By consolidating this body of work, the seventh volume of The Collected Writings of Charles Brockden Brown provides a critical and contextual glimpse into both Brown’s oeuvre and a literary culture that prized verse as much as it did other genres. Engaging and comprehensive, this volume systematically compiles the poems that Brown produced throughout his lifetime, giving special attention to their relationship to the corresponding social, literary, and political life of the early Republic…. [T]hey go beyond Brown’s output to situate his work within a fresh understanding of early American poetry. Indeed, this volume’s major contribution is not only that it augments our understanding of Brown’s work, but also that it trenchantly illuminates the connections between disparate genres and interpersonal discourse—connections that merit further study.