Notebooks.
Found in 3337 Collections and/or Records:
Poetry notebook, literary correspondence and papers of Tom Scott.
Poetry notebook of George Campbell Hay, with later additions, including philosophical and political notes., [Circa 1936]-[circa 1975.]
Poetry notebook of James K Annand.
Contains drafts of Annand`s, "Songs from Carmina Burana. Translated into Scots Verse" (1978).
Poetry notebook of Maurice Lindsay.
Contains drafts of "A Net to Catch the Winds".
Poetry notebook of Robert Crawford., 1927-1928.
Poetry notebook of Robert Crawford., 1927-1931.
The notebook also contains drafts of essays and letters (folio 134 verso).
Poetry notebooks and other papers of Robert Crawford (1877-1931).
Robert Crawford, who was a miner in Ayrshire and later in Stirlingshire, published three collections of poems and also wrote philosophical essays.
Poetry notebooks of Don Paterson., Circa 1992-2006.
Poetry notebooks of Robert Crawford, including versions of poems published in his ‘In quiet fields’ and elsewhere., 1927-1931.
Poetry of Agnes Mure Mackenzie., [Circa 1919, before 1956.]
Poetry of Sydney Durward Tremayne., [1955, or before]-?1972, undated.
Poetry workbook of Sydney Goodsir Smith., 1972-1973.
Poetry workbook, volume III, of Sydney Goodsir Smith., 1942-1944.
Poetry workbook, volume V, of Sydney Goodsir Smith., 1946-January 1951.
Poetry workbook, volume VI, of Sydney Goodsir Smith., March 1951-1953.
Poetry workbook, volume VII, of Sydney Goodsir Smith., 1954-1971.
Poetry workbooks of Sydney Goodsir Smith., 1942-1973.
Part of a numbered series of notebooks containing drafts of poems. some of the poems are annotated with the place and date of their first publication in periodicals. MSS.26116—26117 also contain notes from Goodsir Smith's reading.
Political notebook kept by the 3rd Earl of Minto., 1837-circa 1860.
The notebook contains notes on persons considered for Admiralty appointments and promotions, on ecclesiastical, educational and Lunacy Board affairs, on population, revenue, sugar duties and proceedings in the House of Commons, and notes, made in 1854, on Joseph Butler's ‘The analogy of religion’ (London, 1736).