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2
book jacket
Works. Selections
Shakespeare, William,
xxxiii, 572 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9780143134374
January -- Two households, both alike in dignity' -- Romeo and Juliet -- Prologue -- If music be the food of love, play on' -- Twelfth Night -- Act 1 Scene 1 -- The reason is your spirits are attentive.' -- The Merchant of Venice -- Act 5 Scene 1 -- Under the greenwood tree' -- As You Like It -- Act 2 Scene 5 -- In sooth I know not why I am so sad.' -- The Merchant of Venice -- Act 1 Scene 1 -- "If this fall into thy hand, revolve.'" -- Twelfth Night -- Act 2 Scene 5 -- If all the year were playing holidays' -- Henry IV, Part 1 -- Act 1 Scene 2 -- ̀Devouring Time, blunt thou the Lion's paws' -- Sonnet 19 -- ̀The lunatic, the lover and the poet' -- A Midsummer Night's Dream -- Act 5 Scene 1 -- ̀Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! Rage! Blow!' -- King Lear -- Act 3 Scene 2 -- I show it most of all when I show justice' -- Measure for Measure -- Act 2 Scene 2 -- ̀Health to my sovereign, and new happiness' -- Henry IV, Part 2 -- Act 4 Scene 4 -- ̀"Love comforteth like sunshine after rain'" -- Venus and Adonis -- Lines 799-816 -- ̀Here's flowers for you:' -- The Winter's Tale -- Act 4 Scene 4 -- Now, Master Shallow, you'll complain of me to the King?' -- The Merry Wives of Windsor -- Act 1 Scene 1 -- S̀ir, understand you this of me in sooth' -- The Taming of the Shrew -- Act 1 Scene 2 -- When my cue comes, call me, and I will answer' -- A Midsummer Night's Dream -- Act 4 Scene 1 -- Ì pray you tarry, pause a day or two' -- The Merchant of Venice -- Act 3 Scene 2 -- ̀Gallop apace, you fiery-footed steeds' -- Romeo and Juliet -- Act 3 Scene 2 -- ̀Hard to seem won; but I was won, my lord' -- Troilus and Cressida -- Act 3 Scene 2 -- "This is a sorry sight.' -- Macbeth -- Act 2 Scene 2 -- Ì pray you, what is't o'clock?' -- As You Like It -- Act 3 Scene 2 -- ̀My lovely Aaron, wherefore look'st thou sad' -- Titus Andronicus -- Act 2 Scene 3 -- Who is this? My niece, that flies away so fast?' -- Titus Andronicus -- Act 2 Scene 4 -- ̀Here, father, take the shadow of this tree' -- King Lear -- Act 5 Scene 2 -- Ǹow until the break of day' -- A Midsummer Night's Dream -- Act 5 Scene 1 -- ̀He hath disgraced me' -- The Merchant of Venice -- Act 3 Scene 1 -- ̀Come, sir, now' -- The Winter's Tale -- Act 2 Scene 1 -- Are not these woods' -- As You Like It -- Act 2 Scene 1 -- ̀To be, or not to be -- that is the question;' -- Hamlet -- Act 3 Scene 1 -- Ay, but to die, and go we know not where' -- Measure for Measure -- Act 3 Scene 1 -- February -- ̀Good morrow, Benedick. Why, what's the matter' -- Much Ado About Nothing -- Act 5 Scene 4 -- ̀Do I stand there? I never had a brother;' -- Twelfth Night -- Act 5 Scene 1 -- I wonder how our princely father 'scaped' -- Henry VI, Part 3 -- Act 2 Scene 1 -- ̀They know the corn' -- Coriolanus -- Act 3 Scene 1 -- In Troy there lies the scene. From isles of Greece' -- Troilus and Cressida -- Prologue -- O, courage, courage, princes! Great Achilles' -- Troilus and Cressida -- Act 5 Scene 5 -- This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle' -- Richard II -- Act 2 Scene 1 -- This is the man should do the bloody deed; -- King John -- Act 4 Scene 2 -- ̀Chirrah!' -- Love's Labour's Lost -- Act 5 Scene 1 -- ̀My wind cooling my broth' -- The Merchant of Venice -- Act 1 Scene 1 -- ̀Calpurnia!' -- Julius Caesar -- Act 1 Scene 2 -- ̀But love, first learned in a lady's eyes' -- Love's Labour's Lost -- Act-4 Scene 3 -- ̀Doubt thou the stars are fire.' -- Hamlet -- Act 2 Scene 2 -- When, in disgrace with Fortune and men's eyes' -- Sonnet 29 -- ̀Lady, by yonder blessed moon I vow' -- Romeo and Juliet -- Act 2 Scene 2 -- I have been studying how I may compare' -- Richard II -- Act 5 Scene 5 -- This battle fares like to the morning's war' -- Henry VI, Part 31 -- Act 2 Scene 5 -- When icicles hang by the wall' -- Love's Labour's Lost -- Act 5 Scene 2 -- When daffodils begin to peer' -- The Winter's Tale -- Act 4 Scene 3 -- ̀Come now, what masques, what dances shall we have' -- A Midsummer Night's Dream -- Act 5 Scene 1 -- T have of late' -- Hamlet -- Act 2 Scene 2 -- O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I!' -- Hamlet -- Act 2 Scene 2 -- O Romeo, Romeo! -- wherefore art thou Romeo?' -- Romeo and Juliet -- Act 2 Scene 2 -- I would there were no age between ten and three-and-twenty' -- The Winter's Tale -- Act 3 Scene 3 -- ̀Be merry, be merry, my wife has all' -- Henry IV, Part 21 -- Act 5 Scene 3 -- ̀How now, my eyas-musket, what news with you?' -- The Merry Wives of Windsor -- Act 3 Scene 3 -- No, I think thou art not; I think thou art quit for' -- Henry IV, Part 21 -- Act 2 Scene 4 -- ̀The quality of mercy is not strained' -- The Merchant of Venice -- Act 4 Scene 1 -- March -- Your grandfather of famous memory' -- Henry V -- Act 4 Scene 7 -- The spring is near when green geese are a-breeding.' -- Love's Labour's Lost -- Act 1 Scene 1 -- ̀Thou antic Death, which laughest us here to scorn' -- Henry VI, Part 11 -- Act 4 Scene 7 -- ̀Therefore, to be possessed with double pomp' -- King John -- Act 4 Scene 2 -- "The forward violet thus did I chide' -- Sonnet 99 -- ̀For nature crescent does not grow alone' -- Hamlet -- Act 1 Scene 3 -- ̀"The tender spring upon thy tempting lip"' -- Venus and Adonis -- Lines 147-62 -- Tt is not the fashion to see the lady the epilogue' -- As You Like It -- Epilogue -- ̀"For me, I am the mistress of my fate'" -- The Rape of Lucrece -- Lines 1069-78 -- Ah, wretched man!' -- Henry VI, Part 3 -- Act 1 Scene 1 -- ̀Doth the moon shine that night we play our play?' -- A Midsummer Night's Dream -- Act 3 Scene 1 -- No more, no more! Worse than the sun in March' -- Henry IV, Part 11 -- Act 4 Scene 1 -- I would I had some flowers o ̀th'spring' -- The Winter's Tale -- Act 4 Scene 4 -- No, not an oath. If not the face of men' -- Julius Caesar -- Act 2 Scene 1 -- ̀Beware the ides of March.' -- Julius Caesar -- Act 1 Scene 2 -- Say to me, whose fortunes shall rise higher' -- Antony and Cleopatra -- Act 2 Scene 3 -- These are but wild and whirling words, my lord.' -- Hamlet -- Act 1 Scene 5 -- They shall go forward, Kate, at thy command.' -- The Taming of the Shrew -- Act 3 Scene 2 -- No matter where. Of comfort no man speak.' -- Richard II -- Act 3 Scene 2 -- ̀Dost thou so hunger for mine empty chair' -- Henry IV, Part 2 -- Act 4 Scene 3 -- It was a lover and his lass' -- As You Like It -- Act 5 Scene 3 -- ̀His mother was a votaress of my order' -- A Midsummer Night's Dream -- Act 2 Scene 1 -- ̀Let those who are in favour with their stars' -- Sonnet 25 -- ̀Let the bird of loudest lay' -- The Phoenix and the Turtle -- Unthrifty loveliness why dost thou spend' -- Sonnet 4 -- Orpheus with his lute made trees' -- Henry VIII -- Act 3 Scene 1 -- Vouchsafe to those that have not read the stor -- Henry V -- Act 5 Scene 1 -- I shall lack voice. The deeds of Coriolanus' -- Coriolanus -- Act 2 Scene 2 -- Til blows the wind that profits nobody.' -- Henry VI, Part 3 -- Act 2 Scene 5 -- There's a dainty madwoman, master' -- The Two Noble Kinsmen -- Act 3 Scene 5 -- The poor soul sat sighing by a sycamore tree' -- Othello -- Act 4 Scene 3 -- April -- A fool, a fool, I met a fool i'th ̀forest' -- As You Like It -- Act 2 Scene 7 -- ̀From you have I been absent in the spring' -- Sonnet 98 -- "They love not poison that do poison need;' -- Richard II -- Act 5 Scene 6 -- If I profane with my unworthiest hand' -- Romeo and Juliet -- Act 1 Scene 5 -- ̀Hark, hark, the lark at heaven's gate sings' -- Cymbeline -- Act 2 Scene 3 -- ̀Look in thy glass and tell the face thou viewest' -- Sonnet 3 -- ̀Ceres, most bounteous lady, thy rich leas' -- The Tempest -- Act 4 Scene 1 -- ̀Thou art violently carried away from grace.' -- Henry IV, Part 11 -- Act 2 Scene 4 -- T know thee not, old man. Fall to thy prayers.' -- Henry IV, Part 2 -- Act 5 Scene 5 -- ̀Madam, I was not old Sir Robert's son.' -- King John -- Act 1 Scene 1 -- Without the bed her other fair hand was' -- The Rape of Lucrece -- Lines 393-406 -- Who seeks for better of thee, sauce his palate' -- Timon of Athens -- Act 4 Scene 3 -- ̀Hear me, grave fathers; noble tribunes, stay!' -- Titus Andronicus -- Act 3 Scene 1 -- When daisies pied and violets blue' -- Love's Labour's Lost -- Act 5 Scene 2 -- Our revels now are ended. These our actors' -- The Tempest -- Act 4 Scene 1 -- S̀ay a day' without the ever.' -- As You Like It -- Act 4 Scene 1 -- You foolish shepherd, wherefore do you follow her' -- As You Like It -- Act 3 Scene 5 -- Even as the sun with purple-coloured face' -- Venus and Adonis -- Lines 1-36 -- ̀Madam, there is alighted at your gate' -- The Merchant of Venice -- Act 2 Scene 9 -- The raven himself is hoarse' -- Macbeth -- Act 1 Scene 5 -- O, pardon me, thou bleeding piece of earth' -- Julius Caesar -- Act 3 Scene 1

3
White, James, letters, 1845-1881


ISBN/ISSN:
Shut door and close of probation in James and Ellen White letters 1846-1855 -- Releases from James White letters for Gerard Damsteegt -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Jacobs (article, Day Star, 1845) -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Jacobs (article, Day Star, 1845) -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Jacobs (article, Day Star, 1845) Letter from James White to dear Brother Jacobs (article, Day Star, 1845) -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother Collins, Aug 1846, about the death of Mary Ann Lawrence -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Howland, Mar 1847, about Ellen G. White and what has occurred since they left Topsham -- Letter from James White to dear Sister Hastings, May 1847, about the copies of the visions -- Letter from James White to dear Sister Hastings, Aug 1847, about the letter from Brother Bates -- Letter from James White to dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Apr 1848, about Brother Matthias, Ellen G. White and her vision on the Sabbath -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother, Jul 1848, about Ellen White and Henry not being so well -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Aug 1848, about his trip with Ellen G. White to New York City -- Letter from James White to dear Brother and Sister, Aug 1848, about the invitation to visit with them -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Oct 1848, about the general meeting of the "Outcasts" in Maine -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Jan 1849, about general matters -- Letter from James White to my dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Feb 1849, about the offer of a home -- Letter from James White to beloved Bro. and Sister Collins, Sep 1849, about general matters in Maine -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Bowles, Oct 1849, about their visit to Connecticut and Western New York -- Letter from James White to beloved Brother Bowles, Nov 1849, about general matters and Western New York -- Letter from James White to dear Brother and Sister Hastings, Jan 1850, about the letter from Brother Bates -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Hastings, Jan 1850, about the baby being sick and the time at Brother B. C. Stoors -- Letter to dear Brother and Sister Collins, Jan 1850, about his intent to be at Fairhaven -- Letter from James White to dear Bro. and Sr. Collins and Gilbert and Deborah, Feb 1850, about Jesus and general matters -- Letter from my dear afflicted Brother Hastings, Mar 1850, about the death of the wife of Brother Hastings -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Hastings, Jul 1850, about publishing the Testimonies (handwritten) -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Hastings, Jul 1850, about publishing the Testimonies (typed) -- Letter from James White to my dear Bro. Hastings and all your dear children, Nov 1850, about the printing -- Note by James White at end of Ellen G. White letter dated April 1, 1851, Davis, Maine -- Letter from James White to dear brethren in Jackson, Aug 1851, about the publishing at Saratoga Springs -- Letter from James White to dear Brethren in Christ, Nov 1851, about our conferences at Medford, Washington, Bethel and Johnson -- Letter from James White to dear Brother, Sep 1852, about Ellen G. White's vision -- Letter from James White to brethren in Jackson, Michigan, Dec 1852, about being free of debt -- Letter from James White to beloved Brother Dodge, Jul 1853, about the tracts -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Abraham, Jul 1853, about general matters -- Letter from James White to Brother Abram, Dec 1853, about Brother Rhodes -- Letter from James White to dear Brother and Sister Smith, Aug 1854, about the box of books -- Letter from James White to brethren Cornell and Dodge, Nov 1854, about general matters -- Letter from James White to dear Brother, Feb 1855, about the present situation of Brother J. N. Andrews -- Letter from James White to Bro. Abram, Mar 1855, about the article with Sister Knight's letter -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Lyon, Jul 1855, about the ill health of Brother Lyon and general matters -- Letter from James White to dear Brother, Aug 1855, about letters received from Michigan -- Private letter from James White, 1855, about a vision of Ellen G. White -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Dodge, Aug 1855, about locating the Review West (handwritten) -- Letter from James White to dear Brother Dodge, Aug 1855, about locating the Review West (typed) -- Letter from James White to Sister Below, Nov 1856, about her moving from New York -- Letter from James White to dear Sister, Nov 1856, about her coming to Battle Creek -- Letter from James White to my dear Sister, or shall I say Mother, Mar 1857, about her moving circumstances -- Letter from James White to my dear Edson, Jan 1860, about personal matters -- Letter from James White to my dear Edson, Mar 1860, about personal matters -- Letter from James White to dear Brother, Oct 1860, about personal matters -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Oct 1860, about the meeting -- Letter from James White to my dear Ellen, Oct 1860, about his time in Knoxville and his health -- Letter from James White to my dear Ellen, Oct 1860, about the meeting at Marion -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Oct 1860, about going to Wisconsin -- Letter from James White to my dear Ellen, Nov 1860, about Brother Frisbie and general matters and the Mississippi River Boat, "War Eagle" -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Nov 1860, about praying with Brother Ingraham and Sanborn -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Nov 1860, about his health -- Letter from James White to dear Ellen, Nov 1860, about general matters -- Letter from James White to Brother E. P. Butler, Dec 1861, about the Andrews' difficulty -- Letter from James White to the gentlemen, Oct 1862, about William Hall -- Letter from James White to Brother and Sister Abbey, Dec 1863, about the death of Henry White -- Letter from James White to Sister Steward, Sep 1864, about the Cure and the philosophy of health taught there -- Letter from James White to Brother Abbey, May 1865, about finding a place to live in Michigan -- Letter from James White to my dear niece, (Mary Clough), Jun 1865, about personal matters -- Letter from James White to Brethren - directors of the Health Institute, Aug 1867, about building and property considerations -- Letter from James and Ellen G. White, Sep 1867, about the Health Institute -- Letter from James White to dear Willie, Sep 1867, about general matters -- Letter from James White to my dear Willie, Oct 1867, about Battle Creek -- Letter from James White to my dear Willie, Oct 1867, about going from Michigan to Maine -- Letter from James White to O. H. Pratt, Mar 1869, about the Monroe Church -- Letter from James White to Sister Hall, Jul 1869, about general matters -- Letter from James White to dear son, May 1870, about Mrs. Kittle and her place -- Letter from James White to Willie, Lucinda, May (Mary?) and Anna, Jun 1870, about the importance of having oversight over the entire work and about being in the field more -- Letter from James White to dear Edson, Apr 1871, about the deed from McDearmon and his indefiniteness relative to the peas and the plants -- Letter from James White to Brother Andrews, May 1871, about the tract "The Sabbath on the Round World" still being in type -- Letter from James White to Lucinda and Willie, Jun 1871, about future plans to go to Wisconsin and Minnesota -- The Saviour of sinners / Letter from James White to Sister Lucinda, Oct 1871, about coming with them to Boston -- Letter from James White to my dear son Willie, Nov 1871, about Sister White's dream concerning Edson, Henry, Byron Sperry and Willie himself -- Letter from James White to dear Willie, Nov 1871, about their appointments from Maine to Michigan -- Letter from James White to dear children, Edson and Emma, Dec 1871, about Edson and prosperity only in the Lord

4
book jacket
The Penguin book of the sonnet : 500 years of a classic tradition in English / edited by Phillis Lev

lxxvii, 448 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9780140589290 (pbk.)
Canzoniere, 132 / Troilus and Criseyde, Canticus Troili / The longe love, that in my thought doeth harbar ; Who so list to hounte I know where is an hynde ; Farewell, Love, and all thy lawes for ever ; My galy chargèd with forgetfulnes ; I find no peace, and all my war is done / The soote season, that bud and blome furth bringes ; Alas, so all thinges nowe doe holde their peace ; I never saw you, madam, lay apart ; Love that liveth and reigneth in my thought / A Meditation of a Penitent Sinner: Written in maner of a Paraphrase upon the 51 Psalme of David ; Loe prostrate, Lorde, before thy face I lye ; But render me my wonted joyes againe / That self-same tongue which first did thee entreat ; Sonet written in prayse of the brown beautie / Licia or poems of love First did I fear, when first my love began / Amoretti: Happy ye leaves when as those lilly hands ; More thenmost faire, full of the living fire ; Rolling wheele that runneth often round ; This holy season fit to fast and pray ; Penelope for her Ulisses' sake ; My love is lyke to yse, and I to fyre ; What guyle is this, that those her golden tresses ; Leave, lady, in your glasse of christal clene ; Lyke as a huntsman after weary chace ; Most glorious Lord of lyfe that on this day ; One day I wrote her name upon the strand ; Lackyng my love I go from place to place ; Men call you fayre, and you doe credit it ; Fayre is my love, when her fayre golden heares / Caelica: Caelica, I overnight was finely used ; Nurse-life wheat, within his green husk growing ; In night when colours all to black are cast / Countess of Pembroke's arcadia: My true love hat my hart, and I have his ; Astrophel and Stella: Loving in truth, and faine in verse my love to show ; Let daintie wits crie on the sisters nine ; It is most true that eyes are form'd to serve ; With how sad steps, O moon, thou climb'st the skies ; My mouth doth water, and my breast doth swell ; Come sleepe, O sleepe, the certaine knot of peace ; Having this day, my horse, my hand, my launce ; What, have I thus betrayed my libertie? ; I on my horse, and love on me doth trie ; Because I breathe not love to everie one ; O grammer rules, O now your vertues show ; Who will in fairest booke of nature know ; Love still a boy, and oft a wanton is ; Stella, thinke not that I by verse seeke fame ; Certaine sonnets: Leave me, O love, which reachest but to dust / Vision upon this conceipt of the faery queene ; Secret murder hath been done of late ; To his son / Phillis: Honoured with pastorall sonnets, elegies and amorous delights ; Coronet for his mistress philosophy: Muses that sing love's sensual empery -- Diana: Needs must I leave, and yet needs must I love -- Sonet: Fra banc to banc, fra wod to wod, I rin / To Delia: Looke, Delia, how wee steeme the half-blowne rose ; Care-charmer sleepe, sonne of the sable night ; Let others sing of knights and palladines / Idea in sixtie three sonnets: Nothing but no and I, and I and no ; How many paltry, foolish, painted things ; Love, in a humor, play'd the prodigall ; His remedie for love ; Sitting alone, love bids me goe and write ; Since ther's no helpe, come let us kisse and part / Some blaze the precious beauties of their loves ; Although we do not all the good we love ; Author loving these homely meats speciall, viz. :cream, pancakes, buttered pippin-pies, &c. /

5
book jacket
The literature of lesbianism : a historical anthology from Ariosto to Stonewall / edited by Terry Ca

xxi, 1110 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0231125100
The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries The Eighteenth Century The Nineteenth Century The Twentieth Century

6
book jacket
The Book of rounds / Mary Catherine Taylor and Carol Dyk.

xxviii, 292 p. :
ISBN/ISSN: 0876901828

7
The treasury of musick [music] / first published by John Playford, London, 1669.

3 volumes in 1 ;
ISBN/ISSN:

8
book jacket
Verses from 1929 on / by Ogden Nash
Nash, Ogden,
522 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0316598283
That Reminds Me -- A Bas Ben Adhem -- Seaside Serenade -- Sedative Reflection -- People -- Nevertheless -- When the Devil Was Sick Could He Prove It? -- Oh, Stop Being Thankful All Over the Place -- "My Child is Phlegmatic ..." -- Anxious Parent -- Ha! Original Sin! -- The Party -- Kindly Unhitch That Star, Buddy -- The Passionate Pagan and the Dispassionate Public -- Theatrical Reflection -- Portrait of the Artist as a Prematurely Old Man -- Scram, Lion! -- A Brief Guide to New York -- Birdies, Don't Make Me Laugh -- The Pig -- Lines to a World-Famous Poet Who Failed to Complete a World-Famous Poem, or Come Clean, Mr. Guest! -- Taboo to Boot -- The Cobra -- Very Like a Whale -- Advice Outside a Church -- Platitudinous Reflection -- Fragonard -- Electra Becomes Morbid -- Reflection on a Wicked World -- Our Child Doesn't Know Anything, or, Thank God! -- Listen ... -- The Rabbits -- You Have More Freedom in a House -- Love under the Republicans (or Democrats) -- Don't Look Now -- Reminiscent Reflection -- Lines to Be Mumbled at Ovington's -- Dont' Cry, Darling, It's Blood All Right -- Reflections on Ice-Breaking -- Invocation -- King Leer -- My Daddy -- When You Say That, Smile!, or, All Right Then, Don't Smile -- It Must Be the Milk -- A Lady Thinks She Is Thirty -- Procrastinatin Is All of the Time -- Edouard -- The Individualist -- In Which the Poet Is Ashamed But Pleased -- Funebrial Reflection -- I Know You'll Like Them -- Judgment Day -- The Canary -- The Terrible People -- The Tale of Custard the Dragon -- Political Reflection -- It's Never Fair Weather -- Arthur -- Ma, What's a Banker? or, Hush, My Child -- Golly, How Truth Will Out! -- The Camel -- Will Consider Situation -- The Rooster -- Pretty Halcyon Days -- Mr. Peachey's Predicament, or, Not Mot Parades -- The Sea-Gull -- The Big Tent under the Roof -- Drusilla -- A Good Parent's Garden of Vision -- Literary Reflection -- Two and One Are a Problem -- Song of the Open Road -- Thunder over the Nursery -- The Clean Platter -- The Duck -- Mr. Artesian's Conscientiousness -- The Lama -- Goody for Our Side and Your Side Too -- The Parent -- Family Court -- The Life of the Party -- The Germ -- One Third of a Calendar -- More about People -- The Cow -- Lines to a Three-Name Lady -- Little Feet -- Genealogical Reflection -- The Mind of Professor Primrose -- Reflection on Ingenuity -- The Turtle -- After the Christening -- Aside to Husbands -- The Fish -- Tell It to the Eskimos, or, Tell It to the Esquimaux -- Reflection on Caution -- Turns in a Worm's Lane -- Election Day Is a Holiday -- The Rhinoceros -- September Morn -- From a Manhattan Tomb -- Reflection on Babies -- Epstein, Spare That Yule Log! -- Birth Comes to the Archbishop -- Some of My Best Friends Are Children -- Old Men -- A Drink with Something in It -- Watchman, What of the First First Lady? -- Children's Party -- The Panther -- The Very Unclubbable Man -- Pediatric Reflection -- Good-By, Old Year, You Oaf, or, Why Don't They Pay the Bonus? -- A Carol for Children -- Song for a Temperature of a Hundred and One -- What's the Use? -- I Never Ever Suggested It -- The Kitten -- Don't Guess, Let Me Tell You -- The Caribou -- Please Leave Father Alone -- Legal Reflection -- What's the Matter, Haven't You Got Any Sense of Humor? -- Lucy Lake -- The Oyster -- How Long Has This Been Going On? Oh, Quite Long -- A Watched Example Never Boils -- The Wapiti -- Hearts and Flowers, or, What I Know about Bolivar Black -- Spring Comes to Murray Hill -- Nothing But Nature -- Two Songs for a Boss Named Mr. Longwell -- A Warning to Wives -- Song to Be Sung by the Father of Infant Female Children -- The Phoenix -- Lines Indited with All the Depravity of Poverty -- Malice Domestic -- Machinery Doesn't Answer, Either, but You Aren't Married to It -- A Child's Guide to Parents -- The Turkey -- The Seven Spiritual Ages of Mrs. Marmaduke Moore -- Everybody Tells Me Everything -- The Wombat -- Look for the Silver Lining -- Oh, to Be Odd! -- My Dear, How Ever Did You Think Up This Delicious Salad? -- What Almost Every Woman Knows Sooner or Later -- Pride Goeth before a Raise, or Ah, There, Mrs. Cadwallader-Smith! -- The Squirrel -- Are You a Snodgrass? -- A Parable for Sports Writers, Society Columnists, Bond Salesmen and Poets, or, Go Get a Reputation -- Reflection on the Fallibility of Nemesis -- Raven, Don't Stay Away from My Door -- A Chant for April First -- Dragons Are Too Seldom -- Suppose I Darken Your Door -- Look What You Did, Christopher! -- First Payment Deferred -- Hush, Here They Come -- Biological Reflection -- I Yield to My Learned Brother, or, Is There a Candlestick Maker in the House? -- I Had No Idea It Was So Late -- Reflection on the Passage of Time, Its Inevitability and Its Quirks -- Grasshoppers Are Very Intelligent -- Hearts of Gold, or, A Good Excuse Is Worse Than None -- Introspective Reflection -- Curl Up and Diet -- I Have It On Good Authority -- The Middle of the Month -- First Families, Move Over! -- A Clean Conscience Never Relaxes -- Bankers Are Just Like Anybody Else, Except Richer -- Prayer at the End of a Rope -- Miriam's Lucky Day -- Women Pulls the Wires -- Song Before Breakfast -- The Unselfish Husband -- The Common Cold -- Splash! -- I'll Get One Tomorrow -- The Japanese -- The Friendly Touch -- Don't Grin, or You'll Have to Bear It -- Song for Ditherers -- The Strange Case of Mr. Donnybrook's Boredom -- Experience to Let -- The Man with Two New Suits -- It's Snug to Be Smug -- To a Lady Passing TIme Better Left Unpassed -- The Strange Case of the Blackmailing Dove -- Nine Miles to the Railroad -- Every Day is Monday -- Poor Mr. Strawbridge -- Coffee with the Meal -- The Queen Is in the Parlor -- The Eight O'Clock Peril -- The Strange Case of Mr. Ballentine's Valentine -- Epilogue to Mother's Day, Which Is to Be Published on Any Day but Mother's Day -- England Expects -- This Was Told to Me in Confidence -- Unanswered by Request -- Cat Naps Are Too Good for Cats -- The City -- Nature Knows Best -- Summergreen for President -- The Strange Case of the Dead Divorcee -- Everybody East Too Much Anyhow -- Yes and No -- Columbus -- A Necessary Dirge -- One Man's Meed Is Another Man's Overemphasis -- The Strange Case of the Pleasing Taxi-Driver -- Everybody Makes Poets -- No Wonder Our Fathers Died -- Midsummer's Daymare -- The Strange Case of the Irksome Prude -- A Word on Wind -- A Stitch Too Late Is My Fate -- Spring Song -- Shrinking Song -- The Drop of a Hat -- The Strange Case of Mr. Fortague's Disappointment -- Under the Floor -- The Strange Case of the Ambitious Caddy -- Kind of an Ode to Duty -- Boop-boop-Adieup, Little Group! -- Man Bites Dog-Days -- I'm Terribly Sorry for You, but I Can't Help Laughing -- Where There's a Will, There's Velleity -- The Strange Case of the Girl o' Mr. Sponson's Dreams -- The Calf -- The Purist -- The Ant -- The Hippopotamus -- The Centipede -- Jangle Bells -- Up from the Wheelbarrow -- Away from it All -- The Sage of Darien -- Pipe Dreams -- Absence Makes the Heart Grow Heart Trouble -- Out Is Out -- Isn't That a Dainty Dish? No! -- Oh, Please Don't Get Up! -- How Now, Sirrah? Oh, Anyhow -- Mr. Barcalow's Breakdown -- The Evening Out -- Song for Pier Something or Other -- The Introduction -- Riding on a Railroad Train -- Just Keep Quiet and Nobody Will Notice! -- Parsley for Vice-President! -- Lines to Be Scribbled on Somebody Else's Thirtieth Milestone -- Little Miss Muffet Sat on a Prophet -- and Quite Right, Too -- The Party Next Door -- Locust-Lovers, Attention! -- Traveler's Rest -- The Name Is Too Familiar -- Who Understands Who Anyhow? -- The Banquet -- Do Sphinxes Think? -- Wednesday Matinee -- Barmaids are Diviner Than Mermaids -- So Penseroso -- Complaint to Four Angels -- A Plea for a League of Sleep -- Captain John Smith -- Requiem -- Inter-Office Memorandum -- Time Marches On -- Allow Me, Madam, but It Won't Help -- You and Me and P.B. Shelley -- Glossina Morsitans, or, the Tsetse -- Now Tell Me About Yourself -- Lather As You Go -- Tin Wedding Whistle -- The Skink -- The Strange Case of Mr. Ormantude's Bride -- The Absentees -- April Yule, Daddy! -- I Happen to Know -- I'm Sure She Said Six-Thirty -- Do, Do, Do What You Done, Done, Done Before, Before, Before -- What, No Oysters? -- Ms. Found in a Quagmire -- The Sniffle -- We Don't Need To Leave Yet, Do We? or, Yes We do -- The Smelt -- Slow Down, Mr. Ganderdonk, You're Late -- Creeps and Crawls -- The Screen with the Face with the Voice -- A Visit from Dr. Fell -- Here We Go Quietly Nuts in May -- I Want a Drink of Water, but Not from the Thermos -- The Trouble with Women is Men -- A Beginner's Guide to the Ocean -- The Gander -- Put Back Those Whiskers, I Know You -- Bugs -- No Doctors Today, Thank You -- Dance Unmacabre -- It's a Grand Parade It Will Be, Modern Design -- Down the Mousehole, and What Science Missed There -- Visits Laugh at Locksmiths, or, Hospital Doors Haven't Got Locks Anyhow -- Lament on the Eve of Parting -- Suppose He Threw It in Your Face -- The Grackle -- Now You See It, Now I Don't -- So That's Who I Remind Me of -- There's Always an Ubblebub -- Please Pass the Biscuit -- "Tomorrow, Partly Cloudy" -- Dr. Fell and Points West -- Lines on Facing Forty -- One Night in Oz -- Thought Thought on an Avenue -- Thought Thought While Waiting for a Pronouncement from a Doctor, an Editor, a Big Executive, the Department of Internal Revenue or Any Other Momentous Pronouncer -- Samson Agonistes -- Seeing Eye to Eye Is Believing -- The Strange Case of Mr. Niobob's Transmogrification -- And Three Hundred and Sixty-Six in Leap Year -- Just Wrap It Up, and I'll Throw It Away Later -- Dr. Fell? I Thought So -- The Strange Case of Mr. Pauncefoot's Broad Mind -- Summer Serenade

9
Songs. Selections
Lawes, Henry,
1 score (3 volumes in 1) :
ISBN/ISSN:

10
Verses from 1929 on.
Nash, Ogden,
xxxii, 522 pages
ISBN/ISSN:

11
The greatest legal fake book of all time.

672 p. of music ;
ISBN/ISSN:
About a quarter to nine -- Abide with me -- Afrikaan beat -- After the ball -- After the gold rush -- After midnight -- After the lights do down low -- Ah! so pure (from "Martha") -- Ah! sweet mystery of life (The dream melody) -- Ain't misbehavin' -- Ain't she sweet -- Ain't we got fun -- Alabama jubilee -- Alabamy bound -- Al di la -- Alleluia -- All I want for Christmas is my two front teeth -- All my love -- All my tomorrows -- All the way -- All this and heaven too -- All the gold in California -- All through the night -- Aloha-oe (Hawaiian farewell song) -- Alone together -- Along the Santa Fe Trail -- Alouette -- Always on my mind -- Am I blue? -- Am I in love? -- Amazing grace -- America -- America the beautiful -- An American in Paris -- American made -- American patrol -- And the angels sing -- Angel baby -- Angel eyes -- Angels from the realms of glory -- Angels we have heard on high (Westminster carol) -- Anniversary song -- Another lonely song -- Anything goes -- Anywhere my heart goes (Meggie's theme) -- April in Paris -- April showers -- Arab dance (from "The nutcracker suite) -- Aren't you glad you're you? -- Are you from Dixie? -- Are you lonesome tonight? -- Are you on the road to lovin' me again? -- Artist's life -- Arthur's theme (Best that you can do) -- As long as he needs me -- As tears go by -- As time goes by -- At sundown -- Auf wiedersehen, my dear -- Auld lang syne -- Autumn in New York -- Autumn nocturne -- Avalon -- Ave Maria / Away in a manger -- Baby baby (I know you're a lady) -- Baby, don't get hooked on me -- Baby face -- Baby, I'm-a want you -- Il bacio = The kiss -- Ball of fire -- Ballerina -- Baltimore Oriole -- The band played on -- Barbara Ann -- Barney Google -- Battle hymn of the republic -- Be my little baby bumble bee -- The beat goes on -- Beautiful Ohio -- Beautiful you -- Because -- Beep beep -- Beer barrel polka (Roll out the barrel) -- Before the next teardrop falls -- Begin the beguine -- Bei mir bist du schon (means that you're grand) -- Believe me if all those endearing young charms -- Beside a babbling brook -- The best of my love -- Between the devil and the deep blue sea -- Bewitched -- Bidin' my time -- Big noise from Winnetka -- Bill Bailey, won't you please come home? -- Bimbombey -- Bird dog -- A bird in the gilded cage -- Birdland blues -- The birth of the blues -- Blame it on the bossa nova -- Blow, Gabriel, blow -- Blue champagne -- The blue room -- Blue and sentimental -- Blue Danube -- Blue gardenia -- Blue tango -- Blues for Daddy-o -- Blues in Hoss' flat -- Blues in the night (My mamma done tol' me) -- Bob white (whatcha gonna swing tonight?) -- Body and soul -- The boll weevil -- Boo-hoo -- Born free -- The boulevard of broken dreams -- The Bowery -- Breezin' along with the breeze -- Brian's song -- Bridal chorus (from "Lohengrin") -- Breaking up is hard to do -- Brighten the corner where you are -- Brother, can you spare a dime -- Brotherly shove -- Bud on Bach -- Buffalo gals -- Bugle call rag -- But not for me -- But you know I love you -- By a waterfall -- By the beautiful sea -- By the light of the silvery moon -- Bye bye blackbird -- Bye bye, love -- Calcutta -- Calendar girl -- California here I come -- California sun -- Canadian capers -- Can this be love? -- Can you read my mind? (Love theme from "Superman") -- Can't we be friends? -- Can't we talk it over -- Can't yo' hear me callin', Caroline -- Caravan -- Careless love -- Carolina in the morning -- Carolina moon -- Carry me back to old Virginny -- Catch us if you can -- Catching the sun -- Cement mixer (Put-ti, put-ti) -- Chances are -- Charleston -- Chariots of fire -- Cheatin' on me -- Cheerful little earful -- Cherokee -- Chi-baba chi-baba (My bambino go to sleep) -- Chinatown, my Chinatown -- Christmas auld lang syne -- Christmas in Killarney -- The Christmas waltz -- Chussen kalle mazel tov -- Cinnamon girl -- Clair de lune -- Clancy lowered the boom! -- Clap yo' hands -- Clarinet polka -- Close to you -- The coffee song (They've got an awful lot of coffee in Brazil) -- Collegiate -- Come back to Sorrento -- Come dance with me -- Come fly with me -- Come go with me -- Come, Josephine, in my flying machine -- Come live with me -- Comin' thru the rye -- Conquistador -- The continental -- Could I have this dance -- Count every star -- Country gardens -- Crazy rhythm -- Crimson and clover -- Cry -- Cuddle up a little closer, lovey mine -- A cup of coffee, a sandwich, and you -- Cute -- Daddy's home -- Daisy Jane -- Dance little bird -- Dance of the infidels -- Dance to the music -- Dancing in the dark -- Dancing on the ceiling -- Dancing with tears in my eyes -- Darlin' -- Darn that dream -- The daughter of Rosie O'Grady -- Day by day -- Day in, day out -- Days of wine and roses -- Daydream believer -- Daytime friends -- Deck the halls -- Deep in a dream -- Delicado (Baiao) -- The desert song -- Devoted to you -- Deyainu -- Diamonds are a girl's best friend -- Die greene koseene = My little country cousin -- Dinah -- Dixie -- Dixieland delight -- Do, do, do -- Do nothin' till you hear from me -- Does the spearmint lose its flavor (on the bedpost over night?) -- Dominique -- Domino -- Don't bring Lulu -- Don't break the heart that loves you -- Don't cry Joe (Let her go, let her go, let her go) -- Don't fence me in -- Don't forbid me -- Don't get around much anymore -- Don't take your love from me -- Don't you want me? -- Down among the sheltering palms -- Down by the O-H-I-O -- Down by the river-side -- Down in the valley -- Down here on the ground -- Down on 33rd and 3rd (Thoity thoid and Thoid) -- Dream -- A dream -- Dream lover -- Dream weaver -- Drinking again -- Drinking song -- Duelin' banjos -- Early autumn -- Early mornin' rain -- Earth angel -- Ease on down the road -- Easy come, easy go -- El choclo (tango Argentine) -- El watusi -- Elogie -- Embraceable you -- Empty saddles -- Enjoy yourself (it's later than you think) -- The entertainer -- Etude / An evening prayer -- Evergreen (Love theme from "A star is born") -- Evergreen (A wedding song) -- Everybody loves a lover -- Everybody loves somebody -- Everybody makes mistakes -- Everybody's somebody's fool -- Everybody's talkin' (Echoes) -- Every little movement -- Everything is beautiful -- Ev'rybody has the right to be wrong! (at least once) -- Exactly like you -- Eye of the tiger (the theme from "Rocky III").

12
book jacket
The Oxford book of short poems / chosen and edited by P.J. Kavanagh and James Michie.

xl, 307 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0192820737
'Fowls in the frith' -- 'Lord, Thou Clèpedest me' -- 'When I see on Rood' -- 'Why have you no ruth?' -- Roundel ('Now welcome, summer') from The Parliament of Fowls -- Unto Adam, His Own Scrivèyn -- Roundel ('Since I from Love escapèd am') from Merciless Beauty -- 'I shall say what inordinate love is' -- 'Onmes gentes plaudite!' -- 'Blessed Mary' -- 'Peace maketh plenty' -- 'Hail, Queen of Heaven' -- 'I have been a foster' -- 'Western wind' -- 'Though ye suppose' -- 'Madam, withouten many words' -- 'Who hath heard' -- 'The enemy of life' -- 'Sighs are my food' -- 'Lux, my fair falcon' -- 'Throughout the world' -- The Spouse to the Younglings -- 'Thou sleepest fast' -- To an Old Gentlewoman that Painted Her Face -- 'The lowest trees have tops' -- Epigram ('Were I a king') -- To His Son -- 'What is our life?' -- 'Even such is time' -- 'Sleep, baby mine, Desire' -- 'Like those sick folks' -- 'Whenas man's life' -- Bathsabe's Song ('Hot sun, cool fire') from David and Bethsabe -- Bridal Song ('Now, Sleep, bind fast') from The Masque of the Middle Temple and Lincoln's Inn -- 'Thyrsis, sleepest thou?' -- 'A sparrow-hawk proud' -- 'Thule' -- 'My love in her attire' -- 'Since first I saw your face' -- 'Love me not' -- 'Sweet, let me go!' -- 'He that hath no mistress' -- 'Sweet Cupid, ripen her desire' -- To His Wife, for Striking Her Dog -- Song ('O mistress mine') from Twelfth Night -- Song ('When daffodils begin to peer') from The Winter's Tale -- song ('Jog on, jog on') from The Winter's Tale -- Song ('Full fathom five') from The Tempest -- Song ('The master, the swabber, the boatswain and I') from The Tempest -- Song ('Where the bee sucks') from The Tempest -- A Remembrance of My Friend Mr. Thomas Morley -- 'Happy were he' -- 'Happy were he' -- De Puero Balbutiente -- 'Fair summer droops' -- 'When thou must home' -- 'Never weather-beaten sail' 'Thrice toss these oaken ashes in the air' -- 'Thus I resolve' -- 'Sleep, angry beauty' -- Think'st thou to seduce me then' -- Song ('In a maiden-time professed') from The Witch -- Melancholy Conceit -- Song ('Care-charming sleep') from The Tragedy of Valentinian --

13
Hymnal of the Evangelical Church.

x, 621, 98 p. :
ISBN/ISSN:

14
book jacket
The New Oxford Book of American Verse / Chosen and Edited by Richard Ellmann.

liv, 1076 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0195020588

15
book jacket
Poems
Cummings, E. E.
xxxii, 1102 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9780871407108
Tulips -- Epithalamion -- Of nicolette -- Songs -- (thee will I praise between those rivers whose -- when life is quite through with -- Always before your voice my soul -- Thy fingers make early flowers of -- All in green went my love riding -- Where's Madge then, -- Doll's boy's asleep -- cruelly, love -- when God lets my body be -- Puella Mea -- Chansons innocentes -- in Just -- hist whist -- little tree -- why did you go -- Tumbling-hair picker of buttercups violets -- Orientale -- i spoke to thee -- my love -- listen -- unto thee i -- lean candles hunger in -- The emperor -- Amores -- your little voice over the wires came leaping -- in the rain- -- there is a -- consider O -- as is the sea marvelous -- into the smiting -- if I believe -- The glory is fallen out of -- I like -- after five -- O distinct -- La Guerre -- Humanity I love you -- earth like a tipsy -- The bigness of cannon -- little ladies more -- O sweet spontaneous -- Impressions -- Lady of silence -- The sky a silver -- writhe and -- The hills -- stinging -- the sky was -- i was considering how -- between green mountains -- The hours rise up putting off stars and it is -- i will wade out till my thighs are steeped in burning flowers -- Portraits -- of my -- being -- III. as usual i did not find him in cafes, the more dissolute atmosphere -- The skinny voice -- Babylon slim -- The dress was a suspicious madder, importing the cruelty of roses. -- of evident invisibles -- ta -- it's just like a coffin's -- between nose-red gross -- i walked the boulevard -- 5 -- The young -- one April dusk the -- between the breasts -- but the other.

16
Butler, George I., Biographical information


ISBN/ISSN:
Letter from George I. Butler to J. N. Andrews, Mar 1868, about the question of bearing arms Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Jan 1874, about D. T Bourdeau -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Jan 1874, about Brother Cornel and also about reaching the Germans, the Swedes and the Danes -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother Cornell, Jan 1874, about laboring in some of the Eastern states -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Jan 1874, about his visit among the Swedes -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Feb 1874, about Brother Curtis and the Seventh-day Baptists, Brother Tripp and Brother Gardiner as well as the Pierce family -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Feb 1874, about Brother S. H. Donner -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Mar 1874, about matters at the Institute -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Mar 1874, about his trip to the school building at Moumee (?) with Brother Jones -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Apr 1874, about his trip to Vermont and New England -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Apr 1874, about the state of things in Vermont -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, May 1874, about Maine and Rochester -- The camp meeting at Lees Summit, Missouri / Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Oct 1874, about his trip to California -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Sister White, Oct 1874, about general matters -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Brother White, Mar 1875, about the campmeetings -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Sister White, Dec 1875, about the guidance of the Testimony to him on preaching -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Feb 1878, about the T. J. Butler matter -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother Will, Oct 1879, about General Conference matters -- Letter from G. I. Butler to Dear Will, Dec 1879, about committee matters -- Letter from George I. Butler to Dear William, Dec 1879, about the article on foreign missions -- Letter from G. I. Butler to Elders Andrews, Loughborough and Matteson, Jan 1880, about the Conference in Europe -- Letter from George I. Butler to Elders Andrews, Loughborough and Matteson, Feb 1880, about the postponement of the Conference in Europe -- Letter from George I. Butler to Dear William, May 1880, about the expenses of the European Mission -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Jul 1880, about the Signs printed in Oakland -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My dear Brother and Sister White, Sep 1880, about the meetings in Dakota and Nebraska -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother and Sister White, Sep 1880, about the Nebraska meeting -- Letter from G. I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Oct 1880, about their relationship as co-workers -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother and Sister White, Oct 1880, about the meeting in Osowkee, Kansas -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, Nov 1880, about their relationship as fellow workers for Christ -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother and Sister White, Nov 1880, about general matters and his upcoming meeting in Nevada city -- Letter to Dear Hedy, December 29, 1980 -- Letter from George I. Butler to My dear Will, Jan 1881, about Battle Creek -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My dear Mother, Mar 1881, about the campmeetings, ED. M. Canright and Elder Haskell -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Sister White, Mar 1881, about Dr. Waggoner and A. T. Jones -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Brother White, Apr 1881, about the position he takes regarding the powers of the General Conference committee in sending laborers to other fields from State Conferences -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother John (letter) -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My beloved mother in Christ, May 1881, about his impressions on the state of things in the Kansas conference -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother Will, Jun 1881, about the Signs hindering Elder L in his work and about the number of campmeetings he should attend that summer -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My dear Brother Will, Jun 1881, about the Iowa campmeeting -- Letter from G. I. Butler to Dear Sister White, Jul 1881, about the dream she wrote Letter from Geo I. Butler to My dear Will, Aug 1881, about the death of James White -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My dear Mother in Christ, Sep 1881, about the Ohio and Vermont meetings and the Haskells -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My dear Will, Sep 1881, about the meetings in Maine and the Haskells -- Labor at the campmeetings / Letter from George I. Butler to W. C. White, Dec 1881, about an invitation to California -- Letter from George I. Butler to My dear Will, Jan 1882, about the situation at the General Conference since Brother White died -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My dear Stephen (Haskell), Jan 1882, about Brother Smith and his conspiracy theories -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother Will, Feb 1882, about Brother Grant 's daughter Mrs. Keyes -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Will, February 3, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Will, February 20, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Will, February 22, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother Will, April 10, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My Dear Afflicted Sister, April 26, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My Dear Sister White, May 17, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My Dear Mother in Christ, June 28, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother Will, June 30, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Sister White, July 16, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to My Dear Sister White, August 24, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. to Dear Sister White, August 26, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Sister White, November 14, 1882 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Sister White, November 28, 1882 -- Letter from George I. Butler to my dear Brother John, May 1883, about Sister White's visions and other matters -- :etter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Sister White, February 18, 1883 -- Letter from Geo. I. Butler to Dear Sister White, June 17, 1883 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother Will, July 12, 1883 -- George Ide Butler-- a sketch -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Sister White, January 5, 1885 -- Letter from George I. Butler to dear Sister White, Feb 1885, about the Chicago Mission and Brother Andrews in Illinois -- Letter from George I. Butler to dear Sister White, March 1885, about Brother Miller -- Letter from George I. Butler to dear Sister White, Mar 1885, about general matters -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to Dear Brother White, March 21, 1885 -- Labor at the campmeetings / Letter from George I. Butler to Sister White, May 1885, about Elder J. H. Waggoner -- Letter from George I. Butler to dear Sister White, Aug 1885, about the fanatical movement around there -- Letter from Geo I. White to Dear Sister White, August 31, 1885 -- Letter from George I. Butler to W. C. White, Sep 1885, about publishing matters and the work in many areas -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to W. C. White, October 1, 1885 -- Letter from Geo I. Butler to W. C. White, December 1, 1885 -- George Ide Butler- The message and Its friends- no. 9 (article, The Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, 1923) -- George Ide Butler (1834-1918) (biography) -- George Ide Butler: a sketch of his life / In Memoriam George Ide Butler (leaflet) -- Obituary -- George I. Butler confession (article) -- See also referral notes -- Transfer sheet

17
This is the ultimate fake book : melody, lyrics, chords for all 'C' instruments.

1 score (803 pages) ;
ISBN/ISSN:



20
book jacket
Winning the timeshare game : buying the bargains / Deanna Keahey, Brian Cook.
Keahey, Deanna.
196 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0988839210


22
book jacket
Poems
Rich, Adrienne,
li, 1164 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9780393285116 ;
A change of world (1951). Storm warnings -- Aunt Jennifer's tigers -- Vertigo -- The ultimate act -- What ghosts can say -- The kursaal at Interlaken -- Reliquary -- Purely local -- A view of the terrace -- By no means native -- Air without incense -- For the felling of an elm in the Harvard yard -- A clock in the square -- Why else but to forestall this hour -- This beast, this angel -- Eastport to Block Island -- At a deathbed in the year two thousand -- Afterward -- The uncle speaks in the drawing room -- Boundary -- Five o'clock, Beacon Hill -- From a chapter on literature -- An unsaid word -- Mathilde in Normandy -- At a Bach concert -- The rain of blood -- Stepping backward -- Itinerary -- A revivalist in Boston -- The return of the evening grosbeaks -- The springboard -- A change of world -- Unsounded -- Design in living colors -- Walden 1950 -- Sunday evening -- The innocents -- "He remembereth that we are dust" -- Life and letters -- For the conjunction of two planets --

23
book jacket
French women poets of nine centuries : the distaff and the pen / selected and translated by Norman R

xlvi, 1182 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9780801888045


25
book jacket
You are not crazy : letters from your therapist / David Klow, LMFT ; foreword by Alexandra H. Solomo
Klow, David,
vii, 199 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 1942545959

26
book jacket
A treasury of poems : a collection of the world's most famous and familiar verse / compiled by Sarah

xx, 739 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0681805706


28
book jacket
The definitive book of body language / Allan & Barbara Pease.
Pease, Allan.
xiii, 386 p. :
ISBN/ISSN: 0553804723 : HRD



31
book jacket
The real book. Volume IV, C instruments.

1 score (510 pages) ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9781423425427
Across the alley from the Alamo / Adios / After the rain / Águas de março = Waters of March / All night long / All too soon / Allen's alley / Always true to you in my fashion / And all that jazz / Angela / Apple core / Are you real / As long as he needs me / As we speak / Ashes to ashes / Aunt Hagar's blues / Azure-te (Paris blues) / Baby elephant walk / Baby just come home to me / Back in your own backyard / Bag's new groove / Ballin' the jack / Bandstand boogie / The best is yet to come / Bill / Bim-bom / Bird song / Birds of a feather / Black Byrd / Blackbird / Blue Friday / Blue soul / Blues for Junior (Pyramid) / Blues in Frankie's flat / Blues in time / Blues the most / Bopzilla / Born to be bad / Born to be blue / Boy meets horn / Break out the blues / Bremond's blues / Brown hornet / Buster's last stand / But she's my buddy's chick / Button up your overcoat / Cake walking babies from home / Can't buy me love / The Cape Verdean blues / Change of season / Charade / Chasing the Bird / The chicken / Children of the night / The Christmas song (Chestnuts roasting on an open fire) / Christmas time is here / Christopher Columbus / Chromozone / Clockwise / Close as pages in a book / Cocktails for two / Come Candellia / Come dance with me / Comes love / Compared to what / A cool shade of blue / Curves ahead / Daddy / Dahomey dance / Dance only with me / The days of wine and roses / Deacon blues / Dear heart / Deep purple / Devil may care / Dexter digs in / Dextivity / Dinner for one, please, James / The disguise / Djangology / Do I love you / Doctor Jazz / Don't be that way / Don't you know I care (or don't you care to know) / Doodlin' / Down / Down under / Down with love / Dragonfly / Duke's place / The earl / Effendi / El hombre / Elevation / Everybody loves my baby (but my baby don't love nobody but me) / Everyday I have the blues / Ev'rything I've got / Federico / A felicidade / Festive minor / Flamingo / Flip, flop, and fly / A foggy day (in London Town) / For you, for me, for evermore / Friends / Fuchsia swing song / Gettin' over the blues / Ginger bread boy / Ginza samba / Girl with his smile and my eyes / Give me the night / Goin' to Minton's / Goin' out of my head / Golden earrings / The good life / Goodbye / Green haze / Guess who I saw today / The gypsy / Gypsy jingle-jangle / Hallelujah I love him (her) so / Happy go lucky local / Happy with the blues / Hear ye / Heartaches / Helen's song / Hideaway / Hindustan / Hit the road to dreamland / Hoe-down / Home / A house is not a home / How little we know / Humpty Dumpty / A hundred years from today / I can dream, can't I? / I could eat your words / I didn't know about you / I got a woman / I got rhythm / I got you (I feel good) / I guess I'll have to change my plan / I hadn't anyone till you / I love Lucy / I love my baby (my baby loves me) / I remember Duke / I saw stars / I say a little prayer / I see your face before me / I shot the sheriff / I told ya I love ya now get out / I walk with music / I wouldn't trade you / I'd rather be blue over you / I'm a dreamer, aren't we all / I'm gonna go fishin' / I've got my eyes on you / I've got your number / If ever I would leave you / If I ruled the world / If I were blue / If you could see me now / If you go / In a silent way / The "in" crowd / In the arms of love / In the blue of evening / Inner space / Intermission riff / It was a very good year / It was written in the stars / It's a lonesome old town / It's magic / It's you / Ivy /

32
American poetry / [edited by] Gay Wilson Allen, Walter B. Rideout [and] James K. Robinson.
Allen, Gay Wilson,
xxxiv, 1274 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN:
The Prologue -- Contemplations -- The Flesh and the Spirit -- The Author to Her Book -- To My Dear and Loving Husband -- In Memory of My Dear Grandchild Elizabeth Bradstreet, Who Deceased August, 1665, Being a Year and a Half Old -- Some Verses Upon the Burning of Our House, July 10th, 1666 / Prologue (from "Preparatory Meditations) -- Meditation I -- The Reflexion -- Meditation 6 -- Meditation 8 -- Meditation 20 -- Meditation 29 -- Meditation 38 -- Meditation 40 -- Meditation 68A, Second Series -- from "Gods Determinations Touching His Elect -- The Preface -- The Glory of and Grace in the Church Set Out -- The Joy of Church Fellowship Rightly Attended -- Miscellaneous Poems -- An Address to the Soul Occasioned By a Rain -- Upon a Spider Catching a Fly -- Huswifery -- Upon Wedlock and Death of Children -- The Ebb and Flow / The Power of Fancy -- Death (from "The House of Night") -- The Vanity of Existence -- To the Memory of the Brave Americans -- The Hurricane -- The Wild Honey Suckle -- The Indian Burying Ground -- To Sir Toby -- Ode -- Amanda's Complaint -- On a Honey Bee -- On the Universality and Other Attributes of the God of Nature / The Hasty-Pudding -- from "The Columbiad" [One Centred System] / Thanatopsis -- The Yellow Violet -- Inscription for the Entrance to a Wood -- To a Waterfowl -- Green River -- A Winter Piece -- Summer Wind -- A Forest Hymn -- "Oh Fairest of the Rural Maids" -- The Evening Wind -- To Cole, the Painter, Departing for Europe -- To the Fringed Gentian -- The Prairies -- Earth -- The Antiquity of Freedom -- "Oh Mother of a Mighty Race" -- The Poet -- The Death of Lincoln /

33
The hymnal, army and navy / edited by Ivan L. Bennett.

1 close score (607 pages) ;
ISBN/ISSN:

34
book jacket
9 artists / Edited by Bartholomew Ryan ; Texts by Yael Bartana, Liam Gillick, Renzo Martens, Bjarne

210 pages :
ISBN/ISSN: 9781935963066

35
book jacket
African American poetry : 250 years of struggle & song / Kevin Young, editor

lx, 1110 pages :
ISBN/ISSN: 9781598536669
Introduction / Bury me in a free land: 1770-1899 -- Lift every voice: 1900-1918 -- Dark tower: 1919-1936 -- Ballads of remembrance: 1936-1959 -- Ideas of ancestry: 1959-1975 -- Blue light sutras: 1976-1989 -- Praise songs for the day: 1990-2008 -- After the hurricane: 2009-2020

36
book jacket
Great poems by American women : an anthology / edited by Susan L. Rattiner.

xv, 234 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0486401642
Author to her book / To my dear and loving husband / Before the birth of one of her children -- To an amiable friend mourning the death of an excellent father / Return to Tomhanick / An evening prospect / On being brought from Africa to America / To S. M., a young African painter, on seeing his works / On imagination / On the death of the Rev. Mr. George Whitefield--1770 / An hymn to the evening / African chief / America, commerce, and freedom / To time / Song / Rocked in the cradle of the deep / Watcher / Indian names / To the first slave ship / Indian's welcome to the Pilgrim fathers / Lines / Bell of the wreck / Stanzas / Song / World I am passing through / New-England boy's song about Thanksgiving Day / To Edgar Allan Poe / To--- / Sonnet V / Morning-glory / Widow's wooer / Love unsought / Portrait / Ode to Sappho / Drowned mariner / On the birth of her sister Margaret / America / Flaxman / Instrumental music / Dream / Ellen learning to walk / Dancing girl / Ah! Woman still / Other world / Imitation of Sappho / Harold the valiant / Battle hymn of the republic / My last dance / Woman / Burial of Schlesinger / Sea-side cave / To solitude / Voice of the flowers / Dead child / Nearer home / Advice gratis to certain women / Plant a tree / Strip of blue /


38
book jacket
Essential pleasures : a new anthology of poems to read aloud / edited by Robert Pinsky.

xx, 508 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9780393066081
To my dear and loving husband / Of money / His excuse for loving / My picture left in Scotland / Tichborne's elegy / Song (When I am dead, my dearest) / Jubilate agno (My cat Jeoffry) / Eros turannos / Wild nights--wild nights-- The poets light but lamps-- The soul selects her own society-- Epitaph on Sir Philip Sidney / Bethsabe's song / Ode to a nightingale / To autumn / Methought I saw my late espousèd saint / A married state / My true love hath my heart and I have his / Now winter nights enlarge / Song of myself Epitaph on the Earl of Leicester / On seeing a hair of Lucretia Borgia / Epitaph on a hare /


40
book jacket
The American sign language phrase book / Lou Fant and Barbara Bernstein Fant ; illustrations by Bett
Fant, Louie J.
xv, 384 p. :
ISBN/ISSN: 0071497137


42
Chorales.
Bach, Johann Sebastian,
xvi pages 1 leaf, 165 pages
ISBN/ISSN:

43
500 songs that made the all-time hit parade.
Engel, Lyle Kenyon.
264 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN:

44
book jacket
Light Rises : An utterly emotional, page-turning WW2 historical novel [electronic resource] / Rachel
Wesson, Rachel,
1 online resource (1 audio file (10hr., 49 min.)) :
ISBN/ISSN: 9781805081302

45
book jacket
Queer nature : a poetry anthology / edited by Michael Walsh.

xviii, 375 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9781637680384 (pbk.)
Wilderness of Flesh / What Use Is Knowing Anything If No One Is Around / The River's Address / Taking a Visitor to See the Ruins / A Vegetarian Goes to H Mart / Enskyment / Encountering the Medusa / Atrophied Prescript: / Asleep You Become a Continent / Farmer's Almanac / Godzilla's Lament / Late Echo / We're Standing on the Sun / Let me be a lamb in a world that wants my lion / The Little Girl Is Busy Asking Questions about Desire / Inventory / The Dyke with No Name Thinks about Landscape / Ground State / Kissing after Illness / Prairie Dogs / Poet Wrestling with Why the Heart Feels So Bad / Outing, Iowa / Pastoral for Effective Teaching / Creatures of Hurt and Heal / Song for the Rainy Season / Break Me To Prove I Am Unbroken / Burning in the Rain / Swimming Hole / Regarding the Absent Heat of Your Skin on Letters I Receive While at Sea / Unruly / in the cut / Fast / Lion / Self- Portrait as Land Snail / Hurricane Lyric / Home / Hermit Crab / For the Feral Splendor That Remains / Who Holds the Stag's Head Gets to Speak / What I Would Give / On Harvesting Oneself / The Hummingbird / Drown / Lesson of Bread / Post Op / XXIV. / Elegy to Be Exhaled at Dusk / Dear O / Magnified / Wildlife / Desire as Blue Fog / Twin Cities / [this the forest] / The Rock / Welcome to the Fall / (An Orchid) / To a Straight Man / Voyages / First Date, Hawk Mountain / Youth Sings a Song of Rosebud / Once All the Hounds Had Been Called Home / The Art of Butterflying / These Hands, If Not Gods / Archaeopteryx / Could I but ride indefinite / Wood and Rain / The Basilisk / Deep Lane / Going Home / Conception Myth / Sonnet / Often I Am Permitted to Return to a Meadow / Pervert / Settling In / Sex / once a marine biologist told me octopuses have three hearts / Ode to the Corpse Flower / In Transit / Sunflower Sutra / All at Sea / pedicles, or this is where / The Strangers Who Find Me in the Woods / You Form / A Migration / Heaven and Earth / A Kingdom of Longing / Not Children / Words for Some Ash / Queerodactyl / The Sheltered Garden / Untitled / The Valley of the Amazons / The Kiss / Bottle Gentian / Shadows, Saddle Canyon / Grafted / Idyll / Demand / Tenor / Elementary Departures / Primer / A Stranger Asks Where I Am From / Mesquites / Late Bloom / To a Strayed Cat / Golden Egg / Drag / Letter to the Local Police / purple / Love Poem: Chimera / Young Male / Conservation & Rehabilitation / Sweet Briar / A Little Bit of Ocean / Perianth / Breathing You In / Self- Portrait with Scoliosis (II) / A Southern Wind / Amphibians / Love Two Times / Thunder Cake / I Came / poem to my boyfriend's human immunodeficiency virus / Coal / Falling, Falling, Then Rain, Then Snow / Grotesque / Viscous / [Dear one, the sea . . . ] / Dove Season / The Way the World Comes Back / My Sideshow / Coming Out in the Ozarks / Know My Soul / Dear Canaries / América / For Two Lovers in the Year 2075 in the Canadian Woods / The Lovers / Sonnet IV / Eating a Mountain / Hemispheres / The Complete Tracker / Shared Plight / Real Curvature / Hawk like a Steeple / He Says, Oyster / [I always put my pussy] / For the Era of Extraordinary Weather / Changeling / To You / On Trans / Wild Geese / Three times on the trail, I looked back for you / Toward / Thrush / Radiance versus Ordinary Light / Nature Poem with a Compulsive Attraction to the Shark / Migration / Landscape with Lymphatic System, System of Rivulets, System of Rivers / Burning Water / Lost Season / Livestock / Backyard Rock / Gerard Manley Hopkins Drafts the Light / Head of the Gorgon / uncoil / Horses in Snow / Memory as Missionary Position / heart of the bell / Diving into the Wreck / Backflash: Hinge / Hero Worship / How a Thought Thinks / Fairy Tale / Await / Many Things Are True / Woman Circling Lake / Unbearable White / I'm Over the Moon / Geology of Water / Boy with Flowers / November 19, 2016 / Lovesong of the Square Root of Negative One / Love Letter to a Dead Body / What's Required / alternate names for black boys / Closing the Gay Bar outside Gas City / Queer Earth / The Joshua Tree / For Mac / Lifting Belly (II) / Tonawanda Swamps / Visiting the Natural History Museum with the Son I Don't Yet Have / The Exchange / Estuary / Little Errand / Field Song / The War with the Dandelions / Garden / the aftermath of what / Beast Meridian / Instructions for Opening up the Heart / Torso of Air / Butch Geography / A Natural History of Gay Love / The Third Measure Paused & Set to Your Breathing / El Beso / Iowa / Tail / Skin Movers / Parable / Juneberry / This Compost / A Poem for Trapped Things / blackbody / First Words / Root Sutra / Turing's Theories Regarding Homosexuality / The Trick / The Kiss / The Gods among Us / Flora and Fauna /


47
Youth


ISBN/ISSN:
Need Spirit in Christian work (article, Walla Walla Union, 1928) -- Christ Spirit is greatest need (article, Walla Walla, 1928) -- Resolutions passed at leaders' meeting (article, Lincoln State Journal, 1928) -- Problems of youth are considered by council (article, Walla Walla Union, 1928) -- My code for 1949: a call to youth to live life at its best / Religious convictions of Seventh-day Adventist personnel in the Armed Forces of the United States (publication, War Service Commission of the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, 1961) -- Red guards: China's mini-Mao revivalists / Youth: challenge to the church / Neglect of children as a cause of crime / Sabbath activity for dormitory students (report) The world and you / The U.S. campus mood, '71: a Newsweek poll (article, Newsweek, 1971) -- Urbana 70: students mobilize for Christ / Angels without wings / Letter from John H. Hancock to dear Brethren, undated, about the youth of the worldwide church -- Convictions & observations from the youth leadership study committee on theology (1972) Primitive culture or primitive Godliness? / The youth crisis / A new declaration of principles from the editors of Insight (article, Insight, 1974) -- What's troubling our youth? / Youth ministry accent (section divider) -- Can religion solve youth's problems (article) -- Can I be popular and be right? (article) -- Notes on attributes youth should aspire to -- Youth department evangelism articles (perhaps part of New Beginnings kit) -- Deal gently with Absalom / To dream again / Two young men came to church / An irresponsible, forgetful student / Hello, we're watching you / Patience with problem young people / Just for youth...Don't let life steal your joy / Our violent kids / See also referral notes -- Transfer sheets



50
The sacred harp / [compiled] by B.F. White and E.J. King ; including as a historical introduction, t

1 score (xxxii, 432 pages) ;
ISBN/ISSN:

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This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Library of Michigan.

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