—— Paper: a poem. (In his: Works. London, 1793. 8º. p. 101-104.)
Reserve
Reprinted in The Massachusetts magazine, Boston, 1794, v. 8, p. 501, Reserve; Samuel Kettell, Specimens of American poetry, Boston, 1829, v. 1, p. 173-174, NBH; and in E. A. and G. L. Duyckinck, Cyclopædia of American literature, New York, 1866, v. 1, p. 114, NBB.
Also printed in many editions of Franklin’s Works.
French arrogance; or “The cat let out of the bag.” See [Cobbett, William].
Freneau, Philip, 1752-1832. The American village. A poem by Philip Freneau. Reprinted in facsimile from the original edition published at New York in 1772, with an introduction by Harry Lyman Koopman and bibliographical data by Victor Hugo Paltsits. Providence, Rhode Island, 1906. xxi p., 2 l., 69 p. 8º. (Club for Colonial Reprints of Providence, Rhode Island. Third publication.)
IAG
No. 39 of 100 copies printed.
—— A collection of poems, on American affairs, and a variety of other subjects, chiefly moral and political; written between the year 1797 and the present time. By Philip Freneau, author of Poems written during the Revolutionary War, Miscellanies, &c. &c. In two volumes. New-York: Published by David Longworth, at the Dramatic Repository, Shakspeare-Gallery. 1815. 2 v. 24º.
NBHD