Online-Ressource (1 sheet ([1] p.),
ill. (relief cuts),
32 x 25 cm
Bemerkung(en):
Followed by Death of Gen. Wolf, a song written by Thomas Paine between 1768 and 1774, and first printed in America in the March 1775, issue of the Pennsylvania magazine. Cf. Hawke, David Freeman. Paine. New York, 1974, p. 15, 30. First line: In a sad mould'ring cave where the wretched retreat
Ford, W.C. Thomas ballads, 55
Nathaniel Coverly, Jr. is first listed at this address in the Boston directory for 1810. American Antiquarian Society copy bound in the Isaiah Thomas collection of broadside ballads, v. III, no. 69, presented to the society in August 1814
Shaw & Shoemaker, 19938
Text in two columns; printed area measures 27.3 x 19.9 cm
Verse in twelve stanzas; first line: Cheer up your hearts young men let nothing fright you
Electronic text and image data
Microform version available in the Readex Early American Imprints series.