619 résultats
194944776London: Routledge 1949. hardcover. very good. Commemorative Catalogue of an Exhibition Held at the Victoria and Albert Museum May 5th - June 20th 1948. 3 color plates. 120pp. of monochrome illustrations. 94pp. of text. 4to beige cloth d.w. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul 1949. Very good .<br/><br/> One of 1000 numbered copies.<br/><br/> Routledge unknown books
179528043London 1795 1795. The only recorded edition. ESTC T204804 recording a single copy at Cambridge which contains the same apothecary's stamp. OCLC and COPAC record that same copy; Roud Folk Song Index V1851; and see Broadside Ballads Online at the Bodleian Library which also notes the apothecary's stamp. Paper repaired on the verso; some soiling and smudges; chipped in the upper margin with some loss but only to the blank margins; two small remains of mounting tape on the verso in the upper margin; a rare survival. Broadside 36 x 12 cm woodcut headpiece. Nine four-line stanzas. Attractive oval stamp in the lower margin of Peter Henry Chymist. A typical doggerel poem and somewhat bawdy written in the form of a slip ballad which begins "You young men all both far and near / Listen a while and you shall hear / Take care you're not drawn in a snare / By the girls that do love brandy / Wack Fla la &c." And in the fourth stanza: "'Tis on your backs girls you must lie / Pray which of you would this deny / A dish of tea or brandy." Etc. <br/><br/> [London, 1795?] unknown books
1805M10849London:: n.p. 1805. 1805. Small 4to. 27 pp. Original blue wrappers. Housed in a modern quarter morocco clamshell box. Fine. FIRST EDITION. Containing "An outline of a plan to prevent the Spreading of the Plague or other contagious Diseases presented by the Board of Health agreeably to the Instructions of His Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council." The article gives a brief account of how an outbreak of the plague was dealt with in Queen Elizabeth's time and then presents the then-current practices to prevent the spread of an outbreak. "If the sick die the Body should be wrapped in oiled Cloth or tarred Cloth and soon buried. It must be remembered that everything that tends to secure those about the Sick from Infection is of the greatest Importance both by checking the Progress of the Disease and by giving Confidence to those whose Busines sic it is to help and assist the Afflicted." p. 8-9. n.p., 1805. hardcover books
33703ENGLISH BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOURCES. Series I. Numbers 1-4. Six volumes. Farnborough: Gregg 1964. 4to. Cloth. Facsimiles of source books on early English printing history including The Monthly Catalogue 1714-1717; The Monthly Catalogue 1723-1730 Two Volumes; Register of Books 1728-1732; and Bibliotheca Annua 1699-1703 Two Volumes. Bookplates; fine. unknown books
1939112672London: Published for the English Association by the Oxford University Press 1939. Octavo original cloth. First edition first printing. Thirteen stories by Stella Benson John Galsworthy Richard Hughes M. R. James and others whose chosen stories "are intended to be characteristic of their writers and representative of the modern short story technique. They have also been chosen with a view to their use in Schools." - Preface. A clean bright very good copy. #112672 Published for the English Association by the Oxford University Press unknown books
1897WRCAM51844Indianapolis; Kansas City: Bowen-Merrill Company 1897. 1186pp. with numerous in-text illustrations. Quarto. Two volumes. Original red publisher's cloth boards gilt stamped spine gilt. Corners bumped edges worn hinges starting spine extremities somewhat frayed. Small bookplates on front and rear pastedowns. Minor dust soiling to edges of text block. Good plus. Biography of the life and military exploits of George Rogers Clark remembered principally for his capture of Kaskaskia and Vincennes during the Revolutionary War in 1778 and 1779 respectively. English wholeheartedly endorses the opinion that the British cession of the Northwest Territory to the United States in the Treaty of Paris was the result of Clark's military operations there. With voluminous detail about Clark his famous campaigns his life and decline after the Revolution and his family associates and fellow soldiers. HOWES E157. Bowen-Merrill Company hardcover books
18801332304Philadelphia: Hubbard Bros. 1880. Hardcover. Thick 12mo; pp 502; G; blue spine with gilt text; no jacket; cloth has some white tiny spots to exterior; strong boards; mild edge wear; text block has age toned exterior edges; frontispiece; light foxing to first and last few pages; interior clean; illustrated; good binding. 1332304. FP New Rockville Stock. Hubbard Bros. hardcover books
189412611894. ENGLISH William F. EVOLUTION AND THE IMMANENT GOD. An Essay On The Natural Theology Of Evolution. Boston: Arena Publishing Company 1894. Small 8vo. purple cloth stamped in gilt. First Edition. An essay focusing on using Darwin's theory of evolution as a clearing ground for upbuilding acceptance of Christian theology. A rare book- I have been unable to locate any other copy! English was pastor of the First Congregational Church in East Windsor Connecticut. Signed inscription by English on a front blank page: "Regards of Wm. F. English." Near fine covers bright with very minor rubbing spine; contents clean & tight. $450.00. <br/><br/> hardcover books
1896011791Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill Bobbs Merrill binding 1896. Large Octavo. .with numerous sketches of men who served under Clark and full list of those allotted lands in Clark's grants for service in the campaigns against the British Posts showing exact land allotted each. Volume I and II have continuous pagination Vol. 586pp and Vol. II. 593-1186pp. It was Clark whose victories in the old Northwest enabled the US to obtain full legal right to the territory under the Treaty of Paris in 1783. Both volumes bound in original blue pictorial gilt depicting Clark with sword in hand standing above Vincennes. Only minor rubbing to edges corners with wear previous owner's name dated 1896. A very good set. Bowen-Merrill (Bobbs Merrill binding) unknown books
1997Embry 193955Simon & Schuster 1997. Later printing. Fine in fine dust jacket in mylar cover. Signed by Todd English. Simon & Schuster, 1997. Later printing. unknown books
192962688New York: F. S. Crofts & Co. Very Good. 1929. Hardcover. Inscribed by Willard Pope. 173pp. navy cloth gilt printing to spine. Contents are just slightly toned with a few pencil marks. Spine ends and corners are rubbed otherwise complete and nice. Near Very Good. . F. S. Crofts & Co. hardcover books
1895247634N.p. 1895. 5 stanzas of verse with 7-line note. 2 pp. on two sheets of blank stantionery. 8vo. Fine. 5 stanzas of verse with 7-line note. 2 pp. on two sheets of blank stantionery. 8vo. Author of "Ben Bolt" New Jersey Congressman and Enemy of Poe. Thomas Dunn English 1819-1902 was a proilific author of poems ballads and novels; he also server two terms in the U.S. Congress as a Representative from New Jersey; but his fame as a writer rests on the ballad in wrote in 1843 "Ben Bolt." First published in Nathaniel Parker Willis' magazine NEW YORK MIRROR "Ben Bolt" was set to music many times and became very popular especiallly in the version set to a tune by Nelson Kneass. In his note appended to this transcription of the poem English writes:<br/><br/> "The foregoing stanzas are as they originally appeared in Willis & Morris's NEW YORK NEW MIRROR in the year 1843. Though they have been set to music eight tiimes the only popular melody was the one take from a German air by Kneass. The words there - three stanzas only being taken - are very much mutilated."<br/><br/>"It was hugely successful at the time but had a new lease of life as the song that Trilby O'Ferrall sings in the novel TRILBY 1894 by George du Maurier. It is described in the novel as an 'unsophisticated little song' but when Trilby performs it under the influence of the sinister hypnotist Svengali it reawakens a 'cosmic vision of the beauty and sadness of things' in her former lover Little Billee." Derek B. Scott THE SINGING BOURGEOIS: SONGS OF THE VICTORIAN DRAWING ROOM AND PARLOUR. Aldershot Hampshire; Burlington VT: Ashgate 2001.<br/><br/>Ironically "Ben Bolt" being a tribute to a long-lasting friendship English is also remembered as the bitter foe of his former friend Edgar Allan Poe. The two had a falling out which resulted in a fist fight as well as a long running literary feud. unknown books
190446165Chicago: A. C. McClurg and Co. 1904. Numerous b/w illustrations. Illustrated by Lucy Fitch Perkins. 150 pp. Hardcover. Small 4to. Blue cloth. Head heel and corners bumped and worn; heel chipped away; extremities bumped and lightly worn; hinges rubbed; boards lightly soiled; edges toned; endpapers lightly foxed and soiled. Pages lightly toned; scattered markings in pencil to interior. Good/No jacket issued. A. C. McClurg and Co. hardcover books
185765602Philadelphia PA: T. M. Scroggy Publisher No. 443 Vine St. above 13th 1857. Broadside. 24.5 x 15 cm. Five stanzas of eight lines enclosed in a decorative border. A few tears and chips with some loss at left margin outside the border not affecting text. English lived in New Jersey and supposedly wrote the song on a hunting trip to Tazewell Virginia. <br/><br/> T. M. Scroggy, Publisher, No. 443 Vine St. above 13th unknown books
2007Embry 174443William Morrow 2007. Later printing. Remainder mark to lower edge else fine in fine dust jacket. William Morrow, 2007. Later printing. unknown books
2008263365New York: William Morrow 2008. hardcover. near fine/very good. Illus. 8vo two-toned boards d.w. New York: William Morrow 2008. Very good<br/><br/> William Morrow unknown books
2005Embry 191326Regan Books 2005. First edition first printing. Fine in fine dust jacket with very slight edgewear to upper edge in mylar cover. Regan Books, 2005. First edition, first printing. unknown books
1999MMRM1471New Brunswick:: Rutgers University Press 1999. 1999. 8vo. xx 2 257 1 pp. Black silver-stamped cloth dust-jacket. Near fine. ISBN: 0813527104 Rutgers University Press, 1999. hardcover books
SKU1034707PAPERBACK. Good. B002SLSIZI Plastic comb bound. Clean has a good binding no marks or notations. Modest wear. tnos paperback books
23305Park Forest: The Prairie School Poets 1964. First edition. 8vo. Cloth. 69 pp. This copy is signed by English on the first blank page. Very good there is a paper clip indentation in a very good rubbed jacket. Park Forest: The Prairie School Poets, 1964. hardcover books
1964112753Park Forest IL: The Prairie School Press 1964. cloth dust jacket. 8vo. cloth dust jacket. x 69 pages. First edition. Blurbs by Reuel Denney Peter Viereck. Signed by the author on the front free endpaper. Author's first book of verse. Rubbed price-clipped black dust jacket with a short closed tear. The Prairie School Press unknown books
1964112752Park Forest IL: The Prairie School Press 1964. cloth dust jacket. 8vo. cloth dust jacket. x 69 pages. First edition. Blurbs by Reuel Denney Peter Viereck. Author's first book of verse. Bump on the lower edge of the rear cover price-clipped black dust jacket. The Prairie School Press unknown books
1964155291Park Forest IL: The Prairie School Press 1964. First edition. Hardcover. 69 pages. English's first book of poems. A very good copy with some foxing to the page edges in a very good price clipped dust jacket that has some rubbing and wear. Signed and inscribed by Helen W. D. English on the front free endpaper to poet Linda Pastan and with a letter from English presenting this book to Pastan as she was the winner of the Maurce English Poetry Award. An interesting copy. The Prairie School Press unknown books
190025247N.p. Wyoming ca. 1900. First edition. 76pp. Illus. Original printed wrappers. Fine copy Childhood reminiscences Fort Washakie Lost soldier Ranch the Great Divide Lander Rollins her friend Oahtah Otei Chief Washakie Flathead Squaws Arapaho Camp Shoshone Burial Cave visit of the Sioux Omaha dance Shoshone Sun Dance camping at Bull Lake Owen Wister etc. Eberstadt Cat 111:203. Huntington 292; "privately printed. An interesting narrative of life and adventures in the far west. unknown books
18993392Denver: Privately Printed 1899. First Edition. Very good. 8vo. 215 x 139 mm. 76 pp. photographic text illustrations some full-page. Original green printed wrappers slightly soiled worn and chipped at head and tail pencil inscription on back wrapper SEE IMAGES internally unmarked and unspoiled. NOT ex-library! A remarkable account of an itinerant teenage girl in the the far west very well written and informative. This slender privately published volume has received far too little attention by historians.<br/><br/>The author was a genuine early western "army brat" who except for two years in the East at boarding school grew up "on an Indian pony" in remote Western army posts where her father served as a major in the 7th Cavalry. Mary's high-spirited account commences in Rawlins Wyoming with her arrival by train from the East and boarding school with her mother and a female servant. A grizzled peg-legged stage driver meets the ladies with an army ambulance photo included to drive them overland 150 miles to join Mary's father at Fort Washakie. It does not take very long for Mary to flee the confined ambulance and her female companions and grab the reins from the driver. Their stops along the route are Sheep's Ranch inhabited by a lone coyote; Lost Soldier Ranch "a small pile of low adobe buildings unsightly and gray with dust; not a tree or green thing in sight"; Sweetwater Ranch "much of the land being fenced off with the deadly barbed wire allow no herds of antelope and deer as found in my girlhood"; and Wind River Ranch dangerous ascent down steep Beaver Hill imperiled further by a rattlesnake that spooked the mules. <br/><br/>In an amusing but instructive anecdote Mary tells of their overnight sojourn at the rough headquarters of Lost Soldier Ranch whose owner Tom proudly relates how he bought the ranch with savings from working as a cowpuncher. The ranch had two large rooms one for sleeping and the other a bar-kitchen that reeked of beer "Think of it! Beer for breakfast beer for luncheon beer for dinner". The sleeping quarters contained four enormous beds each large enough to hold six men. Tom had thoughtfully partitioned off one bed for the ladies making a privacy screen with five-foot paper-thin boards for security there was a big glittery bowie knife under the bed and light consisted of a candle in a broken beer bottle. Mary's mother and the servant were so horrified at the immodesty of the sleeping arrangement that Tom in a gesture of true ranching hospitality graciously agreed that he and his cowboys would sleep in the other room on the floor.<br/><br/>From the Dorothy Sloan Collection of Women in the West. <br/><br/>Graff 1251. Howes 1954 3323. Huntington 292: "An interesting narrative of life and adventures in the far west containing details on the Shoshones Arapahoes etc.". [Privately Printed] unknown books