[1] Karen Weyler, “‘Common, Plain, Every Day Talk’ from ‘An Uncommon Quarter’: Samson Occom and the Language of the Execution Sermon,” 127.
[5] Samson Occom,“A sermon at the execution of Moses Paul, an Indian: who had been guilty of murder, preached at New Haven in America,” Printed in New Haven, CT, 1788. Reprinted and sold in London by Buckland, Paternoster-row; Dilly, Poultry; Otridge, Strand; J. Lepard, No. 91, Newgate-street; T. Pitcher, No. 44, Barbican; Brown, on the Tolzey Bristol; Binns, at Leeds; and Woolmer, at Exeter, 1789, i.
[6] Phillip Round, “Toward an Indian Bibliography,” 16.
[7] Samson Occom, “A sermon at the execution of Moses Paul, an Indian: who had been guilty of murder, preached at New Haven in America,” ii.
[9] Karen Weyler, “‘Common, Plain, Every Day Talk’ from ‘An Uncommon Quarter’: Samson Occom and the Language of the Execution Sermon,” 137.
[10] Samson Occom, “A sermon at the execution of Moses Paul, an Indian: who had been guilty of murder, preached at New Haven in America,” iv.
[12] Ibid., Edwards Preface, iv.
[13] Samson Occom and Nathaniel Whitaker,
Extracts of Several Sermons, Preached Extempore at Different Places of Divine Worship, in the City of Bristol (Bristol, 1766), title page.