элизабет грэм фергюссон (1737 - 1801)
Nathaniel Evans was an American colonial clergyman and poet.
Evans was born in Philadelphia in the family of a merchant, graduated from the William Smith Academy in that city. In 1765 he received a master's degree from the University of Pennsylvania. In the same year he edited a collection of poems by his friend Thomas Godfrey. He also organized churches in Waterford and Gloucester, New Jersey.
Nathaniel Evans died of tuberculosis after living only 25 years, so his poetic talent remained undiscovered. But from a collection of a few of his poems published in 1772, we can tell that his mind was of a fine and refined stock, and his imagination was vivid.
Elizabeth Graeme Fergusson or Betsy Graeme was an American colonial writer and poet.
Elizabeth Graeme was born and raised in a wealthy and influential Philadelphia family. In 1764-65, she traveled to London, where she met several leading literary and scientific figures. She soon established something of a literary salon at her native Graeme Park Manor.
Elizabeth Fergusson left few literary works other than a translation of The Adventures of Telemac from the French and a long poem on female suffering, The Abandoned Wife. She is remembered more for her letters and actions during the American War of Independence (1775-83), in which her family suffered considerably. Her husband Henry H. Fergusson was arrested and outlawed, and Graeme Park was confiscated at the end of the war.