3 page manuscript of verse entitled: "Written for the celebration of the 4th of July 1836 at Plymouth, Mississippi." First stanza begins: "The hour has come, when Texians brave – Must choose bright glory, or the Grave;" Accompanying note explains "Ralston most likely went with Quitman to fight for Texas independence." ; https://digitalcommons.wofford.edu/littlejohnmss/1009/thumbnail.jpg
Imprint from colophon. ; Signed at end: Di Francesco Tognetti. ; Beccaria, Cesare. Discours de mr. le marquis Cesar Beccaria Bonesana, noble patricien Milanais, professeur royal de la chaire nouvellement établie par order de s.m. imperialse, pour le commerce & l'administration publique. A Lausanne : Chez Franç. Grasset & Comp., 1749. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Bibliothèque des Fontaine, ; Burns Library copy: bound together subsequent to publication.
1840-41 printed for the Percy society by C. Richards; 1842-52 printed for the Percy society by T. Richards. ; v. 29. Notices of fugitive tracts, and chap-books . By J. O. Halliwell. The man in the moone. A manifest detection of the most vyle and detestable use of dice play. [By Gilbert Walker] The loyal garland: a collection of songs of the seventeenth century. Poems and songs relating to George Villiers, duke of Buckingham; and his assassination by John Felton, August 23, 1628. Ed. . by F. W. Fairholt. -- v. 30. The garland of good-will by Thomas Deloney. Brittannia's pastorals: a third book. [By William Browne] The enterlude of John Bon & Mast Person. [By Luke Shepherd] -- v. 31. Pleasant quippes for upstart newfangled gentlewomen, by Stephen Gosson. ; v. 19. The civic garland . Ed. . by F. W. Fairholt. The life and martyrdom of Thomas Beket . from the series of lives and legends now proved to have been composed by Robert of Gloucester. -- v. 20. The affectionate shepherd: by Richard Barnfield. A dialogue on wit and folly, by John Heywood. A collection of proverbs and popular sayings relating to the seasons, the weather, and agricultural pursuits . By M. A. Denham. The most pleasant song of Lady Bessy. [By Humphrey Brereton] -- v. 21. Popular songs, illustrative of the French invasions of Ireland . Ed. by T. C. Croker. -- v. 22. The cytezen and uplondyshman . By Alexander Barclay. The interlude of the four elements. The interlude of the disobedient child, by Thomas Ingelend. Autobiography of Mary countess of Warwick. Westward for smelts. -- v. 23. Songs and carols . of the fifteenth century. Ed. by T. Wright. Festive songs, principally of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries; with an introduction by W. Sandys. Descriptive notices of popular English histories. By J. O. Halliwell. -- v. 24-26. The Canterbury tales of Geoffrey Chaucer. -- v. 27. Believe as you list . By Philip Massinger. Satirical songs and poems on costume: from the 13th to the 19th century. Ed. by F. W. Fairholt. -- v. 28. An Anglo-Saxon passion of St. George. [By Aelfric] A poem on the times of Edward II. The religious poems of William de Shoreham. The interlude of the trail of treasure. ; v. 11. The owl and the nightingale. Thirteen psalms and the first chapter of Ecclesiastes, translated into English verse by John Croke. An historiall expostulation: against the beastlye abusers, both of chyrurgerie and physyke, in oure tyme . by John Halle. The honestie of this age . By Barnaby Rich. -- v. 12. The history of Reynard the fox, from the edition printed by Caxton in 1481. -- v. 13. The keen of the south of Ireland . Collected and ed. . by T. C. Croker. Six ballads, with burdens, from ms. no. CLXVIII in the library of the Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. Ed. by J. Goodwin. Lyrical poems, selected from musical publications between the years 1589 and 1600. Ed. by J. P. Collier. -- v. 14. The poems of John Audelay. St. Brandan: a medieval legend of the sea. The romance of the Emperor Octavian. -- v. 15. Friar Bakon's prophesie . [By William Terilo, pseud.] Poetical miscellanies from a manuscript collection of the time of James I. Ed. by J. O. Halliwell. The crown garland of golden roses . By Richard Johnson. Pt. 2. -- v. 16. The seven sages. The romance of Syr Tryamoure. -- v. 17. Scottish traditional versions of ancient ballads. Ed. by J. H. Dixon. Ancient poems, ballads, and songs of the peasantry of England . Collected and ed. by J. H. Dixon. -- v. 18. The pastime of pleasure . By Stephen Hawes. ; v. 5. Kind-heart's dream . By Henry Chettle. A knight's conjuring . By Thomas Dekker. The meeting of gallants at an ordinarie . Ed. by J. O. Halliwell. The two angry women of Abington, by Henry Porter. -- v. 6. Ancient poetical tracts of the sixteenth century . Ed. by E. F. Rimbault. Cock Lorell's bote . Ed. by E. F. Rimbault. The crown garland of roses. By Richard Johnson. Pt. 1. Follie's anatomie . By Henry Hutton. Poems by Sir Henry Wotton. -- v. 7. The harmony of birds. A paraphrase on the seven penitential Psalms, in English verse. Supposed to have been written by Thomas Brampton. The harmony of the church by Michael Drayton. Jack of Dover, his quest of inquirie. A Kerry pastoral in imitation of the first eclogue of Virgil. [By Murroghoh O'Connor, pseud.] -- v. 8. A selection of Latin stories, from manuscripts of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Ed. by T. Wright. A dialogue concerning witches & witchcrafts, by George Gifford. -- v. 9. The four knaves . by Samuel Rowlands. A poem to the memory of William Congreve, by James Thomson. The pleasant conceits of old Hobson, the merry Londoner. [By Richard Johnson] Maroccus extaticus: or, Bankes' bay horse in a trance. Old ballads illustrating the great frost of 1683-4 and the fair on the river Thames. Collected and ed. by E. F. Rimbault. -- v. 10. Lord mayor's pageants . By F. W. Fairholt. ; v. 1. Old ballads, from early printed copies of the utmost rarity. Ed. by J. P. Collier. A collection of songs and ballads relative to the London prentices and trades; and to the affairs of London generally. Ed. . by C. Mackay. The historical songs of Ireland: illustrative of the revolutionary struggle between James II and William III. Ed. . by T. C. Croker. The pain and sorrow of evil marriage. The king and a poor northern man; or, Too good to be true. By Martin Parker. -- v. 2. A selection from the minor poems of Dan John Lydgate. The early naval ballads of England. Collected and ed. by J. O. Halliwell. A search for money; or, The lamentable complaint for the loss of the wandering knight, Monsieur l'Argent. By William Rowley. The mad pranks and merry jests of Robin Goodfellow. -- v. 3. Political ballads published in England during the commonwealth. Ed. by T. Wright. Strange histories: consisting of ballads and other poems principally by Thomas Deloney. A marriage triumph, on the nuptials of the Prince Palatine, and the Princess Elizabeth, daughter of James I. By Thomas Heywood. The history of patient Grisel. -- v. 4. Specimens of lyric poetry, composed in England in the reign of Edward the First. Ed. by T. Wright. The boke of curtasye . Ed. by J. O. Halliwell. Specimens of old Christmas carols . [Ed. by T. Wright] The nursery rhymes of England, collected principally from oral tradition. Ed. by J. O. Halliwell. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Verses from Horace printed at foot of each page. ; First edition? One of three editions printed in the same year. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Clark Lib. copy has signatures: 1 leaf unsigned, B-F⁴, G³.
No more published? ; 1. Die Poetik / übersetzt von Christian Walz (2. Aufl., besorgt von Karl Zell). Die Politik / übersetzt von C.F. Schnitzer ; Mode of access: Internet.
Title in black and red. ; Paged continuously; p. 600, 867, v. 2, incorrectly numbered 560, 877, respectively. ; Signatures: v. 1. 3 leaves unsigned, a-c , d , B-U , X , X* ; v. 2. 1 leaf unsigned, Y-Z , Aa-Tt , Uu (Y , cancel) ; Case ; ESTC ; Mode of access: Internet.
Title supplied. ; [1] Debraux, P.E. Villèle aux enfers.-- [2] Plagniol, E. Correspondence ministerielle. Première et deuxième lettre à . le comte de Villèle.-- [3] Barthélemy, A.M. La bacriade.-- [4] Beranger, P.J. de. Les souvenirs du peuple.-- [5] Barthélemy, A.M. La corbiéreide.-- [6] Corbière, E. Corbière à Corbière.-- [7] Méry, J. Peyronneide. ; Mode of access: Internet.
Caption to p. [2]: El Chiton parte primera. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; BEIN Peruvian Pamphlets 160: No. 1 of 26 works bound together, with spine title: Coleccion de Folletos (rebound: previous spine title included: Variedades 8.). From the library of Hiram Bingham. Individual items stamped: "Bought of F. Perez de Velasco October 1912" and "The South American Exploration Fund Yale University."
Pt. 1. Sofocle. Edipo re tragedia.--Pt. 2. Omero, Inno a Cerere Tirteo, Cantici militari I-III. Calino, Cantico militare. Erinna, Ode alla fortezza. Anacreonte, Ode, il nido degli amori. Euripide, Andromaca dinanzi al simulacro di Tetide. Fanocle, Elegia su la morte d'Orfeo. Pindaro, Su L'eclissi del sole. Teocrito, Idillj Il Caprajo, L'epitalamio di Elena. Meleagro, Idillio su la primavera. Alessandro Etolio, Vaticinio di Apollo. Teeteto, Idillio su la primavera. ; Mode of access: Internet.
"The political songs of England, from the reign of John to that of Edward II by the same editor, appeared in 1839 as Camden society Publication no. VI. ; "Glossary and index of medieval Latin words", vol. II: p. [289]-297; "Of obsolete English words": p. [299]-341. ; Microform. ; Mode of access: Internet.
17 leaves, 32 cm. ; A collection of 16 'pasquinades', or, anonymous poetic lampoons posted publicly and compiled by Horacio Quinones, a journalist connected with the Mexico City periodical 'Buro de Investigación Política'. A number of the pieces make mention of the 'Yankee' occupation army, which would date their composition to the period immediately after the end of the Mexican-American War in 1848, while others appear to have been written and posted prior to and during the hostilities themselves. Although the forces of the United States and their aggressive motivations are satirized, the more savage criticism is reserved for Mexican politicians and generals, including Santa Anna, whose pomposity and vanity, as symbolized in the cult surrounding his artificial leg, receives particularly baroque mockery.