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Mercy Otis Warren (September 25, 1728 – October 19, 1814) was an American activist poet, playwright, and pamphleteer during the American Revolution. During the years before the Revolution, she had published poems and plays that attacked royal authority in Massachusetts and urged colonists to resist British infringements on colonial rights and ...
Warren was born in Boston, Massachusetts, a great-great-grandson of Mercy Otis Warren and the son of lawyer Winslow Warren (collector of the Port of Boston) and Mary Lincoln Tinkham. The family moved to Dedham, Massachusetts , when Charles was three, where his biographer notes the family "remained active and loyal Democrats in a bastion of ...
Zoe Akins; Edward Albee; Eva Allen Alberti; Woody Allen; Franco Ambriz; Jane Anderson; Maxwell Anderson; Robert Woodruff Anderson; Maya Angelou; Jacob M. Appel
Otis Redding's "spunky ... free-associating", [46] "rich soul take" [169] version was released on his 1964 album Pain in My Heart. Dave Marsh called it "the best of the era" and noted that he "rearranged it to suit his style" by adding a full horn section and "garble[d] the lyrics so completely that it seems likely he made up the verses on the ...
Note the singeing of the title page. History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution is a book by Mercy Otis Warren.Warren was a correspondent with many political leaders of the American Revolution, including Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, and George Washington.
"The Liberty Song" is a pre-American Revolutionary War song with lyrics by Founding Father John Dickinson [1] (not by Mrs. Mercy Otis Warren of Plymouth, Massachusetts). [2] The song is set to the tune of "Heart of Oak", the anthem of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom.
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"Mercy, Mercy, Mercy" is a jazz song written by Joe Zawinul (lyrics by Gail Fisher) in 1966 for Cannonball Adderley and which appears on his album Mercy, Mercy, Mercy! Live at "The Club" . The song is the title track of the album and became a surprise hit in February 1967. [ 1 ] "