Philip Freneau, the Poet of the Revolution: A History of His Life and TimesA. Wessels Company, 1901 - 285 strani |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 44
Stran 29
... accumulated a for- 1 Governor's Island . 8 East River now . 2 Long Island . ♢ Coenties Slip . 5 Mr. Walton married a daughter of Mr. Delancey . tune in foreign trade , built , in Pearl Street [ 29 ] The Poet of the Revolution.
... accumulated a for- 1 Governor's Island . 8 East River now . 2 Long Island . ♢ Coenties Slip . 5 Mr. Walton married a daughter of Mr. Delancey . tune in foreign trade , built , in Pearl Street [ 29 ] The Poet of the Revolution.
Stran 40
... married Charlotte de Talmont and their son , Nicolas , was mayor of La Rochelle in the year 1357. His son held the same office in 1398 . Jean Thomas , son of the latter , founded the two 1 Azur à un chevron d'argent surmonté d'un ...
... married Charlotte de Talmont and their son , Nicolas , was mayor of La Rochelle in the year 1357. His son held the same office in 1398 . Jean Thomas , son of the latter , founded the two 1 Azur à un chevron d'argent surmonté d'un ...
Stran 41
... married Catherine du Bouché in 1545 , and their son Léonard married Françoise Carré , 1578 , and had two sons : Jean , sieur de Bernon- ville , and André . The latter married Jeanne Lescour , and , after her death , Marie Papin in 1605 ...
... married Catherine du Bouché in 1545 , and their son Léonard married Françoise Carré , 1578 , and had two sons : Jean , sieur de Bernon- ville , and André . The latter married Jeanne Lescour , and , after her death , Marie Papin in 1605 ...
Stran 42
... married Jean Allaire , brother to Alexandre Allaire , the refugee , and one of the founders of New Rochelle , West- chester County , in the State of New York . Another sister married a Mr. Du Pont of La Rochelle , and her son Jacque ...
... married Jean Allaire , brother to Alexandre Allaire , the refugee , and one of the founders of New Rochelle , West- chester County , in the State of New York . Another sister married a Mr. Du Pont of La Rochelle , and her son Jacque ...
Stran 53
... married Marie , the eldest daughter of Pierre Morin , or Morine , whose name appears as the head of a family in the ... marriage , André and his young wife , who had just entered her seventeenth year , resided on lower Broadway facing ...
... married Marie , the eldest daughter of Pierre Morin , or Morine , whose name appears as the head of a family in the ... marriage , André and his young wife , who had just entered her seventeenth year , resided on lower Broadway facing ...
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
Aaron Burr afterwards Agnes Allaire American amongst André Fresneau appointed arms army Aurora beautiful Bellemont Biddle Blatchford British brother Captain cause Charles Cotesworth Pinckney Charleston College colony command Congress daughter death Delancey Dutch Edict of Nantes eldest England English Etienne Delancey Faneuil father France French Church Gabriel Bernon Governor hand honor Huguenots Jefferson Jersey John John Morin Scott Kearny La Rochelle land Leadbeater Ledyard letter liberty living Long Island Louis Madison marriage married minister Monmouth Monmouth County Morin Scott mother Mount Pleasant Nassau Hall neau never o'er O'Rielly paper party patriots person Philadelphia Philip Freneau Philip Kearny Philip Morin Freneau Pierre poem poet poetry political President prison qu'il refugees remained Revolution Rochelle sails satires ship shores Street Thomas thou tion took United verse vessels Washington wrote York
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 193 - Now the dreadful thunder's roaring, Peal on peal contending clash, On our heads fierce rain falls pouring, In our eyes blue lightnings flash. One wide water all around us, All above us one black sky...
Stran 71 - Smit with those charms, that must decay, I grieve to see your future doom; They died — nor were those flowers more gay, The flowers that did in Eden bloom; Unpitying frosts, and Autumn's power Shall leave no vestige of this flower. From morning suns and evening dews At first thy little being came: If nothing once, you nothing lose, For when you die you are the same; The space between, is but an hour, The frail duration of a flower.
Stran 193 - While o'er the ship wild waves are beating, We for wives or children mourn : Alas ! from hence there's no retreating, Alas ! to them there's no return. Still the leak is gaining on us : Both chain-pumps are choak'd below.
Stran 70 - She bade thee shun the vulgar eye, And planted here the guardian shade, And sent soft waters murmuring by ; Thus quietly thy summer goes, Thy days declining to repose.
Stran 86 - Hills sink to plains, and man returns to dust, That dust supports a reptile or a flower; Each changeful atom by some other nurs'd Takes some new form, to perish in an hour.
Stran 159 - Publicola and the discourses on Davila had a good deal excited the public attention, I took for granted, from Freneau's character, which had been marked as that of a good Whig, that he would give free place to pieces written against the aristocratical and monarchical principles these papers had inculcated.
Stran 12 - Gate, which being a narrow passage, there runneth a violent stream both upon flood and ebb, and in the middle lieth some Islands of Rocks, which the current sets so violently upon that it threatens present shipwreck ; and upon the flood is a large Whirlpool, which continually sends forth" a hideous roaring, enough to affright any stranger from passing any further...
Stran 136 - till the British came in We lived, I may say, in the Desert of Sin — Such beating and bruising and scratching and tearing, Such kicking and cuffing, and cursing and swearing ! But when they advanc'd with their numerous fleet, And Washington made his nocturnal retreat, (And which they permitted, I say, to their shame, Or else your New Empire had been but a name) We townsmen, like women, of Britons in dread, Mistrusted their meaning and foolishly fled; Like the rest of the dunces I mounted my steed,...
Stran 205 - September 1809, the ten copies of the Revolutionary Poems, which you subscribed for, were put into a box well secured, and forwarded according to your direction, under the care of General Steele, then Collector of the Port of Philadelphia : I have not since heard whether they reached you or not. " That Edition was published by Subscription merely for the benefit of, and to assist Mrs. Bailey, an unfortunate but deserving widowed female, niece to General Steele, and this consideration alone induced...
Stran 262 - ... some other person present at the capture, to be produced as they were received, without fraud, addition, subduction or embezzlement.