Box 1
Contains 52 Results:
Vale, Eugene, 1959 November 11
"An address on the occasion of presenting the manuscript of The Thirteenth Apostle to the American Literature Collection, University of Southern California Library." Typescript with corrections. Includes introduction by Lewis Stieg, University Librarian. 12 leaves.
Van Dyke, Henry, 1918 July 9
Handwritten manuscript titled, "After Death, What?" 1 leaf.
Van Dyke, Henry, undated
Handwritten poem, "Day and Night," signed by the author. 1 leaf.
Van Dyke, Henry, 1895
"The Song of the Sparrows." Handwritten manuscript signed by the author. 3 leaves.
Van Dyke, Henry, 1918 January 9
"Wit, Humor, and Cheerfulness." Typescript signed by the author. 1 leaf.
Weismiller, Edward R., 1937 August 5
"Wilderness." Typed poem; date added in ink. 1 leaf.
Wells, Carolyn, undated
Two handwritten, signed manuscripts: "Word Square" and "Buried Square Word." 2 leaves.
Southey, Robert, 1808
The manuscripts in the General Literary Manuscripts collection represent a wide variety of American and English writers, as well as a range of written materials. Some items of note include a signed bank check from James Fenimore Cooper to "Daughters," some hand-written receipts with sealing wax of Sir Robert Howard dated 1677, several manuscripts by Christopher Darlington Morley, and an original 1940s radio script by Damon Runyon called, "That Ever-Loving Wife of Hymie's."
Farmer, J.S., 1915
The manuscripts in the General Literary Manuscripts collection represent a wide variety of American and English writers, as well as a range of written materials. Some items of note include a signed bank check from James Fenimore Cooper to "Daughters," some hand-written receipts with sealing wax of Sir Robert Howard dated 1677, several manuscripts by Christopher Darlington Morley, and an original 1940s radio script by Damon Runyon called, "That Ever-Loving Wife of Hymie's."
Coppee, Francois, undated
The manuscripts in the General Literary Manuscripts collection represent a wide variety of American and English writers, as well as a range of written materials. Some items of note include a signed bank check from James Fenimore Cooper to "Daughters," some hand-written receipts with sealing wax of Sir Robert Howard dated 1677, several manuscripts by Christopher Darlington Morley, and an original 1940s radio script by Damon Runyon called, "That Ever-Loving Wife of Hymie's."