Monthly Archives: December 2023

“He resolves to say no more”

Thomas Hardy grew famous for his novels in the 19th century, but he considered himself primarily a poet, publishing over 1000 poems in his lifetime. He finished the manuscript to his last collection, Winter Words in Various Moods and Metres, … Continue reading

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A collaborative creation, in the public domain at last

Grace and Carl Moon met at the Grand Canyon in 1909, and quickly bonded over a shared interest in indigenous peoples of the American southwest. They wrote and illustrated children’s books sympathetically portraying Native characters, often with Native girls as … Continue reading

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From threepenny to free

François Villon’s 15th century French songs and John Gay’s 18th century English “Beggar’s Opera” are among the sources Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill used to create Die Dreigroschenoper, a musical play that premiered in Berlin in 1928. It won fame … Continue reading

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Pardon me while I have a strange interlude

Eugene O’Neill won his third Pulitzer prize for Strange Interlude, a two-part, nine-act play taking place over 20 years, with themes including sex, infidelity, abortion, and eugenics, and featuring frequent stream-of-consciousness asides and soliloquies by the characters. It was a … Continue reading

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Claimed by the sea, reclaimed by the public domain

In 1926, Henry Beston began a two-week stay at a cottage he’d put up on Cape Cod, but “as the year lengthened into autumn, the beauty and mystery of this earth and outer sea so possessed and held me that … Continue reading

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Legend and fiction meet, and soon join the public domain

The legend of the hejnał, a trumpet call cut short as its player was shot by invaders in the 13th century, is now a Kraków tradition. There’s no known written record of it, though, prior to The Trumpeter of Krakow, … Continue reading

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Tim Tyler’s adventures in the public domain

There’s a long-running comic strip character soon joining the public domain who’s not a mouse. Tim Tyler’s Luck first appeared in 1928, drawn by Lyman Young (older brother of Chic Young, later known for Blondie). We first see Tim in … Continue reading

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More of the national jukebox in the public domain

Today I’m visiting the Library of Congress, whose National Jukebox features historic recordings from the early 20th century. Among its featured artists are the New Orleans Rhythm Kings, who wrote several New Orleans and Chicago jazz standards, including “Tin Roof … Continue reading

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“I’m not antique. I’m just old.”

Bess Streeter Aldrich’s A Lantern in Her Hand presents its protagonist, Abbie Deal, with as broad a sweep as the North American prairie she lives in. The book tells Abbie’s story from coming west as a child in a covered … Continue reading

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Think different

“Glibness, confidence, a retentive memory enabling its possessor to air easily acquired, sometimes shamelessly pirated, knowledge, can deceive observation at first, but not for long.” Ernest Dimnet wrote that not about AI chatbots, but about humans. In The Art of … Continue reading

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