Colonial Prose and Poetry Volume II: The Beginnings of Americanism, 1650–1710 - William Penn, Increase Mather, Cotton Mather & Samuel Sewall

Colonial Prose and Poetry Volume II: The Beginnings of Americanism, 1650–1710

By William Penn, Increase Mather, Cotton Mather & Samuel Sewall

  • Release Date: 2012-06-04
  • Genre: U.S. History

Description

*Illustrated with over a dozen pictures of William Penn, the Founding Fathers, and the authors.
*Includes Table of Contents
Long before the United States became a free country, Europeans from all backgrounds entered the continent, and they began to commingle with Native Americans, often not peacefully. However, the mixtures of different ethnicities created a diverse and original culture that became quintessentially American by the time the American Revolution started in 1775. 
This anthology was compiled by William P. Trent, a professor of English at Columbia. The 57 writers in these three volumes of colonial poetry span more than a century and a half and represent the literary and cultural trends in Colonial North America—from the confrontation with the American Indians to Puritan life to opposition to slavery.
This edition of Colonial Prose and Poetry Volume II contains the writings of 20 authors who were among the first and second generations of American settlers from 1650-1710, including accounts of Native Americans, discussions of the Salem Witch Trials and Bacon’s Rebellion, and poetry and religious sermons. Among the authors in this anthology are Increase and Cotton Mather, William Penn, the poetry of Anne Bradford, the sermons of John Mather and Roger Williams, and Edward Johnson. In addition to pictures of some of the authors, this edition includes over a dozen pictures of Colonial American leaders like William Penn and the Founding Fathers, as well as images of Quakers and Native Americans. It also includes a Table of Contents for easier navigation.