Refined by:
Refine by:
- Genre
- Documents (1)
- Novella (2)
- Poetry (2)
- Reviews/Essays (1)
- Short Stories (1)
- Speech (1)
- Publication date
- 0000s (8)
- Subject heading
- American Poetry -- 19th Century (2)
- American literature -- History and criticism. (1)
- Cotton Manufacture -- Southern States. (1)
- Ghost stories, American (1)
- Hammond, James Henry, 1807-1864 (1)
- Slavery -- Justification. (1)
- Slavery -- Southern States -- Justification. (1)
- Slavery -- United States -- History -- Sources (1)
- South Carolina -- Politics and government -- 1775-1865 -- Sources (1)
- Southern States -- Race Relations. (1)
- Character
- Carl Werner (1)
- Conrade Weickhoff (1)
- Helen Halsey (1)
- Henry Meadors (1)
- Herman Ottfried (1)
- Ipsistos (1)
- Logoochie (1)
- Matilda Ottfried (1)
- Mowbray (1)
- Rudolph Steinmyer (1)
- Creator
- Dedicatee
- James W. Miles (1)
- Professor E. Geddings (1)
- Prosper M. Wetmore (1)
- Randell Hunt, Esq. (1)
- Richard Henry Wilde (1)
- Editor
- Printer
- C.A. Alvord (1)
- Chatterton & Brother, Job Printers (1)
- Craighead and Allen, Printers (1)
- G.P. Scott and Co. (1)
- J.R. Winser (2)
- Redfield (1)
- Publisher
- Burgess, Stringer & Co. (2)
- George Adlard (1)
- J. & J. Harper (1)
- John F. Trow & Co. (1)
- Russell & Jones (1)
- The (1)
- The Reprint Company (1)
- Wiley and Putnam (1)
- Subject
- Cornelius Mathews (1)
- Daniel Boon (1)
- Hernando Cortes (1)
- James Fenimore Cooper (1)
- Major John Andre (1)
- Mason L. Weems (1)
- Samuel Morse (1)
- Stereotyper
- T.B. Smith (1)
![]() |
Atalantis. A Story of the Sea: In Three Parts.Poetry | J. & J. Harper | 1832
William
Gilmore Simms published Atalantis. A Story of the Sea: In Three Parts in the
fall of 1832. While Simms’s name does
not appear anywhere on or in the text, it is unlikely that he sought any type
of anonymity in its publication. Within
weeks of its appearing in print a reviewer in the Charleston Courier announced, “It is attributed to the pen of our
fellow-townsman, William Gilmore Simms, Esq.…”[1] Even without such prompting anyone familiar
with Simms’s work would have quickly recognized his authorship, because the
opening sonnet was one that he had previously ... |
![]() |
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 ... |
![]() |
Castle Dismal; or, The Bachelor's ChristmasNovella | Burgess, Stringer & Co. | 1844 A gothic tale of ghosts, infidelity,
murder, and love, Castle Dismal follows
the protagonist Ned Clifton, a “veteran bachelor” who fears the bonds of
marriage, in his holiday visit to the home of married friends. Set during the Christmas season in South Carolina,
Simms’s story illustrates the southern custom of bringing together family
around a table to feast; and while Clifton eventually marries Elizabeth
Singleton—freeing him from the “melancholy dependencies of bachelorism”—Simms
subverts naïve nineteenth-century notions of marriage and domesticity.[1] Marked ... |
![]() |
Helen Halsey, or The Swamp State of Conelachita: A Tale of the BordersNovella | Burgess, Stringer & Co. | 1845 While one of the lesser-known of
Simms’s border romances, the novella Helen
Halsey is nevertheless a strong work, indicative of the overall project the
author undertook in that series. The
first mention of Helen Halsey in the Letters was in June 1843. By September, Simms told James Lawson that the
work was “nearly ready.” Helen Halsey was “to follow up” Simms’s
ghost story Castle Dismal, a work he
announces in the same letter to be sending to “the Harpers.”[1]
Letters to Lawson from this time period
indicate that the author was interested in shopping ... |
![]() |
Selections from the Letters and Speeches of the Hon. James H. Hammond, of South CarolinaDocuments | The Reprint Company; John F. Trow & Co. | 1866, 1978 Selections from the Letters and
Speeches of the Hon. James H. Hammond, of South Carolina was originally
published in New York by John F. Trow & Co. in 1866. The Southern Studies Program at the
University of South Carolina included Selections
in the South Caroliniana Series, and so it was published by the Reprint Company
in 1978. James Henry Hammond (1807-1864)
served South Carolina as a member of Congress from 1835-1836, governor from
1842-1844, and United States senator from 1857 until 1860, when he resigned
upon South Carolina’s secession from the Union.
Hammond ... |
![]() |
Simms's Poems: Areytos or Songs and Ballads of the South with Other PoemsPoetry | Russell & Jones | 1860 Published
in 1846 by John Russell in Charleston, SC, Areytos
was also titled Songs of the South, because
all the poems dealt with subject matter related to the southern United States. Many had been published previously in various
periodicals.[1]
Simms issued this collection on the heels of his Grouped Thoughts and Scattered Fancies. A Collection of Sonnets.[2] Thinking of himself primarily as a poet and
wanting to secure his place as one of America’s best, he followed the
publications of Grouped Thoughts
(1845) and Areytos (1846) with five
other volumes of poetry, all published ... |
![]() |
The Power of Cotton: A Paper Read in the City of New YorkSpeech | 1856 The
Power of Cotton is
a pamphlet published by Chatterton & Brother of New York in 1856. The work claims to be a paper read in New
York in November 1856. The only known
copy of the paper had been in the possession of Theodore Parker, the most
prominent Unitarian and Transcendentalist minister in the northeast in
1856. The work was bequeathed to the
public library of the city of Boston from the Parker estate on 30 October 1864,
four years after Parker’s passing. On
both the cover and title page, the precise location of the reading and the
author’s name were both removed ... |
![]() |
Views and Reviews in American Literature, History and FictionReviews/Essays | Wiley and Putnam | 1845 - 1846 Part of the Wiley and Putnam’s highly influential Library of American
Books, Simms’s two-volume Views and
Reviews in American Literature, History and Fiction, shows the author
theorizing the “American” aspects of American literature, as well as the
relationship between America’s history and its imaginative writing. In this, we can see Simms presenting and
promoting the cultural agenda of the “Young America” movement, whose members
included Melville, Poe, and Hawthorne. Views and Reviews is thus a central text
in understanding the struggle for defining American literature ... |