Series |
Early American imprints. First series ; no. 47682. ^A478749
|
General note | Two poems attributed to Chapman Whitcomb by John C.L. Clark in a letter to Clarence S. Brigham; AAS correspondence for June 26, 1927. Cf. A Concise view of antient [sic] and modern religion ... Printed for Chapman Whitcomb (Bristol B11184). |
General note | A poem, on religious ignorance ..., first lines: Ignatus, born somewhere, no matter where, train'd up in school, and taught to say his pray'r. |
General note | The gospel minister, first lines: Theologist, a free-born son of grace, sought first, in Jesus' school, to find a place. |
General note | Evans 29332 records a four page edition of A poem, on religious ignorance ... Printed at Boston in 1795. However, between 1795 and 1813, many of Whitcomb's poems were printed, without imprints, at Leominster, Mass. Cf. Clark, John C.L. Notes on Chapman Whitcomb ... Lancaster, Mass., 1911, p. 14. |
General note | Text in two columns; printed area measures 37.1 x 15.2 cm. |
References |
Bristol B9425 |
References |
Shipton & Mooney 47682 |
Other forms | Microform version available in the Readex Early American Imprints series. |
Reproduction note | Electronic text and image data. [Chester, Vt. : Readex, a division of Newsbank, Inc., 2002-2004. Includes files in TIFF, GIF and PDF formats with inclusion of keyword searchable text. (Early American imprints. First series ; no. 47682). |
Genre/form | Poems 1795. |
Genre/form | Broadsides. |