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         Field Eugene:     more books (36)
  1. The complete Tribune primer by Eugene Field ; containing 75 orig by Field. Eugene. 1850-1895., 1901-01-01
  2. Songs and other verse by Eugene Field. by Field. Eugene. 1850-1895., 1896
  3. In Wink a way land by Field Eugene 1850-1895, 1905-01-01
  4. The HOUSE. An Episode in the Lives of Rueben Baker, Astronomer, and His Wife Alice. by Eugene [1850 - 1895]. Field, 1896
  5. A little book of Tribune verse a number of hitherto uncollected by Field. Eugene. 1850-1895., 1901-01-01
  6. CHRISTMAS TALES And CHRISTMAS VERSE. by Eugene [1850 - 1895] & Storer, Florence. Field, 1912
  7. Eugene Field; An Auto-analysis; How One Friar Met The Devil And Two Pursued Him by Field Eugene 1850-1895, Wilson Francis 1854-1935, 2010-09-29
  8. A little book of Western verse by Eugene Field 1850-1895, 1895-12-31
  9. Writings in prose and verse Volume 2 by Field Eugene 1850-1895, 2010-10-05
  10. Writings in prose and verse Volume 9 by Field Eugene 1850-1895, 2010-10-13
  11. With trumpet and drum by Eugene Field 1850-1895, 1896-12-31
  12. Writings in prose and verse Volume 6 by Field Eugene 1850-1895, 2010-10-06
  13. Sharps And Flats by Field Eugene 1850-1895, 2010-09-29
  14. Nonsense for old and young by Eugene Field 1850-1895, 1901-12-31

61. Inventory Of The Alice French Papers, 1871-1934
Deland, Margaret Wade Campbell, 18571945 Derby, Ethel Roosevelt Fejervary, CelestineFicke, Arthur Davison, 1883-1945 Field, Eugene, 1850-1895 Field, Marshall
http://www.newberry.org/nl/collections/French.html
Inventory of the Alice French Papers, 1871-1934
The Newberry Library Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections
Midwest Manuscript Collection
Chicago, Illinois
Contact Information:

The Newberry Library
Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections
60 West Walton Street
Chicago, Illinois 60610
Phone:312-255-3506
E-Mail: specialcolls@newberry.org
URL: http://www.newberry.org Descriptive Summary of the Collection Title: Alice French Papers, 1871-1934 Collection Call Number: Midwest MS Thanet Creator: Thanet, Octave, 1850-1934 Extent: 2.5 cubic ft. (7 boxes and 1 oversize box) Repository: Newberry Library, Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections Collection Stack Location: Abstract: Correspondence, diaries, literary manuscripts, clippings and other miscellaneous material relating to Alice French, author of short stories, novels and essays, who wrote under the pseudonym Octave Thanet. Administrative Information Provenance: Gift of Grace French Evans, 1951 Access Restrictions: The Alice French Papers are open for research; they are available five folders at a time in the Special Collections Reading Room.

62. Inventory Of The Henry Blake Fuller Papers, 1874-1940, Bulk 1874-1929
18591920 ChatField-Taylor, Hobart ChatField, 1865-1945 Dreiser, Theodore, 1871-1945Eddy, Arthur Jerome, 1859-1920 Field, Eugene, 1850-1895 Field, Roswell
http://www.newberry.org/nl/collections/Fuller.html
Inventory of the Henry Blake Fuller Papers, 1874-1940, bulk 1874-1929
The Newberry Library Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections
Midwest Manuscript Collection
Chicago, Illinois
Contact Information:

The Newberry Library
Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections
60 West Walton Street
Chicago, Illinois 60610
Phone:312-255-3506
E-Mail: specialcolls@newberry.org
URL: http://www.newberry.org Descriptive Summary of the Collection Title: Henry Blake Fuller Papers, 1874-1940, bulk 1874-1929 Collection Call Number: Midwest MS Fuller Creator: Fuller, Henry Blake, 1857-1929 Extent: 12 cubic ft. (23 boxes and 1 oversize box) Repository: Newberry Library, Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special Collections Collection Stack Location: Abstract: Correspondence, works and miscellaneous material relating to Henry Blake Fuller, Chicago novelist, essayist, critic, and satirist. The bulk of the collection consists of Fuller's writings, both published and manuscript, and incoming correspondence. Administrative Information Provenance: Purchased from Helen Ranney, 1944. Additional gifts from Helen Ranney, 1971-1976.

63. Nietz Collection
Author Browse for Nietz Collection 2 items Ficklin, Joseph, 1833 6 items Field, Eugene, 1850-1895. 2 itemsField, John, 1652-1723. 2 items Field, Walter Taylor, 1861-1939.
http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/nietz/nietzbibl-idx.pl?type=control&fiel

64. Oak Knoll Books & Oak Knoll Press
This book was commissioned by the Eugene Field House Foundation to celebratethe 150th anniversary of the birth of Eugene Field (18501895).
http://www.oakknoll.com/results.php?s_City=(St. Louis, MO)&s_ShowPics=1

65. Oak Knoll Books & Oak Knoll Press
Filled with anecdotes about Field (18501895), the poet and journalist, who wroteLittle Boy Blue, Love Affairs of a Thompson, Slason, Eugene Field, A STUDY
http://www.oakknoll.com/detail.php?d_booknr=65379&d_currency=

66. Tomfolio.com: Literature: Authors E-J
6. Field, Eugene, 18501895 Thompson, Slason, 1840-1935. A biography of Eugene Field(1850-1895), Chicago journalist, humourist, satirist, by a close friend.
http://www.tomfolio.com/bookssub.asp?catid=26&subid=927

67. [nukkad] Little Boy Blue
Little Boy Blue ***** by Eugene Field (18501895) ****The little toy dog is covered with dust, But sturdy and stanch he
http://www.mumbai-central.com/nukkad/feb2003/msg00813.html
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  • Subject : [nukkad] Little Boy Blue From Date : Sun, 23 Feb 2003 18:07:20 +0000 (GMT) Organization : Mumbai Central
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68. Field_Eugene_mo
Eugene Field (1850-1895). St. Louis. By Jeffrey Tucker and PatriciaTimko Belleville Township High School East in Belleville, Illinois.
http://www.ncteamericancollection.org/litmap/field_eugene_mo.htm
Eugene Field - (1850-1895) St. Louis By Jeffrey Tucker and Patricia Timko
Belleville Township High School East in Belleville, Illinois I. Upbringing, Education, and Professional Life In 1871, he became engaged to fourteen-year-old Julia Sutherland Comstock. The following summer, Field and a friend took a trip to Europe, where he spent all of his inheritance from his father. Upon returning, he married Julia Comstock on October 16, 1873, in spite of her disapproving parents. Field and his wife were a happy couple, and were the loving parents of eight children. After their honeymoon, Field looked to newspaper work, which he would do for the rest of his life. He held successful positions as editor on the St. Joseph Gazette , the Kansas City Times , and the Denver Tribune . In 1883, Field moved to Buena Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, and joined the Chicago Morning News . It was during his time spent in Chicago that Field wrote the poems and books for which he is now famous. For the paper, he wrote the editorial page "Sharps and Flats." He was one of the earliest columnists and his column was nationally famous. Field was also very devoted to his work with the paper, and even when he took a trip to Europe in 1889-1890, he continued to contribute to the paper every day. Field would continue to contribute to the paper through the day he died, on November 4, 1895. Field died from heart failure in his sleep, at the age of forty-five.

69. Missouri
local student. Angelou, Maya 1928; Eliot, TS - (1888-1965); Field,Eugene - (1850-1895); Pulitzer, Joseph - (1847-1911); Twain, Mark
http://www.ncteamericancollection.org/litmap/missouri.htm
Missouri Click here to add an author to this state! Click an author to read a biographical essay prepared by a local student.
  • Angelou, Maya Eliot, T. S. Field, Eugene Pulitzer, Joseph ... Williams, Tennessee
  • Missouri's Vast Literary History
    By Kimberly Richey A state with cities as diverse as St. Louis, Kansas City, the Ozarks, Joplin and Cape Girardeau, extremes of urban and rural America, is entitled to a vast literary history. Since Lewis and Clark first wrote about the state in 1804, Missouri authors have been making valuable contributions to American literature. The authors themselves, however, don't always cooperate when one classifies them by state boundaries. Some of the artists with ties to the "Show Me State" only briefly passed through Missouri's state lines, while others spent their entire lives here. For purposes of this essay, therefore, writers will be considered a Missouri writer if they either influenced the state and its culture, or if the state influenced them, even if this means some authors will be claimed simultaneously by other states. Name Droppers
    Many literary critics have claimed that the American novel begins with Mark Twain, Missouri's most famous literary figure who featured his hometown, Hannibal, in his most famous works. He dealt with social conflicts of his time, and his novels and witty essays make him a major part of American literary history.

    70. The San Antonio College LitWeb Northern Humorists Page
    Bobbs, Merrill, 1930. Eugene Field ( 18501895 ). The Tribune Primer ( 1882 ).Disastrous advice to children, made worse, and funnier, by its primer style.
    http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/northumo.htm
    Some Northern Humorists: Before and After the Civil War Era
    Representative Writers and Works

    Thomas Chandler Haliburton ( 1796-1865 ). A Nova Scotian who belongs in this list.
    • The Clockmaker; or The Sayings of Samuel Slick of Slickville. First Series.
    • The Clockmaker. Second Series
    • The Clockmaker. Third Series
    • The Old Judge; or, Life in a Colony
    Seba Smith ( 1792-1868 ). Pen name: Major Jack Downing.
    • The Life and Writings of Major Jack Downing of Downingville
    • Select Letters of Major Jack Downing
    • 'Way Down East
    • My 30 Years Out of the Senate
    Henry Wheeler Shaw ( 1818-1885 ). Pen name: Josh Billings.
    • Josh Billings: Hiz Sayings
    • Farmer's Allminax ( 1869-1880 ). Published annually.
    • Josh Billings on Ice and Other Things
    • Everybody's Friend, or Josh Billings' Encyclopedia and Proverbial Philosophy of Wit and Humor
    • Quotations from Billings
  • David Ross Locke ( 1833-1888 ). Pen name: Petroleum V[esuvius] Nasby.
    • The Nasby Papers
    • Divers Views, Opinions, and Prophecies
    • Swingin' Round the Cirkle ( 1866 ). Illustrated by Thomas Nast
    • Ekkoes from Kentucky
    • The Moral History of America's Life Struggle
    • ( 1872 ). Illustrated by Nast.
  • 71. Gilded Age Documents
    Emerson, Ralph Waldo (18031882). The Conduct of Life (1870). Field, Eugene(1850-1895). The Love Affairs of a Bibliomaniac. Frederic, Harold (1856-1898).
    http://www.wm.edu/~srnels/giltext.html

    72. Contents
    Field, Eugene, 18501895. Journalist, poet. Born in St. Louis, attended Universityof Missouri, newspaperman is St. Louis, St. Joseph, and Kansas City.
    http://www.trcc.cc.mo.us/Library/MoAuthors.htm

    Missouri Authors
    for Children and Young Adults Compiled by:
    Gordon Johnston
    Rutland Library
    Three Rivers Community College
    Poplar Bluff, Mo. Updated: March 2003
    Contents
    Introduction Back to Children's Literature Missouri Authors for Children and Young Adults Other Missouri Authors of Interest to Young People ... Sources Introduction Top You may be aware that Mark Twain, Eugene Field, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Sara Teasdale, Langston Hughes, and T. S. Eliot, all authors of popular works for children, have ties to Missouri.
    This document expands this list with lesser known writers of the past as well as contemporary writers whose works have earned wide readership in the field of children's literature. A few writers of interest primarily to a particular city or area have also been included. Lists of works are representative, not comprehensive.
    If you know of additional writers who should be on this list, please let me know. Gordon Johnston
    Director, Rutland Library Missouri Authors for Children and Young Adults Top Asher, Sandy

    73. Index
    Field, Eugene (18501895) The Love Affairs of A Bibliomaniac Love-Songsof Childhood Fielding, Henry (1707-1754) From This World
    http://www.eshunet.com/list1/en3000/titles/index-f.htm
    English Classics 3000 F ( Listed by Author )
      Fabre, Jean-Henri (1823-1915)
      Bramble-bees and Others
        The Life of the Caterpillar
        The Life of the Fly
        The Life of the Spider
        The Mason-bees
        More Hunting Wasps

      Fa-Hien (ca. 337-ca. 422)
        Record of Buddhistic Kingdoms

      Fairless, Michael (1869-1901)
        The Gathering of Brother Hilarius
        The Grey Brethren and Other Fragments in Prose and Verse
        The Roadmender

      Farrand, Max (1869-1945) The Fathers of the Constitution Farrer James Anson
        Adam Smith (1881)
      Ferdowsi (ca.935-1020)
        The Epic of Kings
      Ferguson, Adam (1723-1816)
        An Essay On The History OF Civil Society
      Ferguson, W. B. M. (1882- ) Garrison's Finish, A Romance of the Race-Course Ferri, Enrico (1856-1929)
        Criminal Sociology
      Field, Edward Salisbury (1878-1936) Cupid's Understudy Field, Eugene (1850-1895)
        The Love Affairs of A Bibliomaniac Love-Songs of Childhood
      Fielding, Henry (1707-1754)
        From This World to the Next The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon
      Fielding, Sarah (1710-1768)
        The Governess, or, Little Female Academy

    74. YALE COLLECTION OF AMERICAN LITERATURE MANUSCRIPT MISCELLANY
    18471904. expand/contract this heading, Field, Eugene, 1850-1895.expand/contract this heading, Field, KATE, 1838-1896. expand/contract
    http://webtext.library.yale.edu/xml2html/beinecke.ycalmiscellany.nav.html
    YALE COLLECTION OF AMERICAN LITERATURE MANUSCRIPT MISCELLANY
    YCAL MSS MISC
    Click text below to navigate Finding Aid
    PROVENANCE
    CITE AS RESTRICTIONS ON ACCESS PROCESSING NOTES ... DESCRIPTION OF THE COLLECTION Collection Series A ALDRICH, THOMAS BAILEY, 1836-1907 ALLEN, ELIZABETH AKERS, 1832-1911 B ... Z

    75. The Werewolf (1911) By Eugene Field
    A message to you about copyright and permissions. The Werewolf. by Eugene Field(18501895). Originally from Second Book of Tales (1911), pp. 243-56.
    http://gaslight.mtroyal.ca/Yseult.htm
    The following is a Gaslight etext.... A message to you about
    The Werewolf
    by Eugene Field
    Originally from Second Book of Tales (1911), pp. 243-56. I N the reign of Egbert the Saxon there dwelt in Britain a maiden named Yseult, who was beloved of all, both for her goodness and for her beauty. But, though many a youth came wooing her, she loved Harold only, and to him she plighted her troth. Among the other youth of whom Yseult was beloved was Alfred, and he was sore angered that Yseult showed favor to Harold, so that one day Alfred said to Harold: "Is it right that old Siegfried should come from his grave and have Yseult to wife?" Then added he, "Prithee, good sir, why do you turn so white when I speak your grandsire's name?" Then Harold asked, "What know you of Siegfried that you taunt me? What memory of him should vex me now?" "We know and we know," retorted Alfred. "There are some tales told us by our grandmas we have not forgot." So ever after that Alfred's words and Alfred's bitter smile haunted Harold by day and night. Harold's grandsire, Siegfried the Teuton, had been a man of cruel violence. The legend said that a curse rested upon him, and that at certain times he was possessed of an evil spirit that wreaked its fury on mankind. But Siegfried had been dead full many years, and there was naught to mind the world of him save the legend and a cunning-wrought spear which he had from Brunehilde, the witch. This spear was such a weapon that it never lost its brightness, nor had its point been blunted. It hung in Harold's chamber, and it was the marvel among weapons of that time.

    76. Literary Tour - Stop 1
    It doesn t matter that the only connection between Eugene Field (18501895) and WashingtonPark is that he once nearly drowned in it while goofing around with
    http://www.denvergov.org/AboutDenver/today_driving_lit_stop1.asp
    DENVER'S LITERARY LANDMARKS DRIVING TOUR
    STOP 1: WASHINGTON PARK
    (Franklin and Exposition Streets, East Side of Park)
    Eugene Field: The Unforgettable Trickster
    For generations now, tiny Coloradans have been prodded, poked and made to stand still while having their photograph taken with obscure, out-of-state relatives next to the statue of Wynken, Blynken and Nod in a picturesque spot next to the Eugene Field House on the east side of Washington Park. There are worse things to happen in childhood, so if you're kind enough to begin this Denver Lit Tour with us at this recommended first stop, then by all means force your children to lean into your viewfinder for a lovely shot of the statue (sculpted by Mabel Landrum Torrey in 1919) with Washington Park lake - and the Rocky Mountains - in the background. It doesn't matter that the only connection between Eugene Field (1850-1895) and Washington Park is that he once nearly drowned in it while goofing around with friends. What does matter is that this city - and an entire generation of American parents and children - adored this man and his writings. Just as nearly every American child today has a Dr. Seuss book read to him or her, Eugene Field's poems for children were equally beloved and best-selling in the first decades of the last century. Beside "Dutch Lullaby," the poem honored by the sculpture, children everywhere once knew "The Sugar Plum Tree," "The Duel" (between the Gingham Dog and the Calico Cat), and "Little Boy Blue."

    77. Skidmore's Curriculum Library Poetry Collection
    Field, Eugene, 18501895. Gingham dog and the calico cat a poem, 811.4 Fie.Field, Eugene, 1850-1895. Wynken, Blynken, Nod a poem, 811.4 Fie.
    http://www.skidmore.edu/library/collections/currlib/clp.htm
    Curriculum Library Poetry Collection
    Return to Curriculum Library main page

    Author Title Call Number O'Halloran, Barbara Collopy. Creature comforts : people and their security objects 155.418 O'Hal Schwartz, Alvin, 1927- And the green grass grew all around : folk poetry from everyone 398.20973 Sch Allison, Diane Worfolk. This is the key to the kingdom 398.8 All Chorao, Kay. Knock at the door and other baby action rhymes 398.8 Cho Craig, Helen. I see the moon, and the moon sees me : Helen Craig's book of nursery rhymes 398.8 Cra Dabcovich, Lydia. Keys to my kingdom : a poem in three languages 398.8 Dab Dreamtime : a book of lullabies 398.8 Dre Hague, Michael. Teddy bear, teddy bear : a classic action rhyme 398.8 Hag Hey, diddle, diddle : a children's book of nursery rhymes 398.8 Hey Ivimey, John W. (John William), b. 1868. Three blind mice : the classic nursery rhyme 398.8 Ivi Johnson, David, 1951- Old Mother Hubbard : a nursury rhyme 398.8 Joh Hickory dickory dock and other nursery rhymes 398.8 Jon Little Robin Redbreast : a Mother Goose rhyme 398.8 Lit Manson, Christopher.

    78. Index
    Course. Ferri, Enrico (18561929) Criminal Sociology Field, EdwardSalisbury (1878-1936) Cupid s Understudy. Field, Eugene (1850-1895)
    http://book.nankai.edu.cn/book/english/f.html
    English Classics 3000 F ( Listed by Author )

    79. HOLY GRAIL: TEXTS, IMAGES, BASIC INFORMATION
    Field, Eugene (18501895), The Vision of The Holy Grail (1905); Fowler Wright,Sydney (1874-1965) The Song of Arthur (Part 4 Carbonac) (from the S. Fowler
    http://www.lib.rochester.edu/camelot/grlmenu.htm
    Return to the Main Menu of The Camelot Project at the University of Rochester
    THE HOLY GRAIL
    The Holy Grail is generally considered to be the cup from which Christ drank at the Last Supper and the one used by Joseph of Arimathea to catch his blood as he hung on the cross. This significance, however, was introduced into the Arthurian legends by Robert de Boron in his verse romance Joseph d'Arimathie (sometimes also called Le Roman de l'Estoire dou Graal ), which was probably written in the last decade of the twelfth century or the first couple of years of the thirteenth. In earlier sources and in some later ones, the grail is something very different. The term "grail" comes from the Latin gradale Parzival Perceval Morte d'Arthur ) do achieve the quest. Tennyson is perhaps the author who has the greatest influence on the conception of the Grail quest for the modern English-speaking world through his Idylls and his short poem "Sir Galahad" . However, James Russell Lowell's "The Vision of Sir Launfal" , one of the most popular of nineteenth-century American poems gave to generations a democratized notion of the Grail quest as something achievable by anyone who is truly charitable. The notion that the Grail story originated in fertility myths was popularized by Jessie Weston in her book From Ritual to Romance , which was used by T. S. Eliot in the writing of

    80. Reading Room Index To The Comic Art Collection
    J. Bails, 19731976). Call no. PN6725.B3v.4 -Field, Eugene, 1850-1895.
    http://www.lib.msu.edu/comics/rri/frri/fie.htm
    Michigan State University Libraries
    Special Collections Division
    Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection
    "Fieber" to "Fièvre" Back to the F index screen
    Back to the
    ...
    Back up the list
    Fields, W. C., 1879-1946
    Fields
    Fiends
    On down the list This segment last edited April 23, 2000

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