Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 1, Issue 11
- Title
- Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 1, Issue 11
- Publication
- Richmond, Virginia,: T.W. White [etc.].
- July 1835
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- Link to this Item
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https://name.umdl.umich.edu/acf2679.0001.011
- Cite this Item
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"Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 1, Issue 11." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/acf2679.0001.011. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 18, 2024.
Contents
- Professor Beverley Tucker's Valedictory Address to His Class Professor Beverley Tucker; pp. 597-602
- Letters on the United States of America, by a Young Scotchman, Part II George Watterston; Signed a Young Scotchman Now No More; pp. 602-604
- Fine Passage in Hooker Edward Vernon Sparhawk [Unsigned]; pp. 604
- To —: "The dial marks the sunny hour" John Walker Wilde [Unsigned]; pp. 604
- Paraphrase of a Figure in the First Volume of Eugene Aram John Walker Wilde [Unsigned]; pp. 604
- To My Sisters Rosicrucius; pp. 604
- Lines: "Sleep on, thou dear maiden" J. M. C. D.; pp. 604
- Grayson Griffith William Swan Plumer [Unsigned]; pp. 605-611
- Lines Written in Mrs. —'s Album John Walker Wilde [Unsigned]; pp. 611
- The Diamond Chain Questus; pp. 611
- Where Shall the Student Rest?: A Parody of Constance's Song in Marmion "Where Shall the Lover Rest" pp. 612
- The Age of Reptiles pp. 612
- Answer to Willis's "They may talk of your Love in a Cottage" John Walker Wilde [Unsigned]; pp. 612
- Epigram pp. 612
- Visit to the Virginia Springs James Ewell Heath [Unsigned]; pp. 613-616
- Extracts from the Autobiography of Pertinax Placid: My First Night in a Watch-house, Chapter I Edward Vernon Sparhawk; Signed Pertinax Placid; pp. 617-621
- Dissertation on the Characteristic Differences between the Sexes, and Woman's Position and Influence in Society, No. II Thomas Roderick Dew [Unsigned]; pp. 621-632
- Lionel Granby, Chapter IV pp. 632-634
- To H. W. M. Morna; pp. 634-635
- Lines Written on Being Accused of Coldness of Character E. A. S.; pp. 635
- On the Deaf, Dumb, and Blind Girl of the Asylum at Hartford, Connecticut (Julia Bruce) Mrs. Lydia Howard Huntley Sigourney; pp. 635-636
- An Elegy Frederic Speece; pp. 636
- Sonnet Alexander Lacey Beard; pp. 636
- To Mary Edgar Allan Poe; Signed E. A. P.; pp. 636
- The Visionary—A Tale Edgar Allan Poe; pp. 637-640
- Peter's Mountain pp. 641
- The Duel Dr. Egan; Signed E.; pp. 641-644
- Lines: "The dove of my bosom lies bleeding" Morna; pp. 644
- My Native Home George Watterston; pp. 644
- Memoir of the Ambitious Lawyer Narrator; pp. 645-646
- Literary Notices pp. 646-651
- Editorial Remarks pp. 652