| Title |
The Singing Girl. |
| Publisher |
[New York] : J. Wrigley, Publisher, 27 Chatham Street, N.Y. |
| Date |
[between 1840 and 1880?] |
| Description |
A woman sits at a piano singing, and her shadow looks like a bird. The valentine puns on the word "lark" to mock the recipient
for being a ridiculously bad singer.
|
| Notes |
Text: You think yourself so runs the tale / A very Lark or Nightingale, / For those that hear you sing, say "hark" / "List
to that warbling, what a Lark," / While thus you sing to please the men / You are a precious Lark to them.
|
| Genre |
Caricatures and cartoons. |
|
Comic valentines. |
| Subject |
American wit and humor. |
|
Women singers -- Caricatures and cartoons. |
| Has format |
TMP.objres.452.jpg |
| Provenance |
McAllister, John A. (John Allister), 1822-1896, collector. |
| Identifier |
Comic Valentines, 10.1 |