Refined by:
- Publication date: 1840s (x)
- Tag: Native American (x)
- Time period: Antebellum Period (x)
- Creator: Anonymous [William Gilmore Simms] (x)
- Genre
- Poetry (1)
- Reviews/Essays (1)
- Short Stories (1)
- Holding Institution
- Place of printing
- New York, NY (1)
- Place of publication
- Charleston, SC (2)
- New York, NY (1)
- Setting
- Georgia (1)
- Germany (1)
- Oconee County, SC (1)
- Okefenokee Swamp, GA (1)
- St. Marys River (1)
- Subject
- Congaree River (1)
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''The Mothers of the South'' / The Maid of Congaree / Song of the Alabama Pine Woods / Children's Evening Gambols ([The Magnolia, July 1842] Page 9, Four Items)Poetry | 1842-07 William Gilmore Simms's collection of scrapbooks represents one
of the most significant, but least accessible, resources for the study of the writer.
Housed as a part of the Charles Carroll Simms collection in the South
Caroliniana Library at the University of South Carolina, there are nine volumes
of scrapbooks, each comprised of works of numerous genres from throughout
Simms's career.[1]
While the majority of the included works are Simms's own, the scrapbooks also
features writings by others, as well as works of uncertain authorship. Prior to
digitizing these volumes, access to them ... |
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Carl Werner, An Imaginative Story; with Other Tales of ImaginationShort Stories | George Adlard | 1838 Carl Werner was published in December 1838 by George Adlard of New
York.[1] In the author’s advertisement, Simms classified
the collected stories as “moral imaginative” tales, a form of allegory
illuminating the “strifes between the rival moral principles of good and evil.”
Such stories, according to John C. Guilds,
may often exploit supernatural elements, although it is not necessary. Simms attributed the origin of the title
story to “an ancient monkish legend,” as he set “Carl Werner” in the deepest parts
of the German forest where the narrator and his friend ... |
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Catlin's North American Indians / Law and Lawyers / Who is the Producer? (Three Items, Page 318)Reviews/Essays | 1842-05 William Gilmore Simms's collection of scrapbooks represents one
of the most significant, but least accessible, resources for the study of the writer.
Housed as a part of the Charles Carroll Simms collection in the South
Caroliniana Library at the University of South Carolina, there are nine volumes
of scrapbooks, each comprised of works of numerous genres from throughout
Simms's career.[1]
While the majority of the included works are Simms's own, the scrapbooks also
features writings by others, as well as works of uncertain authorship. Prior to
digitizing these volumes, access to them ... |