11 résultats
1778510849London 1778 environ 600 pages in8. 1778. Broché. environ 600 pages. The eighth edition with notes of various Authors by Thomas newton DD now lord bishop of Bristol Reliure usagée quelques petites déchirures . Intérieur très bon
1778510849London 1778. Etat Correct. in8. 1778. Broché. environ 600 pages. The eighth edition with notes of various Authors by Thomas newton DD now lord bishop of Bristol Reliure usagée quelques petites déchirures . Intérieur très bon London unknown
179132135Bell 1791. 12mo. with 2 engraved plates; twentieth century boards upper board with printed paper label a very good bright crisp copy. Bell, hardcover
1737R300107918CHEZ M.G.MERVILLE. 1737. In-12. Relié plein cuir. Etat d'usage, Coins frottés, Dos abîmé, Intérieur frais. 328 pages - tranches rosées - annotations sur la page de titre - dos à 5 nerfs - coiffes abîmées - dorures absente sur le dos - pièce de titre absente - 2 photos disponibles.. . . . Classification Dewey : 840.05-XVIII ème siècle
1790016819London: John Taylor 1790. Book measures 17x10.cm. xiv2287pp. Bound in full period calf. Binding worn top board detached bottom board loose. Internally some light tanning foxing. Pages clean. A good better than working copy. F. Full Calf. Good Plus. 12mo. John Taylor Hardcover
175144161751 London for J.&R. Tonson and S. Draper, T. Longman, S Birt, C. Hitch, J. Hodges, B. Dodd, C. Corbet, J. Brindley, J. Oswald and J. Ward, 1751, volume in-12 relié plein veau de l'époque, XXVIII-8(non chiffrées)-350-46(index non chiffré), 1 portrait frontispice et 12 planches hors texte de Hayman, dos à 5 nerfs encadrés d'un double filet doré, pièce de titre bordeaux, très bon état.
176519714A Paris, Chez Nyon / de l'imprimerie de la Veuve Quillau, 1765. Complet en 4 volumes petit in-12 (8,5 x 14 cm.), plein veau marbré, dos lisses avec roulettes, titre et fleurons dorés, tranches rouges, roulette dorée sur les coupes, gardes marbrées, pièces de titre et tomaison bordeaux. Infimes frottements en coins, belle condition générale.
173019715La Haye, Isaac vander Kloot, 1730. Complet en 3 volumes in-12, plein vélin blanc, titre manuscrit aux dos (petits frottements en dessous). Notes (assez critiques) sur la traduction en début du volume 1, à la plume.
178838595Printed for J Lackington No. 46 Chiswell Street Moorfields 1788. 12mo. on laid paper with engraved portrait frontispiece and 3 engraved plates; contemporary calf expertly rebacked in calf to style original red leather label partially legible laid down a remarkably bright clean crisp copy. The frontispiece is Phinn's medallion portrait of the author first published in Donaldson's edition of the Poetical Works in 1772. The plates also by Phinn are placed to head books IV VIII and IX. This edition includes in addition to the poem the Preface by Lackington the Life by Newton augmented with extracts from Toland and Birch Barrow's 'In Paradisum Amissam' Marvell's 'On Paradise Lost' a description of the verse and full index. This edition is selected for comment by Professor John T. Shawcross in his address celebrating the acquisition of the Robert J. Wickenheiser collection of Miltoniana by the Thomas Cooper Library of the University of South Carolina 2006 together with an even more elusive companion volume. EXTREMELY SCARCE. ESTC N32815. Not recorded by NCBEL. COPAC lists copies only at Auckland BL and Harvard. Printed for J Lackington, No. 46 Chiswell Street, Moorfields, hardcover
179217522Paris, Defer et Maisonneuve, 1792. 2 volumes très grand in-4 de [4]-VIII-391; [4]-377 pages, demi-veau brun, dos lisses ornés de filets dorés, pièce de titre beige, et de tomaison ovale et noire.
179424326London: By W. Bulmer and Co. Shakespeare Printing Office for John and Josiah Boydell and George Nicol 1794-1797. 3 volumes. First edition of this Boydell issue the first edition with the plates by Richard Westall and a magnificent presentation copy given by Lord Lansdowne the first Marquis of Landsdowne to the French diplomat M. Chauvet who for many years resided at Kensington in London. An especially large copy. With 32 fine large plates being the 28 plates by Richard Westall and 4 portraits of John Milton. Folio 41 x 30 cm very finely bound in exceptional full contemporary bindings of crushed red morocco French in style with fine gilt rolled borders within gilt ruled frames on all covers each frame with corners formed with central gilt circular devices the spines with flat gilt ruled bands creating compartments decorated with small gilt central star burst tools one compartment lettered in gilt a second with gilt volume numbers and additional gilt lettering at the bottom of the spines gilt tooled edges to the covers and gilt turn-ins marbled endpapers a.e.g. cxxxiii 213; 286; 300 4 pp. A most beautiful and exceptional set. A REGAL SET OF THE FIRST EDITION OF THE GREAT ENGLISH POET AND WRITER TO INCLUDE THE FAMOUS ENGRAVINGS FROM RICHARD WESTALL. The Boydells would use Westall to illustrate their two greatest printing efforts the two greatest masters of the English language John Milton and William Shakespeare. Though Westall’s illustrations would be used again in a number of later editions and printings this is by far the largest finest and most impressive of any of the presentations. The Boydell text is equally fitting to these magnificent plates impressively laid out and making use of the fonts of William Martin.<br> In the years that would follow Westall would become quite famous for these illustrations to Milton and for his portrait of Princess Victoria. He would serve as Princess Victoria’s drawing master until the time of his death in 1836.<br> The very fine bindings are quite fitting and elegant. The volumes are beautifully fitting to the presentation inscribed in this copy and were a gift from Lord Lansdowne William Petty the first Marquis of Landsdowne and Prime Minister from 1782-1783 to his close friend M. Chauvet the French diplomat who resided for many years at Kensington. The inscription is dated 1802 and correlates with Chauvet’s being recalled to France due to the growing hostilities between France and England after the Treaty of Amiens. <br> In PARADISE LOST PARADISE REGAINED and SAMSON AGONISTES Milton revived the heroic verse of Homer and Virgil to frame the tale of Satan and Paradise that has become the best-known epic poem written in English. He had difficulty in finding a publisher because of the plague of 1665 which killed many pressmen and the Great Fire of the following year which destroyed many printing houses—and those publishers who were still operating were wary of the project because of Milton's anti-Restoration sympathies.<br> Simmons to whom he finally came drove a hard bargain and according to the agreement reached and the number of copies sold Milton was paid a total of Å15. Milton’s work survives and is revered to this day as amongst the most significant poetry and prose ever penned and additionally important at a defining moment in the development of the English language. A truly towering figure Milton remains one of the most celebrated and analyzed poets in English literature. Dryden described ‘Paradise Lost’ as ‘one of the greatest most noble and sublime poems which either this age or nation has produced’ while Blake keying in on the poem’s heretical implications described Milton as ‘a true Poet and of the Devil’s party without knowing it.’<br> This thorough collection includes not only ‘Paradise Lost’ and the other major works including ‘Paradise Regained Samson Agonistes and Comus’ but the sonnets psalms translations and his work in Latin. As well there is a fine Memoir of Milton and history of his literary work.<br> PARADISE LOST has remained one of the greatest classics of modern English vernacular indeed some say that it constitutes the beginning of modern English poetry and literature. By W. Bulmer and Co., Shakespeare Printing Office for John and Josiah Boydell, and George Nicol unknown