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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1699
Description:
Signed: John Danforth. Printed in three columns, within a mourning border. First line: Judge of the quick and dead I am not ...
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KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1694
Description:
Verse in twenty-seven stanzas; first line: The great Jehovah is the Lord and King. Signed: Gemebundus composuit Deodat Lawson. Text in three columns within mourning borders. Not in Wing (2nd ed.). Not in Ford, W.C. Broadsides.
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KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1693
Description:
Verse in twenty-two numbered stanzas; first line: When lights go out, darkness succeeds. Followed by: Samuel Arnold. Anagram, Leave old Arm's [and] Mr. Samuel Arnold, the late faithful preacher of the gospel at Marshfield, ...
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KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1687
Description:
Eighty-one lines of verse; first line: On Roman feet my stumbling muse declines. Signed: Nehemiah Walter. Text in two columns.
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KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1686
Description:
Signed: Moestus compouit et posuit Edward Tompson. Ascribed to the press of Samuel Green by Evans. First line: Among the weeping wailing mourners drove. Printed in two columns, within a mourning border.
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KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1678
Description:
Verse; first line: How many hearts do now with tears lament. Signed: An hearty mourner, J.C. Attributed to John Cotton (1640-1699) by C.K. Shipton. This supposition is supported by the evidence of Cotton's relationship ...
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KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1677
Author(s):
Unknown author
Description:
In verse; first line: When heathen first assail'd our peaceful land. The only known copy, held by the Boston Athenaeum, is imperfect. Imprint suggested in Winslow, O.E. American broadside verse, 1930, p. 10-12. Text in two ...
This item contains 3 files (38.05
KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1676
Description:
Verse of eighty-eight lines; first line: Another black parenthesis of woe. Signed: B. Thompson. Ascribed to the press of John Foster in Boston by Evans. Text in two columns; surrounded by a mourning border. Not in Wing. ...
This item contains 3 files (39.37
KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1676
Description:
Verse of forty-six lines; first line: Let woe be printed nigh unto our land. Followed by: Accrosticon [sic] and Epitaph. Imprint supplied by Samuel Abbott Green in his John Foster: the earliest American engraver and the ...
This item contains 3 files (32.65
KB).
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Text
Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1676
Description:
Verse of ninety-eight lines; first line: You English Mattachusians all. Signed: Perciful Lowle [i.e., Percival Lowell]. Bristol supplies imprint: [Boston, J. Foster, 1676]. A funeral elegy upon the death of Winthrop's son, ...
This item contains 3 files (36.74
KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1668
Author(s):
Unknown author
Description:
Three poems, preceded by an epitaph. The title of each poem is an anagram on Lydia Minot; the third includes also an acrostic on that name. Imprint supplied by Bristol and Ford. Relief cut (Reilly 18) at head and two smaller ...
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KB).
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Evans-TCP (Phase 1)
Date of publication:
1658
Description:
Verse of 34 lines. First line: There is no Job but cries to God and hopes. The only place of printing in America at this time was Cambridge, Mass. Samuel Green printed alone at the Cambridge press from 1649 to 1659. "The ...
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KB).
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