Excerpt: The miscellaneous works of David Humphreys. New-York: T. & J. Swords, 1804.
—— A poem, on the happiness of America; addressed to the citizens of the United States. (In: The Boston magazine. Boston, 1786. 8º. July, 1786, p. 306-311; August, 1786, p. 348-352.)
Reserve
The poem was continued in later numbers of the magazine, which the Library lacks.
Also printed in The American museum, Philadelphia, 1787, v. 1, p. 273-288, Reserve; and in the author’s Life of Israel Putnam, New York, 1810, p. 219-285, AN.
—— A poem on the happiness of America. Addressed to the citizens of the United States. By Col. David Humphreys, aid-de-camp to General Washington during the American Revolutionary War. New York: The New York Printing Company, 1871. 1 p.l., (1)4-67 p. 8º.
NBI
—— A poem on industry. Addressed to the citizens of the United States of America. By Colonel David Humphreys, Minister resident at the Court of Lisbon. Philadelphia: Printed for Mathew Carey, No. 118, Market-Street. October 14, 1794. 1 p.l., (i)iv p., 1 l., (1)8-22 p., 1 l. of adv. 8º.
Reserve and NBHD
—— Poems by Col. David Humphreys, late aid-de-camp to his Excellency General Washington. Second edition:—with several additions. Philadelphia: Printed by Mathew Carey. m, dcc, lxxxix. 1 p.l., 90 p., 1 l. 16º.