Page:The Cambridge History of American Literature, v1.djvu/530

504 The Prisoner and the Orphan. The Rival Monarchs. Solitary of Mount Savage. Tsmazl and Marzam. Visitandines. (Opera.)

Brainard, C. H. John Howard Payne: A Biographical Sketch. Washington, 1885.

Hanson, W. T. The Early Life of John Howard Payne. Printed privately, Boston, 1913.

Harrison. G. John Howard Payne, Dramatist, Poet, Actor, and author of Home Sweet Home. Rev. ed. Philadelphia, 1885.

Memoirs of John Howard Payne, The American Roscius. London, 1815.

Sketch of the life of John Howard Payne, as published in the Boston Evening Gazette, Compressed. By one of the Editors of the New York Mirror; now first printed in separate form. . . . Boston. . . 1833.

Wegelin, O. The Writings of John Howard Payne. Reprinted from The Literary Collector, March, 1905. The Literary Collector Press, Greenwich, Conn. n. d.

Phillips, Jonas B. The Evil Eye: A Melo-Drama, In Two Acts. 1831. (Bowery Theatre, New York, 4 April, 1831.)

—Camillus; or, The Self Exiled Patriot. A Tragedy, in Five Acts. New York and Philadelphia, n. d. [1833]. (Arch Street Theatre, Philadelphia, 8 Feb., 1833.)

—Zamira, A Dramatic Sketch, and Other Poems. 1835.

Robinson, J. The Yorker's Stratagem, or Banana's Wedding. A Farce in Two Acts. 1792. (Second Performance, New York, 10 May, 1792.)

Rogers, Major Robert. Ponteach: or the Savages of America. A Tragedy. London, 1766. Ed. Nevins, A., for the Caxton Club. Chicago, 1914.

Rowson, Susanna Haswell. Slaves in Algiers; or, A Struggle for Freedom. Philadelphia, 1794. (Chestnut Street Theatre, Philadelphia, 1794.)

—The Volunteers. A Farce founded on the Whiskey Insurrection. (Chestnut Street Theatre, Philadelphia, 21 June, 1795.)

—The Female Patriot. [Altered from Massinger's Bondman.] (Philadelphia, 1795.)

—The Disbanded Officer [a translation of Lessing's Minna von Barnhelm]. (New Theatre, Philadelphia, 1795-6.)

—Americans in England. A Comedy. (Federal Street Theatre, Boston, May, 1797.)

—Columbia's Daughter. (Mt. Vernon Gardens, New York, 10 Sept., 1800.)

See also bibliographies to Book I, Chap, ix, and Book II, Chap. vi.

Sargent, Epes. The Bride of Genoa. (Federal Street Theatre, Boston, 13 Feb., 1837.)

—Velasco. A Tragedy. Boston, 1837. New York, 1839. (Tremont Theatre, Boston, 20 Nov., 1837.)

—Change Makes Change. (Niblo's Garden, New York, 6 Oct., 1845.)

—Lampoon.

Savage, John. Sybil: A Tragedy, in Five Acts. 1865. Also in Poems: Lyrical, Dramatic, and Romantic. 1870. (St. Louis Theatre, 6 Sept., 1858.)

Richard Penn Smith

The extant manuscript plays of Smith are all in the library of the Pennsylvania Historical Society, Philadelphia.