Digital collections that fall within the John Hay Library’s Performance and Entertainment STRATEGIC COLLECTING DIRECTION. Here you will find digitized materials that document the history and creative process of performing arts and provides a window into public life and popular entertainment in the Americas through plays, dance, film, music, photography, and pornography.
Page [4] blank. Printed in colors on heavy glossy white paper; text in blue. On page [1] colored illustration of sailboat and spray of roses; text on pages [2]-[3] wreathed with roses. At end of poem: Selected. Suggested range of publication dates from internal evidence.
[words by Tanny Galloway] ; [music by Tanny Galloway and James F. Topping] March for voice and piano. Cover title. "Dedicated to Mothers of Our Fighting Boys." Cover illustration: soldiers entering battle; photograph of Mr. O.T. (Tanny) Galloway.
words and music by Alexander Beach Pooley. March for voice and piano. Cover title. Title on caption: Respectfully dedicated to Major General LeRoy S. Lyon, commanding the 31st (Dixie) Division, whose motto is, It shall be done. Cover illustration: Insignia of the Dixie Division.
Broadsheet. Printed on tan card stock. On verso advertisement for Sea Foam, apparently a kind of baking-powder. On recto below poem illustration of running man holding large can of Sea Foam. Title from first line. Date from internal evidence.
Statement about poetry Reproduced typescript. Title from first line of statament Headed in upper right corner: Paterson Society, 16 Parker Street, Cambridge 38, Massachusetts. Type-signed at end: Edward Field. December 1960
Hymn, containing five verses of the original six; without music. Title from first line. Printed on grayish-blue paper; in lower left-hand corner, blind-stamped: 0 & H. Ascribed to James Montgomery.
Hymn, containing five verses of the original six; without music. Title from first line. Printed on grayish-blue paper; in lower left-hand corner, blind-stamped: 0 & H. Ascribed to James Montgomery.
Printed in colors on heavy glossy paper in postcard format. Text in calligraphy superimposed on illustration of grotesque figures. Title from first lines. On verso: Kenneth Patchen. Painting-Poem. Mixed medium, 9 1/2" x 17 1/2" Possession of the poet. Suggested publication date from acquisition date of Brown University copy.
Printed in colors on heavy glossy paper in postcard format. Text in calligraphy superimposed on illustration of grotesque figures. Title from first lines. On verso: Kenneth Patchen. Painting-Poem. Mixed medium, 9 1/2" x 17 1/2" Possession of the poet. Suggested publication date from acquisition date of Brown University copy.
Printed in colors on heavy glossy paper in postcard format. Text in calligraphy superimposed on illustration of grotesque figures. Title from first lines. On verso: Kenneth Patchen. Painting-Poem. Mixed medium, 9 1/2" x 17 1/2" Possession of the poet. Suggested publication date from acquisition date of Brown University copy.
Pages [1] and [4] blank. Within ornamental border with crossed corners on pages [2]-[3] Type-signed at end of poem: A Brother. In lower margin on page [3]: To be read by the author (L.A.M.) before the Ottaugechee Division of the Sons of Temperance at Woodstock, Vt., Dec. 13, 1873.
words by W.E. Browning; music by Chas. E. Hart For voice and piano Caption title Dedicated to: May Irwin Advertisements for other music: p. [2], [8] Cover illustration: drawing of Black man crossing railroad tracks as train approaches, watched by other Black people
Poetry. Printed in brown on tan paper in postcard format within double-line border on recto. At head of title and at right and below drawing signed K.P.B. of hollyhocks and vines. Title from first line of untitled four-line poem. At end of text facsimile signature: James Whitcomb Riley. Suggested range of publication dates from internal evidence and because another similar Riley post card (The prayer perfect, HB39072) acquired with Brown University copy was mailed in 1913.