Contents . xvii
795 Margaretta Bleecker Faugeres (1771-1801)
795 The following Lines were occasioned by Mr. Robertson's refusing to paint
for one Lady, and immediately after taking another lady's likeness, 1793
796 To Aribert. October, 1790
797 Poems Published Anonymously
797 The Lady's Complaint
798 Verses Written by a Young Lady, on Women Born to Be Controll'd
799 The Maid's Soliloquy
800 Voices of Revolution and Nationalism
802 Handsome Lake (Seneca) (1755-1815)
803 How America Was Discovered
804 Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)
808 The Way to Wealth
814 A Witch Trial at Mount Holly
815 The Speech of Polly Baker
817 An Edict by the King of Prussia
820 The Ephemera, an Emblem of Human Life
821 Remarks Concerning the Savages of North America
825 On the Slave-Trade
827 Speech in the Convention
828 from The Autobiography
828 Part One [Twyford, at the Bishop of St. Asaph's, 1771]
876 Part Two: Continuation of the Account of My Life Begun
at Passy, 1784
886 Part Three [Philadelphia, 1788]
890 Mercy Otis Warren ( 1728-1814)
892 To Fidelio, Long Absent on the great public Cause, which agitated all
America, in 1776
894 The Group
917 from The Ladies of Castille
918 from An Address to the Inhabitants of the United States of America
921 J. Hector St. John de Crevecoeur (1735-1813)
922 from Letters from an American Farmer
922 from Letter I, Introduction
925 from Letter II, On the Situation, Feelings, and
Pleasures of an American Farmer
928 from Letter III, What Is an American?
933 from Letter V, Customary Education and Employment
of the Inhabitants of Nantucket