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Publishers cloth. 8vo. 217; 205; 230 pages. 20 cm. First edition. In Yiddish. Cover illustrated by S. Raskin. From New York to Rehovot and Back, the travel narrative and memoir of Yehoash in three volumes. YEHOASH (pseudonym of Yehoash Solomon Bloomgarden; 18721927) , Yiddish poet and translator. Yehoash was born in Virbalen, Lithuania, and as a boy he read maskilic literature as well as studying Torah with his father, briefly attending the yeshivah of Volozhin, only to begin a career as a Hebrew poet. At the age of 17 he took his first Hebrew poems to Warsaw, where I. L. Peretz encouraged him to continue writing Hebrew and Yiddish lyrics. The following year Yehoash immigrated to the U. S. He made no headway either as a Hebrew poet or in various callings bookkeeping, tailoring, peddling, and Hebrew teaching. For a decade he faced severe privations until he contracted tuberculosis and went to the Denver Sanatorium for Consumptives in 1900 to recuperate. There he remained for almost ten years, maturing as a Yiddish poet, publishing his poems, ballads, fables, and translations in leading dailies, periodicals, and literary almanacs. In his early 30s, he undertook to translate the Bible into a modern Yiddish which would combine scholarly precision with simple idiomatic language, a task to which he devoted the rest of his life. While at work on this translation, he prepared, together with Charles D. Spivak, his physician and the co-founder of the sanatorium, a Yiddish dictionary, first published in 1911, which defined about 4, 000 Hebrew and Aramaic words used in Yiddish and which went through many editions as a basic reference work. Returning to New York in 1909, Yehoash had to struggle to make a living, even though his fame was worldwide and Yiddish periodicals in many lands gladly published his contributions. In January 1914, he left for Erez Israel and settled in Rehovot. He mastered classical Arabic and translated portions of the Koran and Arabian tales into Yiddish. When the Ottoman Empire entered World War I, he returned to New York and published the story of his experiences in three volumes of travel sketches, Fun New York biz Rekhovot un Tsurik (From New York to Rehovot and Back, 191718; Eng. The Feet of the Messenger, 1923) . His sojourn in Erez Israel as well as his knowledge of Arabic proved useful to him in his work on the translation of the Bible. Although he had published a Yiddish rendering of several biblical books including Isaiah and Job in 1910, he realized the inadequacy of this initial attempt and began anew. His more adequate rendering, starting with Genesis, appeared in installments in the New York daily Der Tog from 1922. At the time of his death only the Pentateuch translation had been published, but the rest of the biblical books were printed from his manuscripts. His version was hailed as a contribution of national significance. The translator drew upon idiomatic treasures of various Yiddish dialects, upon the Khumesh-Taytsh (the Old Yiddish, word-for-word translation of Pentateuch) , vocabulary used by melammedim in Ashkenazi schools for many generations, and expressions of the Ze'enah u-Re'enah (Tsene-Rene) , with its archaic patina. Yehoash was thus able to retain the rhythm and flavor of the Hebrew to a larger extent than preceding Bible translators. The two-volume edition, with parallel Hebrew and Yiddish texts, distributed in tens of thousands of copies, became a standard work for Yiddish-speaking homes throughout the world. In 1949, Mordecai Kosover edited Yehoash's notes to the Bible, which afforded an insight into the translator's many years of wrestling with the sacred text. Yehoash, who also translated Longfellow's Hiawatha and the Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyam into Yiddish, was far ahead of his time in terms of his own poetry. When the first edition of his Gezamelte Lider (Collected Poems) appeared in 1907, he was widely hailed as a first-rank artist. His lyrics were reprinted in anthologies and school texts, and were translated into many languages. An English translation, Poems of Yehoash, by Isidore Goldstick, appeared in 1952, and a Hebrew version (1957) was a cooperative venture by a number of significant Hebrew writers, including Jacob Fichmann and Dov Sadan. Yehoash's two later lyric volumes (1919 and 1921) linked him with Inzikhism, the modernist trend of introspection in post-World War I Yiddish poetry, the leaders of which acclaimed him as their forerunner. Yehoash gave expression in his lyrics to his awareness of a divine force permeating the universe. He re-imagined in verse biblical and post-biblical legends, tales from medieval Jewish chronicles, and hasidic lore, versified fables from the Talmud, Aesop, La Fontaine, and Lessing, and created new fables of his own. He wrote romantic, ghostly ballads, but he also felt the spell of Peretz, his lifelong friend, and strove for classical purity and perfection in rhythm and rhyme. Yehoash also influenced American Jewish poetry in English, notably the modernist work of Louis Zukofsky. (EJ 2007) Subjects: Yiddish literature - Palestine. Palestine -Description and travel. Authors, Yiddish - New York (State) - Biography. Authors, Yiddish - Israel - Biography. Light wear to cloth, light soiling to outer edges. Very Good Condition. (YID-16-10A)
86 pages. Features: Puppets - Dance and Drama of the Orient; Hands & Heart - New York's Lower East Side; The Tapestries of June Wayne; The Sullen Art and Craft of Portraiture; Fantasy at Kohler - Jack Earl and Tom LaDousa bring hijinks and new vision to the bathroom; The Fiber Game; Jack Lenor Larsen; Shoji Hamada; Furniture by Stephen Robin; and more. Unmarked with average wear. A sound vintage copy. Book
32 pages. Printed on glossy stock. Dozens of quality black and white photos and illustrations. Features: Balloons from Britain's balloon barrage leaving massive hangar for handling practice; Photos of Scotland's garrison on guard; Polish soldiers watch the Scottish coast; At sea with the Australian Army; Illustrated of the text of a broadcast by L.S. Amery entitled "War Effort in India and Burma"; Greek war in pictures; RAF arrive to help the Greeks; Full-page map of the Balkan battlefield - scene of Italian retreat; Photo of Archbishop Chrysanthos, head of the Greek Orthodox Church, with Air Vice-Marshal J.H. D'Albiac and Rear-Admiral C.E. Turle, and others; Photo of Greece's political and military leaders immediately after the Italian invasion; Photos of how the RAF makes war on Italy; Photo evidence of successful R.A.F. raid on Mai Edaga in Eritrea; Air photo of destruction in Behgazi port after an R.A.F. bombing; Centerfold illustration by Montague B. Black captures the drama of Koritza, Italian headquarters in Albania, falling to advancing Greeks; Nice photo of three Beauforts in a moonlit sky; Wireless training; NIce close-up photo of a torpedoe being loaded into the belly of a plane; Illustration by N. Clarke dedicated to the first fighter pilot to win the V.C., Flight-Lieut. James Brindley Nicolson; Illustrated text of broadcast by Sir Angus Gillan entitled "Importance of the Sudan"; Australians building a railway in southern England; A.A. Training in South Africa; Bomb damage to the library at University College, London, Bristol church, London offices, and a Midland town; A Commentary on the war this week; Photos of new leaders of the R.A.F. including Sir R. Brooke-Popham, Sir A. Barratt, J.H. D'Albiac, A.T. (Bomber) Harris, Sir Charles Portal, W.S. Douglas, E.L. Gossage, Sir Hugh Dowding, and B. Babington; Supporters in Malaya and Mauritius; Summary of chief events in the war this week. Average wear. Unmarked. A sound copy. Book
96 pages. Features: Dean Martin has the Last Laugh (without Jerry Lewis); The Beast of Belsen and the Dragon Tattoo; The Shrinking Violet - a story for lads with taller sweeties; Sucker in Paradise; Those Brooklyn Indians - 5,000 Mohawks in New York's most famous borough - Iron Workers, Big Chiefs of High Steel Construction; "My Favourite Girl" Photo Contest; The Man Who Married Annie Oakley - Frank Butler; The Great Football Swindle; Chinatown's Bloody Emperor - Fung Jing Toy evaded 200 attempts on his life; The Real-Life Drama of Willie the Actor - Willie Sutton; Yankee Lynch Mob - an angry crowd goes berserk at Port Jervis, New York; A Sight for Tired Eyes - Gale Fagan; Killer Trail of the Glanton Gang. Many nostalgic ads. Above-average wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. Magazine
66 pages. Features: News Photos; A Salute to Southern Pacific's Overland and Shasta Route - poetry with photos; Tide 470 - Two Chesapeake & Ohio hopper cars star in a drama (cover story); The Elegant Virginia City Private Rail Car; The Architecture of the Locomotive - photos and article; Samuel Unsull's - exit the Electric Interurbans (3); Britain invaded by Diesels; To Chama, Colorado and back on two pieces of D&RGW narrow iron; Southern Pacific's new Englewood Yard at Houston; and more. Moderate wear. Unmarked. Binding intact. A sound copy. Magazine
112 pages. Most text in English plus some in French. Features: Magnet - The Architecture of Anticipation; Emerging Space in Hyper-Modernity; Pictorial Space, Public Space - Jean Fouquet and Medieval Drama Reconsidered; Public et Prive - pour une theorie des seuils; Private Thoughts on a Public Architecture; Latent Spaces for Public Water Courses - Strategies for Toronto's Emerging Public Space; Corridart - Public Space Destroyed and Remembered; Mount Royal - Res Publica; Exploring the Public Realm - Peter Smithson and Gino Valle in Conversation; Empooling. Moderate wear. A sound copy. Book
242 pages. "Contains a number of short glimpses of certain scenes in the tragic drama of Europe between the two Great Wars, as they were witnessed by the writer. The implications of those scenes were so clear that it must remain something of a problem why the leaders of the nations which wished for peace failed to take warning while yet there was time to avert disaster. A scene from each of the Great Wars has been included as prelude and climax, and some account of what defeat has so far meant for Germany. It is a mild punishment compared with what would have befallen her opponents if they had been defeated." - foreword. Black and white photographic plates. Front free endpaper removed. Prior owner's details blacked out inside front board. Average wear to maroon boards. Spine sunned. Binding intact. A sound copy. Book
Pages 229-274. Features: Literary Gents - G.B. Shaw; Kenneth Grahame; Travellers and their tales; George Bernard Shaw as Music Critic; Books we have never read; Contemporary Foreign Writers - Grazia Deledda; E.M. Delafield as a Novelist; Aphra Behn; Commentary on T.S. Eliot's "The Waste Land"; New light on Coleridge; Mary Woolstonecraft; The Transports of Thomas Traherne; The Benighted States; A Tractarian of Economics; Romantic Paris; Drama on Dartmoor; Early Translations from the Russian (part II); and more. Bit of writing and faint ink stamp upon front cover. A sound vintage copy. Magazine
1734002218Amsterdam: Aux Depens de la Compagnie 1734. Hardcover. Very Good -. xxiv 501 1 p.; 17 cm. Signatures: 12 A-X12 12mo. Half polished calf 18th- or early 19th-century with brown speckled paper over boards. Six spine compartments between raised bands. Gilt-tooled leather labels in second and third compartments reading: Oeuvres du P. Du Cerceau; Tom. II. This was probably originally bound as a set with the author's Recueil de Poësies Diverses as volume 1. Gilt-tooled decoration in remaining compartments. Title page printed in red and black. Woodcut head- and tail-pieces. Includes the play Les Incommodites de la Grandeur. Front fixed endpaper bears an unusual engraved bookplate with the name Norrie and the head of an African man framed by two arms from a coat of armor. In an old hand on the title page: Poulet. In Very Good- Condition: lacking 1 cm. leather from head of spine; corners are heavily rubbed with loss of leather; boards rubbed; lightly foxed; occasionally lightly soiled in margins; otherwise clean and tight. Aux Depens de la Compagnie hardcover
1986000870Omaha: Buttonmaker Press 1986. Hardcover. Fine. DePol John. 48 p.: wood engravings by John DePol; 25 cm. Red cloth with printed paper spine and cover label. Original glassine dust jacket. This is number 126 of a limited edition of 150 copies signed by the artist. In Fine Condition: a crisp clean copy. Glassine dust jacket edges are slightly chipped. Buttonmaker Press hardcover
1965308290ABVelber, Friedrich, 1965-1969. kl.8°. Jeder Band rd.140 S. Original-Broschur. 65 Bände. (guter Zustand).
1811305359ABLeipzig, August Gottlob Weigel, 1811. 4°. 205 S. Einfacher Original-Pappband d. Zt. (S. 1 - 40 stärker fleckig, sonst gering stockfl.).
179920175Leipzig, Göschen 1799. Pappeinband der Zeit mit marmor. Buntpapierbezug. 278 S., 1 (w.) Bl., 205 S. sowie 1 gest. Frontispiz. 12°. Einband teils stärker berieben und beschabt. Stellenweise mäßig stockfl.
184217237Stuttgart, Scheible, Rieger & Sattler, 1842, neue, durchaus verbesserte Auflage. Einheitliche Halbleineneinbände der Zeit, marmorierte Deckel, kl-8°, jeder Band ca 300 S., 16 Stahlstiche nach P.C.[Peter Carl] Geissler; -Einbände leicht berieben, Papier etwas gebräunt, gute Exemplare in fester Bindung, Stahlstiche in kräftigem Druck.
2025__0472077503LUP – University of Michigan Press 2025. Hardcover. New. 224 pages. 9.01x6.01x9.24 inches. LUP – University of Michigan Press hardcover
1766305534ABWien, Joh. Thomas Edlen v. Trattnern, 1766. kl.8° 153 S Einfache Interims-Broschur d. Zt. (gering fleckig und eselsohrig).
1766305529ABWien, Joh. Thomas Edlen v. Trattnern, 1766. kl.8° 140 S. Einfache Interims-Broschur d. Zt. (gering fleckig und eselsohrig).
1766305532ABWien, Joh. Thomas Edlen v. Trattnern, 1766. kl.8° 140 S. Einfache Interims-Broschur d. Zt. (gering fleckig und eselsohrig, ltzte Seiten sehr stark leimschattig).
1766305533ABWien, Joh. Thomas Edlen v. Trattnern, 1766. kl.8° 138 S. Einfache Interims-Broschur d. Zt. (gering fleckig und eselsohrig).
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183963450Stuttgart, Metzler Buchhandlung 1839. Thiergeschichten Band 4-9 [2] Bl., S. [389] - 1126 Seiten (6 Bändchen) / Vermischte Schriften Band 1-3 :384 S ;(3 Bändchen); 16° gebundene Ausgabe, Halbleder
183429597BBBerlin, Reimer, 1834. 8°. XIV, 783 S. Halbleder, mit Lederecken. Rücken mit Goldpräg., marmorierte Deckel, 4 Bünde, Einband berieben und bestossen, am Gelenk geplatzt, Seiten gebräunt, Biblioexempl. mit den üblichen Merkmalen wie kleine Notizen, Stempel, Aufkleber.
18795847Berlin, Gustav Hempel, 1868 1879. Halbleder, schwarzes Leinen mit Lederecken, 8 , unterschiedliche Seitenzahlen zwischen 250 - 1000 S., es fehlt der 1877 erschienene 20. Band "Lessings Briefwechsel", im 19. Band ist eine komplette Bibliografie der Lessing-Ausgaben bis 1877 nebst einem Register der in Teil 1 - 19 enthaltenen Dichtungen, Schriften und Aufsätze, Meyers kleines Konversationslexikon von 1908 sagt: "Die beste kommentierte Ausgabe (der Lessing-Werke) ist die Hempelsche (Berlin 1868 - 1879)". Alle Bände mit Exlibris "Bücherei Erich Elingius" (Hamburger Architekt), Band 1 fast vollständig vom Block gelöst, Rücken unfachmännisch nachgeklebt, Band 2/3 Rücken und Kanten etwas bestoßen, innen lichtrandig, Band 4-5 innen etwas lichtrandig, Band 6 Rücken leicht berieben, inenn lichtrandig, Band 7Einband etwas berieben, Rücken berieben und oben und unten etwas bestoßen, Band 8/9 Rücken berieben und leicht bestoßen, innen lichtrandig, Band 10 Rücken etwas berieben innen lichtrandig, Band 11.1 Einband vorn Kratzer und Rücken berieben innen lichtrandig, Band 11.2 Rücken berieben innen lichtrandig, Band 13 Einband vorn Kratzer, Rücken stärker berieben oben bestoßen, Einband etwas fleckig, Rücken mit Zellophan überklebt, etwas locker im Block, Band 14/15 Rücken etwas berieben und bestoßen innen lichtrandig, Band 16-18 Einband vorn KratzerRücken berieben oben und unten bestoßen, Band 19 Rücken berieben und Einband vorn kleiner Kratzer. Versandkosten: Deutschland 6,50 Euro, Europa 13, 00 Euro, Welt 24 Euro. Hardcover