- IE OCL P29/38
- Part
- 6 November 1930
Verse transcribed by Maggie B. Corcoran, with annotation 'broken-hearted'. at Harbour St, Tullamore, Offaly.
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Verse transcribed by Maggie B. Corcoran, with annotation 'broken-hearted'. at Harbour St, Tullamore, Offaly.
Verse by M. E. Lennon, Harbour St, Tullamore:
'A Token.
So I send this little token
With the heartiest good will
Just to prove that I remember
All who climb with me life's hill
Just to prove that time can never
Bonds of time sever
That as years speed by we find
They but more securely bind
Ties of auld acquaintance still.
Verses transcribed by Maggie Corcoran on the subject of public houses:
'Bee Hive Public House
It's in this hive we're all alive
Good liqueur makes us funny.
If you be dry step in and try
The flavour of our honey
Your bees are asps, they sting like wasps
Your liqueur is adulterated and anyone that
resorts this house their misery is completed. '
Verse transcribed by Maggie Corcoran [on the death of her mother].
Black case with poem by Constance Lamb.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Black pocket sleeve with lid which contains a poem and small drawings by Constance Plunkett-Johnston.
Poem by Major George Francis Gamble entitled, "A Biological Study."
Part of Woodfield Papers
"A Biological Study. (After Aristotle, but Before Lunch)" a poem by Major George Francis Gamble.
Poem by Major George Francis Gamble entitled, "The Duties of Gatekeeper at Mount Jerome Cemetery."
Part of Woodfield Papers
Poem written by Major Geore Francis Gamble entitled, "The Duties of Gatekeeper at Mount Jerome Cemetery."
Poem and recipe written by John Stroud Hosford.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Poem recited by Justin McCarthy at the Royal Eyr Hospital London, in 1899, later written down by John Stroud Hosford. On the reverse is the recipe for the "Hosford Punch of over 100 years ago" passed down four generations to John Stroud Hosford.
Art portfolio of Reverend Adam Lamb.
Part of Woodfield Papers
Poems, sketches, and drawings of Adam Lamb, kept in paper mache cover.
Poems by Major George Francis Gamble entitled, "By the Holy Fly" and "Algology."
Part of Woodfield Papers
Two poems written by Major George Francis Gamble. The first, "By The Holy Fly", was dedicated to The Anglers' club of Ireland with their permission. The second, "Algology", was an encore verse dedicated to his algological professor.
Lamb, Francis Adam Johnston, Reverend