Difference between revisions of "Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress"
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So by what the Yankees good are doing<br /> | So by what the Yankees good are doing<br /> | ||
Buckskins will save from utter ruin. | Buckskins will save from utter ruin. | ||
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+ | ==="Instead of Controlling Our Mary's Cross Humor," by William Ellery=== | ||
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+ | <div style="float: right; clear: both; width: 45%; margin: 10px 0 20px 0; background-color: #f9f9f9; border: 1px solid #ddd; padding: 10px;"> | ||
+ | <div>[[File:PoemsOnWittySubjectsInCongressP5.jpg]]</div> | ||
+ | <p style="font-size: 85%;">Page five 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> | ||
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+ | {| style="width: 50%; margin: 20px 0 20px 20px; background-color: #f9f7e0; border: 1px solid #000000; padding: 20px 50px;" | ||
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+ | Instead of controlling our Mary's cross humour,<br /> | ||
+ | You give what she asks you. Nay, you would do more.<br /> | ||
+ | First Virginia, instead of nobly persisting,<br /> | ||
+ | Gives up to Mary one roll for enlisting.<br /> | ||
+ | Mary then rising in her wild demands,<br /> | ||
+ | Virginia lays open the claims about lands.<br /> | ||
+ | Nay, more abounding in supererogation,<br /> | ||
+ | She, too, proposes the mode of taxation<br /> | ||
+ | To leave as it was before it was debated,<br /> | ||
+ | For perhaps by this might Mary be sated.<br /> | ||
+ | Pray, what is the cause of this indulgence so great,<br /> | ||
+ | Where discord and jarring subsisted of late?<br /> | ||
+ | I'll tell you, my friend, 'tis a truth very serious:<br /> | ||
+ | Interest will join states of sentiments various. | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 10:28, 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 "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, |
"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.
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.