Difference between revisions of "Poems on Witty Subjects in Congress"
(→See also) |
|||
Line 223: | Line 223: | ||
| | | | ||
[[File:PoemsOnWittySubjectsInCongressP15.jpg|thumb|550px|Page fifteen from [https://archive.org/details/poemsonwittysubj00elle ''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.]] | [[File:PoemsOnWittySubjectsInCongressP15.jpg|thumb|550px|Page fifteen from [https://archive.org/details/poemsonwittysubj00elle ''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.]] | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==="Some Mere Poetaster Call Tully," by George Wythe=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | {| style="margin-bottom: 20px;" | ||
+ | |- style="vertical-align: top;" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | {| | ||
+ | | style="width: 550px; white-space: nowrap; margin: 20px 0 20px 20px; background-color: #f9f7e0; border: 1px solid #000000; padding: 20px 50px;" | | ||
+ | Some mere poetaster call Tully,<br /> | ||
+ | In for a naggering bully;<br /> | ||
+ | Most others a speaker persuasive,<br /> | ||
+ | In reasoning though sometimes evasive<br /> | ||
+ | Did you, making me his compeer, Sir,<br /> | ||
+ | An irony mean, or a sneer, Sir? | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | [[File:PoemsOnWittySubjectsInCongressP16.jpg|thumb|550px|Page sixteen from [https://archive.org/details/poemsonwittysubj00elle ''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.]] | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==="The Gen'rous Idea Your Last Piece Expresses," by William Ellery=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | {| style="margin-bottom: 20px;" | ||
+ | |- style="vertical-align: top;" | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | {| | ||
+ | | style="width: 550px; white-space: nowrap; margin: 20px 0 20px 20px; background-color: #f9f7e0; border: 1px solid #000000; padding: 20px 50px;" | | ||
+ | The gen'rous Idea your last Peice [''sic''] expresses<br /> | ||
+ | Instead of exciting my Ardour, depresses<br /> | ||
+ | The Muses I know by Experience are gilts<br /> | ||
+ | And he moves unsafely who moves upon Stilts<br /> | ||
+ | When my Fancy was young I asked of those Lasses<br /> | ||
+ | To aid my Ascent up the Mount of Parnassus<br /> | ||
+ | They told me to follow but as swift as the Wind<br /> | ||
+ | They gained its high Top and left me behind<br /> | ||
+ | Thus jellied I labour'd but quickly I found<br /> | ||
+ | My Tread was too clumsy for poetick Ground<br /> | ||
+ | And wanting their Aid to assist my weak Passes<br /> | ||
+ | I bid an Adieu to the Mount of Parnassus<br /> | ||
+ | Since that contented with Limitation<br /> | ||
+ | Sometimes Ive attempted an humble Translation<br /> | ||
+ | Inspired with an Ardour deriv'd from gay Bacchus<br /> | ||
+ | Of an ecologue of Mars or some Ode of Flacus<br /> | ||
+ | Sometimes too when a Genius hath started<br /> | ||
+ | Ideas Ive made use of his Joint ut nuper to videas. | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | [[File:PoemsOnWittySubjectsInCongressP25.jpg|thumb|550px|Page twenty-five from [https://archive.org/details/poemsonwittysubj00elle ''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.]] | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 10:12, 15 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 "You've Not only Quitted Your Arrear," by George Wythe
- 1.9 "Some Mere Poetaster Call Tully," by George Wythe
- 1.10 "The Gen'rous Idea Your Last Piece Expresses," by William Ellery
- 1.11 "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)
|
"A Novanglican to G.W.," by William Ellery (RI)
|
"Instead of Controlling Our Mary's Cross Humor," by William Ellery
|
"For Farms in Utopia, the Moon, or Some Fairyland," by George Wythe
|
||
And if slaves you include in your capitation, |
"Epigram," by William Ellery
|
"Answer to Epigram," by George Wythe
|
"Unless You Will Take One Line for Your Ten," by William Ellery
|
"You've Not only Quitted Your Arrear," by George Wythe
|
"Some Mere Poetaster Call Tully," by George Wythe
|
"The Gen'rous Idea Your Last Piece Expresses," by William Ellery
|
"A Commissioner, to the People of Philadelphia," by William Ellery
|
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.
- ↑ Defy nature, literally "go against Minerva's will." Cicero, De Officiis, I, 31, 110.
- ↑ Wythe is a Virginian Cicero: [[wikipedia:Marcus Tullius Cicero|]].
- ↑ A great law of Nature.
- ↑ Classical Greek cry of exultation or triumph, traditionally addressed to Apollo the healer.
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.