8 811 résultats
564pp, recto blanc Marque typographique au tit, Lettrinesavec bois gravé pour chaque changement de lettre.
Original vintage sound recording 12" LP 33 1/3pm [Folkways # FL 9967] Read in Latin by John F.C. Richards. An 8 page brochure with sleeve notes and texts in Latin and with English translations from the Loeb Classical Library is inserted in the sleeve, together with a sheet citing the references and with an errata note. An order form from Folkways still present. No visual damage, and the disc is now protected wth a plastic inner sleeve LP Recording
304 pages, maps, index. eng
271 pages, maps, table, bibliographical note, index. small crease to front cover. eng
Paris, Presses universitaires de France, 1966. In-12 broché de 127 pages. Collection que sais-je. Bon état
PUF, 1972. Que Sais Je. In-12 broché de 126 pages. Bon état. Broché
Fading to spine. Good clean copy, very minor edgewear to cover. pages very clean, bright and tight. Used
Light shelfwear. Spine browned. Old price to front cover deleted with black marker. Stamped "Scarborough College - Classical Library" to front inner cover. No other ex-lib markings. ; 250 pages
Creasing to wraps. Front hinge is broken and textblock separated from wraps. ; Penguin Classics; 7.6 X 5.0 X 0.8 inches; 464 pages
pp. xi, 498 + folding map. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket, worn. Hardbound. Second printing. LATIN AMERICA BOX 1.
Creasing to spine and lower front wrap. Pages tanned. ; Pelican; 7.1 X 4.3 X 0.6 inches; 303 pages
Scuffing and scratches to wraps with some chipping to extremites and 1 small tear. Creasing to spine. ; Contains : Plautus - The Menaechmi; The Haunted House (Mostellaria) ; The Rope (Rudens). Terence - The Woman of Andros (Andria) Phormio; The Brothers (Adelphoe). Seneca - Medea; Oedipus; Thyestes ; The Library of Liberal Arts; 463 pages
Format de poche. Bon ?tat.
Text block tight. Cover worn on corners and edges, spine top and bottom stating to split on folds, faded. Ex - Library
303p. Paperback Fair condition, dog-earred
Minor pencilling and pen notes to a few pages. Foxing to textblock. Creasing to spine. ; Indiana University Greek and Latin Classics; 256 pages
Scholar's name to titlepage (Robert Brown). Chipping and creasing to wraps. Pages tanned. Tear to upper part of spine. Working copy. ; 233 pages
Red plastic sleeve covering wraps. Pages tanned. Else VG. ; A Pelican Book; 297 pages
Light rubbing to wraps. Pages tanned. ; A Pelican Book; 297 pages
Pencil underlining on a couple of pages of intro. Light shelfwear. Pages slightly tanned. Spine lightly browned. ; English translation of Plautus' Menaechmi, Rudens; Terence's Phormio, Brothers; and Seneca's Medea, Phaedra, and Thyestes. ; Rinehart Editions; 317 pages
Light shelfwear. Sticker residue to back wrap. ; 128 pages; Early in his life, and again in maturity, Horace sought to turn his poetic skills to the uses of moral and aesthetic discussion in the series of didactic works translated here. In the Satires, Horace adopts one persona after another, each of which reduces himself to absurdity in the process of trying to argue a point of view about the ethical or artistic life. The form of the Epistles permits Horace to write with particular intimacy, addressing moral issues in a persuasive yet informal way. The third epistle, The Art of Poetry, on the other hand, is a formal poem addressed to the emperor Augustus, and seeks to educate the poetic taste of the ruler of the western world.
Light shelfwear. Light yellowing and faint creasing to rear wrap. ; 128 pages; Early in his life, and again in maturity, Horace sought to turn his poetic skills to the uses of moral and aesthetic discussion in the series of didactic works translated here. In the Satires, Horace adopts one persona after another, each of which reduces himself to absurdity in the process of trying to argue a point of view about the ethical or artistic life. The form of the Epistles permits Horace to write with particular intimacy, addressing moral issues in a persuasive yet informal way. The third epistle, The Art of Poetry, on the other hand, is a formal poem addressed to the emperor Augustus, and seeks to educate the poetic taste of the ruler of the western world.
Creasing to spine and light creasing to wraps. Light edgewear to spine ends. Scholar's blindstamp and name to ffep (Robert Brown). Else VG. ; Phoenix Classics; 318 pages