The English Literatures of America: 1500-1800Myra Jehlen, Michael Warner Routledge, 2013 M12 19 - 1142 páginas The English Literatures of America redefines colonial American literatures, sweeping from Newfoundland and Nova Scotia to the West Indies and Guiana. The book begins with the first colonization of the Americas and stretches beyond the Revolution to the early national period. Many texts are collected here for the first time; others are recognized masterpieces of the canon--both British and American--that can now be read in their Atlantic context. By emphasizing the culture of empire and by representing a transatlantic dialogue, The English Literatures of America allows a new way to understand colonial literature both in the United States and abroad. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 79
Página 50
... thought good to turn my sails and to follow the ordinary course which I began , and by the example of this worthy captain King Ferdinando , encourage all others ( to their power ) to attempt the like voyages . As for which , in few ...
... thought good to turn my sails and to follow the ordinary course which I began , and by the example of this worthy captain King Ferdinando , encourage all others ( to their power ) to attempt the like voyages . As for which , in few ...
Página 59
... thought a hard point17 to have so much familiarity with the professed and obstinate Enemy of Christ - is likewise a voyage which can not be made but at the devotion , and as it were in the danger of many States , who for sundry respects ...
... thought a hard point17 to have so much familiarity with the professed and obstinate Enemy of Christ - is likewise a voyage which can not be made but at the devotion , and as it were in the danger of many States , who for sundry respects ...
Página 67
... thought , if they could not have sayd much , whether it were true or false . Of which some have spoken of more then ever they saw , or otherwise knew to be there . Other some34 have not bene ashamed to make absolute deniall of that ...
... thought , if they could not have sayd much , whether it were true or false . Of which some have spoken of more then ever they saw , or otherwise knew to be there . Other some34 have not bene ashamed to make absolute deniall of that ...
Página 74
... thought to be much . I thought also good to note this unto you , that you which shall inhabit , and plant there , may know how specially that countrey corne is there to be preferred before ours : besides , the manifold wayes in applying ...
... thought to be much . I thought also good to note this unto you , that you which shall inhabit , and plant there , may know how specially that countrey corne is there to be preferred before ours : besides , the manifold wayes in applying ...
Página 85
... thought they were rather the workes of gods then of men , or at the leastwise they had bene given and taught us of ... thought fit for the time . And although I told them the booke materially and of it selfe was not of any such vertue ...
... thought they were rather the workes of gods then of men , or at the leastwise they had bene given and taught us of ... thought fit for the time . And although I told them the booke materially and of it selfe was not of any such vertue ...
Contenido
of the Will 1754 | 628 |
Thomas Paine | 673 |
Histories | 683 |
Daniel Defoe | 689 |
Dr Alexander Hamilton | 708 |
Nathaniel Ames II | 716 |
Peter Oliver | 771 |
Stephen Burroughs | 801 |
108 | |
John Cotton | 160 |
Thomas Morton | 168 |
William Bradford | 175 |
George | 194 |
Richard Ligon | 201 |
Anonymous | 222 |
Aphra Behn | 233 |
John Esquemeling | 292 |
Ned Edward Ward | 299 |
New England and Canada | 305 |
Thomas Shepard | 316 |
Ned Ward | 400 |
Sarah Knight | 415 |
The Trials of Puritanism | 429 |
the Keayne controversy | 443 |
Richard Saltonstall | 457 |
Deodat Lawson | 475 |
The Seventeenth Century | 489 |
Increase Mather | 504 |
three selections about smallpox | 521 |
The Seventeenth Century | 527 |
George Herbert | 535 |
New Englands Annoyances c 1642 | 538 |
Anne Bradstreet | 548 |
Religion in the Enlightenment | 597 |
The Literature of Politics | 813 |
Edmund Burke | 850 |
Notes on the State of Virginia Query 19 1781 | 863 |
Judith Sargent Murray | 874 |
Ottobah Cugoano John Stuart | 880 |
Benjamin Franklin | 891 |
The Eighteenth Century | 901 |
Jonathan Edwards | 907 |
Benjamin Franklin | 915 |
William Bartram | 939 |
Belles Lettres | 949 |
Thomas Jefferson | 971 |
Susannah Haswell Rowson | 989 |
Fisher Ames | 1000 |
The Eighteenth Century | 1011 |
Benjamin Tompson | 1032 |
three versions of Psalm 137 | 1040 |
Anonymous | 1048 |
John Dyer | 1061 |
Phillis Wheatley | 1076 |
The Rector of St Johns Nevis | 1088 |
Joel Barlow | 1094 |
Philip Freneau | 1104 |
INDEX | 1113 |
954 | 1117 |
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Términos y frases comunes
America amongst Antinomians Bacon Barbados began Benjamin Franklin better body brought called Captain Captain Morgan Christ Christian church colonies Cotton Mather Country DAREING death desire devil doth drink DULLMAN earth enemy England English Father fear fire FRIENDLY friends gave give Goodwife Governor hair hand hath HAZARD head heard heart heaven Honour Increase Mather Indians inhabitants Island John John Winthrop killed kind King labour land laws liberty live Lord Madam master means mercy mind nation nature never night Olaudah Equiano papoose persons Plantation pleasure Porto Bello Powhatan Praying Indian Puritan RANTER reason religion river shee shewed ships slavery slaves soon soul Spain spirit sweet thee things thou thought TIMOROUS told took trade unto Virginia voyage WELLMAN West Indies WHIFF WHIMSEY wigwam woman women