Through him we have
—
an
Access
—
unto the Father,
172
32.
Meditation.
1
Cor.
3.22.
Whether Paul or
Apollos,
or
Cephas,
173
39.
Meditation, from
1
Joh.
2.1.
If any man sin, we have
an Advocate,
175
46.
Meditation. Rev.
3.5.
The same shall be cloathed in
White Raiment,
176
from Preparatory Meditations (Second Series)
1.
Meditation. Col.
2.17.
Which are Shaddows of things
to come and the body is
Christs,
178
4.
Meditation. Gal.
4.24.
Which things are an
Allegorie,
179
12.
Meditation.
Ezek.
37.24.
David my Servant shall be
their King,
180
14.
Meditation. Col.
2.3.
In whom are hid all the
Treasures of Wisdom, and Knowledge,
182
18.
Meditation.
Heb 13.10.
Wee have an Altar,
183
Meditation
24.
Joh.
1.14.
έσκήνωσβν
ev
ήμίν
Tabernacled amongst us,
185
34.
Meditation. Rev.
1.5.
Who loved us and washed away
our Sins in his Blood,
187
60a. Meditation.
Joh.
6.51.
I am the Living Bread, that
came down from Heaven,
189
150.
Meditation. Cant.
7.3.
Thy two breasts are like two
young Roes that are twins,
190
from Gods Determinations
The Preface,
191
The Accusation of the Inward Man,
192
The Glory of and Grace in the Church set out,
194
XIV CONTENTS
Upon a Spider Catching a Fly,
195
Upon a Wasp Child with Cold,
196
Huswifery,
198
The Ebb and Flow,
198
Upon the Sweeping Flood.
Aug:
13.14. 1683, 199
Francis Daniel Pastorius (1651-1719)
"In these Seven Languages I this my book do own,"
200
A Token of Love and Gratitude,
200
Rachel Preston, Hannah Hill
&
Mary Norris,
202
"As often as some where before my Feet,"
207
"Delight in Books from Evening,"
207
"When I solidly do ponder,"
207
Epibaterium, Or a hearty Congratulation to William Penn,
209
"If any honest Friend be pleased to walk into my poor
Garden,"
214
John Norton Jr. (1651-1716)
A Funeral Elogy, Upon that Pattern and Patron of Virtue, the
truely pious, peerless
&
matchless Gentlewoman, Mrs.
Anne Bradstreet,
216
Samuel Sewall (1652-1730)
"Once more! Our GOD, vouchsafe to Shine,"
219
Upon the drying up that Ancient River, the River
Merrimak,
220
Benjamin Harris (c. 1655-c.
1720)
"In Adam's Fall,"
221
John Danforth (1660-1730)
A few Lines to fill up a Vacant Page,
224
Cotton Mather (1663-1728)
"Go then, my Dove, but now no longer MineV
225
Grati
tudinis Ergo,
225
Singing at the Plow,
232
The Songs of Harvest,
233
Sarah Kemble Knight (1666-1727)
from The Journal of Madam Knight
"I ask thy Aid,
О
Potent Rum!"
234
"Tho' 111 at ease, A stranger and alone,"
234
CONTENTS
XV
Robert Hunter (1666-1734)
from Androboros: A Biographical Farce,
235
Ebenezer Cook (c.
іббу-с.
1733)
The Sot-Weed Factor; or, A Voyage to Maryland, &c,
239
Lewis Morris II (1671-1746)
The Mock Monarchy; or, the Kingdom of the Apes,
259
Benjamin
Colman (1673-1747)
A Quarrel with Fortune,
271
A Poem, on Elijahs Translation,
271
Tom Law (fl. 1720s)
Lovewell's Fight,
280
Christopher
Witt (1675-1765)
From the
Hymn-Book
of Johannes Kelpius
Of the Wilderness of the Secret, or Private
Virgin-Cross-Love,
284
The Paradox and Seldom Contentment of the God
loving Soul,
293
Of the Power of the New Virgin-Body, Wherein the Lord
himself dwelleth and Revealeth his Mysteries,
297
Henry Brooke (1678-1736)
The New Metamorphosis, or Fable of the Bald Eagle,
299
To my Bottle-friends,
303
Modern Politeness,
304
An unwilling Farewel to Poesy,
306
Roger Wolcott (1679-1767)
from Meditations on Man's First and Fallen Estate, and the
Wonderful Love of God Exhibited in a Redeemer,
310
from A Brief Account of the Agency of the Honourable
John Winthrop, Esq; in the Court of King Charles the
Second,
313
Charles
Hansford (c. 1685-1761)
My Country's Worth,
329
George Berkeley (1685-1753)
Verses on the Prospect of planting Arts and Learning in
America,
346
XVI CONTENTS
George Seagood
(с.
1685-1724)
Mr. Blackmore's Expeditio
Ultramontana,
347
Joseph
Breintnall
(с.
1695-1746)
"A plain Description of one single Street in this City,"
353
The Rape of Fewel,
354
To the Memory of
Aquila
Rose, Deceas'd,
357
James Kirkpatrick (1696-1770)
The Nonpareil,
366
Susanna Wright (1697-1784)
Anna Boylens Letter to King Henry the 8th,
371
On the Benefit of Labour,
373
On the Death of a little Girl,
374
My own Birth Day,
376
To Eliza Norris
—
at
Fairhill, 377
Richard Lewis (c. 1699-1734)
To Mr. Samuel Hastings, (Ship-wright of Philadelphia) on his
launching the Maryland-Merchant, a large ship built by
him at Annapolis,
380
A Journey from Patapsco to Annapolis,
386
Food for Criticks,
396
Thomas Dale
(1700-1750)
Prologue spoken to the Orphan,
401
Epilogue to the Orphan,
402
"Ralpho Cobble" (fl.
1732)
"Learning that Cobweb of the Brain,"
403
James Sterling (1701-1763)
from An Epistle to the Hon. Arthur Dobbs, Esq. in Europe
from a Clergyman in America,
405
William Dawson (1704-1752)
The Wager,
413
On the Corruptions of the Stage,
420
To a Friend, Who recommended a Wife to Him,
421
To a Lady, on a Screen of Her Working,
421
John Adams (1705-1740)
Melancholly discrib'd and dispell'd,
423
CONTENTS XVII
Archibald Home
(с.
1705-1744)
An Elegy On the much to be lamented Death of George
Fraser
of Elizabeth Town,
425
The Ear-Ring,
427
Black-Joke: A Song,
428
On killing a Book-Worm,
429
Joseph
Green (1706-1780)
To Mr.
В
occasioned by his Verse, to Mr. Smibert on
seeing his Pictures,
430
The Poet's Lamentation for the Loss of his Cat, which he us'd
to call his Muse,
430
On Mr.
В
—
s's singing an Hymn of his own composing,
432
To the Author of the Poetry in the last Weekly Journal,
434
A True Impartial Account of the Celebration of the Prince of
Orange's Nuptials at Portsmouth,
435
Inscription under Revd. Jn. Checkley's Picture,
437
"A fig for your learning, I tell you the Town,"
437
The Disappointed Cooper,
437
"Hail!
D
—
f
—
t
of wondrous fame,"
440
Benjamin
Franklin (1706-1790)
Drinking Song,
443
I Sing My Plain Country Joan,
444
Three Precepts,
446
Mather Byles (1707-1788)
Hymn to Christ for our Regeneration and Resurrection,
447
To Pictorio, on the Sight of his Pictures,
448
The Conflagration,
450
Jane Colman
Turell (1708-1735)
To my Muse, December
29. 1725, 454
An Invitation into the Country,
454
"Phoebus has thrice his Yearly Circuit run,"
456
Mary Hirst Pepperell (1708-1789)
A Lamentation &c. On the Death of a Child,
458
John Seccomb (1708-1792)
Father Abbey's Will,
459
Proposal to Mistress Abbey,
462
Anon.
The Convert to Tobacco,
466
XVIII CONTENTS
"Poor
Julian"
Poor JuUeyoun's Warnings to Children and Servants,
470
Advice from the Dead to the Living,
473
Jupiter Hammon (1711-c.
1806)
An Address to Miss Phillis Wheatly, Ethiopian Poetess, in
Boston,
477
John Osborn (1713-1753)
A Whaling Song,
481
Thomas Cradock (1718-1770)
Hymn for Ascension,
484
from Maryland Eclogues in Imitation of Virgil's,
485
Charles Woodmason (c. 1720-c.
1777)
To Benjamin Franklin Esq; of Philadelphia, on his Experiments
and Discoveries of Electricity,
489
James Grainger (c. 1721-1766)
from The Sugar-Cane,
492
Samuel Davies (1723-1761)
"What is great God\ and what is not,"
516
"While o'er our guilty Land,
О
Lord,"
517
"While various Rumours spread abroad,"
519
The Invitations of the Gospel,
520
Self-Dedication at the Table of the Lord,
521
A.L.M. (fl.
1744)
A College Room,
523
Thomas Clemson (fl.
1746)
"From Thomas Clemson ran away,"
526
"Carolina, a young lady"
On her Father having desired her to forbid all young Men the
House,
528
Joseph Dumbleton (fl. 1744-1749)
A Rhapsody on Rum,
529
William Livingston (1723-1790)
from Philosophic Solitude,
531
Proclamation,
538
CONTENTS XIX
Samson Occom
(1723-1792)
The Sufferings of Christ,
543
A Morning Hymn,
544
A Son's Farewell,
545
The Slow Traveller,
546
Anon.
A Description of a Winter's Morning,
548
Anon.
The Petition,
549
William Smith (1727-1803)
The Mock Bird and Red Bird,
550
The Cherry-Tree and Peach-Tree,
552
The Birds of different Feather,
554
Hannah Griffitts (1727-1817)
The female Patriots. Address'd to the Daughters
of Liberty in America,
558
To Sophronia. In answer to some Lines she directed to be
wrote on my Fan,
559
The Cits Return from the Wilderness to the City,
559
Wrote on the last Day of February
1775, 561
Upon Reading a Book entituled Common Sense,
561
On reading a few Paragraphs in the Crisis,
562
Mary Nelson (fl.
1769)
Forty Shillings Reward,
564
Mercy Otis Warren (1728-1814)
A Thought on the Inestimable Blessing of Reason,
occcasioned by its privation to a friend of very
superior talents and virtues,
566
To Mr.
-------, 567
Lucy Terry (c. 1730-1821)
Bars Fight,
570
Ned Botwood (c. 1730-1759)
Hot Stuff,
571
Henry Timberlake
(1730-1765)
A Translation of the War-Song,
572
XX
CONTENTS
Benjamin
Banneker (1731-1806)
The Puzzle
of the Hare and Hound,
574
Thomas Godfrey Jr.
(1736-1763)
Verses Occasioned by a Young Lady's asking the Author, What
was a Cure for Love?,
576
Epistle to a Friend; from Fort Henry,
577
A Dithyrambic on Wine,
578
Annis Boudinot Stockton (1736-1801)
A Satire on the fashionable pompoons worn by the Ladies in
the year
1753.
by a Gentleman; Answered by a young Lady
of sixteen,
581
A Sarcasm against the ladies in a newspaper; An impromptu
answer,
582
Compos'd in a dancing room,
583
A Poetical Epistle, addressed by a Lady of New-Jersey, to her
Niece, upon her Marriage, in this City,
584
To Miss Mary Stockton,
587
Sensibility, an ode,
588
John Singleton
(fl. c. 1750-1767)
from A General Description of the West-Indian Islands,
590
Francis Hopkinson (1737-1791)
"My gen'rous heart disdains,"
598
An Epitaph for an Infant,
599
The Battle of the Kegs,
599
A Camp Ballad,
602
Jonathan Odell
(1737-1818)
The Word of Congress,
604
Thomas Paine (1737-1809)
Liberty Tree,
614
Yankee Doodle
Yankee Doodle, or (as now christened by the Saints of New
England), The Lexington March,
616
The Yankey's return from Camp,
618
Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson (1737-1801)
To Doctor Fothergill,
621
Robert Bolling (1738-1775)
Neanthe,
625
Occlusion,
639
CONTENTS XXI
Nathaniel Evans (1742-1767)
To Benjamin Franklin, Esq: L.L.D., Occasioned by hearing
him play on the Harmonica,
641
Joseph Stansbury (1742-1809)
Verses to the Tories,
643
The United States,
643
To Cordelia,
644
William Billings (1746-1800)
Chester,
646
John
André (1750-1780)
Cow-Chace,
647
John
Trumbull (1750-1831)
from The Progress of Dulness {from Part Third: The
Progress of Coquetry, or, The Adventures of Miss
Harriet Simper),
657
from M'Fingal {from Canto Third, The Liberty Pole),
668
Ann Eliza Bleecker (1752-1783)
Written in the Retreat from Burgoyne,
680
On Reading Dryden's Virgil,
681
Return to Tomhanick,
682
Timothy Dwight (1752-1817)
from The Triumph of Infidelity,
684
from Greenfield Hill (Part II, The Flourishing Village),
687
from The Psalms of David
"Shall man,
O God
of light, and life,"
708
"While life prolongs its precious light,"
710
"I love thy kingdom, Lord,"
711
Anon.
from The
Philadelphiád
Country Clown,
713
Quaker,
714
The Universal Motive,
715
Bagnio,
716
The Emigrant,
717
Miss Kitty Cut-a-dash,
718
Anne Hecht
(fl.
1780s)
Advice to Mrs. Mowat,
720
XXII CONTENTS
Philip Freneau (1752-1832)
American Liberty, 723
Libera
nos, Domine
—
Deliver us,
О
Lord,
732
Female Frailty,
733
Stanzas Occasioned by the Ruins of a Country Inn,
739
The Dying Indian,
740
The Wild Honey Suckle,
742
The Indian Student, or Force of Nature,
743
Lines occasioned by a Visit to an old Indian Burying
Ground,
746
The Country Printer,
747
To Sir Toby, a Sugar-Planter in the interior parts of
Jamaica,
752
To
Mr. Blanchard,
754
The Republican Genius of Europe,
755
On a Honey Bee, Drinking from a Glass of Wine, and
Drowned Therein,
756
David Humphreys (1752-1818)
Mount-Vernon: An Ode,
758
The Genius of America,
760
The Monkey, Who Shaved Himself and His Friends,
761
St. George Tucker (1752-1827)
A Dream on Bridecake,
763
A Second Dream on Bridecake,
764
George Ogilvie (c. 1753-1801)
from Carolina; or, The Planter,
767
Phillis Wheatley (c. 1753-1784)
To Maecenas,
774
To the University of Cambridge, in New-England,
775
On being brought from Africa to America,
776
On the Death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield,
777
To the Right Honourable William, Earl of Dartmouth,
778
To
S. M., a
young African Painter, on seeing his Works,
780
A Farewel to America,
781
To a Gentleman of the Navy,
783
Philis's Reply to the Answer in our last by the Gentleman in
the Navy,
784
To His Excellency General Washington,
786
Liberty and Peace,
787
CONTENTS XXIII
Lemuel Haynes
(1753—1833)
The Battle of Lexington,
789
Joel Barlow (1754-1812)
Innumerable mercies acknowledged,
796
from The Conspiracy of Kings,
796
The Hasty-Pudding,
799
Royall
Tyler (1757-1826)
The Origin of Evil. An Elegy,
809
Ode Composed for the Fourth of July,
813
An Irregular Supplicatory Address to the American Academies
of Arts and Sciences,
815
Margaret Lowther Page
(1759-1835)
To Miss J. L.—
, 818
Sarah Wentworth Morton (1759-1846)
The African Chief,
820
Memento,
822
Joseph Hopkinson (1770-1842)
Song, Adapted to the President's March
("Hail Columbia!"),
823
Thomas Green Fessenden (1771-1837)
Jonathan's Courtship,
825
Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810)
Monody, On the death of Gen. George Washington,
828
Robert Treat Paine Jr. (1773-1811)
Adams and Liberty,
831
William Munford (1775-1825)
The Disasters of Richland,
834
Biographical Notes,
839
Note on the Texts,
881
Acknowledgements,
894
Notes,
898
Index of Titles and First Lines,
942
Index of Poets,
951 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author2 | Shields, David S. |
author2_role | edt |
author2_variant | d s s ds dss |
author_facet | Shields, David S. |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV022963344 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | PS601 |
callnumber-raw | PS601 |
callnumber-search | PS601 |
callnumber-sort | PS 3601 |
callnumber-subject | PS - American Literature |
classification_rvk | HS 2100 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)144228453 (DE-599)BVBBV022963344 |
dewey-full | 811.308 |
dewey-hundreds | 800 - Literature (Belles-lettres) and rhetoric |
dewey-ones | 811 - American poetry in English |
dewey-raw | 811.308 |
dewey-search | 811.308 |
dewey-sort | 3811.308 |
dewey-tens | 810 - American literature in English |
discipline | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
discipline_str_mv | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
edition | 1. print. |
era | Geschichte 1600-1800 gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte 1600-1800 |
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genre | (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content |
genre_facet | Anthologie |
geographic | USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd |
geographic_facet | USA |
id | DE-604.BV022963344 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T19:05:39Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:08:41Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781931082907 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016167693 |
oclc_num | 144228453 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-20 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-20 DE-188 |
physical | XXIII, 952 S. |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Libr. of America |
record_format | marc |
series | The library of America |
series2 | The library of America |
spelling | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries [David S. Shields selected the contents and wrote the notes for this volume] 1. print. New York, NY Libr. of America 2007 XXIII, 952 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier The library of America 178 Presents a collection of early American poetry in a tribute to the diversity and range of poetic traditions from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and includes regional music ballads and Native American translations. Geschichte 1600-1800 gnd rswk-swf American poetry sears American poetry Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4002214-6 Anthologie gnd-content USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 s Geschichte 1600-1800 z DE-604 Shields, David S. edt The library of America 178 (DE-604)BV000009606 178 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016167693&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries The library of America American poetry sears American poetry Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4036774-5 (DE-588)4078704-7 (DE-588)4002214-6 |
title | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries |
title_auth | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries |
title_exact_search | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries |
title_exact_search_txtP | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries |
title_full | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries [David S. Shields selected the contents and wrote the notes for this volume] |
title_fullStr | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries [David S. Shields selected the contents and wrote the notes for this volume] |
title_full_unstemmed | American poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries [David S. Shields selected the contents and wrote the notes for this volume] |
title_short | American poetry |
title_sort | american poetry the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries |
title_sub | the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries |
topic | American poetry sears American poetry Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 Lyrik (DE-588)4036774-5 gnd |
topic_facet | American poetry American poetry Colonial period, ca. 1600-1775 Lyrik USA Anthologie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016167693&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV000009606 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT shieldsdavids americanpoetrytheseventeenthandeighteenthcenturies |