Four poems, holograph, with one pen and ink drawing, "from 1975 & 1976 written out for Jay and Ann [Laughlin]... New Years' 1977," in Japanese accordion-fold book. Contains: "Artist to Intellectual (Poet to Explainer); "From Metamorphic Journal (excerpts)"; "What My House Would Be Like If It Were A Person"; and "Alongside."
Holograph list of five poems by Lathrop and four by his wife Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, with notes indicating his personal preferences. Also bears editorial annotations; "Library of American Literature" was edited by Edmund Clarence Stedman and Ellen Mackay Hutchinson.
Nine poems, drafts, typescript, sent to Cid Corman. Titles include: "The Crisis," "The Rhyme," "The Painters," "Something for Easter," "The Riddle," "The Echo," "The Vision," "Popular Song," and "The Cantos."
Poems, holograph and typescript, some with manuscript corrections in Gregory's hand, including "Off Capri," "Candlemass Eve," "The Muse of Dublin," and "Book I/iv/iv."
Six AMS: "Atavism"; "Atropos"; "Avowal"; "A Faun in Wall Street"; "Vale"; "Vespasian's Circus." Accompanied by typescript historical notes regarding influence of "Atavism" on Jack London's Call of the Wild, and brief manuscript notes on O'Hara.
Two poems, typescript, corrected in holograph and signed, beginning "In God's great scheme, there is one theme"; and "Love is the center, and circumference," from "What Love Is," in her Poems of Pleasure.
TMS poem "The Three B's," dedicated to the Writers' Guild; holograph notes or fragments of draft about Lincoln, with a printed clipping about Lincoln corrected in ink; a deposit slip from the Staten Island National Bank and Trust, signed; and a signed photograph, dated 1936.
AMS poem inscribed to Stedman for his birthday, four lines forming a pun on Stedman's name; mounted to sheet inscribed, "To Ernest F. Hill, A New Year's Greeting from Mrs. William Sharp, 1931."