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1
Twelve centuries of English poetry and prose / by Alphonso Gerald Newcomer, Alice E. Andrews ; revis
Newcomer, Alphonso G.
xviii, 941 pages, 4 unnumbered leaves of plates :
ISBN/ISSN:

2
book jacket
Art since 1900 : modernism, antimodernism, postmodernism / Hal Foster, Rosalind Krauss, Yve-alain Bo

2 volumes :
ISBN/ISSN: 0500289522

3
English poetry and prose of the romantic movement. Selected and edited with notes, bibliographies an
Woods, George Benjamin,
1432 pages
ISBN/ISSN:
Eighteenth century forerunners. The tree ; from The petition for an absolute retreat ; To the nightingale ; A nocturnal reverie / A fairy tale ; A night-piece on death ; A hymn to contentment / The highland laddie ; My Peggy ; Sweet William's ghost ; Through the wood laddie ; An thou were my ain thing ; from The gentle shepherd. Patie and Peggy / Preface to the evergreen / The braes of Yarrow / William and Margaret ; The Birks of Endermay / Grongar Hill ; The fleece. from Book I / The seasons. from Winter ; from Summer ; from Autumn ; A hymn on the seasons ; The castle of indolence, from Canto I ; Tell me, thou soul of her I love ; To Amanda ; Preface to winter /

4
Poetical works
Wordsworth, William,
xlii, 937 p.
ISBN/ISSN:

5
British literature / edited by Hazelton Spencer, Walter E. Houghton, Herbert Barrows.
Spencer, Hazelton,
2 v. :
ISBN/ISSN:
From Beowulf to Sheridan. Beowulf -- Deor ; A wife's lament ; Wanderer ; Seafarer ; The dream of the rood ; Brunanburg ; Maldon.



8
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. /


10
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


12
The Oxford book of Victorian verse / chosen by Arthur Quiller-Couch.

xv, 1023 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN:
Corinna, from Athens, to Tanagra ; The yacht ; Ianthe ; Her name ; The gifts return'd ; The maid's lament ; The dragon-fly ; To Miss Arundell ; Rose Aylmer ; On a child ; To his verse ; The kiss ; The wall-flower ; On the death of Southey ; On his own death ; His epitaph ; Finis / A wish / Plaint / To spring : on the banks of the Cam / The nun ; Jenny kiss'd me ; Abou Ben Adhem / Champagne rosée / Hermione ; For a fountain / Last lines / The right use of prayer / On his friend, Joseph Rodman Drake / Balaam ; November / Graves of infants ; Song ; Written in Northampton County asylum / Lines / The forest maid ; Thanatopsis / Song ; The phoenix ; Love's likeness ; The lyre ; On the death of a recluse ; Song / The sower's song / Song ; To a lofty beauty from her poor kinsman ; May, 1840 / Ode to the moon ; Fair Ines ; Time of roses ; The death-bed ; Ruth ; The bridge of sighs ; The song of the shirt / A Jacobite's epitaph / Elena's song ; Song ; Women singing / Conflict / Woodlands ; The oak-tree ; The old house ; The turnstile ; The wife a-lost ; Evening, and maidens ; The head-stone / Rest ; Chorus of the elements ; The vicar ; Mater desiderata / The mother ; Song / Eileen Aroon / Dark Rosaleen ; The fair hills of Eirk, O ; The Karamanian exile ; The three Khalandeers; Gone in the wind ; To Amine ; Advice against travel ; The world : a Ghazel ; The nameless one / Mariners' song ; Dirge ; Dream-pedlary ; Bridal song to Amala ; Wolfram's song / Absent yet present ; Nydia's song / The field-path / Wood-notes ; Fore-runners ; Days ; Give all to love ; Brahma / Ralph Waldo Emerson -- The plough ; Solitude and the life / The lamp / The first fathers ; The song of the western men ; Death song ; King Arthur's waes-hael / Wellington / Lament / The bells of Shandon / The true martyr / Farewells from paradise ; Cowper's grave ; Praise of earth ; Confessions ; The mask ; Grief ; Mystery ; A musical instrument ; Sonnets from the Portuguese ; Inclusions ; My Kate ; The best ; The North and the South /



15
book jacket
A new hymnal for colleges and schools [music] / edited by Jeffery Rowthorn and Russell Schulz-Widmar

1 condensed score (598 pages) ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0300051131

16
Hymnal of the Evangelical Church.

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

17
book jacket
Irish writing in the twentieth century : a reader / edited by David Pierce.

xliv, 1351 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 1859182585
from The revival of Irish literature. "The necessity of de-Anglicizing Ireland" / from Abhráin grádh chúige Connacht = Love songs of Connacht. "Dá d'téinnse siar" = "If I were to go west" / from The united Irishman. "Parnell" / from The Irish monthly. "The associations of scenery" / from From the land of St. Lawrence. "The orange lilies" / from Some experiences of an Irish R.M. "Lisheen races, second hand" / from Ideals in Ireland. "The battle of two civilizations" / from Ideals in Ireland. "The literary movement in Ireland" / from Imagination and reveries. "Nationality or cosmopolitanism" / from Workers' republic. "Physical force in Irish politics" / from Irish Literary Society gazette. Lecture by Mr. W.B. Yeats / from The ballad of Reading gaol /

18
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

19
book jacket
Memoirs of the late Captain Hugh Crow of Liverpool
Crow, Hugh,
xxiv, 198 pages :
ISBN/ISSN: 9781851243211

20
book jacket
Cyclopedia of literary places / second edition, Denise Lenchner, editor ; first edition, R. Kent Ras

3 volumes (xl, 1216 pages) ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9781619258846 (set)


22
book jacket
The sea mark : Captain John Smith's voyage to New England / Russell M. Lawson.
Lawson, Russell M.,
xviii, 228 pages :
ISBN/ISSN: 9781611685169 (cloth : alk. paper)

23
Verses from 1929 on.
Nash, Ogden,
xxxii, 522 pages
ISBN/ISSN:

24
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").


26
The hymnal, army and navy / edited by Ivan L. Bennett.

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

27
book jacket
The American tradition in literature.

2 volumes ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0075572044


29
The generall historie of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Isles / by John Smith.
Smith, John,
96, 105-248 pages, [12] leaves of plates :
ISBN/ISSN:

30
book jacket
American poetry : The twentieth century Volume two, E. E. Cummings to May Swenson.

1009 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN: 1883011787
"All in green went my love riding" "in Just-/spring when the world is mud-" "Tumbling-hair/picker of buttercups" "Humanity i love you" "O sweet spontaneous" "stinging/gold swarms" "between green/mountains" "Babylon slim/-ness of" "ta/ppin/g/toe" "Buffalo Bill's/defunct" "the Cambridge ladies who live in furnished souls" "god pity me whom(god distinctly has)" "Dick Mid's large bluish face without eyebrows" "Spring is like a perhaps hand" Poem, or Beauty Hurts Mr. Vinal "she being Brand" "on the Madam's best april the" Memorabilia "next to of course god america i" "lis/-ten//you know what i mean when" "my sweet old etcetera" "Among/these/red pieces of" "in spite of everything" "since feeling is first" "i sing of Olaf glad and big" "twi-/is -Light bird" "a clown's smirk in the skull of a baboon" "somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond" "r-p-o-p-h-e-s-s-a-g-r" "the boys i mean are not refined" "as freedom is a breakfastfood" "anyone lived in a pretty how town" "my father moved through dooms of love" "plato told" "pity this busy monster, manunkind" "a grin without a" Proud Riders Europa Test Paper From the Green Book of Yfan Mater Dolorosa Words of an Old Woman Hasbrouck and the Rose Bill Gets Burned "On Brooklyn Bridge I saw a man drop dead" "I met in a merchant's place" "The shopgirls leave their work" "How shall we mourn you who are killed and wasted" "My work done, I lean on the window-sill" "In the shop, she, her mother, and grandmother" Idiot "She who worked patiently" Epidemic "Her work was to count linings--" "The house-wreckers have left the door and a staircase" Aphrodite Vrania April "Out of the hills the trees bulge" "How difficult for me is Hebrew" "I have learnt the Hebrew blessing before eating bread" "After I had worked all day at what I earn my living" "The Hebrew of your poets, Zion" "Though our thoughts often, we ourselves" "Among the heaps of brick and plaster lies" Epitaphs Millinery District ["The clouds ..."] "A dead gull in the road" "I like this secret walking" Rainy Season "Of course, we must die" My grandfather, dead long before I was born" "A grove of small trees, branches thick with berries" Millinery District ["Many fair hours ..."] Similes Epitaph Free Verse from Early History of a Writer Empty Bed Blues Everyday Alchemy Thirst To One Loved Wholly Within Wisdom To Mr. Maunder Maunder, Professional Poet To the Powers of Desolation To the Natural World: at 37 Try Tropic All Around the Town Bounding Line Hymn to Yellow Weed Fructus Reapers Cotton Song Georgia Dusk Nullo Evening Song Portrait in Georgia Seventh Street Storm Ending Her Lips Are Copper Wire Gum Gods Are Here This Amber Sunstream Axle Song Near House Midland So Simple Where I Saw the Snake First Poem Lamentations Winter Nocturne: Thea Hospital "To an Amiable Child" Creatures in the Zoo A Purplexicon of Dissynthegrations Ol' Man River Little Girl Blue Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered Dead Man's Corner Epitaphs A House of the Eighties Omelet of A. MacLeish Newsreel LIII Waltz Against the Mountains Something Starting Over Noon I Can't Get Started They All Laughed Elegy for Melusine from the Intensive Care Ward Red-Headed Intern, Taking Notes Scene: A Bedside in the Witches' Kitchen Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? Insects A History of the Caesars Medusa Knowledge Women Alchemist My Voice Not Being Proud Men Loved Wholly Beyond Wisdom Sub Contra Cassandra Winter Swan Dark Summer Late Song Short Summary Roman Fountain Evening-Star Baroque Comment Kept Heard by a Girl Several Voices Out of a Cloud Musician Zone Night Morning Dragonfly Sermon Serenade Kiss Almost a God Long Distance Moan from Elegy in the Manner of a Requiem in Memory of D. H. Lawrence Waiter History of Education Slow Curtain Why Must You Know? Would You Think? Fish Food: An Obituary to Hart Crane Come Over and Help Us Anathema. Maranatha! In the Bathtub, to Mnemosyne Esprit d'Escalier Cross Questions from John Brown's Body American Names Cotton Mather Daniel Boone Metropolitan Nightmare Winter Tenement Ernest Vision Photoheliograph from Chorus for Survival Cage of Voices from Libretto for the Republic of Liberia from Harlem Gallery April Mortality Ghostly Tree Rounds and Garlands Done Moon and Spectator Fragmentary Stars Horn Figurehead Grapes Making Chaplinesque For the Marriage of Faustus and Helen Voyages Repose of Rivers Wine Menagerie At Melville's Tomb Bridge O Carib Isle! Broken Tower Take My Hand, Precious Lord Dumb Moment Fern Song Frog Song True Western Summer from The Indians in the Woods Girl Help Reader Winter Garden Helen Grown Old For the Father of Sandro Gulotta Ancient Ones: Betatakin Garden Note I, Los Altos Garden Note II, March from The Wild Party from Lolita On Translating "Eugene Onegin" Santo Domingo Corn Dance Mr. Pope Ode to the Confederate Dead Twelve Last Days of Alice Wolves Aeneas at Washington Ivory Tower Mediterranean Sonnets at Christmas Swimmers February Ground Walt Whitman Two Songs of Advent Magpie's Shadow Solitude of Glass October Vacant Lot Cold Nocturne Barnyard Wild Sunflower Realization Apollo and Daphne Fable Fall of Leaves Slow Pacific Swell To a Young Writer By the Road to the Sunnyvale Air-Base Elegy on a Young Airedale Bitch Lost Two Years Since in the Salt-Marsh On Teaching the Young Time and the Garden In Praise of California Wines To the Moon Long Gone Scotty Has His Say Sister Lou Southern Road Memphis Blues Ma Rainey Slim in Atlanta Children's Children Chillen Get Shoes Sporting Beasley Cabaret Old Lem A Broken View Onion Fields Earthworm Slow By Night Curse While I Slept Sound I Listened For As Easily As Trees Waxwings Pitcher Cypresses Swimmer Farm Boy After Summer Museum Vase Ordovician Fossil Algae Sounds

31
book jacket
Eyewitness to history / edited by John Carey.

xxxviii, 706 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0380729687

32
book jacket
Religion and its reformation in America, beginnings to 1730 : an anthology of primary sources / Mich

xii, 1117 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9781602583016

33
book jacket
Poems
Rossetti, Christina Georgina,
3 volumes :
ISBN/ISSN: 0807103586

34
book jacket
The Norton anthology of African American literature / Henry Louis Gates, Jr., general editor, Nellie

xliv, 2665 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0393040011
Were you there when they crucified my Lord? ; City called heaven ; God's a-gonna trouble the water ; Walk together children ; I know moon-rise ; I'm a-rollin' ; I been rebuked and I been scorned ; Didn't my Lord deliver Daniel? ; Soon I will be done ; No more auction block ; Swing low, sweet chariot ; Steal away to Jesus ; Go down, Moses ; Been in the storm so long ; Oh, freedom! -- This little light of mine ; Down by the riverside ; Freedom in the air ; Take my hand, precious Lord ; Peace be still ; Stand by me -- Yellow dog blues ; St. Louis blues ; Beale Street blues ; Down-hearted blues ; See, see rider ; Prove it on me blues ; Gulf Coast blues ; Trouble in mind ; Backwater blues ; In the house blues ; How long blues ; Hellhound on my trail ; It's a low down dirty shame ; Good morning, blues ; Sent for you yesterday ; Going to Chicago blues ; Fine and mellow ; Hoochie coochie ; Sunnyland.

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
"Good news from New England" / by Edward Winslow ; edited by Kelly Wisecup.
Winslow, Edward,
viii, 180 pages :
ISBN/ISSN: 9781625340825 (hardcover : alk. paper)
Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Edward Winslow, Good News from New England (1624) -- Related Texts -- Captives and Emissaries -- From The Voyages of Giovanni da Verrazzano, 1524-1528 -- From James Rosier, A True Relation of the most prosperous voyage made this present year 1605, by Captain George Waymouth, in the discovery of the land of Virginia (1605) -- From Ferdinando Gorges, "A Description of New England," in America Painted to the Life… an absolute Narrative of the North parts of America, and of the Discoveries and Plantations of our English in Virginia, New-England, and Barbados (1659) -- From Phenehas Pratt, A Declaration Of The Affairs Of The English People That First Inhabited New England (1662) -- Disease and Disorder -- From John Smith, A Description of New England: Or The Observations, And discoveries, of Captain John Smith (Admiral of that Country) in the North of America (1616) -- From Ferdinando Gorges, "A Description or New England" (1659) -- From Ferdinando Gorges, A Brief Narration Or The Original Undertakings Of The Advancement Of Plantations Into the Parts of America (1658) -- From Thomas Dermer, "To his Worshipful Friend M. Samuel Purchas, Preacher of the Word, at the Church a Little within Ludgate, London" (1625) -- From Thomas Morton, Nat' English Canaan or New Canaan, Containing an Abstract of New England, Composed in three Books (1637) -- From Robert Cushman, A Sermon Preached at Plimoth in New England Written in the year 1621 (1622) -- Compromise and Conflict -- From William Bradford and Edward Winslow, A Relation Or fournal of the beginning and proceedings of the English Plantation settled at Plimoth in New England, by certain English adventurers both Merchants and others (1622) -- From William Bradford, History of the Plimoth Plantation Containing An Account of the Voyage of the 'Mayflower' Written by William Bradford (1896) -- Edward Winslow, "A Journey to Packanokick, The Habitation of the Great King Massasoyt. As also our Message, the Answer and Entertainment We Had of Him" (1622) -- Edward Winslow, A Letter Sent From New-England to a friend in these parts, setting forth a brief and true Declaration of the worth of that Plantation; As also certain useful Directions for such as intend a Voyage into those Parts" (1622) -- From Phenehas Pratt, A Declaration Of The Affairs Of The English People That First Inhabited New England (1662) -- John Robinson to William Bradford (1623) -- Bibliography -- Index

37
book jacket
The New Oxford Book of American Verse / Chosen and Edited by Richard Ellmann.

liv, 1076 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0195020588

38
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 --

39
book jacket
Historia ecclesiastica gentis Anglorum. English
Bede,
xxxi, 439 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9780486477381
Introduction Life of Bede Ecclesiastical History -- Preface. To the most glorious king Ceolwulf. Bede, the servant of Christ and Priest Book I -- Of the Situation of Britain and Ireland, and of their ancient inhabitants How Caius Julius Caesar was the first Roman that came into Britain How Claudius, the second of the Romans who came into Britain, brought the islands Orcades into subjection to the Roman empire; and Vespasian, sent by him, reduced the Isle of Wight under the dominion of the Romans How Lucius, king of Britain, writing to Pope Eleutherus, desired to be made a Christian How the Emperor Severus divided from the rest by a rampart that part of Britain which had been recovered Of the reign of Diocletian, and how he persecuted the Christians The Passion of St. Alban and his companions, who at that time shed their blood for our Lord How, when the persecution ceased, the Church in Britain enjoyed peace till the time of the Arian heresy How during the reign of Gratian, Maximus, being created Emperor in Britain, returned into Gaul with a mighty army How, in the reign of Arcadius, Pelagius, a Briton, insolently impugned the Grace of God How, during the reign of Honorius, Gratian and Constantine were created tyrants in Britain; and soon after the former was slain in Britain, and the latter in Gaul How the Britons, being ravaged by the Scots and Picts, sought succour from the Romans, who coming a second time, built a wall across the island; but when this was broken down at once by the aforesaid enemies, they were reduced to greater distress than before How in the reign of Theodosius the younger, in whose time Palladius was sent to the Scots that believed in Christ, the Britons begging assistance of Aetius, the consul, could not obtain it. [446 a.d.] How the Britons, compelled by the great famine, drove the barbarians out of their territories; and soon after there ensued, along with abundance of corn, decay of morals, pestilence, and the downfall of the nation How the Angles, being invited into Britain, at first drove off the enemy; but not long after, making a league with them, turned their weapons against their allies How the Britons obtained their first victory over the Angles, under the command of Arnbrosius, a Roman How Germanus the Bishop, sailing into Britain with Lupus, first quelled the tempest of the sea, and afterwards that of the Pelagians, by Divine power. [429 a.d.] How the same holy man gave sight to the blind daughter of a tribune, and then coming to St. Aiban, there received of his relics, and left other relics of the blessed Apostles and other martyrs. [429 a.d.] How the same holy man, being detained there by sickness, by his prayers quenched a fire that had broken out among the houses, and was himself cured of his infirmity by a vision. [429 a.d.] How the same Bishops brought help from Heaven to the Britons in a battle, and then returned home. [430 a.d.] How, when the Pelagian heresy began to spring up afresh, Germanus, returning to Britain with Severus, first restored bodily strength to a lame youth, then spiritual health to the people of God, having condemned or converted the heretics. [447 a.d.] How the Britons, being for a time at rest from foreign invasions, wore themselves out by civil wars, and at the same time gave themselves up to more heinous crimes How the holy Pope Gregory sent Augustine, with other monks, to preach to the English nation, and encouraged them by a letter of exhortation, not to desist from their labour. [596 a.d.] How he wrote to the bishop of Aries to entertain them. [596 a.d.] How Augustine, coming into Britain, first preached in the Isle of Thanet to the King of Kent, and having obtained licence from him, went into Kent, in order to preach therein. [597 a.d.] How St. Augustine in Kent followed the doctrine and manner of life of the primitive Church, and settled his episcopal see in the royal city. [597 a.d.] How St. Augustine, being made a bishop, sent to acquaint Pope Gregory with what had been done in Britain, and asked and received replies, of which he stood in need. [597-601 a.d.] How Pope Gregory wrote to the bishop of Aries to help Augustine in the work of God. [601 a.d.] How the same Pope sent to Augustine the Pall and a letter, along with several ministers of the word. [601 a.d.] A copy of the letter which Pope Gregory sent to the Abbot Mellitus, then going into Britain. [601 a.d.] How Pope Gregory, by letter, exhorted Augustine not to glory in his miracles. [601 a.d.] How Pope Gregory sent letters and gifts to King Ethelbert. [601 a.d.] How Augustine repaired the church of our Saviour, and built the monastery of the blessed Peter the Apostle; and concerning Peter the first abbot of the same How Ethelfrid, king of the Northumbrians, having vanquished the nations of the Scots, expelled them from the territories of the English. [603 a.d.] Book II -- Of the death of the blessed Pope Gregory. [604 a.d.] How Augustine admonished the bishops of the Britons on behalf of Catholic peace, and to that end wrought a heavenly miracle in their presence; and of the vengeance that pursued them for their contempt. [Circ. 603 a.d.] How St. Augustine made Mellitus and Justus bishops; and of his death. [604 a.d.] How Laurentius and his bishops admonished the Scots to observe the unity of the Holy Church, particularly in the keeping of Easter; and how Mellitus went to Rome How, after the death of the kings Ethelbert and Sabert, their successors restored idolatry; for which reason, both Mellitus and Justus departed out of Britain. [616 a.d.] How Laurentius, being reproved by the Apostle Peter, converted King Eadbald to Christ; and how the king soon recalled Mellitus and Justus to preach the Word. [617-618 a.d.] How Bishop Mellitus by prayer quenched a fire in his city. [619 a.d.] How Pope Boniface sent the Pall and a letter to Justus, successor to Mellitus. [624 a.d.] Of the reign of King Edwin, and how Paulinus, coming to preach the Gospel, first converted his daughter and others to the mysteries of the faith of Christ. [625-626 a.d.] How Pope Boniface, by letter, exhorted the same king to embrace the faith. [Circ. 625 a.d.] How Pope Boniface advised the king's consort to use her best endeavours for his salvation. [Circ. 625 a.d.]

40
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

41
book jacket
The complete poems of Thomas Hardy / edited by James Gibson.
Hardy, Thomas,
xxxvi, 1002 pages :
ISBN/ISSN: 0025481509
Wessex poems and other verses; Preface; The temporary the all; Amabel; Hap; In vision I roamed; At a bridal; Postponement; A confession to a friend in trouble; Neutral tones; She at his funeral; Her initials; Her dilemma; Revulsion; She, to him; Ditty; The sergeant's song; Valenciennes; San Sebastian; The stranger's song; The Burghers; Leipzig; The peasant's confession; The alarm; Her death and after; The dance at the phoenix; The Casterbridge captains; A sign-seeker; My Cicely; Her immortality; The ivy-wife; A meeting with despair; Unknowing; Friends beyond; To outer nature; Thoughts of Phena; Middle age enthusiasms; In a wood; To a lady; To a motherless child; Nature's questioning; The impercipient; At an inn; The slow nature; In a Eweleazre near Weatherbury; The bride-night fire; Heiress and architect; The two men; Lines; I look into my glass; Poems of the past and present; Preface; V.R. 1819-1901; War poems; Embarcation; Departure; The colonel's soliloquy; The going of the battery; At the war office, London; A Christmas ghost-story; Drummer Hodge; A wife in London; The souls of the slain; Song of the soldiers' wives and sweethearts; The sick battle-god; Poems of pilgrimage; Genoa and the Mediterranean; Shelley's skylark; In the old theatre, Fiesole; Rome; on the palatine; Building a new street in the ancient quarter; The Vatican: Sala delle Muse; At the pyramid of Cestius near the graves of Shelley and Keats; Lausanne: in Gibbon's old garden 11-12 pm; Zermatt: to the matterhorn; The bridge of Lodi; On an invitation to the United States; Miscellaneous poems; The mother mourns; I said to love; A commonplace day; At a lunar eclipse; The lacking sense; To life; Doom and she; The problem; The subalterns; The sleep-worker; The bullfinches; God-forgotten; The bedridden peasant; By the earth's corpse; Mute opinion; To an unborn pauper child; To flowers from Italy in winter; On a fine morning; To Lizbie Browne; Song of hope; The well-beloved; Her reproach; The inconsistent; A broken appointment; Between us now; How great my grief; I need not go; The coquette and after; A spot; Long plighted; The widow betrothed; At a hasty wedding; The dream follower; His immortality; The to-be-forgotten; Wives in the Sere; The superseded; An August midnight; The caged thrush freed and home again; Birds at winter nightfall; The puzzled game birds; Winter in Durnover field;

42
book jacket
Reading the American past : selected historical documents / [edited by] Michael P. Johnson.

2 v. ;
ISBN/ISSN: 9780312564131 (pbk. : v. 1)



45
The questing spirit : religion in the literature of our time / selected and edited by Halford E. Luc

717 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN:
Amos comes to Bethel / A shepherd / Simon who was called Peter / Come, follow me / They cast lots for his robe / On the road to Damascus / St. Peter's difficulty / from The lost word / A Christmas mystery / The stranger / The saint and the goblin / Music on the Muskatatuck / The pragmatist / The Lord's day in the nineties / The man with the good face / Mr. Andrews / The debt / The shadow of a green olive tree / The materialist / The truth / John the six / Child of God / The lesson / Father Sebastian / Answer to prayer / The little candle / The tenth Jew / D-Day in church / Leaning on the everlasting arms /


47
book jacket
Eyewitness to history / edited by John Carey.

xxxviii, 706 pages ;
ISBN/ISSN: 0674287509

48
book jacket
American antislavery writings : colonial beginnings to emancipation / James G. Basker, editor.

xli, 963 pages :
ISBN/ISSN: 9781598531961

49
book jacket
William Shakespeare : a documentary volume / edited by Catherine Loomis.

xxxvi, 390 pages :
ISBN/ISSN: 0787660078
Short Titles of Works Cited in this Volume -- Baptism through the "Lost Years": 1564-1591 -- 1564 -- William Shakespeare's Birth and Name. Box: A Note on Dates during Shakespeare's Life; Facsimile: Shakespeare's Baptismal Record -- 1566 -- Gilbert Shakespeare's Baptismal Record -- 1569 -- Joan Shakespeare's Baptismal Record -- The Queen's Players and the Earl of Worcester's Players; Visit Stratford-upon-Avon -- 1571 -- Anne Shakespeare's Baptismal Record -- 1573 -- Visit of the Earl of Leicester's Players -- 1574 -- Richard Shakespeare's Baptismal Record. Box: Money in the Elizabethan and Jacobean Eras -- 1576 -- Visit of the Earl of Worcester's Players -- 1578 -- Visit of the Earl of Worcester's Players -- 1579 -- Anne Shakespeare's Burial Record -- Visits of the Lord Strange's Players and the Countess of Essex's Players -- 1580 -- Inquest on the Body of Katherine Hamlett -- Edmund Shakespeare's Baptismal Record -- Visit of the Earl of Derby's Players. Box: An Age of Exploration and Colonization; Box: A Touring Company Performance -- 1581 -- The Will of Alexander Hoghton of Lea, Esquire -- Visits of the Earl of Worcester's Players and Lord Berkley's Players -- 1582 -- Visit of the Earl of Worcester's Players -- Records of Shakespeare's Marriage. Entry in Bishop Whitgift's Register naming Anne Whatley; Facsimile and transcription: Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway's Marriage License Bond; Box: Acting as a Profession -- 1583 -- Susanna Shakespeare. Facsimile: Susanna Shakespeare's Baptismal Record; Epitaph -- 1584 -- Visits of the Lord Berkley's Players and the Lord Chandos's Players -- 1585 -- Visits of the Earl of Oxford's Players, the Earl of Worcester's Players, and the Earl of Essex's Players -- Hamnet and Judith Shakespeare's Baptismal Record. Facsimile: Hamnet and Judith Shakespeare's Baptismal Record -- 1587 -- Visit of Unidentified Players -- 1588 -- Visits of the Queen's Players, the Earl of Essex's Players, the Earl of Leicester's Players, and an Unidentified Company. Box: On the Charms of Plays -- Record of John Shakespeare's Lawsuit against John Lambert in which William Shakespeare Is Named -- 1589 -- Allusion to an ur-Hamlet in Nashe's Preface to Green's Menaphon -- The Elizabethan Years: 1592-March 1603 -- 1592 -- Henslowe Records Performances of a Play about King Henry VI -- John Shakespeare Cited for Failing to Attend Church -- Allusion to Shakespeare in Greene's Groats-worth of Witte. Box: Signature Designations -- Possible Allusion to 1 Henry VI in Nashe's Pierce Penilesse. Box: Shakespeare's Work on Sir Thomas More -- 1593 -- Possible Allusion to Shakespeare in Chettle's Kind-Harts Dreame -- Henslowe Records Performances of a Play about Henry VI -- Shakespeare's First Publication. Stationers' Entry for Venus and Adonis; Fascimile: Title page for Venus and Adonis; Box: Quartos and Folios; Box: The Stationers' Company -- The Dedication of Venus and Adonis to the Earl of Southampton -- Stonley Buys a Copy of Venus and Adonis -- Reynolds Interprets Venus and Adonis -- 1594 -- Henslowe Records Performances of Titus Andronicus and Other Plays -- Stationers' Register Entries. Entries for Titus Andronicus, The First Part of the Contention betwixt the two famous Houses of Yorke and Lancaster, The Taming of a Shrew, The Rape of Lucrece, and Venus and Adonis -- Publications. Transcribed title page for Venus and Adonis; Facsimile: Title page for The Rape of Lucrece; Facsimile: Title page for Titus Andronicus; Facsimile: Title page for The First Part of the Contention betwixt the two famous Houses of Yorke and Lancaster -- The Dedication of The Rape of Lucrece to the Earl of Southampton -- Shakespeare's Company Paid for a Court Performance -- Probable Allusion to Titus Andronicus in A Knacke to know a Knave -- Possible Allusion to The Rape of Lucrece in Drayton's Matilda -- Allusion to The Rape of Lucrece in Har.'s Epicedium -- Allusion to W.S. and The Rape of Lucrece in Willobie His Avisa. Box: On Printing Plays; Box: The Reliability of Shakespeare's Texts -- Account of an Attempted Performance of The Comedy of Errors in Gesta Grayorum.


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