Adios, West!
Advertisement for book "Trail Dust of a Maverick." At head of text: Apologies to the author of "No More West!"
Advertisement for book "Trail Dust of a Maverick." At head of text: Apologies to the author of "No More West!"
Page [4] blank. Pages [2,3] within single line border. At end of text: C.B.F.
Page [4] blank. Pages [2,3] within single line border. At end of text: C.B.F.
Page [4] blank. Pages [2,3] within single line border. At end of text: C.B.F.
By Vox Buffalorem. Caption title. Poem in 27 four-line stanzas. At end of text: Reynolds City, Texas, Sept. 16, 1877. [From Dodge City Times, Sept. 29, 1877.]
by the Bard of Tower Hall. Advertisement for Bennett's Tower Hall Clothing Bazaar.
At head of text: Tune - "Scots wha ha"
by a Virginia girl, and his reply. At head of title: Privately printed. Page [4] blank. Printed in red; with red edged borders. At head of title on page [1]: Cut of the Confederate flag. At head of pages [2,3]: One cut each of the seal of Virginia and Maryland. Cola is a pseudonym for N.G. Ridgely.
by a Virginia girl, and his reply. At head of title: Privately printed. Page [4] blank. Printed in red; with red edged borders. At head of title on page [1]: Cut of the Confederate flag. At head of pages [2,3]: One cut each of the seal of Virginia and Maryland. Cola is a pseudonym for N.G. Ridgely.
by a Virginia girl, and his reply. At head of title: Privately printed. Page [4] blank. Printed in red; with red edged borders. At head of title on page [1]: Cut of the Confederate flag. At head of pages [2,3]: One cut each of the seal of Virginia and Maryland. Cola is a pseudonym for N.G. Ridgely.
By a Lady. Printed area: 18 x 8 cm. Poem in six numbered four-line stanzas.
Page [4] blank. At end of text: Facsimile signature of author. At end of text: Marjorie Flack and William Rose Benét. Christmas 1949.
written by Elihu Hubbard Smith, M.D. Poetry. At end of text: Reprinted for Ireland's Records of the New York stage. Suggested publication date from date of publication of J. N. Ireland's Records of the New York stage.
Within triple line border of type ornaments.
Printed in two columns divided by curvilinear line. Poem in 26 four-line stanzas. At end of text: April 1, 1852, with two hands with pointing forefingers. Satirical defense of Maine prohibition law.
Ornamental border.
At end of text: Reading about my world, March 6th, 1968. Poem; title from beginning of 1st verse.
Two songs and a poem. Adams and liberty was written by Thomas [i.e. Robert Treat] Paine in 1798; for other editions cf. Evans 34293-34299 and Bristol B10451-B10454A. Hail Columbia, by Joseph Hopkinson, was also written in 1798. Place of publication suggested by Evans. Text in two columns; printed area measures 32.5 x 18.6 cm. Evidently printed from a larger type setting than the American Antiquarian Society copy (BR 1798) Printed in two columns divided by a single line; row of curved line ornaments between Hail Columbia and The American sailor.
Two songs. Adams and liberty was written by Robert Treat Paine in 1798; Hail Columbia, by Joseph Hopkinson, was also written in 1798. Woodcut of military scene at head of text (soldiers standing in front of tents) Printed in two columns, divided by line of type ornaments, within single line border; printed area: ca. 32.7 x 15.5 cm. Not recorded in Shipton & Mooney or Ford, W.C. Broadsides.
by Robert Duncan. Page [4] blank. One leaf 22 x 14 cm. fold. to 11 x 14 cm. Playbill for the first presentation of the Reading Version at the San Francisco Museum of Art, June 17, 1976.
Printed in two columns. Two woodcuts-couple; farmer feeding chickens flank title.
Latin text.
Pages [1] and [4] blank. At head of text: O nata mecum consule Manlio. Read inside and outside the lines. Hor. Car. III. 21. At end of text: John O. Sargent, Class of 1830. Harvard Club Dinner, New York, Feb. 21, 1884.
A hundred years ago [First line: Again with heartfelt joy we greet].--Our Acworth home [First line: Amid New Hampshire's thousand hills].--Ode [First line: Our father's God! We raise].--Parting invocation [First line: Lead us O Lord; thou art Divine]
Poetry Printed on white silk within curvilinear border with ornamental corners Acrostic poem in two six-line stanzas; initial letters form the name "Hannah Cordis."
Poem in three stanzas, with initials spelling out: Mary Porter Chase. Author's name and date from ms. notation on Brown University copy.
Showing 18121 to 18150 of 19339 results