<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<ead xmlns="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="urn:isbn:1-931666-22-9 ead.xsd" relatedencoding="MARC21">
  <eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" id="a0" findaidstatus="edited-full-draft" audience="internal" repositoryencoding="iso15511" countryencoding="iso3166-1" scriptencoding="iso15924" dateencoding="iso8601">
    <eadid mainagencycode="US-txauhrh" countrycode="US" encodinganalog="852$a">urn:taro:utexas.hrc.00098</eadid>
    <filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper>Ogden Nash: </titleproper>
        <subtitle>An Inventory of His Collection at the Harry Ransom Humanities
        Research Center</subtitle>
        <author encodinganalog="245$c">Chelsea Dinsmore</author>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher encodinganalog="260$b">University of Texas at Austin</publisher>
        <date encodinganalog="260$c" calendar="gregorian" era="ce">1998</date>
      </publicationstmt>
    </filedesc>
    <profiledesc>
      <creation>Text converted and initial EAD tagging provided by Apex Data
      Services, 
      <date era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 2000.</date></creation>
      <langusage>Finding aid written in <language langcode="eng" scriptcode="Latn">English.</language></langusage>
    </profiledesc>
    <revisiondesc>
      <change>
        <date>Tue Jul 22 15:08:47 CDT 2003</date>
        <item>urn:taro:utexas.hrc.00098 converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02.xsl (20030505).</item>
      </change>
    </revisiondesc>
  </eadheader>
  <archdesc level="collection">
    <did id="a1">
      <head>Descriptive Summary</head>
      <origination label="Creator">
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="100">Nash, Ogden,
        1902-1971</persname>
      </origination>
      <unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" label="Title:">Ogden Nash Collection</unittitle>
      <unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" era="ce" calendar="gregorian" label="Dates:" normal="1882/1969">1882-1969</unitdate>
      
      <unitid label="Call Number: " countrycode="US" repositorycode="US-txauhrh" encodinganalog="099">Manuscript Collection MS-02989</unitid>
      <physdesc label="Extent" encodinganalog="300$a">
        <extent>12 boxes (4 linear feet), 1
      galley folder, 1 oversize folder</extent>
      </physdesc>
      <repository label="Repository:" encodinganalog="852$a">
        <extref xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" xlink:show="new" xlink:actuate="onRequest" xlink:href="http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/">
          <corpname><subarea>Harry Ransom Center, </subarea>The University of Texas at Austin </corpname>
        </extref>
      </repository>
      <abstract encodinganalog="520$a">This collecton contains manuscripts of
      poems, short stories, collections of verse and other writings, correspondence,
      and miscellany trace the writing career and personal life of Ogden
      Nash.</abstract>
      <langmaterial label="Language: " encodinganalog="546$a">
        <language langcode="eng" scriptcode="Latn">English.</language>
      </langmaterial>
    </did>
    <bioghist encodinganalog="545" id="a2">
      <head>Biographical Sketch</head>
      <p>Ogden Nash (1902-1971) was raised in Savannah, Georgia, and other East
      Coast cities. His father's import-export business made it necessary for the
      family to move frequently. After completing his secondary education at St.
      George's School in Newport, Rhode Island, Nash attended Harvard for one year
      (1920-21). Dropping out of college for financial reasons, Nash took various
      positions teaching, selling bonds, and writing streetcar advertisements. In
      1925, Nash took a position with Doubleday Page Publishers as an editor and a
      publicist, and published his first children's story, written with Joseph Alger,
      
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Cricket of Carador </title>(1925).</p>
      <p>Still working at Doubleday, Nash collaborated with Christopher Morley to
      publish the comical 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Born in a Beer Garden or, She Troupes to Conquer:
      Sunday Ejaculations by Christopher Morley, Cleon Throckmorton, Ogden Nash and
      Certain of the Hoboken Ads, with a Commentary by Earnest Elmo Calkins
      </title>(1930). Also in 1930, Nash published his first humorous poem 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Spring Comes to Murray Hill</title> in 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New Yorker.</title></p>
      <p>After the Murray Hill poem, Nash's work began to appear in other
      periodicals and he was able to publish a collection of verse in 1931 with
      immense success. 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Hard Lines </title>(1931) sold out seven printings
    in its first year and secured Nash in his role as a master of light and
    whimsical verse.</p>
      <p>In 1932 he left Doubleday to work on staff at 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New Yorker, </title>but he soon quit the job to
    devote himself full-time to his writing. He went on to publish more than two
    dozen volumes of verse, as well as screenplays (none successfully produced),
    lyrics and scripts for theater, children's stories and various essays. Some of
    his better known titles include 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Bad Parent's Garden of Verse </title>(1936), 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">I'm a Stranger Here Myself </title>(1938), 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Face Is Familiar: the Selected Verses of Ogden
      Nash </title>(1940), 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Parents Keep Out: Elderly Poems for Young Readers
      </title>(1951), 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Custard the Dragon </title>(1959), and 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Marriage Lines: Notes of a Student Husband
      </title>(1963). His Broadway play, 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">One Touch of Venus </title>(1943), written with Kurt
    Weill and S.J. Perelman was a smashing success.</p>
      <p>When he wasn't writing poems, Nash took time to appear on various radio
      game and comedy shows in the 1940s and to write scores for TV shows in the
      1950s. He also engaged in extensive lecture tours around the United States and
      England.</p>
      <p>In his personal life, he married Frances Rider Leonard in June of 1931
      and had two daughters, Linell Chenault (Mrs. J. Marshall Smith), and Isabel
      Jackson (Mrs. Frederick Eberstadt). His marriage and his children proved to be
      a strong influence on his work. He received honorary degrees from New England
      College (1967), Adelphi (1961), and Franklin and Marshall (1962) and was
      elected to membership in many societies, including the American Academy of Arts
      and Sciences (1965), American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers
      (1943), and the National Institute of Arts and Letters (1950).</p>
      <p>Ogden Nash continued to write, publish, tour, and lecture until very
      close to the end of his life on May 19, 1971.</p>
    </bioghist>
    <scopecontent id="a3" encodinganalog="520$b">
      <head>Scope and Contents</head>
      <p>Manuscripts of poems, short stories, collections of verse, and other
      writings, correspondence, and miscellany trace the writing career and personal
      life of Ogden Nash, 1882-1969 (bulk 1928-1969). The collection is organized
      into four series which are generally arranged alphabetically by author or
      title: I. Works, 1927-1969 (3.5 boxes), II. Letters, 1928-1969 (5.5 boxes),
      III. Recipient, 1928-1969 (1.5 boxes) and IV. Miscellaneous, 1882-1969 (1.5
      boxes). This collection was previously accessible through a card catalog, but
      has been re-cataloged as part of a retrospective conversion project.</p>
      <p>The Works series contains drafts of over 350 of Nash's poems and
      published collections, many of them holographs, as well as typed and copied
      versions with edits, printer's marks, and notes, arranged alphabetically by
      title. Unidentified and untitled poems are arranged alphabetically by first
      line. In addition, an untitled and unpublished novel, lyrics, scripts, and a
      few essays and speeches are scattered through the series. Specific manuscripts
      can be found using the Index of Works at the end of this finding aid.</p>
      <p>The Letters series consists almost entirely of 577 letters, telegrams,
      and flower cards from Nash to his wife, Frances Leonard Nash. Additionally,
      there are letters to publishers, friends, and in-laws. The Recipient series is
      composed of letters and telegrams from friends, fans, editors, and publishers.
      These include Larry Adler, Spiro Agnew, Nicolas Bentley, Gelett Burgess, Curtis
      Brown, Ltd., Walt Disney, Corey Ford, Eugene McCarthy, Groucho Marx, Marianne
      Moore, Christopher Morley, staff at 
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New Yorker, </title>Charles G. Norris, J.B.
    Priestley, John Pudney, John Updike, E. B. White, and P.G. Wodehouse.
    Additional correspondents can be identified using the Index of Correspondents
    in this finding aid.</p>
      <p>The Miscellaneous series contains a wide variety of material ranging
      from honorary degrees awarded to Nash, a journal of publishing information for
      all of Nash's published poems, certificates of membership in various societies,
      wedding license and program, biographical essays about several of Nash's
      antecedents (Edmund Strudwick Nash, Gen. Francis Nash, Abner Nash, and
      Frederick Nash) as well as obituary notices for other family members. A series
      of letters from Edmund Strudwick Nash, Ogden's father, span 1882-1924. Also
      included in this series are galley proofs for E.B. White's collection of verses
      
    <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">The Fox of Peapack and other Poems,</title> letters
    from Frances L. Nash to her mother, and minutes from the Nassau and Suffolk
    County Deviled Ham and Lake Ronkonkoma Club meetings.</p>
      <p>Elsewhere in the Ransom Center is a large collection of newspaper
      clippings covering the publication and criticism of Nash's work (23 Vertical
      File folders and four Scrapbooks). Also, located in the Art Collection, are 84
      images. About two-thirds of these are sketches by Ogden Nash, along with his
      captions for them. The remaining images are interpretations of the drawings by
      an artist. In the Literary Files of the Photography Collection there are about
      90 photographs and negatives, spanning Nash's life. There are a few childhood
      pictures of Nash, several photos from Nash's time at St. George's School, and a
      number of family snapshots of Nash's wife and children. Also included are
      photos of Nash speaking, writing, and posing.</p>
    </scopecontent>
    <acqinfo id="a19" encodinganalog="541">
      <head>Acquisition</head>
      <p>Purchases and gifts, 1970-1991 (R5207, R5892, R6625, G2815, R12087,
        G8976)</p>
    </acqinfo>
    <accessrestrict id="a14" encodinganalog="506">
      <head>Access</head>
      <p>Open for research</p>
    </accessrestrict>
    <processinfo id="a20" encodinganalog="583">
      <head>Processed by</head>
      <p>Chelsea S. Jones, 1998</p>
    </processinfo>
    <controlaccess>
      <head>Index Terms</head>
      <controlaccess>
        <head>Correspondents</head>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Alder, Larry</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Agnew, Spiro T.
        1918-</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Bentley, Nicolas,
        1907-</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Burgess, Gelett,
        1866-1951</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Disney, Walt,
        1901-1966</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Duke, Vernon,
        1903-1969</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Ford, Corey
        Hitchcock,1902-1969</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Longwell, Daniel,
        1899-1969</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">McCarthy, Eugene J.,
        1916-</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Marx, Groucho,
        1891-1977</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Moore, Marianne,
        1887-1972</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Morley, Christopher,
        1890-1957</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Nash, Frances Leonard,
        1906-</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Norris, Charles Gilman,
        1881-1945</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Perelman, S.J. (Sidney
        Joseph), 1904-</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Priestley, J.B. (John
        Boynton), 1894-</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Pudney, John,
        1909-1977</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Updike, John</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">White, E.B. (Elwin Brooks),
        1899-</persname>
        <persname source="lcnaf" encodinganalog="700">Wodehouse, P.G. (Pelham
        Grenville), 1881-1975</persname>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <head>Organizations</head>
        <corpname encodinganalog="710" source="lcnaf">Curtis Brown
        Ltd.</corpname>
        <corpname encodinganalog="710" source="lcnaf">Little, Brown, and
        Company</corpname>
        <corpname encodinganalog="710" source="lcnaf">
          <emph render="italic">The
        New Yorker</emph>
        </corpname>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <head>Subjects</head>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">American poetry</subject>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Children's poetry</subject>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Humorous poetry</subject>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Nash Family</subject>
        <subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Poets, American--20th
        century</subject>
      </controlaccess>
      <controlaccess>
        <head>Document Types</head>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Cartoons</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Christmas cards</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Galley proofs</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Journal</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Love letters</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Photographs</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Postcards</genreform>
        <genreform encodinganalog="655" source="aat">Scripts</genreform>
      </controlaccess>
    </controlaccess>
    <bibliography id="a10">
      <head>Sources</head>
      <bibref xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" xlink:href=""><title xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Dictionary of Literary Biography -- Volume 11:
          American Humourists, 1800-1950, part 2, M-Z. </title>Stanley Trachtenberg, Ed.
        (Detroit: Gale Research Company, 1982).</bibref>
      <bibref xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" xlink:href="">For further information on Ogden Nash see:</bibref>
      <bibref xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" xlink:href=""><title xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Loving Letters from Ogden Nash, </title>A Family
        Album, Isabel Nash Eberstadt and Linell Nash Smith, (Boston: Little, Brown and
        Company, Inc., 1990).</bibref>
      <bibref xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" xlink:href=""><title xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Ogden Nash: A Descriptive Bibliography,
          </title>Crandell, George W., (New Jersey: The Scarecrow Press, Inc.,
        1990).</bibref>
      <bibref xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" xlink:href=""><title xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Ogden Nash Collection at the University of
          Texas: A Catalogue of the Correspondence, </title>Crandell, George W., Report
        (MA), The University of Texas at Austin, 1981.</bibref>
    </bibliography>
    <dsc type="in-depth" id="a23">
      <head>Ogden Nash Collection--Folder List</head>
      <c01 level="series" id="ser1">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Series I. Works, 
          <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1927-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">1</container>
            <container type="folder">1</container>
            <unittitle>Unidentified works, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1966-1967, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
            <physdesc>59pp</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">1</container>
            <container type="folder">2</container>
            <unittitle>Untitled novel about Mr. Parish, in cloth album, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1 Jan. 1927,</unitdate></unittitle>
            <physdesc>94pp</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <unittitle>Identified Works</unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">1</container>
              <container type="folder">3</container>
              <unittitle>A, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1969, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>70pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">1</container>
              <container type="folder">4</container>
              <unittitle>The Animal Garden, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>26pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">1</container>
              <container type="folder">5</container>
              <unittitle>B, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1965-1969, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>74pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">1</container>
              <container type="folder">6</container>
              <unittitle>C, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1969, nd, </unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>98pp [manuscripts removed to oversize folder and galley
              folder]</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">1</container>
              <container type="folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>D-E, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935-1968, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>77pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">1</container>
              <container type="folder">8</container>
              <unittitle><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Everyone but Thee and Me, </title>typed
              and printed version with author edits and printers marks, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd, </unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>99pp [galleys removed to galley folder]</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>F-G, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953-1968, nd, </unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>86pp [galleys removed to galley folder]</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">2</container>
              <unittitle>H, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1940-1968, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>57pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">3</container>
              <unittitle><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">He and She, </title>playlets and songs
              being considered, theme song and musical notations, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1948, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>47pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">4</container>
              <unittitle>I, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1967-1967, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>112pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">5</container>
              <unittitle>J-L, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd, </unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>105pp [galleys removed to galley folder]</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">6</container>
              <unittitle><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Littlest Review, </title>lyrics, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>48pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">2</container>
              <container type="folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>Lyrics, various musicals, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>118pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>M, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1968, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>104pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">2</container>
              <unittitle><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Marriage Lines, </title>printed ms with
              author corrections, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1964, </unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>70pp [galleys removed to galley folder]</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">3</container>
              <unittitle>Mother Goose Suite, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1968, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>31pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">4</container>
              <unittitle>N-O, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1966-1969, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>89pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">5</container>
              <unittitle>Notes and fragments, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>142pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">6</container>
              <unittitle>P-R, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1932-1969, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>66pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>Sa-Sp, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961-1968, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>65pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">3</container>
              <container type="folder">8</container>
              <unittitle>Sq-Sz, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959-1969, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>91pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>T, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953-1969, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>82pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">2</container>
              <unittitle>There's Always Another Windmill, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>116pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">3</container>
              <unittitle><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Two's Company, </title>lyrics, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>51pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">4</container>
              <unittitle><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Two's Company, </title>script, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>84pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">5</container>
              <unittitle>U-Whi, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1968-1969, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>75pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">6</container>
              <unittitle>Whj-Z, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931-1969, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>90pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">4</container>
              <container type="folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>The Year there Was No Christmas, 
              <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957,</unitdate></unittitle>
              <physdesc>41pp</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 level="series" id="ser2">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Series II. Letters, 
          <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">4</container>
            <container type="folder">8</container>
            <unittitle>A-W, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1932-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">4</container>
            <container type="folder">9</container>
            <unittitle>Leonard, William Wirt, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949-1957</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">4</container>
            <container type="folder">10</container>
            <unittitle>Leonard, Mrs. William Wirt, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1929-1959, nd</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">4</container>
            <container type="folder">11</container>
            <unittitle>Longwell, Daniel, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933-1959, nd,</unitdate></unittitle>
            <physdesc>5 pieces</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <unittitle>Nash, Frances Leonard, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928-1963, nd</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">5</container>
              <container type="folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">nd</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">5</container>
              <container type="folder">2</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928-July 1929</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1929</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">5</container>
                <container type="folder">3</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">7 Aug.-6 Sep.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">5</container>
                <container type="folder">4</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">10 Sept.-22 Sep.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">5</container>
                <container type="folder">5</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">26 Sep.-17 Oct.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">5</container>
                <container type="folder">6</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">21 Oct.-13 Nov.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">1</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">18 Nov.-18 Dec.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">2</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">20-30 Dec.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">3</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Jan.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">4</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Feb.-Mar.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">5</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Apr.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">6</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">7</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">6</container>
                <container type="folder">8</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">1</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Aug.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">2</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Sept.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">3</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">3-13 Oct.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">4</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">14-31 Oct.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">5</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">3-16 Nov.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">6</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">17-28 Nov.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">7</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">2-15 Dec.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">7</container>
                <container type="folder">8</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">16-30 Dec.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">8</container>
                <container type="folder">1</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1-15 Jan.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">8</container>
                <container type="folder">2</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">16-31 Jan.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">8</container>
                <container type="folder">3</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1-13 Feb.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">8</container>
                <container type="folder">4</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">14-28 Feb.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">8</container>
                <container type="folder">5</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1 Mar.-27 Apr.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">8</container>
                <container type="folder">6</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">6 July-1 Sep.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">8</container>
              <container type="folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1932-1933</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">8</container>
                <container type="folder">8</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">20 Oct.-8 Nov.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
            <c04>
              <did>
                <container type="box">8</container>
                <container type="folder">9</container>
                <unittitle>
                  <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">10 Nov.-12 Dec.</unitdate>
                </unittitle>
              </did>
            </c04>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">9</container>
              <container type="folder">1</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1937-1939</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">9</container>
              <container type="folder">2</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1941</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">9</container>
              <container type="folder">3</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1942</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">9</container>
              <container type="folder">4</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">16 Sep. 1943-15 Oct. 1949</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">9</container>
              <container type="folder">5</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1950</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">9</container>
              <container type="folder">6</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1 Jan.-26 Feb. 1951</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">9</container>
              <container type="folder">7</container>
              <unittitle>
                <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">27 Feb. 1951-12 Apr. 1963</unitdate>
              </unittitle>
            </did>
          </c03>
          <c03>
            <did>
              <container type="box">9</container>
              <container type="folder">8</container>
              <unittitle>Poems, photos, etc.,</unittitle>
              <physdesc>35 items</physdesc>
            </did>
          </c03>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 level="series" id="ser3">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Series III. Recipient, 
          <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">1</container>
            <unittitle>Unidentified; A</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">2</container>
            <unittitle>B-C</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">3</container>
            <unittitle>Curtis Brown, Ltd. 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">4</container>
            <unittitle>D-G</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">5</container>
            <unittitle>Duke, Vernon, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">[1967]-1968</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">6</container>
            <unittitle>E.M. Evans and Co, Inc., 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1964-1967</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">7</container>
            <unittitle>H-L</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">8</container>
            <unittitle>Komarova, Irene, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1962-1966</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">9</container>
            <unittitle>Little, Brown and Company, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1966-1968</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">10</container>
            <unittitle>Longwell, Daniel, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930-1933</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">11</container>
            <unittitle>M</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">12</container>
            <unittitle>N-R</unittitle>
            <physdesc> [letters on large paper moved to oversize
            folder]</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">13</container>
            <unittitle>New Yorker, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">10</container>
            <container type="folder">14</container>
            <unittitle>Perelman, S. J., 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1965-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">1</container>
            <unittitle>S-Z</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">2</container>
            <unittitle>Shaw, Julie W., 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1967-1968</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">3</container>
            <unittitle>Wodehouse, P.G., 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1931-1966</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 level="series" id="ser4">
        <did>
          <unittitle>Series IV. Miscellaneous, 
          <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1882-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">4</container>
            <unittitle>Unidentified notecard and list of Georgia
            flora</unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">5</container>
            <unittitle>A-M, third-party letters, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">6</container>
            <unittitle>Adelphi College Honorary Degree, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">14 June 1961</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">7</container>
            <unittitle>Franklin Marshall College Honorary Degree, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">6 Oct. 1962</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">8</container>
            <unittitle>N-Z, third-party letters, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1882-1969</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">9</container>
            <unittitle>Nassau &amp; Suffolk County Deviled Ham Club, minutes and
            membership certificate, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May-Aug. 1929</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">11</container>
            <container type="folder">10</container>
            <unittitle>Nash, Edmund Strudwick, letters and fragments, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1882-1924</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">12</container>
            <container type="folder">1</container>
            <unittitle>Nash Family, skit by Ogden Nash's grandchildren, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">19 Aug. 1966,</unitdate></unittitle>
            <physdesc>6pp</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">12</container>
            <container type="folder">2</container>
            <unittitle>Nash Family, historical narratives and notes,</unittitle>
            <physdesc>36pp</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">12</container>
            <container type="folder">3</container>
            <unittitle>Nash, Frances, letters, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957,</unitdate></unittitle>
            <physdesc>10pp</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">12</container>
            <container type="folder">4</container>
            <unittitle>Nash, Ogden, record of published verses, 
            <unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933-1967</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">12</container>
            <container type="folder">5</container>
            <unittitle>Nash, Ogden, personal records (marriage certificate,
            baptismal certificate, membership certificates for various societies,
            etc.),</unittitle>
            <physdesc>10 items</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">12</container>
            <container type="folder">6</container>
            <unittitle>White, E.B., Proofs for 
            <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">The Fox of Peapack</title><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">28 Apr. 1967</unitdate></unittitle>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02>
          <did>
            <container type="box">12</container>
            <container type="folder">7</container>
            <unittitle>Lose envelopes,</unittitle>
            <physdesc>4 items</physdesc>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
    </dsc>
    <odd type="index">
      <head>Ogden Nash Collection--Index of Correspondents</head>
      <p>Index entries followed by the notation [from Nash, O] indicate that the
      person is the recipient of correspondence from Nash. Box and folder numbers
      followed by a number in parenthesis indicate the number of items by (or to)
      that person. Where there is no number in parenthesis, there is only one letter.
      So in the example Agnew, Spiro T., 1918- --4.8 [from Nash, O.], 10.1(2) there
      is one item from Nash to Agnew in box 4, folder 8 and two items, from Agnew to
      Nash, in box 10, folder 1.</p>
      <list type="simple">
        <item> Adams, Franklin Pierce, 1881-1960--10.1, 11.5</item>
        <item> Adler, Larry--10.1(2)</item>
        <item> Agnew, Spiro T., 1918- --4.8 [from Nash, O.], 10.1(2)</item>
        <item> Alajalov, Constantin, 1900-1987--10.1</item>
        <item> Alden Kindred of America, Inc.--10.1</item>
        <item> Alexander, Lloyd--10.1(2)</item>
        <item> American Theatre Wing--10.1(2)</item>
        <item> Andric, Dragoslav--10.1</item>
        <item> Angell, Roger--See 
        <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">New Yorker</title></item>
        <item> A.P. Watt and Son--11.1, 11.8</item>
        <item> Armour, Richard Willard, 1906- --10.1(2)</item>
        <item> Ashton, Winifred--See Dane, Clemence</item>
        <item> Associated Harvard Alumni--10.7</item>
        <item> Auslander, Jo--10.1</item>
        <item> Bean, Marshall E.--4.8 [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Benét, Stephen Vincent, 1898-1943--10.2</item>
        <item> Bentley, Nicolas, 1907- --12.2(2)</item>
        <item> Bocher, Main R.--10.2</item>
        <item> British Broadcasting Corporation--10.2</item>
        <item> Brown, Catherine Meredith--10.2</item>
        <item> Bulkeley, Robert T., 1867-1950--10.2</item>
        <item> Burgess, Gelett, 1866-1951--10.2</item>
        <item> Burrill, Edgar White, 1883- --11.5</item>
        <item> Byram, John, 1901-1977--10.2</item>
        <item> Cain, James M. (James Mallahan), 1892-1977--10.2(2)</item>
        <item> Cane, Melville, 1879- --10.2</item>
        <item> Cedric, R.C.--10.2</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Child Life</title>--10.2</item>
        <item> Chilson, Elizabeth--11.5</item>
        <item> Clark, Elton--10.2</item>
        <item> Collins, Alan Copeland, 1902- --10.2</item>
        <item> Collins, Catherine--See Pomeroy, Miggs</item>
        <item> Connelly, Marc, 1890- --10.2</item>
        <item> Coots, J. Fred, 1897- --10.2</item>
        <item> Cosgrove, John O., 1908-1968--10.2</item>
        <item> Covici, Friede Inc.--10.2</item>
        <item> Crowninshield, Frank, 1872-1947--10.2</item>
        <item> Curtis Brown, Ltd.-- 4.8(5) [from Nash, O.], 10.3(24)</item>
        <item> Dalrymple, Jean--10.4</item>
        <item> Dane, Clemence--10.4</item>
        <item> Dartmouth College, Library--10.4</item>
        <item> De Graff, Robert F.--4.8 [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> De La Roche, Mazo, 1879-1961--10.4</item>
        <item> Deitrich, Marian--10.4</item>
        <item> Deyo, Morton L. (Morton Lyndholm), 1887-1973--10.4</item>
        <item> Disney, Walt, 1901-1966--10.4(3)</item>
        <item> Dixit, I.C.--10.4</item>
        <item> Doubleday, Nelson--10.4</item>
        <item> Duke, Kay McCracken--10.4(2)</item>
        <item> Duke, Vernon, 1903-1969--10.5(6)</item>
        <item> E. M. Evans and Co.--10.6(4), 11.5</item>
        <item> Eberstadt, Isabel Nash--10.4</item>
        <item> Eberstadt, Nenna, 1962- --10.4</item>
        <item> Eberstadt, Nick, 1955- --10.4</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Evening Sun </title>(Baltimore)--4.8 [from
        Nash, O.]</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Exchange Magazine </title>(NYSE)--11.5</item>
        <item> Farrar, John (Farrar &amp; Rinehart)--10.4</item>
        <item> Feild, Thomas--10.4</item>
        <item> Ferber, Edna, 1887-1968--10.4(3)</item>
        <item> Ford, Corey Hitchcock, 1902-1969--4.8 [from Nash, O.],
        10.4(2)</item>
        <item> Fremont-Smith, Eliot, 1929- --10.4</item>
        <item> Friml, Rudolf, 1879-1972--10.4</item>
        <item> Frost, Joseph W.P.--10.4</item>
        <item> Goodrich, Frances--10.4</item>
        <item> Goodson, Wilbur Chapman--4.8(2) [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Goodspeed, John--10.4</item>
        <item> Gordon, Max, 1892- --10.4</item>
        <item> Gorman, Gwendolen Nash, 18??-1967--10.4</item>
        <item> Gould, Bruce--10.4</item>
        <item> Grey, J.C., 1879-1943--10.4(2)</item>
        <item> Gross, Milt, 1895-1953--10.4, 11.5</item>
        <item> Grover, Edwin Osgood, 1870- --4.8(2) [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Hansen, Harry, 1884- --11.5</item>
        <item> Hemenway, Robert--See 
        <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">New Yorker</title></item>
        <item> Henry, Margaret--10.7</item>
        <item> Hessian, John, 1880-1939--10.7</item>
        <item> Holden, Raymond P. (Raymond Peckham), 1894-1972--10.7</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Holiday Magazine</title>--11.5</item>
        <item> Hughes, Rupert, 1872-1956--11.5</item>
        <item> J. M. Dent &amp; Sons--4.8 [from Nash, O.], 10.4(2)</item>
        <item> Jackson, Cornwell, 1902- --10.7</item>
        <item> Jackson, George--10.7</item>
        <item> Jackson, Henry C., Sir--10.7(3)</item>
        <item> Jacobsen, Josephine--10.7</item>
        <item> Johnson, Malcolm (Doubleday, Doran)--4.8 [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Johnson, Nunnally--10.7</item>
        <item> Jones, Francis Avery, Sir--10.7</item>
        <item> Jouvenal, Renaud de--10.7</item>
        <item> Kahn, Joan--10.7</item>
        <item> Kennard, Mildred Kearny Hill, 1908- --10.7</item>
        <item> Kietly, Bernardine--11.1</item>
        <item> Knowlton, Perry H.--11.5</item>
        <item> Komarova, Irene--10.8(5)</item>
        <item> Kriendler, Jack, 1898-1947--10.7</item>
        <item> Lafitte, Louise--10.7</item>
        <item> Lamparski, Richard--4.8 [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Lawrence, Daisy Gordon--10.7</item>
        <item> Leonard, W. W., Mrs., 1875-1965--4.10(31) [from Nash, O.],
        11.5(2)</item>
        <item> Leonard, William Wirt, 1875-1962--4.9(7) [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Levy, Newman, b. 1888--10.7</item>
        <item> Library of Congress, Manuscript Division--11.1</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Life Magazine</title>--10.7</item>
        <item> Little, Brown and Company--4.8(3) [from Nash, O.], 10.9(9)</item>
        <item> Longwell, Daniel, 1899-1968--4.11(5) [from Nash, O.], 10.10(5),
        11.5</item>
        <item> Loveman, Amy--10.7</item>
        <item> Lusty, Robert, Sir--10.7</item>
        <item> MacInnes, Helen, 1907- --10.11</item>
        <item> MacLeish, Archibald, 1892- --10.11</item>
        <item> Martin, Mary, 1913- --10.11(3)</item>
        <item> Marx, Groucho, 1891-1977--10.11</item>
        <item> Mauran, B. Hunter, 1900-1974--10.11</item>
        <item> Maxon, Constance, 1932- --4.8(2) [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> McCarthy, Eugene J., 1916- --10.11</item>
        <item> McCord, David Thompson Watson, 1897- --10.11</item>
        <item> McCowen, Alec--10.11</item>
        <item> McGinley, Phyllis, 1905- --10.11</item>
        <item> McIntyre, Thomas J., 1915- --10.11</item>
        <item> McKeldin, Theodore R. (Theodore Roosevelt), 1900- --10.11</item>
        <item> McMillan, Gaines--10.11</item>
        <item> Mencken, Sara Haardt--10.11</item>
        <item> Meyer, Katharine--4.8(2) [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Mitford, Nancy, 1904-1973--10.11</item>
        <item> Moore, Marianne, 1887-1972--10.11</item>
        <item> Morley, Christopher, 1890-1957--10.11(3), 11.5</item>
        <item> Morgan, Richard (of Scotland)--10.11(2)</item>
        <item> Morison, Samuel Eliot, 1887-1976--10.11</item>
        <item> Nash, Edmund Strudwick, 1854-1931--11.9(8)</item>
        <item> Nash, Frances Leonard, 1906- --5.1-5.6, 6.1-6.8, 7.1-7.8, 8.1-8.9,
        9.1-9.8(577 total) [from Nash, O.], 12.3(10), oversize folder(2)</item>
        <item> Nash, Mattie--11.9(3)</item>
        <item> Nash, S. S.--11.8</item>
        <item> New York Philharmonic--10.12</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">New Yorker</title>--4.8(2) [from Nash, O.],
        10.13(49), 11.8(2)</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The New York Times</title>--10.12</item>
        <item> Nilson, Robert, 1932- --10.12(2)</item>
        <item> Norris, Charles Gilman, 1881-1945--4.8 [from Nash, O.],
        10.12(2)</item>
        <item> Norris, Howes, Jr.--4.8 [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> O'Brien, Lawrence F.--10.12</item>
        <item> Opie, Peter--10.12(4)</item>
        <item> Parker, Dorothy, 1893-1967--10.12</item>
        <item> Parramore, Felice--10.12</item>
        <item> Patterson, Berta E., 1898-1944--10.12</item>
        <item> Perelman, S. J. (Sidney Joseph), 1904- --10.14(13)</item>
        <item> Perrin, Noel--10.12</item>
        <item> Pipes, Richard--10.12(2)</item>
        <item> The Poetry Center--10.12(2)</item>
        <item> Pomeroy, Miggs--10.2(2)</item>
        <item> Porges, Albert--11.8</item>
        <item> Pressman, Hyman Aaron--10.12</item>
        <item> Priestley, J.B. (John Boynton), 1894- --10.12</item>
        <item> Pudney, John, 1909-1977--10.12</item>
        <item> Radio Corporation of America, RCA Victor Division--10.12(3)</item>
        <item> Rascoe, Burton, 1892-1957--10.12</item>
        <item> Reardon, W.G.--10.12</item>
        <item> Rehman, W.K.--4.8 [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Richards, Laura Elizabeth Howe, 1850-1943--10.12</item>
        <item> Robbins, John J., 1894-1955--10.12</item>
        <item> Roberts, Arthur S., 1878-1970--4.8(2) [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Robinson, Corinne Roosevelt, Mrs., 1861-1933--10.12</item>
        <item> Rodgers, Richard, 1902- --10.12</item>
        <item> San Francisco Symphony Association--11.1</item>
        <item> Scherman, Bernardine--See Kietly, Bernardine</item>
        <item> Schuster, M. Lincoln (Max Lincoln), 1897-1970--11.8</item>
        <item> Shaw, Julie W., 1878-1977--11.2(4)</item>
        <item> Simon and Schuster, inc.--11.1(2)</item>
        <item> Smart, Charles Allen, 1904-1967--11.1</item>
        <item> Smith, Brigid--11.1</item>
        <item> Smith, Francis, 1954- --11.1(2)</item>
        <item> Smith, Linell Nash--11.1(2)</item>
        <item> Smith, Win--11.1</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Sports Illustrated </title>(Time,
        inc.)--11.1</item>
        <item> Stone, Naomi Burton--11.1</item>
        <item> Sukerman, Nellie--11.1</item>
        <item> Sullivan, Frank, 1892-1976--11.1(3)</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Sunday Times </title>(London, England)--4.8
        [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Thomas, Lowell, 1892-1981--11.1</item>
        <item> Towne, Charles Hanson, 1877-1949--4.8 [from Nash, O.]</item>
        <item> Uitgeverij de Arbeiderspers--11.8</item>
        <item> U.S. Treasury Department, War Finance Division--11.1</item>
        <item> United States, Navy--4.8 [from Nash, O.], 11.1(4)</item>
        <item> Updike, John--11.1</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Vanity Fair </title>(New York,
        N.Y.)--11.1</item>
        <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Venture Magazine</title>--11.8</item>
        <item> Wagner, Rob, 1872-1942--11.1</item>
        <item> Watkins, Shirley--11.1</item>
        <item> Weissberger, L. Arnold, 1907-1981--11.8</item>
        <item> White, E.B. (Elwin Brooks), 1899- --11.1, 12.6</item>
        <item> White, Katherine--11.1</item>
        <item> Winchell, Walter, d. 1972--11.1</item>
        <item> Wodehouse, P. G. (Pelham Grenville), 1881-1975--11.3(8)</item>
      </list>
    </odd>
    <odd type="index">
      <head>Ogden Nash Collection--Index of Works</head>
      <p>
        <list type="simple">
          <head>Unidentified/Untitled Works</head>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">From the middle of April until
              October...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Hello everybody, do you want me to laugh in
              your face?</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">I'd rather, if I dared or dast, conceal my
              academic past...</title>1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">I'm at sixes and sevens, yea, at sevens and
              eights, I'm on the wrong side of the United States...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">I tip my hat, I unwind my turban, saluting
              Christmases suburban...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">I wish I were an erudite Oxonian, a cultured
              Eli, or a smooth Princetonian...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Mr. Arthur Brisbane...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">My opinion of banquets is
              prejudicial...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Oh city I find it
              difficult...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Once there was a man named Mr. Todhunter
              Furpiper...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">The parish we love in
              summer...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">People who frequent the races certainly have
              unhappy faces...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Remember...remember...oh, that's the sum of
              it now...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Some five and thirty years
              ago...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">To Marcia, and Anne, and Mary
              Anne...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Twinkle, Marjorie
              Morningstar...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">We all deplore people who are
              uncouth...</title>--1.1</item>
          <item> Untitled essay on speaking to women's clubs--1.1</item>
          <item> Untitled novel--1.2</item>
        </list>
      </p>
      <p>
        <list>
          <head>Identified Works</head>
          <item> Alias and Melisande--1.3</item>
          <item> All Good Americans go to Larousse, or, I don't pretend to be
            Moliere than thou--1.3</item>
          <item> All of the pleasure and none of the responsibility--1.3</item>
          <item> All's Brillig at the Brill--1.3</item>
          <item> All's Brillig at the Brill: Niobe at the calliope--1.3</item>
          <item> And don't forget weight lifting, shot putting, and the ladies'
            junior backstroke championship--1.3</item>
          <item> And perhaps there are two Eugenie Grandets, two Father
            Goriets--1.3</item>
          <item> And so Manhattan became an isle of joy--1.3</item>
          <item> And that's why I always take the Oakland ferry to Beverly
            Hills--1.3</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Animal Garden</title>--1.4</item>
          <item> Anybody else hate nickynames?--1.3</item>
          <item> Are we there yet, Daddy? or Songs for the front seat, songs
            for the back seat--1.3</item>
          <item> Armchair Golfer--1.3</item>
          <item> As Gauguin said to Sadie Thompson, You pronounce it, I'll
            paint it--1.3</item>
          <item> As I was saying to Saint Paul just the other
            day...--1.3</item>
          <item> At least I'm not the kind of fool who sobs, what kind of fool
            am I--1.3</item>
          <item> Avanti, Fourmetti: Italo-American menu--1.3</item>
          <item> The back of mine hand to mine host--1.5</item>
          <item> Backward, turn backward, O commentator in thy
            flight--1.5</item>
          <item> The bargain--1.5</item>
          <item> Bet you a nickel my unhappiness can lick your
            unhappiness--1.5</item>
          <item> Beware of Easter Monday, or, A meal that can't be eaten won't
            be eaten--1.5</item>
          <item> Birthday verse for Jean Lincoln--1.5</item>
          <item> Birthday verse for Senator McCarthy--1.5</item>
          <item> A bogey for Yogi, or, Sticks and stones may break their bones,
            but names will lose a sponsor--1.5</item>
          <item> Born 1792, still going strong--1.5</item>
          <item> Botanist, anoint thee! or, Henbane by any other
            name--1.5</item>
          <item> A boy and his room--1.5</item>
          <item> The boy and the pig--1.5</item>
          <item> The boy with the dirty face--1.5</item>
          <item> Bread and butter letter for a conflagration that enlivened the
            last day of a pleasant vacation--1.5</item>
          <item> Brief lives in not so brief--1.5</item>
          <item> The buses headed for Scranton--1.5</item>
          <item> Butterfly found slain--1.5</item>
          <item> Caesar knifed again, or, culture biz gets hep, boffs
            prof--1.6</item>
          <item> California - a sun kissed self portrait--oversize
            folder</item>
          <item> Can I get you a glass of water? or, Please close the glottis
            after you--1.6</item>
          <item> Capercaillie, ave atque vaillie--1.6</item>
          <item> The champions and the chimpions: variations on a
            team--1.6</item>
          <item> Chant at the end of a beginningless summer--1.6</item>
          <item> Children under 12 no charge, and that's too much--1.6</item>
          <item> Co-efficients of expansion--1.6</item>
          <item> The collector--1.6</item>
          <item> Come one, come all!--1.6</item>
          <item> The comic spirit, or, never say die, say kick the
            bucket--1.6</item>
          <item> The cricket--1.6</item>
          <item> The crown that wouldn't fit--1.6</item>
          <item> The cruise of the Aardvark--1.6, galley folder</item>
          <item> Custard the dragon and the wicked knight--1.6</item>
          <item> Dad, poor dad, there's nothing in your closet and we're
            feeling sad--1.7</item>
          <item> The darkest half-hour or, Are you sure it was this Saturday we
            asked them for?--1.7</item>
          <item> The day of the locust or, Whose wedding is this
            anyway?--1.7</item>
          <item> A day on a cruise or, What a day! What a cruise!--1.7</item>
          <item> Detroit, spare the wheel--1.7</item>
          <item> The disappearance--1.7</item>
          <item> Do you plan to speak Bantu? or, Abbreviation is the thief of
            sanity--1.7</item>
          <item> Don't be cross Amanda--1.7</item>
          <item> Don't bite the hand that puts its foot in your
            mouth--1.7</item>
          <item> Don't dissipate that scowl, or, Two can boil quicker than
            one--1.7</item>
          <item> Don't look now, but there's something behind the
            curtain--1.7</item>
          <item> Don't sit under the family tree-1.7</item>
          <item> Doorman, call me a taxi, please! Okay, Mac, you're a
            taxi--1.7</item>
          <item> A dream of innocent orgies, or, The most unforgettable
            character I never met--1.7</item>
          <item> Edouard--1.7</item>
          <item> The education of Anthony Jones, or, Are there more radios in
            hacks than hacks in radio?--1.7</item>
          <item> The emancipation of Mr. Poplin, or, Skoal to the
            skimmerless--1.7</item>
          <item> An enthusiast is a devotee is a rooter--1.7</item>
          <item> The entrapment of John Alden, or, We paint the lily, we beard
            Mr. Longfellow--1.7</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Everyone but Thee and Me</title>--1.8,
            galley folder</item>
          <item> Excuse me dear, but it doesn't go this way, it goes that
            way--1.7</item>
          <item> Exit, pursued by a bear--1.7</item>
          <item> Fables Bullfinch forgot: Narcissus, the undoing of his
            wooing--2.1</item>
          <item> Family Album: scene 1--2.1</item>
          <item> Fee, fi, ho, hum, no wonder baby sucks her thumb--2.1</item>
          <item> Fellow creatures, tray and outré--2.1</item>
          <item> The firefly--2.1</item>
          <item> Flying Dutchman--2.1</item>
          <item> For any improbable she--galley folder</item>
          <item> For Rudolph Friml on his ninetieth birthday--2.1</item>
          <item> Foreword to 
            <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">On Your Marks </title>by Richard
            Armour--2.1</item>
          <item> Forward to 
            <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Selected Verse</title>--3.7</item>
          <item> Frances--2.1</item>
          <item> From an antique land--2.1</item>
          <item> Go ahead, it will do you good, or, her eyes are bigger than
            his stomach--2.1</item>
          <item> Go home Santa; a case history for parents--2.1</item>
          <item> God bless the Gideons, or, There's always the King James
            version--2.1</item>
          <item> Gone with the wind: musical adaptation: act 1--2.1</item>
          <item> Goodbye now, or, Pardon my gauntlet--galley folder</item>
          <item> Great gin passage: authentic text--2.1</item>
          <item> The Greeks had a void for it, so why speak
            English?--2.1</item>
          <item> The happy Christmas hop of Mr. Leaper--2.2</item>
          <item> Hark, hark, the larks do bark--2.2</item>
          <item> H'ave Caesar, or, Boadaicea's revenge--2.2</item>
          <item> Have you read any good books tomorrow?--2.2</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">He and She</title>--2.3</item>
          <item> He didn't dare look, or, The puzzling uniqueness of Mr.
            Saltbody's meekness--2.2</item>
          <item> He never told me--2.2</item>
          <item> Heil, heilage nacht; Christmas, 1940--2.2</item>
          <item> Here I foreclose, ready or not, or, Bankers are just great big
            overgrown boys--2.2</item>
          <item> Hey, hey for the A.B.A.--2.2</item>
          <item> Ho Vartlet! My two cents worth of penny post card--2.2</item>
          <item> Home is the golfer; being extracts from the diary of the other
            cheek--2.2</item>
          <item> Hook, line and ennui--2.2</item>
          <item> How can an echo answer what echo cannot hear?--2.2</item>
          <item> How many miles to the dead letter office? part I--2.2</item>
          <item> Hush, here they come--2.2</item>
          <item> I always say there's no place like New York in the summer, or,
            that cottage small by a waterfall was snapped up last September--2.4</item>
          <item> I can do without - I can't do without--2.4</item>
          <item> I can hardly wait for the sandman--2.4</item>
          <item> I can't have a martini, dear, but you take one, or, are you
            going to be guzzling all night?--2.4</item>
          <item> I don't understand women, and I'm glad of it--2.4</item>
          <item> I know exactly who dropped the overalls in Mrs. Murphy's
            chowder--2.4</item>
          <item> I suppose the Greeks have a commercial for it, or, Hail Solon!
            How's thy colon?--2.4</item>
          <item> If a Boder meet a boder, need a boder cry?--2.4</item>
          <item> If ethyl vanillin be the food of love, drink on--2.4</item>
          <item> If fun is fun, isn't that enough--2.4</item>
          <item> If he were a live today, mayhap Mr. Morgan would sit on the
            midget's lap--2.4</item>
          <item> If I had the wings of a heliocopter, or, Hall's Mills that
            ends mills--2.4</item>
          <item> If there were no England, Country Life could invent
            it--2.4</item>
          <item> Ill-met by fluorescence, or, Everybody's doing it who'd rather
            be eschewing it--2.4</item>
          <item> I'm no Saint, but I have my doubts about Valentine,
            too--2.4</item>
          <item> In one ear and out of this world--2.4</item>
          <item> The indignant owl: Addressee unknown, return to
            sender--2.4</item>
          <item> Introduction to 
            <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Anthology of Suspense Stories,
              </title>edited by John Kahn--2.4</item>
          <item> Introduction to 
            <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Hanging Book </title>by Bob
            Nilson--2.4</item>
          <item> The invitation says between 5 to 7, or, Silly
            invitation--2.4</item>
          <item> Is there a Dr. Johnson in the house?--2.4</item>
          <item> Is there an oculist in the house?--2.4</item>
          <item> Is this any way to advertise an airline? Is this any way to
            run a campaign? You bet it is!--2.4</item>
          <item> It walks, it talks--2.4</item>
          <item> Jenny kissed me, but she called me sir--2.5</item>
          <item> John Peel, shake hands with 37 mamas--2.5</item>
          <item> Joyous Malingerer: A tale of two husbands--2.5</item>
          <item> Laments for dying language--2.5</item>
          <item> The latter years of Achilles Helios--2.5</item>
          <item> Lecturer at large--2.5</item>
          <item> Let's have a look at your license: Hip, hip,
            hooray?--2.5</item>
          <item> Limericks--2.5</item>
          <item> Lines fraught with naught but thought--2.5</item>
          <item> Lines to be engraved on a wedding gift--galley folder</item>
          <item> The literary scene--2.5</item>
          <item> The little booklet--2.5</item>
          <item> Little pretty penny, let's squander thee--2.5</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Littlest Review</title>--2.6</item>
          <item> Lord of the drones! P.G. Woodhouse, Esq.--2.5</item>
          <item> Madam, your Achilles tendon is showing--3.1</item>
          <item> The madcap zoologist--3.1</item>
          <item> The man on the shelf--3.1</item>
          <item> The man who frustrated Madison Avenue--3.1</item>
          <item> A map for St. Valentine--3.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Marriage Lines</title>--3.2, galley
            folder</item>
          <item> Me, I play the harp, it's just one syllable--3.1</item>
          <item> Menu macabre--3.1</item>
          <item> Merrill Lynch we roll along without the comma--3.1</item>
          <item> Mets win East--3.1</item>
          <item> A mint of phrases, or, A team is as strong as its
            bench--3.1</item>
          <item> The miraculous countdown--3.1</item>
          <item> Mr. Burgess; meet Mr. Barmecide--3.1</item>
          <item> Mr. Judd and his snail, a sorry tale, or, Never underestimate
            the wisdom of a sage of the ages--3.1</item>
          <item> Mr. Minikins darkest hour, or, What will be won't
            be--3.1</item>
          <item> Modest meditations on the here, the heretofore and the
            hereafter--3.1</item>
          <item> Moose on the beach--3.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Mother Goose Suite</title>--3.3</item>
          <item> The mother tongue--3.1</item>
          <item> The museum of Natural History--3.1</item>
          <item> My dear Santa Claus, had I but known--3.1</item>
          <item> My evensong--3.1</item>
          <item> My eye and Betty Martin--3.1</item>
          <item> My my my--3.1</item>
          <item> The mysterious Ouphe--3.1</item>
          <item> The name is legion, or, No bouquets for the
            sobriquets--3.4</item>
          <item> Never mind that overcoat, button up that lip--3.4</item>
          <item> Never was I born to set them right--3.4</item>
          <item> The new Eden--3.4</item>
          <item> No love but yours--3.4</item>
          <item> No trouble at all, it's as easy as falling off a
            loggerhead--3.4</item>
          <item> The non-biography of a nobody--3.4</item>
          <item> Notes for the chart in 306--3.4</item>
          <item> The nymph and the shepherd, or, She went that way--3.4</item>
          <item> O. N.--3.4</item>
          <item> O tempora, o, oh!--3.4</item>
          <item> Old is for Books--3.4</item>
          <item> Old men--3.4</item>
          <item> On learning that Louisville, Ky., has two neighbors, Pee Wee
            Valley and Pleasure Ridge--3.4</item>
          <item> Once more my Valentine--3.4</item>
          <item> One evening near the sea--3.4</item>
          <item> One man's cigarettes or, the Kinsey Report didn't upset me
            either--3.4</item>
          <item> The other mind reader--3.4</item>
          <item> Our own medical department--3.4</item>
          <item> Over my shoulder--3.4</item>
          <item> The panda--3.6</item>
          <item> The panther--3.6</item>
          <item> Paper-back, who made thee? Dost thou know who made
            thee?--3.6</item>
          <item> The parsnip--3.6</item>
          <item> Pavane for a dead doll, or, The pain in Grandfather's
            neck--3.6</item>
          <item> People--3.6</item>
          <item> Period. Period.--3.6</item>
          <item> Permissive pictures presents 
            <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="doublequote" xlink:href="">Happy Halloween, everybody</title>; an
            Alfred Hitchcock Production--3.6</item>
          <item> Phi Beta kickoff--3.6</item>
          <item> Philology, etymology, you own me an apology--3.6</item>
          <item> Pimlico Preakness--3.6</item>
          <item> Please remind me before I forget--3.6</item>
          <item> A poem in praise of practically John J. Hessian--3.6</item>
          <item> The Portable Nash; in 
            <title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Speeches of the Year,
              </title>1962--3.6</item>
          <item> Poseys from a second childhood, or, Hark how gaffer do
            chaffer--3.6</item>
          <item> Preface to the past--3.6</item>
          <item> Prognostications are for the birds; lay off me, please, while
            I eat my words--3.6</item>
          <item> The purist--3.6</item>
          <item> The question box--3.6</item>
          <item> Recitatifs never to be recited at Lincoln Center--3.6</item>
          <item> Reflection poems--3.6</item>
          <item> Reindeer scallopini is off--3.6</item>
          <item> The rejected portrait: Recommended for mature audiences: what
            the artist saw--3.6</item>
          <item> Reprise--3.6</item>
          <item> Roll on thou deep dark blue syllable roll on; Ill met by
            Zenith--3.6</item>
          <item> S. J. Perelman--3.7</item>
          <item> Scrooge rides again--3.7</item>
          <item> Santa go home--3.7, galley folder</item>
          <item> The self-effacement of Electra Thorne--3.7</item>
          <item> Sexual politics farewell: What would I most likely say to
            women, or, Speak gently to your little man--3.7</item>
          <item> Shall we dance? Being the confessions of a
            Balletramus--3.7</item>
          <item> Sing a song of taste buds--3.7</item>
          <item> The snark was a boojum was a prawn--3.7</item>
          <item> The sniffle--3.7</item>
          <item> So, I resigned from the Churchin' Chowder and Marching
            Club--3.7</item>
          <item> The solitary huntsman--3.7</item>
          <item> Songland revisited, or, There's no purity like
            immaturity--3.7</item>
          <item> Splinters from the festive board--3.7</item>
          <item> The spoon ran away with the dish?--3.7</item>
          <item> Stamp too big for letter, must be for album--3.8</item>
          <item> Stars and stripes--3.8</item>
          <item> Sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will break my
            ears--3.8</item>
          <item> The stilly night: a soporific reflection--3.8</item>
          <item> The strange case of Mrs. Moodus's second honeymoon, or, How to
            unobstreperize a husband--3.8</item>
          <item> The strange case of Mr. Artesian's
            conscientiousness--3.8</item>
          <item> The strange case of Mr. Ormantude's bride: It's smart to be
            wrong--3.8</item>
          <item> The strange case of Mr. Twombley's ultimate
            triumph--3.8</item>
          <item> The strange case of Mr. Wood's frustration, or, a team that
            won't be beaten better stay off the field--3.8</item>
          <item> The strange case of the missing cocktail hour, or, It's either
            the maid, wife, or on the town--3.8</item>
          <item> The strange case of the clashing cultures--3.8</item>
          <item> The strange case of the poetic apothecary--3.8</item>
          <item> Stranger in the house--3.8</item>
          <item> Susie and the bear--3.8</item>
          <item> Sweet bye and bye--3.8</item>
          <item> Sweet land of capitals--3.8</item>
          <item> Table talk--4.1</item>
          <item> Tale of the thirteenth floor--4.1</item>
          <item> Taste bud, en garde! --4.1</item>
          <item> Telephone company verses--4.1</item>
          <item> Tell me no fiblets, where are the giblets?--4.1</item>
          <item> The termite revisited--4.1</item>
          <item> Thank you verse for Henry Large--4.1</item>
          <item> That stupid woman--4.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">There's Always Another
              Windmill</title>--4.2</item>
          <item> This Christmas will continue after a brief message of
            importance--4.1</item>
          <item> Thoughts thought while resting comfortably in Phillips House,
            Massachusetts General Hospital, overlooking the Charles River--4.1</item>
          <item> Three strikes, you're elected--4.1</item>
          <item> Through a glass, temporarily--4.1</item>
          <item> Time-traveler beware, or, Here comes 1953--4.1</item>
          <item> Tin wedding whistle--4.1</item>
          <item> To ee is human--4.1</item>
          <item> To my Valentine--4.1</item>
          <item> Toast for the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. W.W.
            Leonard--4.1</item>
          <item> The tortoise--4.1</item>
          <item> The toucan--4.1</item>
          <item> Try it Suns. and Hols., it's closed then--4.1</item>
          <item> The twelve days of Christmas--4.1</item>
          <item> Two minute warning--4.1</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">Two's Company</title>--4.3-4.4</item>
          <item> Unfortunately, it's the only game in town--4.5</item>
          <item> The uniqueness of Mr. Onatavia--4.5</item>
          <item> The unwonted silence of Miss Sniffen--4.5</item>
          <item> Up from the egg: the confessions of a nuthatch
            avoider--4.5</item>
          <item> Vernacular lines for a spectacular anniversary--4.5</item>
          <item> Verse...for our friend Peter Fuller...--4.5</item>
          <item> Very nice, Rembrandt, but how about a little more
            color--4.5</item>
          <item> A visitor from Porlock, but alas, no Xanadu--4.5</item>
          <item> The voice of experience--4.5</item>
          <item> We have met the Sassenachs and they are ours, even the year is
            now McMLXIX--4.5</item>
          <item> We're fine, just fine, or, You'll be astonished when I'm gone,
            you rascal, you--4.5</item>
          <item> Westward the course of chlorine--4.5</item>
          <item> What, no sheep--4.5</item>
          <item> What's Hecuba to him? A one-minute close up, or, Some noses
            for news are for tweaking--4.5</item>
          <item> What's in a name? Here's what's in a name, or, I wonder what
            became of John and Mary--4.5</item>
          <item> What's it like outside, or, There's no weather until somebody
            says there is--4.5</item>
          <item> What's sauce pour l'oie is sauce pour l'etat c'est
            moi--4.5</item>
          <item> While Homer nodded: A footnote to the Iliad--4.5</item>
          <item> Who called that pie-billed grebe a podilymbus podiceps
            podiceps--4.6</item>
          <item> Who put that spokesman in my wheel?--4.6</item>
          <item> Who says it's so nice to have a man around the
            house?--4.6</item>
          <item> Who, Sir? Me, Sir? No, Sir. The Times, Sir!--4.6</item>
          <item> Who wants to travel all over Europe and see nothing but a lot
            of American tourists? I do--4.6</item>
          <item> Who'll buy my lingual, or, You pronounce pluie,
            Louie--4.6</item>
          <item> Why don't couples in Cincy read Thomas de Quincy?--4.6</item>
          <item> Why need history to be a mystery?--4.6</item>
          <item> The wild jackass--4.6</item>
          <item> Will the real St. Nicholas please stand up? And indeed he
            did--4.6</item>
          <item> Women and Elephants &amp; With all my heart--4.6</item>
          <item> The Wrongs of Spring--4.6</item>
          <item><title xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple" render="italic" xlink:href="">The Year there was no
              Christmas</title>--4.7</item>
          <item> You are old Father Bertram, or, He only does for
            Hanoi--4.6</item>
          <item> Your friends are my friends; being further extracts from the
            diary of the other cheek--4.6</item>
          <item> Your lead, partner, I hope we've read the same
            book--4.6</item>
          <item> Yum yum, take it away--4.6</item>
          <item> Ziegfield hits evils of pulpit--4.6</item>
        </list>
      </p>
    </odd>
  </archdesc>
</ead>

