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9780195118414

Early American Writings

by ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780195118414

  • ISBN10:

    0195118413

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2001-12-06
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Summary

This comprehensive and authoritative anthology uses a wide range ofwritings by the peoples of early America--English, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch,French, Swedish, African, and Native American--to convey the cultural richnessand complexities of the Atlantic world of the fifteenth through the lateeighteenth centuries. The collection offers a generous selection of writings byBritish and European peoples who came to the Americas as well as materialsrepresenting indigenous American cultures. Encompassing literature, journalism,and oral narrative, it includes several original translations and features morepoetry than any other anthology in the field. Each section covers a differentperiod of colonization and is introduced by an extensive essay. All selectionshave been carefully annotated to help students place the writings in theircultural and regional contexts. Ideal for courses in early/colonial Americanliterature, colonial American studies, American studies, and American history,Early American Writings gives students an unprecedented look into the diverseand fascinating culture of early America.

Table of Contents

Preface xvii
Acknowledgments xxi
1. THE STORIES OF THE PEOPLE: CREATION, EMERGENCE, TRANSFORMATION 1(22)
Penobscot
2(2)
Corn Mother
2(2)
Algonquian
4(2)
A Story about Great Rabbit
4(2)
Iroquois
6(5)
The Creation of the World
7(2)
Iroquois, or the Confederacy of the Five Nations
9(2)
Seneca
11(2)
The Origin of Stories
11(2)
Creek
13(3)
Origins of the People
13(3)
Salish
16(1)
The Beginning
16(1)
Gros Ventres
17(1)
The Creation of the World
17(1)
Acoma
18(5)
Emergence into the Upper World
18(5)
2. EUROPEANS' NEW WORLD: THE FIRST CENTURY 23(117)
Southern Experiences
Christopher Columbus (1451-1506)
28(15)
from the Diario of Christopher Columbus's First Voyage to America, 1492-1493
29(11)
Letter of Columbus, Describing the Results of His First Voyage
40(3)
Amerigo Vespucci (1452?-1512)
43(9)
Letter to Piero Soderini, Gonfaloniere of the Republic of Florence, 1504
44(8)
Bartolome de Las Casas (1474-1566)
52(8)
from A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies
53(7)
Prologue
53(1)
Preface
54(2)
from New Spain
56(4)
Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca (1490?-1577?)
60(8)
from The Relation of Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca
61(7)
from Chapter 7: The Character of the Country
61(1)
from Chapter 8: We Go from Aute
62(1)
from Chapter 10: The Assault from the Indians
63(1)
from Chapter 11: Of What Befel Lope de Oviedo with the Indians
64(1)
from Chapter 21: Our Cure of Some of the Afflicted
64(1)
from Chapter 24: Customs of the Indians of That Country
65
from Chapter 27: We Moved Away and Were Well Received
63(3)
from Chapter 32: The Indians Give Us the Hearts of Deer
66(1)
from Chapter 33: We See Traces of Christians
67(1)
from Chapter 34: Of Sending for the Christians
67(1)
Pedro de Castaneda (1510-1570?)
68(6)
from Castaneda's Narrative
69(5)
from Part I
from Preface
69(1)
Chapter 2
70(1)
Chapter 3
71(1)
from Chapter 9
72(1)
from Part II Chapter 3
73(1)
Jean de Lery (1534-1613)
74(12)
from History of a Voyage to the Land of Brazil, Otherwise Called America
75(11)
from Preface
75(3)
Chapter 16
78(8)
Rene Goulaine de Laudonniere (1529-1574)
86(7)
from A Notable Historie Containing Foure Voyages Made by Certaine French Captaines unto Florida
87(6)
from Preface
87(1)
from The Historie of the First Voyage
88(5)
Garcilaso de la Vega, el Inca (1539-1616)
93(17)
from The Florida of the Inca
94(9)
Book I
Chapter 3
94(1)
Chapter 4
95(2)
Book II
Chapter 1
97(2)
Chapter 2
99(1)
Chapter 3
100(2)
Chapter 4
102(1)
from Royal Commentaries of the Incas and General History of Peru, Part I
103(7)
Book I
Chapter 6
103(2)
Chapter 15
105(1)
Chapter 16
106(1)
Chapter 17
107(1)
Chapter 18
108(1)
from Chapter 19
109(1)
Northern Experiences
Jacques Cartier (1491-1557)
110(4)
from The First Relation
110(4)
Samuel de Champlain (1570?-1635)
114(9)
from Voyages and Discoveries in New France
114(9)
To the King
114(1)
Preface
115(1)
Of the Hurons
115(8)
Pierre-Esprit Radisson (1636-1710?)
123(17)
from The Relation of my Voyage, being in Bondage in the Lands of the Irokoits, which was the next yeare aft my coming into Canada, in the yeare 1651, the 24th day of May
124(16)
3. THE STORIES OF THE PEOPLE: STRANGERS IN THE LAND 140(19)
Yucatec Maya
141(3)
The First Seating of the Land Owners
142(2)
Aztec/Mexican
144(6)
History of the Miraculous Apparition of the Virgin of Guadalupe in 1531
145(5)
Hopi
150(2)
The Coming of the Spanish and the Pueblo Revolt
150(2)
Joseph Jeremy, Micmac
152(1)
The Floating Island
153(1)
Yuchi
153(1)
Creation of the Whites
153(1)
Handsome Lake, Seneca
154(1)
How America Was Discovered
154(1)
Lenape and Mahican
155(2)
Arrival of the Dutch
156(1)
Flathead
157(2)
Creation of the Red and White Races
158(1)
4. BRITAIN'S FIRST CENTURY IN AMERICA 159(199)
Southern Experiences
Arthur Barlowe (flourished 1584-1585)
165(4)
from The First Voyage Made to the Coasts of America
165(4)
John Smith (1580-1631)
169(19)
from Proceedings of the English Colonie in Virginia [Powhatan's Speech to Captain Smith]
171(1)
from A Description of New England
171(6)
from the Generall Historie of Virginia, New England, and the Summer Isles
177(11)
from The Third Booke
from Chapter 1
177(2)
from Chapter 2
179(5)
from Chapter 3
184(2)
from Chapter 4
186(2)
Edward Maria Wingfield (1560?-1613?)
188(6)
A Discourse of Virginia
188(6)
Letters from Virginia
194(10)
Letter to Sir Thomas Dale (1614)
195(2)
John Rolfe
Letters to His Parents (1623)
197(2)
Richard Frethorne
Letter to Dr. Ralph Smith (1686)
199(1)
William Fitzhugh
Letter to the Royal Society of London (1688)
200(4)
John Clayton
Richard Ligon (1634-1703)
204(12)
from A True and Exact History of the Island of Barbados
205(11)
Conflict in the Caribbean and in Virginia
216(6)
Great News from the Barbadoes (1676)
217(2)
Anonymous
Manifesto Concerning the Present Troubles in Virginia (1676)
219(1)
Nathaniel Bacon
John Cotton of Queen's Creek Bacon's Epitaph and Upon the Death of G: Bacon
220(2)
Northern Experiences
William Bradford (1590-1657)
222(15)
from Of Plymouth Plantation
The First Book
from Chapter 1: Why the Separatists Left England
223(3)
from Chapter 2: Of Their Departure into Holland
226(1)
from Chapter 5: Showing What Means They Used for Preparation to this Weighty Voyage
226(1)
from Chapter 9: Of Their Voyage
227(2)
from Chapter 10: Showing How They Sought out a Place of Habitation
229(2)
The Second Book
from Chapter 28: Anno Dom: 1637 The Pequot War
231(2)
from Chapter 32: Anno Dom: 1642 Wickedness Breaks Forth
233(2)
from Chapter 33: Anno Dom: 1643 The Life and Death of Elder Brewster
235(2)
John Winthrop (1588-1649)
237(13)
A Model of Christian Charity
238(7)
from The Journal of John Winthrop
245(5)
Thomas Morton (1579?-1647)
250(7)
from New English Canaan
251(6)
from the Second Book
from Chapter 1: The General Survey of the Country
251(1)
from The Third Book [The Incident at Merry Mount]
from Chapter 14: of the Revels of New Canaan
252(2)
from Chapter 15: of a Great Monster Supposed to be at Ma-re Mount; and the Preparation Made to Destroy it
254(2)
from Chapter 16: How the Nine Worthies Put Mine Host of Ma-re Mount into the Enchanted Castle at Plymouth and Terrified Him with the Monster Briareus
256(1)
Roger Williams (1603-1683)
257(8)
from A Key into the Language of America
258(6)
from Chapter 21: of Religion, the Soul, etc.
261(3)
from The Bloody Tenet of Persecution, for Cause of Conscience, in a Conference between Truth and Peace
264(1)
A Letter to the Town of Providence
265(1)
John Eliot (1604-1690)
265(11)
from Indian Dialogues, for Their Instruction in that great Service of Christ
267(8)
Dialogue I: [A Dialogue between Pium bukhou and His Unconverted Relatives]
267(8)
Letter to the Honorable Council Sitting at Boston (1675)
275(1)
Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672)
276(9)
from The Tenth Muse, Lately Sprung Up in America
277(3)
from The Four Ages of Man
277(3)
from Several Poems
280(4)
Contemplations
280(3)
Before the Birth of One of Her Children
283(1)
In Memory of My Dear Grand-child Elizabeth Bradstreet, Who Deceased August, 1665 Being a Year and Half Old
284(1)
Here Follows Some Verses upon the Burning of Our House, July 10th, 1666. Copied out of a Loose Paper
284(1)
Letters from New England
285(7)
Letter to Sir Edward Altham (1623)
286(5)
Emmanuel Altham
Letter to His Parents (1630)
291(1)
John Pond
Edward Taylor (1642?-1729)
292(13)
from Christographia
294(7)
Meditation 44
294(1)
from Sermon III
294(7)
from Gods Determinations
301(1)
The Joy of Church Fellowship Rightly Attended
301(1)
Upon a Spider Catching a Fly
301(1)
Upon a Wasp Child with Cold
302(1)
Huswifery
302(1)
Upon Wedlock, and Death of Children
303(1)
The Ebb and Flow
303(1)
A Funerall Poem upon the Death of My Ever Endeared, and Tender Wife Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, Who Fell Asleep in Christ the 7th Day of July at Night about Two Hours after Sun Setting 1689 and in the 39 Yeare of Her Life
304(1)
Mary White Rowlandson (1637?-1711)
305(23)
Narrative of the Captivity and Restauration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson
307(21)
John Williams (1664-1729)
328(21)
from The Redeemed Captive Returning to Zion
329(20)
A Collection of Poems from New England
349(9)
from The Whole Booke of Psalmes Faithfully Translated into English Metre
Psalme 1
351(1)
Psalme 19
351(1)
Psalme 23
352(1)
Psalme 137
352(1)
from The New England Primer (1683)
352(2)
Alphabet
353(1)
The Dutiful Child's Promises
353(1)
Verses
353(1)
The Death of John Rogers
354(1)
John Cotton (1584-1652)
354(1)
A Thankful Acknowledgment of God's Providence
354(1)
Nathaniel Ward (1578-1652)
355(1)
[Mercury shew'd Apollo, Bartas Book]
355(1)
Benjamin Woodbridge (1622-1684)
355(1)
Upon the Author; by a known Friend
355(1)
Upon the TOMB of the most Reverend Mr. John Cotton, Late Teacher of the Church of Boston in New-England
355(1)
John Josselyn (1608?-1700?)
356(2)
Verses Made Sometime since upon the Picture of a Young and Handsome Gypsie, Not Improperly Transferred upon the Indian Squa
357(1)
5. NEW SPAIN IN NORTH AMERICA 358(68)
Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz (1648?-1695)
361(11)
from Response to the Most Illustrious Poetess Sor Filotea de la Cruz
362(7)
from Romances
369(3)
[Prologue to the Reader]
369(1)
[In Reply to a Gentleman from Peru, Who Sent Her Clay Vessels While Suggesting She Would Better Be a Man]
370(1)
[While by Grace I Am Inspired]
371(1)
Gaspar Perez de Villagra (1555?-1620)
372(12)
from The History of New Mexico
373(11)
Canto 1
373(3)
from Canto 29
376(2)
from Canto 30
378(2)
from Canto 31
380(2)
from Canto 32
382(2)
Pueblo Conflict in New Spain (1680-1692)
384(10)
Letter on the Pueblo Revolt of 1680
385(5)
Antonio de Otermin
from Letter on the Reconquest of New Mexico (1692)
390(4)
Diego de Vargas
Fray Carlos, Jose Delgado (1677-post-1750)
394(4)
Report Made by Rev. Father Fray Carlos Delgado to Our Rev. Father Ximeno .... the Year 1750
395(3)
Eusebio Francisco Kino (1644-1711)
398(7)
from The Celestial Favors of Jesus
400(5)
Book I
My Arrival at These Missions of Sonora, and My First Entry into this Pimeria, with the Father Visitor, Manuel Gonzales
403(1)
Expedition to San Ygnacio de Caborica, San Joseph de Los Himiris, and Nuestra Senora de Los Remedios
404(1)
First Opposition Experienced in This New Conversion
404(1)
Second Opposition and Discord Sown in Pimeria
405(1)
Francisco Palou (1723-1789)
405(7)
from Life of Junipero Serra
406(6)
from Chapter 22: The Expeditions Arrive at the Port of Monterey--The Mission and Presidio of San Carlos Are Founded
406(2)
from Chapter 58: The Exemplary Death of the Venerable Father Junipero
408(4)
Jose Longinos Martinez (?-1803)
412(14)
from The Journal of Jose Longinos Martinez
413(13)
from Part Two: Journey through Old California, Cape San Lucas to Mission San Miguel
413(5)
from Part Three: Journey through New California, San Diego to Monterey
418(8)
6. NEW FRANCE IN NORTH AMERICA 426(53)
Jean de Brebeuf (1593-1649)
429(11)
from Relation of What Occurred in the Country of the Hurons in the Year 1636
430(10)
[Dedicatory Letter to Paul Le Jeune]
430(1)
from Part 1
Chapter 1
431(4)
Chapter 3
435(5)
Marie Guyart Martin, ``Marie de l'Incarnation'' (1599-1672)
440(12)
Letters to Her Son
441(11)
[The Deaths of Daniel, Brebeuf, and Gabriel Lalemant]
441(2)
[A New Language to Learn]
443(1)
[The End of the Huron Mission]
444(3)
[The Coming of Bishop Laval]
447(2)
[New France a Crown Colony]
449(1)
[An Answer to Criticism]
450(2)
Marie Madeleine Hachard, ``Sister Saint Stanislaus'' (1704-1760)
452(11)
Letters Written at New Orleans to Her Father
453(10)
October 27, 1727
453(4)
January 1, 1728
457(1)
April 24, 1728
457(6)
Louis Vivier (1714-1756)
463(7)
Letters Written among the Illinois
464(6)
June 8, 1750
464(1)
November 17, 1750
465(5)
Antoine-Simon Le Page du Pratz (1695?-1775?)
470(9)
from The History of Louisiana
471(8)
from Book
4(467)
Chapter 1: The Origin of the Americans
471(3)
from Chapter 2, Section 1: [Of the Natives of Louisiana]
474(1)
from Chapter 3, Section 2: [Of Their Language, Government, Religion, Ceremonies, and Feasts]
475(4)
7. THE BRITISH COLONIES OF NORTH AMERICA, THE EARLIER COLONIAL YEARS 479(219)
The Staple Colonies
Edward ``Ned'' Ward (1667-1731)
481(9)
A Trip to Jamaica
482(8)
John Lawson (1670?-1711?)
490(8)
from A New Voyage to Carolina
from A Description to North-Carolina
490(4)
An Account of the Indians of North-Carolina
494(4)
Charles Woodmason (1720?-post-1776)
498(3)
To Benjamin Franklin, Esq., of Philadelphia, on his Experiments and Discoveries in Electricity
499(1)
Indico
500(1)
James Grainger (1721?-1766)
501(12)
from The Sugar-Cane. A Poem. In Four Books. With Notes
502(11)
Book IV: The Genius of Africa
503(10)
Robert Beverley (1673-1722)
513(9)
from History and Present State of Virginia (1705)
514(8)
from Book 1
Containing an Account of the first Settlement of Chesapeak Bay
514(5)
from Book 3: Of the Indians, Their Religion, Laws, and Customs, in War and Peace from Chapter 1: Of the Persons of the Indians, and their Dress
519(1)
Of the Travelling, Reception, and Entertainment of the Indians
519(2)
Of the Learning, and Languages of the Indians
521(1)
William Byrd II (1674-1744)
522(14)
from The History of the Dividing Line Run in the Year 1728
523(8)
Letters to Charles Boyle, Earl of Orrery
531(3)
Letter to John Boyle, Baron Boyle of Broghill
534(1)
Letter to John Perceval, Earl of Egmont
535(1)
Patrick Tailfer, Hugh Anderson, David Douglas (flourished 1741)
536(10)
from A True and Historical Narrative of the Colony of Georgia in America
538(8)
Henry Timberlake (1730?-1765)
546(7)
from The Memoirs of Lieut. Henry Timberlake
547(6)
Britain's Middle Atlantic: Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York
George Alsop (1636-post-1673)
553(10)
from A Character of the Province of Mary-Land
554(9)
The Preface to the Reader
555(1)
Chapter 1 [Of the Situation and Plenty of the Province of Mary-Land]
555(3)
Chapter 3 [The Necessariness of Servitude Proved, with the Common Usage of Servants in Mary-Land, Together with Their Priviledges]
558(3)
Chapter 4 [Upon Trafique, and What Merchandizing Commodities this Province Affords]
561(2)
Ebenezer Cook (1667-1733)
563(9)
The Sot-Weed Factor; or, a Voyage to Maryland, &c.
563(9)
Richard Lewis (1700-1734)
572(7)
A Journey from Patapsko to Annapolis, April 4, 1730
573(4)
Food for Criticks
577(2)
Dr. Alexander Hamilton (1712-1756)
579(11)
from Itinerarium
580(10)
William Penn (1644-1718)
590(9)
Letter from William Penn to the Committee of the Free Society of Traders
592(7)
George Keith (1639-1716)
599(3)
An Exhortation and Caution to Friends concerning Buying or Keeping of Negroes
600(2)
Elizabeth Ashbridge (1713-1755)
602(13)
Some Account of the Early Part of the Life of Elizabeth Ashbridge
603(12)
John Woolman (1720-1772)
615(13)
from Some Considerations on the Keepings of Negroes
616(4)
from the Journal of John Woolman
620(8)
Cadwallader Colden (1688-1776)
628(5)
from The History of the Five Indian Nations
629(4)
New England
Cotton Mather (1663-1728)
633(12)
from Magnalia Christi Americana
634(4)
Galeacius Secundus: The Life of William Bradford, Esq., Governor of Plymoth Colony
634(4)
The Negro Christianized
638(7)
Samuel Sewall (1652-1730)
645(7)
from The Diary of Samuel Sewall
646(3)
The Selling of Joseph. A Memorial
649(2)
My Verses upon the New Century
651(1)
John Saffin (1632-1710)
652(3)
A Brief and Candid Answer
652(3)
Sarah Kemble Knight (1666-1727)
655(13)
The Journal of Sarah Kemble Knight
656(12)
Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758)
668(19)
Personal Narrative
669(7)
Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God
676(8)
from The Distinguishing Marks of a Work of the Spirit
684(3)
Charles Chauncy (1705-1787)
687(11)
from Enthusiasm Described and Caution'd Against
688(6)
from Seasonable Thoughts on the State of Religion
694(4)
8. DUTCH, SWEDES, AND GERMANS IN NORTH AMERICA 698(60)
Johannes Megapolensis, Jr. (1603?-1669)
701(7)
A Short Account of the Mohawk Indians
702(6)
Adriaen Van Der Donck (1620-1655)
708(8)
from A Description of the New Netherlands
709(3)
from Of the Manners and Peculiar Customs of the Natives of the New Netherlands
712(4)
Henricus Selyns (1636-1701)
716(3)
Bridal Torch for Rev. AEgidius Luyck
717(2)
To My Friend Captain Gerard Douw
719(1)
Epitaph for Peter Stuyvesant
719(1)
Maria Van Cortlandt Van Rennselaer (1645-1689)
719(6)
Letters to Rygart van Rensselaer
721(4)
December 1675?
721(1)
September? 1680
721(1)
November 12, 1684
722(3)
Francis Daniel Pastorius (1651-1720)
725(10)
Petition of the Germantown Quakers, ``Reasons Why We Are Against the Traffic of Menbody''
727(1)
from Positive Information from America, Concerning the Country of Pennsylvania
728(5)
from the Beehive
733(2)
[When I Solidly Do Ponder
733(1)
If any be pleased to walk into my poor Garden, I heartily bid him or her welcome, thus
734(1)
[When One or Other Rambles
734(1)
As Often as Some where before My Feet
735(1)
Extract the Quint-essence
735(1)
Delight in Books from Evening
735(1)
Christoph Saur (1695-1758)
735(9)
from A Dialogue between a Newcomer and a Settler in Pennsylvania
737(7)
Gottlieb Mittelberger (1715-1779?)
744(14)
from Journey to Pennsylvania
746(12)
Preface
746(1)
from Part I: The Crossing to Pennsylvania
746(6)
from Part II: Description of the Province of Pennsylvania
752(6)
9. CULTURAL CONSOLIDATIONS IN BRITISH NORTH AMERICA 758(184)
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)
761(52)
Silence Dogood, No. 1
763(1)
Silence Dogood, No. 2
764(1)
The Speech of Miss Polly Baker
765(1)
An Edict by the King of Prussia
766(3)
Speech in the Convention at the Conclusion of Its Deliberations
769(1)
Sidi Mehemet Ibrahim on the Slave Trade
770(1)
from Autobiography Part One
771(42)
Part Two
803(10)
A Collection of Poems
813(16)
William Dawson (1704-1752)
814(1)
To Silvia, on Approach of Winter
814(1)
Anacreonitic
815(1)
Jane Colman Turell (1708-1735)
815(2)
An Invitation into the Country, in Imitation of Horace, Left Only in a Rough Copy
815(1)
Lines on Childbirth
816(1)
Lines on the Death of Mother
816(1)
Martha Wadsworth Brewster (1710-post-1759)
817(2)
[Prefatory Poem to the Reader]
817(1)
An Essay on the Four Ages of Man, Resembling the Four Seasons of the Year
817(2)
Bridget Richardson Fletcher (1726-1770)
819(1)
Hymn XXXVI. The Greatest Dignity of a Woman, Christ Being Born of One
819(1)
Hymn LXX. The Duty of Man and Wife
819(1)
John Leacock (1729-1802)
820(2)
Song, The First of May, to St. Tammany
821(1)
Lucy Terry (1730-1821)
822(1)
Bars Fight (c. 1746)
822(1)
Thomas Godfrey (1736-1763)
823(2)
A Dithyrambic on Wine
823(1)
A Night-Piece
824(1)
Milcah Martha Hill Moore (1740-1829)
825(1)
The Female Patriots. Addressed to the Daughters of Liberty in America, 1768
826(1)
Nathaniel Evans (1742-1767)
826(3)
Hymn to May
826(1)
An Ode, Attempted in the Manner of Horace, to My Ingenious Friend, Mr. Thomas Godfrey
827(1)
Elegy, to the Memory of My Beloved Friend, Mr. Thomas Godfrey, Who died near Wilmington, North-Carolina, August 3d, 1763
828(1)
To Benjamin Franklin, Esq.; L.L.D, Occasioned by Hearing Him Play on the Harmonica
829(1)
Annis Boudinot Stockton (1736-1801)
829(7)
To the Visitant, from a Circle of Ladies
830(1)
By a Lady in America to Her Husband in England
831(1)
A Sudden Production of Mrs. Stockton's in One of Those Many Anxious Nights in Which She Watched with Mr. Stockton in His Last Illness
831(1)
A Poetical Epistle, Addressed by a Lady of New Jersey to Her Niece, upon Her Marriage, in This City
832(1)
Addressed to General Washington, in the Year 1777, after the Battles of Trenton and Princeton
833(1)
To the President of the United States
834(1)
The Vision, an Ode to Washington
835(1)
Thomas Paine (1737-1809)
836(12)
from Common Sense
837(7)
The Crisis
844(4)
William Bartram (1739-1823)
848(6)
from Travels through North and South Carolina, Georgia, East and West Florida
849(5)
Jupiter Hammon (1711-1806?)
854(9)
An Evening Thought. Salvation by Christ, with Penetential Cries
854(1)
An Address to Miss Phillis Wheatly, Ethiopian Poetess
855(2)
A Poem for Children with Thoughts on Death
857(1)
An Address to the Negroes in the State of New-York
858(5)
Briton Hammon (flourished 1760)
863(4)
Narrative of the Uncommon Sufferings and Surprizing Deliverance of Briton Hammon
864(3)
Samson Occom (1723-1792)
867(16)
A Short Narrative of My Life
868(4)
A Sermon Preached by Samson Occom
872(11)
Joseph Johnson (1751-1776)
883(5)
Letter from J--h J--n, one of the Mohegan Tribe of Indians, to his Countryman, Moses Paul, under Sentence of Death in New-Haven Goal
884(3)
Dedication to a Life of the Spirit
887(1)
Phillis Wheatley (1754?-1784)
888(13)
from Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral
889(5)
To Maecenas
889(1)
To the University of Cambridge, in New-England
890(1)
On Being Brought from Africa to America
890(1)
On the Death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield
891(1)
Thoughts on the Works of Providence
891(2)
On Recollection
893(1)
To the Right Honorable William, Earl of Dartmouth, His Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for North America & c.
893(1)
To S. M. a Young African Painter, on Seeing His Works
894(1)
To His Excellency General Washington
894(1)
Letters to Obour Tanner
895(2)
May 19, 1772
895(1)
July 19, 1772
896(1)
October 30, 1773
896(1)
Letter to Samson Occom
897(1)
February 11, 1774
897(1)
Letters to Selina Hastings, Countess of Huntington
897(1)
October 25, 1770
897(1)
June 27, 1773
898(1)
Letter to William Legge, Second Earl of Dartmouth
898(1)
October 10, 1772
898(1)
Letter to David Wooster
899(1)
October 18, 1773
899(1)
Letter to Samuel Hopkins
900(1)
February 9, 1774
900(1)
Letter to John Thornton
900(1)
October 30, 1774
900(1)
Prince Hall (1735?-1807)
901(11)
Petition to the Honorable Council and House of Representatives, for the State of Massachusetts-Bay, in General Court Assembled January 13, 1777
903(1)
A Charge, Delivered to the Brethern of the African Lodge on the 25th of June, 1792
904(3)
A Charge, Delivered to the African Lodge, June 24, 1797, at Menotomy
907(5)
Olaudah Equiano (1745-1797)
912(16)
from The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African, Written by Himself
913(15)
Chapter 1
913(8)
Chapter 2
921(7)
John Marrant (1755-1791)
928(14)
A Narrative of the Lord's Wonderful Dealings with John Marrant, a Black
929(13)
10. CONFEDERATION AND THE FORMATION OF A BRITISH AMERICAN REPUBLIC 942(167)
Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)
945(20)
from Notes on the State of Virginia
947(16)
from Query 6: A Notice of the Mines, and Other Subterraneous Riches
947(7)
from Query 11: A Description the Indians Established in That State
954(2)
from Query 14: Laws
956(4)
Query 17: The Different Religions Received into That State
960(2)
Query 18: The Particular Customs and Manners That May Ha to Be Received in That State
962(1)
Letter to Francois Jean, Marquis de Chastellux
963(1)
September 2, 1785
963(1)
Letter to Jean Marie Antoine Nicholas Caritat, Marquis de Condorcet
964(1)
August 30, 1791
964(1)
The Declaration of Independence
965(2)
The Unanimous Declaration of the Thirteen United States of America, Adopted in Congress, July 4, 1776
966(1)
British Loyalists in British North America
967(8)
William Franklin (1730-1813)
968(2)
Speech before the New Jersey Assembly, January 13, 1775
969(1)
Hannah Griffitts (1727-1817)
970(1)
On Reading a Few Paragraphs in ``The Crisis,'' April 1777
970(1)
Jacob Bailey (1731-1808)
971(1)
The Factious Demagogue, a Portrait
971(1)
Joseph Stansbury (1740-1809)
972(1)
To Cordelia
972(1)
Jonathan Odell (1737-1818)
972(3)
from The American Times
973(2)
J. Hector St. Jean de Crevecoeur (1735-1813)
975(23)
On the Situation, Feelings, and Pleasures of an American Farmer
976(3)
History of Andrew the Hebridean
979(6)
A Singular Punishment
985(1)
from Letters from an American Farmer
986(12)
from Letter 12: Distresses of a Frontier Man
986(12)
Three Federalist Papers
998(10)
The Federalist No. 6 (Hamilton)
999(3)
The Federalist No. 10 (Madison)
1002(4)
The Federalist No. 51 (Madison)
1006(2)
Mercy Otis Warren (1728-1814)
1008(14)
Letter to the Independent Chronicle, on Chesterfield
1010(2)
Observations on the New Constitution, and on the Federal and State Conventions
1012(9)
from Poems, Dramatic and Miscellaneous To a Young Lady
1021(1)
To Mrs. Montague, Author of ``Observations on the Genius and Writings of Shakespeare''
1021(1)
John Adams (1735-1826)
1022(7)
A Dissertation on the Canon and the Feudal Law, No. 4
1023(3)
Letter to Mercy Otis Warren April 16, 1776
1026(1)
Letter to Thomas Jefferson July 29, 1791
1027(2)
Abigail Adams (1744-1818)
1029(8)
from The Travel Diaries of Abigail Adams [Boston to Deal]
1029(5)
[London to Plymouth]
1033(1)
Letter to John Adams
1034(1)
Letter to Mercy Otis Warren
1035(2)
Timothy Dwight (1752-1817)
1037(2)
from Greenfield Hill
Part II: The Flourishing Village
1037(2)
Judith Sargent Murray (1751-1820)
1039(12)
On the Equality of the Sexes
1040(5)
Desultory Thoughts upon the Utility of Encouraging a Degree of Self-Complacency, Especially in Female Bosoms
1045(2)
Observations on Female Abilities Part III
1047(4)
Part IV
1049(2)
Joel Barlow (1754-1812)
1051(23)
from The Vision of Columbus
1053(21)
[Dedication to King Louis XVI of France]
1053(1)
Introduction
1053(6)
Book I
1059(6)
Book II
1065(9)
Philip Freneau (1752-1832)
1074(10)
Account of the Island of Santa Cruz, Containing an original Poem on the Beauties of that Island
1075(4)
The Prophecy of King Tammany
1079(1)
Lines Written at the Pallisades, near Port-Royal, in the Island of Jamaica--September, 1784
1080(1)
The Island Field Negro
1081(1)
Speech of the Indian Head of the Ship Delaware
1082(1)
On Deborah Gannet
1083(1)
William Hill Brown (1765-1793)
1084(4)
Harriot, Or, the Domestick Reconciliation, Sketched from the Life
1085(2)
Seduction
1087(1)
Hannah Webster Foster (1758-1840)
1088(3)
Picture of a Libertine
1090(1)
Susannah Haswell Rowson (1762-1824)
1091(3)
The Happy Pair
1092(1)
The Ingrate
1092(1)
Maternal Sorrow
1093(1)
Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810)
1094(6)
The Man at Home, No. XI
1095(2)
A Lesson on Sensibility
1097(3)
Noah Webster (1758-1843)
1100(4)
from Effects of Slavery, on Morals and Industry
1101(3)
Benjamin Banneker (1731-1806)
1104(5)
Copy of a Letter from Benjamin Banneker to the Secretary of State, with His Answer
1105(4)
11. THE NATIVE PEOPLES OF EASTERN NORTH AMERICA AND THE SETTLERS WHO REMAINED 1109(16)
The Mahicans
1109(2)
Speech of the Mahicans to Gov. William Burnet of New York, 1722
1110(1)
Stung Serpent
1111(1)
Speech to Antoine Le Page du Pratz, 1723
1111(1)
Canastego
1112(3)
Speech at the Treaty of Lancaster, 1744
1113(2)
Gachradodow
1115(1)
Speech at the Treaty of Lancaster, 1744
1116(1)
The Chickasaws
1116(2)
Speech of the Chickasaws to the Governors of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia, 1771
1117(1)
John Killibuck
1118(1)
Speech to the Govenors of Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia, 1771
1119(1)
Cornplanter
1119(6)
Speech in the Council at Philadephia, 1790
1121(4)
Index 1125

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