The FictionMags Index
Index by Date: Page 5598
Previous —
Chronological Index —
Table-of-Contents
Nash, Harriet A. (1864-1907) (items)
- A Twenty-Dollar Bill, (ss) McClure’s Magazine November 1898
- The Misses Potter’s Chaperon, (ss) Frank Leslie’s Popular Monthly January 1900
- An Old Story, (ss) McClure’s Magazine January 1900
- Sylvan Episode, (ss) New England Magazine May 1900
- Mayor of Five Rivers, (ss) New England Magazine September 1900
- Kept Until Called for, (ss) New England Magazine May 1901
- Shell Pagoda, (ss) New England Magazine October 1901
- Christmas Tangle, (ss) New England Magazine December 1902
- Island Miller, (ss) New England Magazine January 1903
- Easter Blossoms, (ss) New England Magazine April 1903
- Aunt Marvelous, (ss) The Red Book Illustrated May 1903
- Special Providence, (ss) New England Magazine May 1903
- In Lilac Time, (ss) Ainslee’s Magazine August 1903
- Webster Curse, (ss) New England Magazine September 1903
- A Woman Hater, (ss) The Red Book September 1903
- A Question of Ancestry, (ss) Ainslee’s Magazine November 1903
- Ephraim Mosher’s Responsibilities, (ss) The Red Book January 1904
- Roxella’s Prisoner, (ss) The Atlantic Monthly January 1904
- Abby Sophia’s Legacy, (ss) New England Magazine May 1904
- The Judge, (ss) The Atlantic Monthly May 1904
- Hem Anniversary, (ss) New England Magazine June 1904
- The Healing of Pineville, (ss) The Red Book July 1904
- A Later Generation, (ss) The Red Book October 1904
- The Owner of Cottonville, (ss) The Red Book February 1905
- The Last Tyler, (ss) The Red Book March 1905
- Madame Mansfield’s Granddaughter, (ss) Smith’s Magazine April 1905
- The Elder, (ss) The Red Book Magazine November 1905
- An Earth-Born Goddess, (ss) The Red Book Magazine December 1905
- A Truth Party, (ss) The Designer February 1906
- The Making of a Citizen, (ss) The Red Book Magazine March 1906
- Lorenzo Potter’s Estate, (ss) The Monthly Story Magazine June 1906
- The Widow Hardwick, (ss) The Red Book Magazine July 1906
- Parson Noble’s Daughter, (ss) The Monthly Story Blue Book Magazine November 1906
- The Spanish Ancestress, (ss) The Red Book Magazine February 1907
- Eli Packer’s Inheritance, (ss) The Century Magazine October 1907
Nash, Ogden (1902-1971) (items)
- Biological, (pm) The New Yorker July 12 1930
- Ethnological, (pm) The New Yorker July 12 1930
- Genealogical, (pm) The New Yorker July 12 1930
- Geographical, (pm) The New Yorker July 12 1930
- Introspective, (pm) The New Yorker July 12 1930
- Political (“Like an art lover looking at the Mona Lisa…”), (pm) The New Yorker July 12 1930
- Without All Due Respect, (pm) The New Yorker July 26 1930
- Architectural, (pm) The New Yorker August 9 1930
- Literary, (pm) The New Yorker August 9 1930
- On Ice-Breaking, (pm) The New Yorker August 9 1930
- Political (“I for one…”), (pm) The New Yorker August 9 1930
- On Ice-Breaking, (pm) The New Yorker August 9 1930
- Hymn to the Sun and Myself, (pm) The New Yorker August 16 1930
- Grateful, (pm) The New Yorker September 20 1930
- Honest, (pm) The New Yorker September 20 1930
- Reminiscent, (pm) The New Yorker September 20 1930
- Speculative, (pm) The New Yorker September 20 1930
- For Any Improbable She, (pm) The New Yorker October 4 1930
- Love Under the Republicans or Democrats, (pm) The New Yorker October 18 1930
- Cautious, (pm) The New Yorker October 25 1930
- Invidious, (pm) The New Yorker October 25 1930
- Platitudinous, (pm) The New Yorker October 25 1930
- Woodpile-Raking, (pm) The New Yorker October 25 1930
- Wrong-Headed, (pm) The New Yorker October 25 1930
- Preface to a Wedding Trip, (ss) Vanity Fair (US) October 1930
- Funebrial, (pm) The New Yorker November 1 1930
- Helpful, (pm) The New Yorker November 1 1930
- Legal, (pm) The New Yorker November 1 1930
- Monstrous, (pm) The New Yorker November 1 1930
- Sedative, (pm) The New Yorker November 1 1930
- Theatrical, (pm) The New Yorker November 1 1930
- Veracious, (pm) The New Yorker November 1 1930
- Helpful, (pm) The New Yorker November 1 1930
- Autres Betes, Autres Moeurs I, (pm) The New Yorker November 15 1930
- Autres Betes, Autres Moeurs II, (pm) The New Yorker November 15 1930
- I Want New York, (pm) The New Yorker December 20 1930
- Lines in Dispraise of Dispraise, (pm) The New Yorker December 20 1930
- Lines Indited with All the Depravity of Poverty, (pm) The New Yorker December 20 1930
- Family Court, (pm) Publishers Weekly January 3 1931
- Atop the Mooring Mast, (ss) The New Yorker March 21 1931
- The Lama, (pm) The New Yorker April 4 1931
- The Oyster, (pm) The New Yorker April 4 1931
- The Phoenix, (pm) The New Yorker April 4 1931
- The Baby, (pm) The New Yorker April 11 1931
- The Cobra, (pm) The New Yorker April 11 1931
- The Cow, (pm) The New Yorker April 11 1931
- The Judge, (pm) The New Yorker April 11 1931
- The Rabbits, (pm) The New Yorker April 11 1931
- The Roach, (pm) The New Yorker April 11 1931
- Eyewitness, (ss) The New Yorker May 16 1931
- It’s All Wrong, (pl) The New Yorker May 23 1931
- Manhattan Monkey, (pm) Free Wheeling by Ogden Nash, Simon and Schuster, 1931
- Reflection on a Common Misapprehension, (pm) Free Wheeling by Ogden Nash, Simon and Schuster, 1931
- Lines Written to Console, (pm) Hard Lines by Ogden Nash, Simon and Schuster, 1931
- Natural Reflection, (pm) Hard Lines by Ogden Nash, Simon and Schuster, 1931
- Raven, Don’t Stay Away from My Door, (ss) Harper’s Bazaar April 1932
- Song of the Open Road, (pm) The New Yorker October 15 1932
- Far Thoughts from 82nd Street, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 12 1932
- Who Is a Hasppy Parent?, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post December 3 1932
- The Insect, (pm) The New Yorker January 28 1933
- The Pig, (pm) The New Yorker January 28 1933
- The Pigmy, (pm) The New Yorker January 28 1933
- The Rhinoceros, (pm) The New Yorker January 28 1933
- The Wapiti, (pm) The New Yorker January 28 1933
- The Wren, (pm) The New Yorker January 28 1933
- The Seven Ages of Mrs. Marmaduke Moore, (ss) Redbook Magazine February 1933
- Turns in a Worm’s Lane, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post July 29 1933
- Just a Piece of Lettuce and Some Lemon Juice, Thank You, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post August 19 1933
- A Parable for Sports Writers, Society Columnists, Bond Salesmen and Poets; or, Go Get a Reputation, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post September 2 1933
- Apartment to Sublet - Unfurnished, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post September 9 1933
- When You Say That, Smile! Or, All Right, Then, Don’t Smile!, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post September 16 1933
- Lines to a Three-Name Lady, (pm) Redbook Magazine September 1933
- How’s Your Sacro-Iliac, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post October 14 1933
- The Camel, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 4 1933
- The Caribou, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 4 1933
- The Germ, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 4 1933
- The Giraffe, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 4 1933
- The Wombat, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 4 1933
- There’s More Time at the Top, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 18 1933
- The Cat, (pm) Happy Days by Ogden Nash, Simon and Schuster, 1933
- The Stork, (pm) Happy Days by Ogden Nash, Simon and Schuster, 1933
- Fragments from the Japanese, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post February 3 1934
- It Ought to Be History; or, Don’t Say It Isn’t So, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post February 10 1934
- The First Thousand Miles, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post February 24 1934
- The Only Good Indian Is a Dead Public Relations Counselor, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post February 24 1934
- Good-by, Old 1933, You Oaf, (pm) Redbook Magazine February 1934
- Don’t Cry, Darling, It’s Blood All Right, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post March 10 1934
- Speaking of Valentines…, (ss) Cosmopolitan March 1934
- Oh, Stop Being Thankful All Over the Place, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post April 14 1934
- Long Live Delays of Ancient Rome, (ms) The Saturday Evening Post April 28 1934
- Easter Parade (with James Montgomery Flagg), (ss) Cosmopolitan April 1934
- How to Tell a Quail from a Partridge, (ms) The Saturday Evening Post May 5 1934
- Anybody Here Alive?, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 19 1934
- Ding-Dong, Toot-Toot, All Aboard, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 26 1934
- Roulette Us Be Gay, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 9 1934
- Portrait of the Artist As a Prematurely Old Man, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 16 1934
- One from One Leaves Two, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 23 1934
- Down with the Course of Inhuman Events, (ms) The Saturday Evening Post June 30 1934
- One, Two, Buckle My Shoe, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post July 7 1934
- Just Shut Your Eyes Till It’s Over, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post July 14 1934
- After the Christening, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post July 21 1934
- Suppose I Darken Your Door, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post July 28 1934
- Are You Saving This Seat for Anyone; or, Yes, But What’s the Use?, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post August 4 1934
- I’ll Take a Bromide, Please, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post September 15 1934
- There’s a Host Born Every Minute, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post September 22 1934
- What Almost Every Woman Knows Sooner or Later, (pm) New York American September 27 1934
- The Return, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 6 1934
- Are You a Snodgrass?, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 13 1934
- Civilization Is Constant Vexation, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 20 1934
- Further Fragments from the Japanese, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 27 1934
- Goody for Our Side and Your Side Too, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 17 1934
- Archer, Arch Me Yon Carrier Pigeon, (ms) The Saturday Evening Post November 24 1934
- Third Floor, Men’s Yellow Waistcoats, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post December 8 1934
- Let George Do It, If you Can Find Him, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post December 15 1934
- Home Is the Golfer, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post December 29 1934
- A Warning to Wives, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post February 2 1935
- Kind of an Ode to Duty, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post February 23 1935
- Judgment Day, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post March 2 1935
- Spring Song, (pm) New York American March 21 1935
- The Japanese, (pm) New York American April 11 1935
- The King of Kings, (pm) New York American April 11 1935
- The Neighbors, (pm) New York American April 11 1935
- The Northerners, (pm) New York American April 11 1935
- Your Friends Are My Friends, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post April 27 1935
- Machinery Doesn’t Answer, Either, But You Aren’t Married to It, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 4 1935
- The Strange Case of the Dead Divorcee, (vi) New York American May 9 1935
- Splash!, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 11 1935
- A Plea for a League of Sleep, (pm) New York American May 16 1935
- The Ant, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 25 1935
- The Calf, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 25 1935
- The Centipede, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 25 1935
- The Hippopotamus, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 25 1935
- The Purist, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 25 1935
- The Common Cold, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 1 1935
- Parsley for Vice-President!, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 8 1935
- Little Feet, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 15 1935
- Complaint to Four Angels, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post July 13 1935
- Aside to Husbands, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post July 20 1935
- Children’s Party, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post August 3 1935
- Personal Form Sheet, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post August 24 1935
- A Salute to the Four Seasons, (pm) Esquire August 1935
- I Have It on Good Authority, (pm) New York American September 3 1935
- Rainy Day, (pm) New York American September 10 1935
- Pipe Dreams, (pm) New York American October 10 1935
- Christopher Columbus, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 12 1935
- Do Poets Know Too Much?, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 19 1935
- Friend of My Friend, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 26 1935
- Birdies, Don’t Make Me Laugh, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 9 1935
- Three Plaints: and Other Poems, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 16 1935
- It’s Important to Be Alive, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 23 1935
- Riding on a Railroad Train, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post December 28 1935
- Mutiny on the Bounty, (pm) Redbook Magazine December 1935
- Seaside Serenade, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post January 4 1936
- Winning Is More Fun Than Losing, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post January 11 1936
- He Ain’t Ethical, (pm) Redbook Magazine January 1936
- The Wishing Well, (ms) The Saturday Evening Post February 22 1936
- It Must Be the Milk, (pm) The New Yorker February 29 1936
- Catch Old St. Valentine by the Toe, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine February 1936
- The Norwegian Nightingale, (pm) Redbook Magazine February 1936
- Recipe for a Dictatorship, (pm) Esquire February 1936
- A Child’s Guide to Parents, (pm) New York American March 12 1936
- Dear Godmother, I Hope She Bruises Easily!, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post April 4 1936
- What This Country Needs Is More Broad-Minded Babies, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post April 11 1936
- Absence, (pm) Harper’s Bazaar April 1936
- The Adventures of Isabel, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine April 1936
- The Decline and Fall of the Masculine Gender, (pm) Cosmopolitan April 1936
- Norma Shearer—Shakespearer, (pm) Redbook Magazine April 1936
- The Dark Horse of 1936, (pm) Redbook Magazine May 1936
- The Man with Two New Suits, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine May 1936
- Barnyard Cogitations, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 6 1936
- Hark! Hark! The Pari-Mutuels Bark!, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 6 1936
- Up from the Wheelbarrow, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post June 6 1936
- The First Family of the Turf, (pm) Redbook Magazine June 1936
- Ruinous Racing, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine June 1936
- Do Sphinxes Think?, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post July 4 1936
- Anthony Adverse Comes to Hollywood, (pm) Redbook Magazine July 1936
- Yes and No, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post August 1 1936
- Out Is Out, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post August 22 1936
- Remembrance of Things to Come, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post August 29 1936
- Where Boy Meets Loy, (pm) Redbook Magazine August 1936
- England Expects, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post September 12 1936
- Afternoon of a Woolgatherer, (ar) The Saturday Evening Post September 26 1936
- It Is Indeed Spinach, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post September 26 1936
- The Good Earth, (pm) Redbook Magazine September 1936
- This Was Told Me in Confidence, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine September 1936
- The Queen Is in the Parlor, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 17 1936
- Everybody Eats Too Much Anyhow, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 24 1936
- A Triple-Threat Star, (pm) Redbook Magazine October 1936
- Song Before Breakfast, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 21 1936
- Experience to Let, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine November 1936
- Marta Abba, (pm) Redbook Magazine December 1936
- Mr. Barcalow’s Breakdown, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine December 1936
- The Friendly Touch, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post January 9 1937
- The Boy Who Laughed at Santa Claus, (pm) Ladies’ Home Journal January 1937
- I’ll Be Up in a Minute, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine January 1937
- What I Always Say Is—, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post February 13 1937
- The Facts of Life, (pm) Nash’s—Pall Mall Magazine February 1937
- Are You Going My Way? No, Never, (ss) The New Yorker July 3 1937
- Merry Christmas, Nearly Everybody!, (pm) Cosmopolitan January 1938
- Disappearance, (pm) Good Housekeeping April 1938
- Mrs. Peachey’s Predicament; or, No Mot Parades, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post August 19 1939
- I Had No Idea It Was So Late, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post October 28 1939
- Practically Autumn, (pm) The American Magazine October 1939
- What’s the Matter, Haven’t You Got Any Sense of Humor?, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post November 25 1939
- April Yule, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post December 23 1939
- When the Devil Was Sick, Could He Prove It?, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post February 3 1940
- Taboo to Boot, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post February 17 1940
- Don’t Guess, Let Me Tell You, (pm) The New Yorker April 20 1940
- I Never Even Suggested It, (pm) The Saturday Evening Post May 18 1940
(continued)
Next —
Chronological Index —
Table-of-Contents