The New-England Courant. A Selection of Certain Issues Containing Writings of Benjamin Franklin or Published by Him during His Brother's Imprisonment

1956 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 437
Author(s):  
Lester J. Cappon ◽  
Perry Miller

2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 220-228
Author(s):  
Luca Codignola

Benjamin Franklin played a significant role in the early encounter between Rome and the United States. By highlighting Franklin’s role one is likely to question the two main tenets of traditional Catholic historiography in this regard. First of all, that the Holy See did not unwillingly submit itself to any imposition of newly-devised American democratic procedures in selecting how best to deal with the new republic. Secondly, that Franklin did constantly intervene in religious matters, at least as far as these concerned the establishment of the Catholic Church in the United States. In fact, the adoption of a democratic form of selection of the higher hierarchy was easily accepted and indeed exploited by the Holy See. Furthermore, much was going on underneath the official doctrine of the separation between church and state. This resembled old-regime diplomatic wrangling and had Franklin as its main protagonist.



1960 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 106-122 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Garvan

Purism represents the conscious effort of a culture to reject a commonly accepted iconography and the meanings implicit in its canons of proportion, taste and esthetic, and to substitute in their place a pragmatic solution of the artistic problem involved. What is not always recognized is that this solution must be the consequence of the terms of the problem; and the statement of these terms, indeed the selection of the problem itself, are both culturally determined.



Author(s):  
Vincent Carretta

The person now best known as Phillis Wheatley was born around 1753 in West Africa, most likely south of the Senegambia area. In 1761 the slave ship Phillis brought her to Boston, where the merchant John Wheatley and his wife, Susanna, purchased her. Wheatley’s mistress enabled her to become literate and encouraged her to write poetry that soon found its way into New England newspapers. Phillis Wheatley gained transatlantic recognition with her 1770 elegy on the death of the evangelist George Whitefield, which she addressed and sent to his English patron, the Countess of Huntingdon. By 1772 Wheatley had written enough poems so that she could attempt to capitalize on her growing transatlantic reputation by producing a book of previously published and new poems. Rather than publishing her volume in Boston, Phillis and her mistress successfully sought a London publisher through Huntingdon’s patronage. Phillis accompanied her owner’s son to London in 1773, where she spent several weeks promoting the forthcoming publication of her Poems on Various Subjects: Religious and Moral. Its publication made her the first English-speaking person of African descent to publish a book and, consequently, to become a founder of African American literature. Phillis Wheatley was on her way back to Boston before her book appeared in September 1773. She probably agreed to return only if her owners promised to free her, as she told a correspondent, “at the desire of [her] friends in England” (Carretta 2019, cited under Primary Texts, p. 110), one of whom was Granville Sharp. Sharp had procured a ruling in the King’s Bench in 1772 that legally no slave brought to England could be forced to return to the colonies as a slave. Her owners freed her within a few weeks of her return in September 1773 to Boston, where she quickly took charge of promoting, distributing, and selling her book. Her former mistress died the following March. Phillis continued to live with her former master, John Wheatley, until his death in March 1778. She became engaged to John Peters, a free black, the next month, and married him in November 1778. Initially a successful businessman, Peters soon suffered financial distress during the post-Revolution depression. Publication of Wheatley’s Poems gained her widespread contemporaneous fame, bringing her to the attention of Voltaire, Benjamin Rush, Benjamin Franklin, John Paul Jones, and George Washington, among others. However, during her lifetime, her fame was short-lived once she was on her own and after her marriage. She published only a few poems after 1773 and unsuccessfully tried to find a Boston publisher for a proposed second volume of her writings, which was to include correspondence and be dedicated to Benjamin Franklin. Her husband was probably in jail for debt when Phillis died in poverty in Boston on 5 December 1784. Her first biographer, Matilda Margaretta Odell, claims that Phillis and John had three children, who all died young. However, no records of their births, baptisms, or deaths have been found. Although Odell says only that John Peters “went South,” he died in Charlestown, just north of Boston, in March 1801.



1994 ◽  
Vol 51 (8) ◽  
pp. 1855-1876 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald B. Davis ◽  
Dennis S. Anderson ◽  
Stephen A. Norton ◽  
Jesse Ford ◽  
P. Roger Sweets ◽  
...  

Gradient analyses of 29 chemical and physical (C–P) variables and diatom remains in surface sediments of 63 New England lakes (pH 4.4–7.9) indicate a primary C–P gradient of pH, alkalinity, Ca, Mg, conductance, and Al; diatom distributions are most strongly related to that gradient (especially to pH and alkalinity) and also reflect secondary gradients (oceanic–inland, lake morphology, and regional chemistry). The primary relationship supports the calibration of regression models for paleolimnological inference of pH and alkalinity based on diatoms. To optimize inference models for the region's most acidic lakes, a second set of calibrations was run after culling the seven least acidic lakes. Diatom distributions on the restricted pH and alkalinity gradients are of two types: roughly uniclinal and variously unimodal. Models assuming each type were calibrated: CLUSTER (linear), DCA (unimodal), and CCA (unimodal). Log-transformation of alkalinity improved the 63-lake DCA and CLUSTER regressions, but worsened or left the others unchanged. Postulated causes of incongruous diatom assemblages and outlier pH and alkalinity inferences are sediment mixing, focusing time lag, growth of epipelic diatoms at the core site, and atypical lake morphology. Careful selection of calibration lakes is at least as important as the choice of regression models.



2006 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 261 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. J. S. Debus

I studied the selection of breeding habitat and nest microhabitat in Scarlet Robins Petroica multicolor and Eastern Yellow Robins Eopsaltria australis, in remnant woodland on the New England Tablelands of New South Wales in 2000?2002. Yellow Robins used breeding territories (n = 10) with significantly higher densities of rough-barked saplings, acacias and other (non-Acacia) shrubs than Scarlet Robin breeding territories (n = 10) and plots lacking Yellow Robins (n = 7). Yellow Robins nested mostly in gully and lower-slope positions, with a southerly aspect, >40 m from the woodland edge, whereas Scarlet Robins nested mostly on upper slopes and ridges, with no preferred minimum distance from the woodland edge. Most Yellow Robin nests (86% of 58) had overhead foliage within 1 m, shielding them from above, whereas over half (58% of 54) of Scarlet Robin nests were in unconcealed positions. Yellow Robin nests had significantly greater density of cover, and the surrounding habitat was more complex, than for Scarlet Robin nests, in 0.13-ha plots centred on the nest. Breeding success and fledgling survival in the Yellow Robin were positively related to the density of acacias, non-Acacia shrubs and rough-barked saplings (but not gum saplings) in breeding territories. Fledging success and juvenile survival in the Yellow Robin were also positively related to habitat complexity around nest-sites (but not distance to nearest cover, or items of cover within 20 m). Scarlet Robins had exposed nests and suffered high nest predation, with too few successful nests for comparison with unsuccessful nests. Habitat conservation for the Yellow Robin should address the complexity of the ground, shrub and sapling layer in woodland remnants; that for the Scarlet Robin may need to address foraging substrate and ecologically based control of nest predators.





2014 ◽  
Vol 78 (4) ◽  
pp. 645-656 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pamela H. Loring ◽  
Peter W.C. Paton ◽  
Jason E. Osenkowski ◽  
Scott G. Gilliland ◽  
Jean-Pierre L. Savard ◽  
...  


Nova Tellus ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Germán Santana Henríquez

Como personaje nacido en Nueva España, educado en Salamanca y autor de un poema sobre el nuevo México, Gaspar de Villagrá ocupa un espacio supranacional que lo hace relevante para las historias literarias de tres países y, por supuesto, para otras varias historias transnacionales y regionales. Las tres naciones que lo pueden reclamar como suyo, España, México y Estados Unidos, se lo disputan por diferentes motivos. España, por ser un representante tardío de un género, la épica, cada vez menos relevante; México, porque su obra se sitúa en los albores de la literatura colonial, y Estados Unidos, porque Villagrá publicó su poema diez años antes de la llegada de los famosos peregrinos del Mayflower, catorce años antes que la Generall Historie of Virginia, New England, and the Summer Isles de John Smith, y cuarenta antes de la impresión de los versos de Anne Bradstreet.1 A esta indudable primacía cronológica como escritor estadounidense habría que sumarle, además, la decidida adopción del poeta como uno de los suyos por parte de los intelectuales méxico-americanos y chicanos en los siglos XIX y XX. El poema de Villagrá destaca también por ser una historia temprana de la colonización del actual suroeste de los Estados Unidos.



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