. "right"@en . . "350"^^ . . . . . . . "11640"^^ . . . . . . "Rebecca Hammond Lard"@en . . . . "Rebecca Hammond Lard (Laird)"@en . . . "School Teacher, Poet"@en . "Rebecca Hammond"@en . . . . . "right"@en . "#FFFFF0"@en . . . . "Samuel Adams Lard"@en . "from \"On the Banks of the Ohio.\""@en . . . . . . . . . . "Rebecca Hammond Lard (Laird) (born Rebecca Hammond; March 7, 1772 \u2013 September 28, 1855), is called by some critics \"the first poet in Indiana\". Her poetry reflects on the lives of the early people in Indiana and the colonists in Vermont. Lard's works are mainly religious and meditative in tone, but draw their inspiration in part from the Bucolics and Georgics of Virgil. She is best known for Indiana's first book of poetry, On the Banks of the Ohio, a poem she is believed to have written."@en . "Rebecca Hammond Lard (ur. 7 marca 1772, zm. 28 wrze\u015Bnia 1855) \u2013 ameryka\u0144ska poetka."@pl . . . . . "1772-03-07"^^ . . . . . "1073132455"^^ . "Rebecca Hammond Lard (ur. 7 marca 1772, zm. 28 wrze\u015Bnia 1855) \u2013 ameryka\u0144ska poetka."@pl . . . . "true"@en . . "36324705"^^ . . . . . . "Horatio Nelson Lard"@en . . "Charles Lard"@en . . . . . . . . "Rebecca Hammond Lard"@pl . . . . . . . . "1855-09-28"^^ . . . . . "Julia Hammond"@en . . "Rebecca Hammond"@en . . . "1772-03-07"^^ . . "Rebecca Hammond Lard (Laird) (born Rebecca Hammond; March 7, 1772 \u2013 September 28, 1855), is called by some critics \"the first poet in Indiana\". Her poetry reflects on the lives of the early people in Indiana and the colonists in Vermont. Lard's works are mainly religious and meditative in tone, but draw their inspiration in part from the Bucolics and Georgics of Virgil. She is best known for Indiana's first book of poetry, On the Banks of the Ohio, a poem she is believed to have written."@en . . . . . "Rebecca Hammond Lard"@en . . . . "Samuel Lard"@en . . . "Coffee Creek Baptist Church Cemetery"@en . . . . . ""@en . . . . . . . . . "1855-09-28"^^ . . "The power that form\u2019d the hills and spread the plain\nAnd bade the rivers roll towards the main\nBy the same fiat gave this clime to rise \nAnd bloom in splendour \u2018neath the western skies\nCrown\u2019d with his richest gifts this favour\u2019d land'\nAnd pour\u2019d his bounties with unsparing hand\n\nThen beasts of prey here found a resting place\nAnd savage men delighted in the chase.\nNo cultering hand improv\u2019d the fertile soil\nBut herbs and flowers in wild confusion lay \nAnd trees umbrageous veil\u2019d the noontide ray."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . .