Series |
Early American imprints. First series ; no. 37772. ^A478749
|
General note | Verse in two stanzas with prose epilogue; first line: What solemn sounds the ear invade. |
General note | Followed by Columbia's lamentation for Gen. Washingtton [sic]; first line: How sad are the tidings that sound in my ears. |
General note | Leonard Deming was a trader and bookseller in Boston from 1828 to 1840. Mistakenly dated 1800 in Evans because of the subject. Ascribed by Shipton & Mooney to the press of Nathaniel Coverly, Jun., who printed another edition of the Lamentation (Evans 37771, but printed between 1810 and 1814); Coverly, however, died in 1824. |
General note | Text in two columns, with the imprint printed vertically between the columns. |
References |
Evans 37772 |
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. 37772). |
Genre/form | Broadsides. |
Genre/form | Poems 1828. |
Contains title |
Columbia's lamentation for Gen. Washington. |