707 résultats
18972091202133212320Charles Scribner's Sons 1897. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 36 books in total Charles Scribner's Sons paperback
1885BIBLIO-47698The "Civil and Military Gazette" Press Lahore first edition1885. Edition of 250 copies. Contemporary blind-patterned cloth original printed wrappers and advertisement leaves if any not retained 8vo. 125 pp. David Richards' authoritative bibliography notes that the advertisements present in many though not all copies do not form part of the book. Includes the first appearance of 'The Phantom Rickshaw'. Quartette was sold on the 19-year old Kipling's initiative as the 1885 Christmas supplement to the Civil & Military Gazette the Indian newspaper for which he was then journalist and general provider of material. It includes 16 works - eight in prose and eight poems - by Kipling himself and by his parents and sister the most notable being Rudyard's "The Strange Ride of Morrowbie Jukes C.E." and "The Phantom 'Rickshaw". Only 250 copies were printed and Kipling wrote amusingly to his cousin Margaret Burne-Jones about the chaotic circumstances of the production: copies were printed and bound up in the Civil & Military Gazette printing hall on overtime throughout the 'mad night' of 17-18 December 1885 with tots of brandy and plugs of free tobacco from Kipling 'twelve pounds of the hideous mixture of cow dung and dried grass they delight in' to encourage the 'forty odd men besides binders to keep Quartette going' ". Joints showing slight splitting though firm and sound some wear at spine-ends front endpapers replaced and with old tape-repair to first endpaper and minor loss to foot of gutter of second endpapers tanned textblock Good. The "Civil and Military Gazette" Press, Lahore, first edition,1885 hardcover
1895338058London: Macmillan 1895. First editions. Numerous illustrations both full-page and in the text by J. Lockwood Kipling W. H. Drake and P. Frenzeny. 2 vols. 8vo. Publisher's pictorial gilt cloth a.e.g. inner front hinge started in Vol.I in drop blue cloth case. Kipling J. Lockwood and others. First editions. Numerous illustrations both full-page and in the text by J. Lockwood Kipling W. H. Drake and P. Frenzeny. 2 vols. 8vo. Grolier/Kipling 185 197; Stewart 123 132; Richards A76 A85 Macmillan unknown
1894150271MacMillan London 1894. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket. A very good set of the true first editions. Housed in a custom-made collector's slipcase. MacMillan, London hardcover
1894188110London: Macmillan and Co. 1894. Thou art of the Jungle and not of the Jungle First edition in book form. Kipling's best-known work was based on folk tales learned during his childhood in India. The Jungle Book was serialized between 1893 and 1894 and became yet more popular upon its publication as a book. It was reprinted twice in 1894 and twice again the following year prompting calls for a second instalment. Kipling won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1907. He was the first English-language writer and the youngest ever author to receive the prize. Octavo. Tissue-guarded frontispiece in-text illustrations by William Henry Drake Paul Frenzeny and the author's father John Lockwood Kipling. Original blue cloth spine lettered and tooled in gilt pictorial design to front cover in gilt green coated endpapers edges gilt. Bookplate of artist Ali Goubitz 1904-1975 to first blank. Gilt bright spine cocked and a little worn at ends rubbing to corners occasional foxing closed tear to p. 162/3 just touching lettering. A very good copy. Grolier Children's 100 52; Martindell 54; Richards A76. hardcover
1900123414London: Macmillan and Co. Limited 1900. Rare Macmillan's Colonial Library edition of Kipling's From Sea to Sea issued the same year as the first trade edition. Octavo two volumes original blue cloth with gilt titles to the spine and front panel. Signed by Rudyard Kipling on the title page of both volumes. In near fine condition. Scarce signed by Kipling. English journalist short-story writer poet and novelist Rudyard Kipling's major works include The Jungle Book 1894 Kim 1901 and many short stories and poems. Kipling was born in India which inspired much of his work and his innovative stories for children have become timeless classics. Kipling was one of the most popular writers in the British Empire in both prose and verse in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature in 1907. Macmillan and Co., Limited hardcover
1886321985Lahore: Civil and Military Press Gazette 1886. First Edition of Kipling's first published book. Tall narrow 4to. Bound original light brown printed wrappers in the form of an Indian civil service envelope overlapping flap. Laid into red morocco spine and cloth slipcase and chemise. The George Ulizio copy. First Edition of Kipling's first published book. Tall narrow 4to. The first edition of Kipling's first published work. Kipling was made sub-editor of the Civil and Military Gazette an Anglophone newspaper in Lahore upon his return to India after his time at the United Service College; this volume collects his poetry printed therein. Richards A7; Stewart 8; Livingston 10 Civil and Military Press Gazette unknown
189719555EMaidencombe: 4 1/2†x 7†May 4 1897. Original autograph letter signed by the author Rudyard Kipling on printed stationery from Rock House Maidencombe St. Marychurch where he and his wife lived between 1896 and 1898. The letter reads in full: “Dear Watson Many thanks for your note and the contract which certainly opens a new and safe method of burglary. I always said that the Oriental thief can give his white brothers many points in the game. The necklace he chose was amethyst & pearl - not emerald & pearl - and it is a beauty. I should very much like to be able to afford a white pearl necklace. Do you suppose the price would be very heavy I should like to have an idea on this subject. Bombay must have been a ghastly place this winter. My sister’s letters gave me some of the news as she learned it and it seems to have been fearful. Always sincerely yours Rudyard.†Near fine with a hint of use and a single crease from folding. 4 1/2†x 7†unknown
1886540<p>FIRST EDITION tall narrow 4to half red morocco over marbled boards original light brown printed wrappers that double as an Indian civil service envelope preserved marbled endpapers bookplates of William Garth and William Marchbank Lahore the Civil and Military Press 1886.</p><p>The First Edition of Kipling's first published work. Previous work was either printed privately offprints or collaborative books. Kipling was sub-editor of the Civil and Military Gazette an Anglophone newspaper reporting from Lahore on the life of the Civil Service and the Indian Army in Punjab. Thanks to his occupation and his family's social standing he had many opportunities to explore the full range of life in India. He remained keenly observant of the thronging spectacle of native India which had engaged his interest and affection from earliest childhood. He was quickly filling the journals he worked for with prose sketches and light verse. Kipling began inserting his own poems under the heading of Departmental Ditties into the newspaper and then produced this edition made up to look like a bundle of civil service memoranda. </p><p>Richards A7; Stewart 8; Livingston 22</p><br /> William Marchbank
1894336 - 984 - 296<p><em>First impressions of Kipling's iconic story collections</em></p><p><strong>Publisher and Year</strong>: London: Macmillan and Co. 1894 & 1895</p><p><strong>Edition</strong>: First editions in book form first impressions with the copyright pages entirely blank as called for reprints would be stated. Kipling's stories previously appeared in various magazines from 1893 to 1894. Livingston 104; Richards A76</p><p><strong>Condition and Description</strong>: Small octavos blue cloth stamped in gilt all edges gilt dark blue coated endpapers. 212 pp. Vol. 1. 238 pp. 2 pp. ads Vol. 2. Complete with all pages present. Both volumes contain extensive illustrations by J. L. Kipling as well as W. H. Drake and P. Frenzeny. Only the first volume contains a frontispiece the second was issued without one. Gilt bright on both volumes especially the second with trace rubbing to the first. Minor wear to the boards. The price of the book at publication "6/-" is penciled on the verso of the front free endpapers. The first volume has a contemporary blind debossed stamp of a British retailer to the front free endpaper "W.H. Smith & Son / London". No other prior owner markings. Tight hinges in both books with no trace of the seemingly ubiquitous separation. Additional condition details for each volume are as follows. Vol. 1: Mild spine lean. Secure binding though with a few gutters exposed most significantly at p. 33 with a handful of minor instances elsewhere. Gutter at p. 212 discreetly and reversibly strengthened. Faint stain to the bottom right corner of the first blank leaf extending to just before the first page of text. Vol. 2: Securely bound. Scattered instances of foxing but most pages are clear. Additional pictures available upon request. An attractive set and uncommon in this condition.</p><p><em>"Now this is the Law of the Jungle — as old and as true as the sky…"</em></p><p>Since its publication in 1894 <em>The Jungle Book</em> has become one of the most enduring works in children's literature inspiring a vast range of adaptations in film animation and theater. Its characters and themes—Mowgli Baloo the "Law of the Jungle"—have become cultural touchstones reinterpreted across generations by Disney the BBC and others.</p><p>Inventory ID: 336 - 984 - 296</p> hardcover
18957926London: Macmillan and Co 1895. First editions. Very Good Near Fine. A handsome set. Publisher's blue cloth bindings stamped in gilt. All edges gilt. Dark green endpapers. Slight wear to the spine ends and corners of The Jungle Book a little foxing internally otherwise very clean and fresh throughout. A Very Good copy. The Second Jungle Book presenting very well indeed front hinge a little tender bookeller's ticket to foot of front free endpaper verso. A Near Fine copy overall. Both volumes illustrated throughout with contributions by J. L. Kipling W. H. Drake and P. Frenzeny in The Jungle Book; the author's father Lockwood Kipling C.I.E. illustrated The Second Jungle Book. This set contained in a custom blue cloth slipcase.<br /> <br /> Few books have shaped the imagination of childhood quite like Kipling's Jungle Books. First published in 1894 and 1895 these two volumes introduced the world to Mowgli Baloo Bagheera Kaa and Shere Khan. The timeless stories blended fable folklore and imperial adventure into one of the most enduring classics of English literature. The Jungle Book 1894 includes the first appearance of "Mowgli's Brothers" "Kaa's Hunting" and "Tiger! Tiger!" alongside such favorites as "Rikki-Tikki-Tavi." The Second Jungle Book 1895 continued the talesdeepening the Mowgli cycle and adding enduring pieces like "The King's Ankus" and "Red Dog." Together the two books form the complete Mowgli canon. First edition sets in original cloth are increasingly scarce especially when both volumes present well.<br /> <br /> These are the foundational works of Kipling's career - the stories that earned him the Nobel Prize in Literature 1907 and secured his place in the canon of English storytelling. Based on folktales and legends that Kipling learned during his childhood in India the Jungle Books were met with huge success upon publication and continue to enthrall readers of all ages to this day. According to Professor Edwin L. Miller their publication "caused even severe critics of Kipling's previous work to admit that he is a writer of inspired genius." Largely focused on man's relationship to nature the Jungle Books in part narrate the tales of Mowgli a human "man-cub" raised by wolves as he tries to find his proper place in the world. As he struggles with his own identity he finds allies and adversaries among the animal communities through which he travels. They also include the story of Rikki-Tikki-Tavi the heroic mongoose who would later inspire an animated short voiced by Orson Welles. For contributions like these Kipling became the first English-language writer and the youngest ever to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature. Very Good Near Fine. Macmillan and Co unknown
18979900028063London: Pearson's Magazine 1897. 1st edition. Leather Bound. black-&-white illustrations. 85 pp. Slim 8vo. Handsomely bound in 3/4 reddish-brown niger morocco over reddish-brown cloth t.e.g. The five parts are bound without any preliminary leaves containing 85 pages from the magazine. The binding is by Sangorski and Sutcliffe of London. The spine is in compartments with delicate gilt lettering and the date 1896-7 at bottom. The leather of the front board is a bit spotted more so near the top than elsewhere and the top of the hinge is rubbed. The boards are also slightly bumped. The front free endpaper shows some scuffing. There are four small spots to the rear endpaper of no particular consequence. The contents are generally clean if slightly edge-worn. Overall the book is in very good condition in a most attractive binding. Martindell 68. Written when Kipling was but 31 and not long married to the sister of his American agent this is his only book to be set entirely in America. This unique item contains the December 1896; and the January to April 1897 parts of Pearson's Magazine which constituted the first appearance in print of Kipling's famous novella. The first book publication was by Macmillan London later in 1897 with 21 illustrations by I. W. Taber. The first American book publication was also in 1897 by The Century Co. New York City. This true first printing also contains 16 illustrations by I. W. Taber as well as an additional 21 illustrations by Fred T. Jane the founder of 'Jane's Fighting Ships ' and two by Swain. Pearson's Magazine unknown
1889100206<p>Allahabad: A.H. Wheeler & Co. 1889. 1889. Fair. - Quarto 8-11/16 inches high by 5-7/16 inches wide. Softcover bound in greyish-green pictorial wrappers with the lettering in black. The front cover is detached and the spine has perished and is thus lacking. The front wrapper is heavily chipped with large pieces out and with tape repairs on the verso. The rear cover is chipped and soiled aith pieces out from the edges. Both covers are fragile and will easily chip. Collation: 5 leaves pp. 100 i leaf: advertisements with "Opinions of the Press" on verso title page with "REPRINTED IN CHIEF FROM THE 'WEEK'S NEWS.'" on verso Dedication Preface Contents 5 leaves; text pp. 1 - 97 p. 98 being blank; "L'Envoi" p. 99 p. 100 being blank; "Opinions of the Press" with advertisements on verso 1 leaf. There is offsetting to the first leaf from the bookplate and some minor slight chipping and minor creases to the corners to the first few pages with offsetting to the last page from the rear cover.</p><p>Second Indian edition. Stewart 29; Richards 39.</p><p>From the library of Edmund Gosse with his bookplate on the verso of the front wrapper. Inscribed & signed on the first page "Edmund Gosse from J.A. Symonds". "Gosse was happily married for over 50 years and had three children but did acknowledge to John Addington Symonds around the time Symonds was working on A Problem in Modern Ethics that he was attracted to men thus confirming the suspicions Symonds had voiced earlier. 'Either way I entirely deeply sympathize with you. Years ago I wanted to write to you about all this' Gosse wrote to Symonds 'and withdrew through cowardice. I have had a very fortunate life but there has been this obstinate twist in it! I have reached a quieter time--some beginnings of that Sophoclean period when the wild beast dies. He is not dead but tamer; I understand him & the trick of his claws.' Gosse had love affairs possibly not consummated with a school friend John Blaikie and the handsome young sculptor Wiiliam Hamo Thornycroft.After Symonds' death Gosse burnt all of Symonds' letters and diaries and papers that had been bequeathed to him." Quoted from the LGBT Archive in the UK.</p> Allahabad: A.H. Wheeler & Co., 1889. paperback
1894330918London: Macmillan 1894. First. hardcover. Illustrated by J.L. Kipling & others. 2 volumes. 8vo blue cloth with cover design & lettering in gilt all edges gilt. London: Macmillan 1894-1895. First Editions.<br/> <br/> A tight set with light rubbing on the bindings leaving the gilt somewhat dulled; bookplate. Preserved in a 1/2 leather double slipcase with Jean Hersholt bookplates.<br/> <br/> Macmillan unknown
1894846011894. KIPLING Rudyard. The Jungle Book. with: The Second Jungle Book. Two vols. Orig. pictorial cloth a.e.g. London: Macmillan & Co. 1894 1895. First editions. Stewart 122 128. In cloth chemises and a half morocco slipcase. With the bookplates of the Newberry Library and the collector Herbert Stuart Stone on the chemises but no ownership markings to the books themselves. Chemises sunned else a fine bright set. unknown
1894193167London: Macmillan and Co. 1894 & 1895. A beautifully presented pair First editions in book form. Kipling's adventurous stories were based on folk tales learned during his childhood in India. The Jungle Book was serialized between 1893 and 1894 and became increasingly popular upon its publication as a book prompting calls for a second instalment. The Second Jungle Book completed the Mowgli saga with five stories that "are essential to its emotional rounding-out" Grolier. 2 works octavo 180 x 199 mm. Half-tone frontispiece with tissue guard in Jungle Book both works with illustrations by William Henry Drake Paul Frenzeny and John Lockwood Kipling. Later 20th-century blue crushed morocco for the London bookseller Charles J. Sawyer spines lettered in gilt single gilt fillet framing compartments and boards small gilt roundels of elephants in profile to front boards double gilt fillet to turn-ins marbled endpapers gilt edges. Ownership inscription contemporary with binding to half-title of the second volume. Bindings bright and unblemished very mild foxing. A near-fine set. Grolier Children's 100 52; Martindell 54 & 56; Richards A76 & A85. hardcover
18951003893London: Macmillan 1895. First English editions of Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book and The Second Jungle Book in pictorial morocco bindings by Bayntun-Riviere. Inspired by the folk tales that the young Kipling encountered in India these stories follow the adventures of the boy Mowgli who learns the law of the jungle from the animals who adopt him: "The man's cub is mine . . . He shall not be killed! He shall live to run with the Pack and to hunt with the Pack." This set has been handsomely bound in full morocco with a multi-colored onlay of the elephant Kala Nag on the upper board of the first volume and the bear Baloo on the second volume. Grolier Children's 100 52. A near-fine set. Two volumes measuring 7.25 x 4.5 inches: viii 212; viii 238. Early twentieth-century full blue morocco spines with gilt-dotted raised bands compartments lettered and ruled in gilt with gilt-stamped animals all boards ruled in gilt upper boards with colored pictorial onlays board edges and doublures tooled in gilt marbled endpapers all edges gilt. Tissue-guarded frontispiece to The Jungle Book; black-and-white illustrations throughout text of both volumes. Bound without advertisements; publisher's blue pictorial cloth bound at rear of both volumes. Faint ownership signature in second volume. Expert reinforcement to joints. Housed in a cloth slipcase. Macmillan unknown
1894183376London: Macmillan and Co. 1894 & 1895. Thou art of the Jungle and not of the Jungle First editions in fine and uniform bindings by Bayntun. Kipling's best-known works were based on folk tales learned during his childhood in India. The stories previously appeared in periodicals between 1893 and 1894. The Second Jungle book completed the Mowgli saga with five stories that "are essential to its emotional rounding-out" Grolier. Kipling won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1907. He was the first English-language writer and the youngest ever author to receive the prize. 2 works octavo. Tissue-guarded frontispiece to The Jungle Book illustrations in the text of both works by William Henry Drake Paul Frenzeny and the author's father John Lockwood Kipling. Mid-20th-century blue morocco by Bayntun for Sotheran's spines lettered in gilt compartments and front covers with gilt frames enclosing animal devices in gilt board edges ruled in gilt inner dentelles gilt marbled endpapers edges gilt. Original cloth bound in at end. Housed in a custom blue cloth slipcase. Spines mildly darkened gilt and covers bright frontispiece with two marginal closed tears neatly repaired. A near-fine set. Grolier Children's 100 52; Martindell 61 & 63; Richards A76 & A85. hardcover
1894149681London: Macmillan 1894-95. First editions of both volumes of The Jungle Book. Octavo two volumes original blue cloth decorated and lettered in gilt all edges gilt engraved tissue-guarded frontispiece illustrated by J. L. Kipling W.H. Drake and P. Frenzeny. In near fine condition with light rubbing to the extremities. Near ownership inscriptions. An exceptional example. The Jungle Book is a collection of fables which provide moral instruction by using animals anthropomorphically. Each story begins and ends with a verse and the original publications contain some illustrations created by Rudyard's father John Lockwood Kipling. The inspiration for the book is evident. Kipling was born in India and he spent his childhood there. Interestingly Kipling wrote these stories when he lived in Vermont. The Jungle Book is used to develop the morale of the junior element of the Scouting movement "The Cub Scouts". The name of the head wolf "Akela" has been traditionally given to each Cub Scout pack leader. At least fifteen movies were released based on Kipling's stories beginning with Elephant Boy in 1937. A live-action anticipated version of Jungle Book will be released in October of 2018 by Warner Brothers. Macmillan hardcover
1897374815London: Macmillan 1897. First English edition. 22 illustrations by I. W. Taber. 245 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. Original gilt stamped blue cloth with vignette of fishermen black endpapers a.e.g. Complete with original dust jacket in very good condition lightly yellowed at spine with some archival mending. W. C. Thomas bookplate to front pastedown; minimal foxing to prelims. Taber I.W. First English edition. 22 illustrations by I. W. Taber. 245 pp. 1 vols. 8vo. A charming copy with the rare dust jacket of Kipling's only novel set in the United States following the son of a Californian millionaire who stumbles into his adventure by falling overboard and being rescued by a fishing vessel. Teddy Roosevelt praised the book in 1900 for describing "in the liveliest way just what a boy should be and do." Stewart 160; Livingston 136; Richards A103 Macmillan unknown
1886140941952Lahore: Civil and Military Press Gazette 1886. First Edition. Very Good. First edition of Kipling's first published book. Bound in publisher's original tan printed wrappers imitating the form of an Indian civil service envelope with an overlapping flap. Wear to spine and a short split at the bottom end of the overlapping flap fold. Kipling was serving as sub-editor of the Civil and Military Gazette and this volume collects his poetry which was published in the paper. Housed in a chemise custom dark blue straight grain morocco slipcase. Civil and Military Press Gazette unknown
18941907121The Century Co 1894. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. Two volumes. The Jungle Book is a first US edition and contains an original watercolor by the illustrator William Henry Drake. Book in very good condition. The Second Jungle Book is also a first US edition and includes the first edition dust jacket. Both books are housed in custom-made matching slipcases. The Century Co hardcover
1893123441London: Macmillan and Co. 1893. First English edition of this collection of Kipling's poems and tales. Octavo original cloth decorated in gilt. Association copy inscribed by Rudyard Kipling on the title page in the year of publication to his second cousin by marriage "Eliot sic Balestier from Rudyard Kipling Xmas. 93." The recipient Elliot Francis Balestier was the second cousin of Kipling's wife Caroline Balestier and her brother Wolcott with whom Kipling collaborated with for the novel The Naulahka: A Story Of East And West which he would later name his historic shingle style house in Dummerston Vermont after. In very good condition. A fine association exceptionally rare inscribed by Kipling. English journalist short-story writer poet and novelist Rudyard Kipling's major works include The Jungle Book 1894 Kim 1901 and many short stories and poems. Kipling was born in India which inspired much of his work and his innovative stories for children have become timeless classics. Kipling was one of the most popular writers in the British Empire in both prose and verse in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature in 1907. Macmillan and Co. hardcover
1896140944705New York: The Century Co 1896. Early Printing. Fine/Near Fine. First American edition early reprint with "Thirtieth Thousand" on the title page. Bound in publisher's original olive green cloth decoratively embossed and stamped in gilt. Former owner's inscription to front free endpaper contents lightly tanned and occasionally foxed else Fine in a Near Fine dust jacket with light chipping at the edges toning and a scratch to the front panel. A stunning and bright copy with sharp gilt no doubt protected by the dust jacket over all these years. A remarkable survival. The Century Co unknown
1897114945London: Macmillan & Company 1897-1919. The Bombay edition of Rudyard Kipling's collected works. Octavo 30 volumes bound in full morocco by Sangorski and Sutcliffe gilt titles to the spine gilt tooling and ruling to the spine front and rear panels raised bands inner dentelles top edge gilt marbled endpapers. One of 1050 sets with volume one signed by Rudyard Kipling. In very good condition. The works of Rudyard Kipling contains his poetry novels stories travel writings childrens tales military tales and essays. Kipling in 1907 became the first English writer to receive the Nobel Prize. Macmillan & Company hardcover