English III Early American Literature Native American Experience “Coyote Finishes His Work” “ Coyote and the Buffalo” pp. 48-52 Exploration and Early Settlers The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano pp. 84-88 The Puritan Tradition -Anne Bradstreet “To My Dear and Loving Husband” p.116 “Upon the Burning of Our House July 10th, 1666” p. 118 -Jonathan Edwards Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God pp. 124-129 -Arthur Miller The Crucible pp.136-212 Salem Witchcraft Trials pp. McCarthyism p.217 Writers of the Revolution -Patrick Henry “Speech to Virginia Convention” pp. 230-234 -Thomas Jefferson The Declaration of Independence pp. 240-244 -Thomas Paine The Crisis pp. 250-255 -Abigail Adams “Letter to John Adams” p. 262-264 -Benjamin Franklin The Autobiography p. 270 Poor Richard’s Almanack p. 275 American Romanticism The Early Romantics -Washington Irving “The Devil and Tom Walker” pp. 320-332 “Rip Van Winkle” “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” The Fireside Poets -William Cullen Bryant “Thanatopsis” pp. 338-339 -Henry Wadsworth Longfellow “A Psalm of Life” pp. 344-345 “The Tide Rises, The Tide Falls” p. 346 The Transcendentalists -Ralph Waldo Emerson “Self-Reliance” pp. 370-372 Nature pp. 373-374 -Henry David Thoreau Walden pp. 380-387 “Civil Disobedience” pp. 390-396 Gandhi pp. 400-401 American Gothic -Edgar Allan Poe “The Fall of the House of Usher” pp. 412-430 “The Raven” pp. 436-440 “The Masque of the Red Death” pp. 446-452 -Nathaniel Hawthorne “The Minister’s Black Veil” pp. 470-482 “Young Goodman Brown” “Rappaccini’s Daughter” “Dr. Heidegger’s Experiment” Brilliant Mavericks -Walt Whitman “I Hear America Singing” p.532 Song of Myself pp. 534-537 “A Noiseless Patient Spider” p. 538 “Beat! Beat! Drums!” p. 539 -Emily Dickinson “Because I could not stop for Death-” p. 548 “Success is counted sweetest” p. 550 “Much Madness is divinest Sense-“ p. 551 “My life closed twice before its close-“ p. 551 “The Soul selects her own Society-“ p. 552 “I heard a Fly buzz-when I died-“ p. 553 “My Life had stood-a Loaded Gun-“ p. 554 Literature of the Civil War -Frederick Douglass Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave pp. 560-569 -Sojourner Truth “Ain’t I a Woman?” -Abraham Lincoln The Gettysburg Address p. 586 The Emancipation Proclamation pp. 528-589 Realism -Stephen Crane The Red Badge of Courage p. 601 -Ambrose Bierce “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” pp. 604-614 Regionalism and Local Color -Mark Twain The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn “The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County” pp. 684-690 -Edith Wharton Ethan Frome “Roman Fever” Harlem Renaissance -Langston Hughes “Harlem” p. 880 “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” p. 882 “I, Too” p. 883 “The Weary Blues” p. 884 -Claude McKay” “If We Must Die” p. 890 -Countee Cullen “Tableau” “Incident” “Any Human to Another” p. 894 -Zora Neale Hurston Their Eyes Were Watching God -Toni Morrison The Bluest Eye The Jazz Age -F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby pp. 1002-1004 “Winter Dreams” pp. 978-998 The New Poetry -Edwin Arlington Robinson “Richard Cory” p. 922 “Miniver Cheevy” pp. 924-925 “Lucinda Matlock” p. 926 -Carl Sandburg “Chicago” pp. 930-931 “Grass” p. 932 -Robert Frost “The Road Not Taken” “Acquainted with the Night” p. 938 “Nothing Gold Can Stay” p. 940 “Out, Out-“ p. 941 “The Death of the Hired Man” pp. 944-949 -Ezra Pound “In a Station of the Metro” p. 954 -H. D. “Helen” p. 954 -William Carlos Williams “The Red Wheelbarrow” “The Great Figure” “This Is Just to Say” p. 957 -E. E. Cummings “anyone lived in a pretty how town” p. 962 “what if a much of a which of a wind” -T.S. Eliot “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” pp. 970-973 -Ernest Hemingway The Grapes of Wrath pp. 1027-1032 “Hills Like White Elephants” The Modern Short Story -Eudora Welty “A Worn Path” pp. 1050-1059 -William Faulkner “A Rose for Emily” pp. 1066-1074 -Flannery O’Connor “The Life You Save May Be Your Own” pp. 1080-1089 The Legacy of an Era - Dramas -Tennessee Williams The Glass Menagerie p. 1165 -Arthur Miller Death of a Salesman p. 1167 -Lorraine Hansberry A Raisin in the Sun Responses to War -Randall Jarrell “The Death of the Ball Turrett Gunner” p. 1175 -Tim O’Brien The Things They Carried Civil Rights Movement and Protest Literature -Martin Luther King, Jr. “Stride toward Freedom” pp. 1220-1223 -Dudley Randall “Ballad of Birmingham” p. 1214 -Malcolm X “Necessary to Protect Ourselves” pp. 1224-1227 -Anne Moody “Coming of Age in Mississippi” pp. 1240-1246 -Alice Walker “In Search of Our Mother’s Gardens” pp. 1280-1284 `