Record ID | ia:theprivatedining0000unse |
Source | Internet Archive |
Download MARC XML | https://archive.org/download/theprivatedining0000unse/theprivatedining0000unse_marc.xml |
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LEADER: 07095cam 22005891a 4500
001 ocm05354860
003 OCoLC
005 20200320084230.0
008 790516s1953 mau 001 p eng
007 ta
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043 $an-us---
050 00 $aPS3527.A637$bP73
055 2 $aPS3527*
080 $a820(73)
082 00 $a817.5
084 $aHU 4576$2rvk
084 $aHU 4585$2rvk
100 1 $aNash, Ogden,$d1902-1971.
245 14 $aThe private dining room, and other new verses /$cOgden Nash.
250 $a[1st ed.].
260 $aBoston :$bLittle, Brown,$c1953.
300 $axiii, 169 pages ;$c20 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
380 $aPoetry
500 $aIncludes index.
505 0 $aThe private dining room -- Peekaboo, I almost see you -- Correction: Eve delved and Adam span -- My trip Daorba -- The anniversary -- All, all are gone, the old familiar quotations -- Everybody loves a bride, even the groom -- The happy ending of Mr. Train -- The calendar-watchers, or, What's so wonderful about being a patriarch? -- I'm a pleasure to shop for -- A caution to hillbilly singers, harpists, harpoonists, channel-swimmers, and people first in line for world series tickets -- A caution to everybody -- Flow gently, sweet etymology, ornithology, and penology -- The snake, without whom Adam would never have looked at the lady once -- Shoo, shoo, shoemaker -- I didn't say a word, or, Who called that piccolo player a father? -- There's a law, isn't there? or, I can call you names but don't call me names -- Calling spring VII-MMMC -- Everybody's mind to me a kingdom is, or, a great big wonderful world it's -- Next! -- They won't believe, on New Year's Eve, that New Year's Day will come what may -- Change here for Wichita Falls, or, Has anybody seen my wanderlust? -- Don't look for the silver lining, just wait for it -- Polonius, yes, Polonius, no -- The astigmatic naturalist -- With my own eyes -- Two goes into two once, if you can get it there -- The chef has imagination, or, It's too hard to do it easy -- Why the postman has to ring twice, or, Yellow envelope, where have you gone? -- The wild jackass -- The tortoise -- The aquarium -- The mules -- The cuckoo -- The birds -- The swan -- The voluble wheel chair -- The child is father to the man, but with more authority -- The visit -- A dog's best friend is his illiteracy -- We pause now briefly for an important message -- Eheu! Fugaces, or, What a difference a lot of days make -- Everybody wants to get into the Baedeker -- Old Dr. Valentine to his only millionaire -- Old Dr. Valentine to that kind of patient -- Old Dr. Valentine to a colleague -- Old Dr. Valentine to his son -- Old Dr. Valentine for once dreams of wealth -- Roll over and play alive, or, Who says you can't teach an old dog tiresome tricks? -- The Wendigo -- Mr. Betts's mind a kingdom is -- The strange case of the cautious motorist -- The unwinged ones -- What is bibbidi-bobbidi-boo in Sanskrit? -- You can be a republican, I'm a gerontocrat -- Fables Bulfinch forgot -- Hi-ho the ambulance-o -- Baby, it's Calder inside -- Everything's haggis in Hoboken, or, Scots wha hae hae -- Father, dear father, go jump in the lake, or, You're costlier than you think -- Father-in-law of the groom -- What's in a name? Some letter I always forget -- Merry Christmas, you-all, or, Who forgot Savannah? -- The strange case of Mr. O'Banion's come-uppance -- Hand me down the old school sliding pads, or, There's a hint of strawberry leaves in the air -- The strange case of the lovelorn letter writer -- Long time no see, 'by now -- How to get along with yourself, or, I recommend softening of the oughteries -- How high is up? A sort of chantey -- How to be married without a spouse, or, Mr. Kipling, what have you done with Mr. Hauksbee? -- Have a seat behind the potted palm, sir -- Hey, hey for the American way -- The bat -- The chipmunk -- The grynch -- Let's not play lotto, let's just talk -- Tweedledee and Tweedledoom -- I remember yule -- Kipling's Vermont -- M.C. loves TV, or, A personality is born -- Max Schling, Max Schling, lend me your green thumb -- It's about time -- Maybe you can't take it with you, but look what happens when you leave it behind -- Is it true what they say about Dixie, or, Is it just the way they say it? -- The club car -- Lecturer in bookstore -- The dust storm, or, I've got Texas in my lungs -- Reflection on the vernacular -- I can't stop unless you stop, or, Lines addressed to a man making $5000 a year who overtips and man making $10,000 a year to make himself feel he's making $20,000 a year -- You can't tell the hit parade without a drum majorette -- The lepidopterist -- This is my own, my native tongue -- Love me but leave my dog alone -- Limerick one -- Limerick two -- Limerick three -- Just press the button, the buttonhole is really a deepfreeze -- It was not I who posed for Rodin, or, Why I flunked philosophy IV -- Tune for an ill-tempered clavichord.
530 $aAlso issued online.
520 $a"Nash belongs to none of the 20th century's poetic movements though he borrowed from all of them. He published his first collection during the height of High Modernism and his last in the early 70s with the Language poets and Second New York School bubbling around him. 'The Private Dining Room' pops and fizzes on the level of sound poetry, both a sendup to the form and to 1950s propriety and etiquette guides."--Ondioline website.
650 0 $aHumorous poetry, American.
650 6 $aPoésie humoristique américaine.
650 7 $aHumorous poetry, American.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00963760
655 7 $aPoetry.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01423828
655 7 $aPoetry.$2lcgft
776 08 $iOnline version:$aNash, Ogden, 1902-1971.$tPrivate dining room, and other new verses.$b[1st ed.].$dBoston : Little, Brown, 1953$w(OCoLC)570672963
938 $aBaker and Taylor$bBTCP$n52012647 /L/r952
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