File:Theatrical and circus life (1893).jpg
Original file (1,888 × 2,824 pixels, file size: 764 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Title: Theatrical and circus life; Year: 1893 (1890s) Authors: Jennings, John Joseph, 1853-1909. (from old catalog)
Fiction cross-reference
Karl Jones in demon costume, Halloween 2009.
Carnevale Tenebre uses vise to clamp souls.
Das Gespenst eines Flohs ("The Ghost of a Flea") by William Blake. (Circa 1819-1820).
Nonfiction cross-reference
Text Appearing Before Image:
ily until I was stuckas full of carpet tacks as a boiled ham is of cloves at apastry-cooks ball. Then they took me out of thenet, picked the tacks out of my back, and stood meup, weak and exhausted, according to instructions, infront of the throne. The candidate, said the High Muck-a-Muck, has given satisfactory evidence of his fortitude andendurance, and we are now prepared to receive himforever into our number as an Elk. Let him takethe oath and kiss the branching antlers. The oath was administered and I saluted the antlerswith my lips as fervently as I could under the circum-stances. Now remove the blindfold. The handkerchief was removed from my eyes and Isaw â nothing. But I was an Elk. I have seen many candidates initiated into this Ordersince that time, but I have never seen any such pro-ceeding as that here described, which leads me to in-fer that some friends, and among them Jughandle, putup a job on me and used me a little roughly, for thesake of the sport it afforded them.
Text Appearing After Image:
(512) THE CIRCUS WORLD. CHAP TEE XXXVIII. THE CIECUS IS HERE. A disengaged canvasman who was probablydriven to poetry for lack of other work wrote the fol-lowing spring verses which were published in the NewYork Clipper: â In the spring the gorgeous banners float upon the circus tent, And the active agents fancies on advances all are bent. In the spring the bounding brothers try some new and daring games,While the opposition fakirs call each other awful names. In the spring the sideshow-blowers, with their never-failing tongues,Pump out paralyzing language from their copper-fastened lungs.In the spring the fair Circassian, with her every hair on end,Leaves again her native Brooklyn, on the road her steps to wend. In the spring ye candy-butcher shows confections old and tough,While the gentle lemonadist juggles with the same old stuff.In the spring ye merry jester learns conundrums bright and new(Dug up by the Christy Minstrels in the year of 52). In the spring â and in the ring
Attribution:
By Internet Archive Book Images - https://www.flickr.com/photos/internetarchivebookimages/14763080281/Source book page: https://archive.org/stream/theatricalcircus00je/theatricalcircus00je#page/n521/mode/1up, No restrictions, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=43616670
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
current | 11:49, 9 June 2016 | 1,888 × 2,824 (764 KB) | Admin (talk | contribs) | Title: Theatrical and circus life; Year: 1893 (1890s) Authors: Jennings, John Joseph, 1853-1909. (from old catalog) == Fiction cross-reference == <gallery mode="traditional"> </gallery> * Carnevale Tenebre == Nonfiction cross-reference == Text... |
You cannot overwrite this file.
File usage
The following page uses this file: