Difference between revisions of "Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress"
(→"Answer to Epigram," by George Wythe) |
|||
Line 159: | Line 159: | ||
If who's the author, dubitatur?<br /> | If who's the author, dubitatur?<br /> | ||
He's your correspondent, Nugator.<ref>Jester, clown.</ref> | He's your correspondent, Nugator.<ref>Jester, clown.</ref> | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==="Unless You Will Take One Line for Your Ten," by William Ellery=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div style="float: right; clear: both; width: 45%; margin: 10px 0 20px 0; background-color: #f9f9f9; border: 1px solid #ddd; padding: 10px;"> | ||
+ | <div>[[File:PoemsOnWittySubjectsInCongressP23.jpg]]</div> | ||
+ | <p style="font-size: 85%;">Page eleven from ''Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress,'' from the [https://www.bpl.org/ Boston Public Library's] [https://archive.org/details/bplscarwm American Revolutionary War Manuscripts] collection.</p> | ||
+ | </div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | {| style="width: 50%; margin: 20px 0 20px 20px; background-color: #f9f7e0; border: 1px solid #000000; padding: 20px 50px;" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | Unless you will take one Line for your Ten<br /> | ||
+ | I shall never pay you, and indeed I shan't then.<br /> | ||
+ | For to form One good Clink invita Minerva,<br /> | ||
+ | I must turn my poor brain quite topsy, turvy.<br /> | ||
+ | While you with a Portion of Latin and Greek<br /> | ||
+ | An hundred good lines can easily make<br /> | ||
+ | As the Virginian Tully can speak.<br /> | ||
+ | The muses will readily yield up their Charms<br /> | ||
+ | To the Poet that dreads not the Thunder of Arms<br /> | ||
+ | They'll favour the brave the youthfull the blythe<br /> | ||
+ | Will fly from an Ellery and caress a Wythe<br /> | ||
+ | Compelled thus to rhime in my own Defense<br /> | ||
+ | <s>These Lines are lictated a Lege Natura</s><br /> | ||
+ | <s>Pray then forbear Sir, your Caricatura</s><br /> | ||
+ | I most humbly submit to your Candour and Sense.<br /> | ||
+ | What thus is forced from Me Lege magna Natura<br /> | ||
+ | And beg you would forbear Sir your Caricatura. | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 14:24, 14 April 2014
George Wythe and Willam Ellery, "Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress," American Revolutionary War Manuscripts Collection, Boston Public Library, MS.Ch.E.8.31-33.[1]
Contents
- 1 Manuscript text, November-December 1776
- 1.1 "A Member of the Antinovanglian Faction to W. E.," by George Wythe (VA)
- 1.2 "A Novanglican to G.W.," by William Ellery (RI)
- 1.3 "Instead of Controlling Our Mary's Cross Humor," by William Ellery
- 1.4 "For Farms in Utopia, the Moon, or Some Fairyland," by George Wythe
- 1.5 "Epigram," by William Ellery
- 1.6 "Answer to Epigram," by George Wythe
- 1.7 "Unless You Will Take One Line for Your Ten," by William Ellery
- 1.8 "A Commissioner, to the People of Philadelphia," by William Ellery
- 2 See also
- 3 References
- 4 External links
Manuscript text, November-December 1776
"A Member of the Antinovanglian Faction to W. E.," by George Wythe (VA)
Page seven from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress,] from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
For the two first Lines the author alludes to the Roman Catholics— |
"A Novanglican to G.W.," by William Ellery (RI)
Page three from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress, from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
As by works supererogatory |
"Instead of Controlling Our Mary's Cross Humor," by William Ellery
Page five from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress, from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
Instead of controlling our Mary's cross humour, |
"For Farms in Utopia, the Moon, or Some Fairyland," by George Wythe
Page nine from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress, from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
Page ten from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress, from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
For farms in Utopia, the moon, or some fairyland And
|
And if slaves you include in your capitation, |
"Epigram," by William Ellery
Page eleven from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress, from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
Like a Babbler ambitious of some little fame W. E.
|
"Answer to Epigram," by George Wythe
Page eleven from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress, from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
With one epigram, though well hit off, |
"Unless You Will Take One Line for Your Ten," by William Ellery
Page eleven from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress, from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
Unless you will take one Line for your Ten |
"A Commissioner, to the People of Philadelphia," by William Ellery
First page from Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress, from the Boston Public Library's American Revolutionary War Manuscripts collection.
Attend all ye People of wry degree |
See also
References
- ↑ See W. Edwin Hemphill, "George Wythe Courts the Muses," William and Mary Quarterly 3rd ser., 9, no. 3 (July 1952), 338-345.
- ↑ "Novanglian": New Englander.
- ↑ "Dire desire to write," paraphrase of Virgil, Aeneid, Book V, line 721.
- ↑ "The love which consumed Dido," Queen of Carthage.
- ↑ Ovid, Ex Ponto III, xxxvi.
- ↑ Jester, clown.
External links
- Boston Public Library, Special Collections.
- American Revolutionary War Manuscripts at the Boston Public Library, Internet Archive.
- Read these poems in the Internet Archive.