The Sorrows of Yamba; Or, The Negro Woman's Lamentations. A Poetic Fact, Describing the Cruelties Inflicted on the Africans by Men who are Destitute of Humanity; : in which is Shewn the Power of God in Bringing Good Out of Evil, by Sometimes Converting These Captives to a Better Hope Than that of Being Released from the Bonds of Those Masters Into Whose Hands They Have Fallen.
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More, Hannah. The Sorrows of Yamba; Or, The Negro Woman's Lamentations. A Poetic Fact, Describing the Cruelties Inflicted on the Africans by Men who are Destitute of Humanity; : in which is Shewn the Power of God in Bringing Good Out of Evil, by Sometimes Converting These Captives to a Better Hope Than that of Being Released from the Bonds of Those Masters Into Whose Hands They Have Fallen.The Women's Print History Project, 2019, title ID 15419, https://womensprinthistoryproject.com/title/15419. Accessed 2024-11-04.
More, Hannah. The Sorrows of Yamba; Or, The Negro Woman's Lamentations. A Poetic Fact, Describing the Cruelties Inflicted on the Africans by Men who are Destitute of Humanity; : in which is Shewn the Power of God in Bringing Good Out of Evil, by Sometimes Converting These Captives to a Better Hope Than that of Being Released from the Bonds of Those Masters Into Whose Hands They Have Fallen. Joseph Barber, 1811.
More , H. (1811). The sorrows of yamba; or, the negro woman's lamentations. a poetic fact, describing the cruelties inflicted on the africans by men who are destitute of humanity; : in which is shewn the power of god in bringing good out of evil, by sometimes converting these captives to a better hope than that of being released from the bonds of those masters into whose hands they have fallen. Joseph Barber.
@book{ wphp_15419 author={More,Hannah}, year={1811}, title={The Sorrows of Yamba; Or, The Negro Woman's Lamentations. A Poetic Fact, Describing the Cruelties Inflicted on the Africans by Men who are Destitute of Humanity; : in which is Shewn the Power of God in Bringing Good Out of Evil, by Sometimes Converting These Captives to a Better Hope Than that of Being Released from the Bonds of Those Masters Into Whose Hands They Have Fallen.}, publisher={Joseph Barber}, }
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