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24777‘Ye Olde Dorset Fayre’ 22 and 23 August 1923; H. D. Warwick printer Weymouth. The two titled ‘Wole Darset Vayre’ 24 and 25 August 1927 and 21 22 and 23 August 1929. The first printed by Warwick and the second by W. J. Squibb of Weymouth. Three scarce items: no other copy traced. The three pamphlets are uniform in design each consisting of 4pp 12mo stapled into card wraps with title and date beneath the Borough crest. Presumably produced for distribution at the annual town fair. The text of each poem covers all four pages. The first two are in good condition lightly aged; the last is in fair condition slightly ruckled and spotted. ONE: ‘Ye Olde Dorset Fayre’. At the Royal Palm Court Weymouth 22 and 23 August 1923. Poem ‘By Two Darset Maids’ beginning: ‘Come in me vriends and look around / We got all zarts to zell:’. TWO: ‘Wole Darset Vayre’. At Sidney Hall Weymouth 24 and 25 August 1927. Poem titled ‘A Liddle bit more o’ it’ ‘By the zame Two Darset Maids.’ Beginning: ‘Yer we be agen me vriends / At another wole Darset Vayre;’. THREE: ‘Wole Darset Varye’. At New Hall and Schools Baptist Chapel Weymouth 21 22 and 23 August 1929. ‘Arthur Nicholls’ lightly stamped in red at head of cover. Poem titled ‘The Vinish o’ it’ by ‘Zame Maids as avore.’ Beginning: ‘You ’ad the beginnin’ o’ this yer rhyme / Nigh on zix year ago;’ See image. ‘Ye Olde Dorset Fayre’, 22 and 23 August 1923; H. D. Warwick, printer, Weymouth. The two titled ‘Wole Darset Vayre’, 24 paperback
1855H21074Philadelphia: Scroggy 1855. Very Good. 8 x 6.25 inches typographical border. Very good with darkening and tanning to borders light corner wear and loss to lower left. AAS dates this 1853-57; this particular iteration NOT in the LOC America Singing Collection and is no.1021f in Wolf's American Song Sheets. A popular song in dialect printed by several publishers. Scroggy unknown
1697ST15929aYork: J. White for Francis Hildyard 1697. Third Edition. 157 x 92 mm. 6 1/4 x 3 5/8". 2 p.l. 124 pp. <br/> Dark blue crushed morocco by Charles Lewis rear flyleaf with early owner's ink notation to this effect giving 1831 as the date of the binding covers bordered by three gilt rules raised bands spine compartments with rows of gilt flowers tan morocco label gilt-rolled turn-ins marbled endpapers all edges gilt. Front pastedown with engraved armorial bookplate of William Gott; 1906 article reporting on a sale at Sotheby's mentioning this volume specifically laid in at front; rear flyleaf with ink note: "Hibberts sale. 1829 / binding by C. Lewis 1831." Wing M-1810; ESTC R19511. Very slight signs of wear to leather but the attractive binding extremely well preserved and very pleasing. Leaves apparently lightly pressed some foxing and browning to the title page occasional minor foxing elsewhere small repairs to worming on upper corner and head edge of A2 but still a clean and fresh copy internally.<br/> <br/> First printed in 1685 this is a book with two very different parts the first being a rowdy and amusing poem on Yorkshire ales and the second a much more serious and important linguistic work on the Yorkshire dialect--both offered here in a binding by a prominent English craftsman. Scion of a landed county family and author of well-regarded legal treatises attorney George Meriton 1634-1711 began to create a record of the Yorkshire dialect in 1683 when he published "A York-shire Dialogue in its Pure Natural Dialect." A second edition was printed in 1685 prefaced by the poem "The Praise of York-shire Ale" and with the addition of a pioneering dialect glossary. Our third edition includes more dialogues in the York dialect. According to linguist Martyn Wakelin Meriton's work is still "of the utmost value to our knowledge of late 17th century northern phonology." In addition the work was influential in encouraging others to document regional dialects in Britain. This is an uncommonly seen item. The son of a Hanoverian immigrant Charles Lewis 1786-1836 was apprenticed to Henry Walther at 14 and obtained his freedom in 1807. He set up a shop in Scotland Yard had other addresses in the Strand before establishing himself in Duke Street St. James in 1817. By 1823 he was employing 21 journeymen a number of whom are illustrated in a watercolor of the bindery reproduced in Middleton's "A History of English Craft Bookbinding Technique" p. 349. Lewis was patronized by the great collectors of the day including William Beckford who favored him above all others. In a letter to the bookseller George Clarke written in 1831--the year our binding was done--Beckford declared: "Lewis was and is and I hope will continue to be the first artist in this line that Europe can boast of." Our tasteful binding is a fine and well-preserved example of his work. The provenance here is significant. The first known owner of our volume was the outstanding book collector George Hibbert F.R.S. 1757-1837 Member of Parliament wealthy shipowner and one of the earliest members of the Roxburghe Club elected 1816. This copy of Meriton is almost certainly lot #4914 in the "Catalogue of the Library of George Hibbert Esq. of Portland Place" London 1829 p. 267. Historian David Hancock in Oxford DNB characterized Hibbert as "a renowned collector of paintings sculpture and books." Afterwards the volume was in the collection of Yorkshire bibliophile and industrialist William Gott 1797-1863 who "built up a magnificent collection of rare books." University of Leeds Library website The laid-in article at the front referring to a Sotheby’s sale in the early 20th century must refer to a third distinguished owner and a second vigorous bibliophile of the Gott dynasty of Yorkshire-born collectors William’s son John Gott 1830-1906 Bishop of Truro. Two years after the Bishop’s death his library was sold by Sotheby’s in a "Catalogue of the Choice Library of Valuable and Rare Printed Books and Ancient Manuscripts of the late Rt. Rev. John Gott D.D.". J. White for Francis Hildyard unknown
19209916Memphis TN: Latsch & Arnold 1920. First edition. 8.5x8" 30ff. Illustrated with several full page and vignette drawings presumably by the author. Printed on brown stock with decorative borders throughout. Bound in original brown and blue paper covered boards. Signed and inscribed by the author Willa Johnson on the ffep. Paper spine perished boards rubbed and soiled. Still a very good sound copy. <br /> <br /> Privately printed collection of vernacular and sentimental verse issued by the local Memphis job printer Latsch & Arnold. The poems use Black Southern dialect and regional speech characteristic of African American vernacular writing of the time while other pieces are sentimental and typical of local community-distributed poetry. We find no concrete answers as to the author and recipient but that is understandable for a grassroots publication of this nature. An intriguing and scarce title held only in the Harris Collection of American Poetry and Plays at Brown University and the University of Kentucky. Latsch & Arnold unknown
P5881Prague: Družstevnà Práce 1935. Octavo 19.8 × 12 cm. Original embossed ochre cloth orange dust wrappers by Ladislav Sutnar; 8 115 2 pp. Frontis drawing by FerdiÅ¡ DuÅ¡a. Light sun-tanning to spine; else very good or better in very good dust jacket. Scarce third book of poems by this Silesian poet who became famous for defending the rights of speakers of the so-called Lach dialects a group of dialects situated between the Czech and Polish languages. Although Åysohorsky grew up speaking German and initially published in German he later refused to write in standard Czech publishing numerous works in Lachian. A scholar of Slavic studies he systematized the grammar of Lachian and created the first published works using this dialect. Claiming persecution by Czech authorities who refused to recognize Lachian as an independent language he later asked Stalin to intercede on his behalf. He spent time in the Soviet Union and Boris Pasternak even translated several volumes of his poetry. Because of his controversial status in Czechoslovakia his books were later banned and removed from libraries and the book trade. Nevertheless because he was a poet of the oppressed and of the working class Åysohorsky found acclaim with the Czechoslovak interwar leftist literary and artistic scene. This book also serves as an introduction to the Lach dialect with a long dictionary and introduction to pronunciation and a note that the orthography and grammar is based on an 1898 work by Jan LoriÅ¡. Binding by FrantiÅ¡ek Muzika typographic design and wrappers by Ladislav Sutnar. Outside the Czech Republic KVK OCLC show copies at Bamberg and Regensburg University Herder Institut Oxford UCL and Urbana-Champaign. unknown
065661465X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
026784106X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
0365027553.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
133189395X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1331893984.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
B9781021089076Hardback. New. hardcover
2024BIBSD0026159202024. Full Leather Bound. NEW. Size: 19.68 x 24.13 cms A Unique Premium Leather-Bound book for elite readers/collectors of old rare books. An Original Leather is being used for binding this book with Golden Leaf Printing and designing on Spine front and Back of the book with edge gilding. WE HAVE MULTIPLE OPTIONS IN COLOR OF LEATHER RED GREEN BLUE MAGENTA TAN PURPLE DEEP BROWN BLACK AND WITH DIFFERENT COLOR LABELS. YOU MAY CHOOSE ANY COLOR OF YOUR CHOICE AND MAIL US. This service is chargeable. Original edition was published in 1890 and this unique edition is Reprinted in 2024 with the help of original edition. Black & white printing on high quality natural shade paper with sewing binding for longer life professionally processed without changing its contents. As these are old books we processed each page manually on computer and make them readable. We give our best to give you the best book but in some cases we have to adjust few pages which are blur or missing or black spots. We hope that you understand these issues in these old treasure. This is an important book for the readers who want to know more about our old treasure. Our dedicated team is trying to bring these rare books back to the shelves. We are also giving service of printing the hard-to-find books which are not listed in our store. Hope you will like it and give your comments and suggestions. Lang: - English Vol: - Volume 1 Pages 505. Product Disclaimer: Please be aware that because leather is a natural material slight discoloration or change in texture may be visible. FOLIO EDITION Size 12x19 Inches IS ALSO AVAILABLE ON REQUEST. hardcover
B9781164620129New. unknown
1164620126.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
143682124X.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
2008DADAX143682124XKessinger Publishing 2008-06-29. paperback. New. 8.25x1.01x11.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Kessinger Publishing paperback
21104University AL: University of Alabama Press. Near Fine with no dustjacket. Hardcover. Undated but circa 1960s printing. Sharp and clean with just a hint of cover wear. Contents include: college words and phrases; American-Norwegian with a vocabulary; the word binnekill language of the Kentucky negro; pioneer dialect of Southern Illinois; stovepipes and funnels; English elements in Norse dialects of Utica Wisconsin; Cape Cod dialect; the language of the oil wells; English loan words used in the Icelandic colony of North Dakota; some lumber words; list of words from Northwest Arkansas. More. ; 8vo; 479 pages . University of Alabama Press hardcover
1527836266.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
22629'The 16th March' no year but after 1886. 1p on the reverse of an advertisement with engraving for his 1886 book 'Tales and Sketches of Lancashire Life' cut down to 16 x 13 cm. On aged paper with horizontal cut repaired with archival tape. Reads: 'Sent me very well. The poems I propose reading will be "The New Shirt." and "The Gravelgate Flood." You can take your choice betwixt "The New Shirt" and "The Bradley's Visit to Thisle Ho." Please send me a programme as soon as printed.' 'The 16th March' [no year, but after 1886]. unknown
1888177281888. Jones Charles C. Negro Myths from the Georgia Coast 1888 presenting a late nineteenth-century compilation of African American folklore recorded in the Gullah dialect of the Georgia and South Carolina coastal region with direct relevance to the study of Black oral traditions linguistic history and post-emancipation cultural expression. The volume gathers fable-like narratives often centered on anthropomorphic animals that reflect storytelling traditions rooted in African diasporic heritage and adapted within enslaved and freed communities of the coastal South. Its use of Gullah a Creole language shaped by West African linguistic structures and English situates the work within ongoing efforts of the period to document vernacular speech and preserve forms of cultural expression that had developed under slavery and persisted into Reconstruction and beyond.<br /> <br /> Jones Charles C. Negro Myths from the Georgia Coast. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin and Company 1888. First edition. The text is rendered in Gullah dialect reflecting the linguistic patterns of African American communities along the Georgia and South Carolina coasts including areas around Savannah and Charleston. Jones raised in a plantation environment and familiar with the regional speech patterns compiled these narratives as part of a broader nineteenth-century interest in folklore and dialect studies contributing to early written records of Gullah language and storytelling traditions.<br /> <br /> Single volume. Ex libris. Minor foxing to the front pastedown and bumped corners; overall very good condition. A late nineteenth-century printed record of African American folklore and language from the coastal South documenting narrative forms and speech patterns that remain central to the study of Gullah culture and linguistic history. unknown
20212081502111907907guangdong people 2021. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. guangdong people paperback
19762090202122700935arrow publisher 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 arrow publisher paperback
19762090202118101048arrow publisher 1976. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. arrow publisher paperback
19832091502135303238Keimei shobo 1983. Soft Cover. Fine. Volume: 1 Keimei shobo paperback
20062080202102706809Dialect Research Seminar 2006. Soft Cover. Fine. Page size: 245 pages Size: B5 size Dialect Research Seminar paperback