hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Washington (United States) 273 1 Browse Search
United States (United States) 184 0 Browse Search
Baltimore, Md. (Maryland, United States) 166 2 Browse Search
Massachusetts (Massachusetts, United States) 122 0 Browse Search
Robert Anderson 116 2 Browse Search
Jefferson Davis 109 3 Browse Search
Abraham Lincoln 106 0 Browse Search
Maryland (Maryland, United States) 97 1 Browse Search
Charleston (South Carolina, United States) 95 5 Browse Search
Kentucky (Kentucky, United States) 82 0 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 1. (ed. Frank Moore). Search the whole document.

Found 6 total hits in 4 results.

Abraham Lincoln (search for this): chapter 265
ust be meddling, why, There's only this to do: Select the black spot in his eye, And let the daylight through I And if he doesn't like the way That Bess presents the view, He'll may-be change his mind, and stay Where the good Doodles do! Where Lincoln lives;--the man, you know, Who kissed the Testament, To keep the Constitution?--No! To keep the Government! We'll hunt for Lincoln, Bess!--old tool-- And take him half-and-half; We'll aim to kit him, if a fool, And miss him, if a calf! We'll That Bess presents the view, He'll may-be change his mind, and stay Where the good Doodles do! Where Lincoln lives;--the man, you know, Who kissed the Testament, To keep the Constitution?--No! To keep the Government! We'll hunt for Lincoln, Bess!--old tool-- And take him half-and-half; We'll aim to kit him, if a fool, And miss him, if a calf! We'll teach these shot-gun boys the tricks Fe By which a war is won; Especially how seventy-six Took Tories on the run. --Richmond Dispatch, May 23.
Frank Ticknor (search for this): chapter 265
84. the old Rifleman. by Frank Ticknor, M. D. Now bring me out my buckskin suit I My pouch and powder, too! We'll see if seventy-six can shoot As sixteen used to do. Old Bess! we've kept our barrels bright I Our trigger quick and true! As far, if not as fine a sight, As, long ago, we drew! And pick me out a trusty flint I A real white and blue; Perhaps 'twill win the other tint, Before the hunt is through! Give boys your brass percussion caps I! Old “shut-pan” suits as well I There's something in the sparks; perhaps There's something in the smell! We've seen the red-coat Briton bleed! The red-skin Indian, too! We never thought to draw a bead On Yankee-doodle-doo! But, Bessie! bless your dear old heart! Those days are mostly done; And now we must revive the art Of shooting on the run! If Doodle must be meddling, why, There's only this to do: Select the black spot in his eye, And let the daylight through I And if he doesn't like the way That Bess presents the view, He'll m
rt! Those days are mostly done; And now we must revive the art Of shooting on the run! If Doodle must be meddling, why, There's only this to do: Select the black spot in his eye, And let the daylight through I And if he doesn't like the way That Bess presents the view, He'll may-be change his mind, and stay Where the good Doodles do! Where Lincoln lives;--the man, you know, Who kissed the Testament, To keep the Constitution?--No! To keep the Government! We'll hunt for Lincoln, Bess!--old toy That Bess presents the view, He'll may-be change his mind, and stay Where the good Doodles do! Where Lincoln lives;--the man, you know, Who kissed the Testament, To keep the Constitution?--No! To keep the Government! We'll hunt for Lincoln, Bess!--old tool-- And take him half-and-half; We'll aim to kit him, if a fool, And miss him, if a calf! We'll teach these shot-gun boys the tricks Fe By which a war is won; Especially how seventy-six Took Tories on the run. --Richmond Dispatch, May 23.
d “shut-pan” suits as well I There's something in the sparks; perhaps There's something in the smell! We've seen the red-coat Briton bleed! The red-skin Indian, too! We never thought to draw a bead On Yankee-doodle-doo! But, Bessie! bless your dear old heart! Those days are mostly done; And now we must revive the art Of shooting on the run! If Doodle must be meddling, why, There's only this to do: Select the black spot in his eye, And let the daylight through I And if he doesn't like the way That Bess presents the view, He'll may-be change his mind, and stay Where the good Doodles do! Where Lincoln lives;--the man, you know, Who kissed the Testament, To keep the Constitution?--No! To keep the Government! We'll hunt for Lincoln, Bess!--old tool-- And take him half-and-half; We'll aim to kit him, if a fool, And miss him, if a calf! We'll teach these shot-gun boys the tricks Fe By which a war is won; Especially how seventy-six Took Tories on the run. --Richmond Dispatch, May 23