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.
Sung to the tune: Parody on "St. Patrick was a Gentleman." Poetry within border of type ornaments printed in two columns divided by rule; each poem in different sized type. Wood-engraving of caricature of African American soldier at head of first column. Below border in bottom margin: Sold Wholesale and Retail by Hunts & Shaw, North East Corner Fanenil [i.e. Faneuil] Hall Market. Firm is listed at above address in 1834.
Air: Parody on St. Patrick was a gentleman. Printed in two columns divided by ruled line of advertising. Sold, wholesale and retail, by L. Deming, No. 62, Hanover Street, Boston, and at Middlebury Vt.
Printed on orange card stock. Poetic prayer in two stanzas. Suggested range of publication dates from internal evidence and acquisition date of Brown University copy.
Dorothy Livesay. Poetry. Printed on peach-colored paper in two columns; title outlined in red. At end of text: Dreadnaught 52 pickup 29. Series also issued as set. First line: My grandmothers, grandaunts.
Printed in gray-blue and gray on heavy pale gray paper in postcard format. At left of text on recto drawing of eagle-tipped top of flagstaff; in upper right corner on verso cut of upside-down United States flag. Poem in three stanzas of varying length. Type-signed at end of poem: Amiri Baraka.
White silk ribbon badge Between title and subtitle illustration framed in wheat-ears of men marching behind fountain, above illustration framed in garland of flowers of woman and two children at well; below garland: R. Andrews, Boston Printed area measures: 10.5 x 4.9 cm. Two-line poem Below poem: Published by Mass. Temp. Union
White silk ribbon badge Between title and subtitle illustration framed in wheat-ears of men marching behind fountain, above illustration framed in garland of flowers of woman and two children at well; below garland: R. Andrews, Boston Printed area measures: 10.5 x 4.9 cm. Two-line poem Below poem: Published by Mass. Temp. Union
Poems, issued as set in buff folder; folder also doubles as one of the Cold Hollow broadsides. Pages 1 and 2 of folder blank; pages 3 and 4 with text Five broadsides of differing dimensionsprinted in black on white laid paper laid into folder David Wilk's poem "To the dreamers" printed on page 3 of the folder Colophon on page 4: a cold hollow broadside. This edition consists of 110 copies, of which 10 are signed & numbered. printed by david wilk & david southern for truck press in the winder of 1973, a.d.
lyric by Raymond Egan ; music by Richard A. Whiting. For voice and piano. Caption title. Advertisement for "How's every little thing in Dixie": p. [4] Cover illustration: drawing of sailors and women dancing on beach / Starmer.
lyric by Raymond Egan ; music by Richard A. Whiting. For voice and piano. Caption title. Advertisement for "How's every little thing in Dixie": p. [4] Cover illustration: drawing of sailors and women dancing on beach / Starmer.
Printed in five columns with each song and ad within line border. At head of text: Henry J. Wehman, publisher of penny ballads, song sheets, song books, German songs, sheet music ... 82 Park Row, N.Y. At end of text: New sheet music for the piano. Contains 15 songs.
Printed in five columns with each song and ad within line border. At head of text: Henry J. Wehman, publisher of penny ballads, song sheets, song books, German songs, sheet music ... 82 Park Row, N.Y. At end of text: New sheet music for the piano. Contains 15 songs.
Printed in five columns with each song and ad within line border. At head of text: Henry J. Wehman, publisher of penny ballads, song sheets, song books, German songs, sheet music ... 82 Park Row, N.Y. At end of text: New sheet music for the piano. Contains 15 songs.
Poetry. At head of title: Phoenix Broadsheet Sixty-Eight. At head of title drawing by S. Simmonds of men digging. At end of poem: David Stacton. "Printed for Albert Sperisen of California on paper made by W. H. Saunders and given to Toni Savage by Dr. Robin Alston, Janus Press, Ilkley, Yorkshire. New Broom Private Press, Leicester. May 1976." Edition limited to 50 copies, FPAA III, 307. First line: The woods were so deep, so blue, so green.