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The Last Poems of Philip Freneau
Freneau, Philip Morin (1752-1832)
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Stanzas on the Great Comet: To Ismenia
The Neglected Husband
Stanzas Written for a Lad
To Mr. Blanchard, the Celebrated Aeronaut
The Fortunate Blacksmith
Salutary Maxims, Or, the Way of the World. To a Misanthrope, or Man-Hater.
Stanzas Written in an Ancient Burial Ground
Epitaph Upon a Spanish Horse
The Tye-Wig
Letitia
A Dialogue Between a News-Printer And His Cash-Collector
The Great Western Canal
The Re-opening of the Park Theatre
Jersey City
The City Poet
Elijah, The New England Emigrant. No. I
Elijah, The New England Emigrant. No. II
Elijah, The New England Emigrant. No. III
Elijah, The New England Emigrant. No. IV
To a Young Friend, With Some Maple Sugar
The Youth of the Mind
Prologue to Kotzebue's Play
The Military Ground
On the Loss of the Packet Ship Albion. Captain Williams, of New York.
To a Young Farmer
To a Young Person Addicted to the Gaming Table
Philosophical Fortitude
General Lefevre Denouette
On the Civilization of the Western Aboriginal Country
Lines Written at Demarest's Field
Verses Written on Leaving a Great House Of Much Ceremony, but Little Sincerity, Or Hospitality
Verses on an Upper Street Physician
Lines to a Lady
The Passaick Garden
Bonaparte
A Midnight Storm in the Gulph Stream
To a Lady Remarkably Fond of Sleep
The Arrival at Indian Sam's (Or, Wee-Quali's) Wigwam
Circumnavigation
Ode on a Remote Perspective View of Princeton College
A Transient View of Monticello
On Observing a Large Red-streak Apple
A Fragment of Bion
Answer to a Letter of Despondency
To a New-England Poet
On a Widow Lady (Very Rich and Very Penurious.)
On the Death of Robert Fulton
General De la Fayette On His Expected Visit to America
Stanzas Made at the Interment of a Sailor
Winter
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The Last Poems of Philip Freneau
The Last Poems of Philip Freneau
Philip Morin Freneau
1752-1832
Rutgers University Press
New Brunswick
1945
The Last Poems of Philip Freneau