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.
Printed in blue on glossy pale blue card stock within single-line border. Poem in four lines. At end of text, within border, in larger type: Price, Give what you wish. Place and date of publication from ms. notation on Brown University copy.
by Francesco Bivona. Below title on page [1] reproduction of photograph of Bivona. Cover title. Prose and poetry. Suggested publication date from date of author's ms. inscription in Brown University copy.
by Francesco Bivona. Below title on page [1] reproduction of photograph of Bivona. Cover title. Prose and poetry. Suggested publication date from date of author's ms. inscription in Brown University copy.
by Francesco Bivona. Below title on page [1] reproduction of photograph of Bivona. Cover title. Prose and poetry. Suggested publication date from date of author's ms. inscription in Brown University copy.
Printed on green paper in four columns. Title from first line of first poem. Eighty-eight two-line poems dealing with love and courtship. Suggested range of publication dates from internal evidence.
Printed in red and gray on heavy white paper in postcard format within ornamental border; text on recto in red, on verso in gray. Title from first line. Poem in six lines. Suggested publication date from postmark on Brown University copy.
Title from first line. At head of title: Respectfully dedicated to the clerks of the Market National Bank, by their fellow clerk, James McMahon, in appreciation of the testimonial received from them December 25th, 1867. At end of text: "Coupon Observer"
words and music by W.R. Williams. March for voice and piano. Caption title. Advertisement for another song: p. [4] Cover illustration: drawing of man and woman inside heart / Starmer. Also published for: band and orchestra.
Currier, p. 138; Wilson II, 563. Dated at end: "Jan. 6th, 1869." Title from first line. Hymn for the 1869 reunion of the Harvard University Class of 1829.
Printed on heavy paper within yellow ornamental border bearing legend beginning: Remember now thy creator in the days of thy youth. At head of title cut of boy with sketch pad beside woman holding baby. Poem in three four-line stanzas. Suggested range of publication dates from internal evidence.
Printed in colors on heavy paper within ornamental border; title in red, text in brown. At head of text colored illustration of woman with two little girls praying. Poem in two four-line stanzas. Suggested range of publication dates from internal evidence.
Printed on card stock. Advertisement for Hunt's Coal. Contains poetry. Colored illustration of young man standing on stepping stones and girl on bank. Title from first line.
Pages [1,4] blank. At head of title: Reprinted from The Evangelical May 12, 1897. At end of text: Written in Dresden, Germany, June 27, 1873. Page [1]: Those pleasant rivers. A sonnet ..
Title from caption. Includes short verse quotations. Date suggested because of reference to President Cleveland's "present campaign" after the 1884 elections. Signed at end: William Cranston Lawton.
Title from caption. Includes short verse quotations. Date suggested because of reference to President Cleveland's "present campaign" after the 1884 elections. Signed at end: William Cranston Lawton.
Title from caption. Includes short verse quotations. Date suggested because of reference to President Cleveland's "present campaign" after the 1884 elections. Signed at end: William Cranston Lawton.
Printed area: 25.2 x 17.4 cm. Prose account followed by a poem on the shipwreck. Within mourning border, printed in two columns divided by heavy single line. Wood-engraving of wrecked ship on left of title. First line: Particulars given by the wrecked. First line of poem: While reading o'er the dismal fate.
Poem in fourteen lines. At end of text: Dedicated to immortal Nathan Hale of Connecticut by William Kimberley Palmer. Chicopee, Massachusetts U.S.A. 1930 A.D.
Walter J. Coates. Printed on birch bark with irregularly cut edges; line of type ornaments at top. Poem in one stanza of eight lines and one of six. At end of text: East Calais, June 2, 1919. From "Mood Songs", 1921.