330 résultats
30641<p>Small octavo 127 manuscript pp. bound in original limp leather entries dated 21 May to 13 July 1919 and 25 January to 19 May 1919 written in ink in legible hand; first 50 pp consists of the diary for the time period of 21 May to 13 July 1919; the next 60 pp are apparently entries from another diary copied into this diary for the dates of 25 January to 19 May 1919 giving a total time period of the diary for 25 January to 13 July 1919. The last 17 pp of volume contains various memorandum notes including: "Partial list of books I read in France" the poem "Ladies" by Rudyard Kipling a list of different types of alcoholic beverages a poem "Jim" a quote from "Ben Hur" and "Wicksteed" a poem "To the Unknown Goddess" a poem "Jealousy" plus two other notes about war and food.</p><p> <b>Description of Diary:</b></p><p> The name of the author of the diarist is unknown at present although with research his name could presumably be found. The author is a male who is serving in the United States Army in 1919 as a driver transporting officers to various locales in France near the former frontlines. The war had just ended 11 Nov. 1918 a little over two months before this diary begins 25 Jan. 1919 thus our author sees a number of the former battle fields and entrenchments of the frontlines various destroyed French cities and towns and he makes a tour of Paris. He also visits war cemeteries and attends various events at the Red Cross or at Base Hospital 53 amongst other places. </p><p> There is much about his regular care and maintenance of his car and picking up military officers and travel to other military installations towns or places or simply acting as the driver as the officers go out on the town pick up prostitutes bed them at a local hotel and afterwards driving both the officer and prostitute to their respective homes. </p><p> The diary recounts the various 'joyrides' that the author and his fellow servicemen take to nearby towns the dinners they seek out meeting French girls bartering with the local French population with cash chocolates and cigarettes for various items like watches fruit gloves etc. The diary also recounts the steamer ride home from France to Newport News Virginia which took from 24 June to 5 July.</p><p> <b> Sample Quotes from the Diary:</b></p><p>"From other diary</p><p>Jan 25 1919</p><p>Have neglected diary. Will write only when I feel like it. At noon helped Miss Flagg pack books for another hut. Did not go to dinner but she brought me cocoa & sandwiches. Snow on ground."</p><p>"March 24</p><p>Rain sleet and lightning. Dance at R.C. afraid to try. All sorts of nurses big little short tall stout thin graceful awkward decent and crooked. Some extremely ugly but very sic are passably good looking." </p><p>"April 6</p><p>Up early breakfast and roll pack. Left at 8 for St. Javin by way of Flinville. Rode atop a 'Mack' In barracks all shot to pieces formerly German headquarters St Javin was great German rail head town occupied by Germans for 4 years. Full of German signs. Took walk to Champigneulle. Detonations machine guns grenades etc. We put over a barrage. Sarsfield's gun blew up salvage dump with piles of everything French American and German. Piles of burned German helmuts. After supper walked thru St. Javin heaps of dead unburied horses German machine gunner buried with one leg sticking above ground part of uniforms heap of empty shells an overturned machine gun by his side. Outdoor movies."</p><p>"May 1</p><p>Went to Chaumont this morning. Cole is leaving for home mother sill. Took Lehmer to café. Returned at 7 waited till 8. Good looking 'Catin' prostitute with him. Went to little town and had drinks. One to Rolampont to café de la Patrie. Lieut & girl slept next room to us. Came in to see me before she went to sleep. Moans!</p><p>"May 2</p><p>Breakfast and took L to Chaumont. Returned for girl. Asleep. Had not slightest idea of modesty. My reply to her advances was to get her clothes on or she would not go back with me. September moon in May. Truck trains left Chaumont at 1:30 P.M. was in Langes at 4 P.M. At 10 P.M. took Lieut L. and Capt. Ardon to depot. L was pretty drunk. Met 2 fellows and 2 girls. Took them to town. L had me drive him and them but they could find no rooms. Drove them to Humes but no room there. Left them at depot. One girl about all in. Lieut L in R.C. talking to girl finally got him home at 2:30 A.M. Quite disgusting."</p><p>"May 10</p><p>Drove all day and B.H. at night. At R.C. Peggy asked me to go for a walk. Experiment 'Baso' Muy bien. In at 3 A.M. 'Cracker' had his court martial today."</p><p>"June 5</p><p>Did not make a trip. Farewell party at Y. Close of contests. Band concert & special selection. Fine. Free eats. Date with Miss Lawrence for tomorrow night. Down town in ambulance to round up drunks. </p><p>"June 6</p><p>Woke me up at night to go to Romagne went via St. Dizier Bar le Duc Varemes. Lunch at fine café at Bar le Duc. Romagne at 3:30. Large camp tents largely negroes 'beaucoup' P.W.'s cemetery is very large mainly for those killed in the Argonne to hold 30000 to 40000. Dug up & brought in by negroes search for means of identification. Disagreeable work & place. Very bad smell over entire camp. Motorcycle bicycle mounted and foot M.P.'s no place to stay with them. Loan of bunk & blankets razor & use of barber shop. Lemonade at 'Y' Negro 'Y' & 'Y' women."</p><p> "June 24</p><p> Up for breakfast fair hit most of lines hot chocolate at 'Y' coffee & sandwich at J.W. B. cakes at K. of C. 3 cones ice cream at Premier Hut. Rate of exchange for U.S. silver is same as for French silver. Rolled pack at noon 12:00 physical inspection. Out to parade grounds with full equipment at 4:30 supper march to boat at 8 P.M. cigarettes and chocolate from Y.M.C.A. at wharf gangplank at 9:30 up on deck till midnight."</p><p> "June 25</p><p> A good night sleep tho it is some job to dress & undress. When get back can give exhibition as 'sandwich man' for in these 4 tier bunks one is a living sandwich every night. Fair meals. Mixed indiscriminately with negroes and hate it. They are often unbearably insolent. Rain at 9:30 35 war brides aboard one being a negro. Leave locks at 1 P.M. last glimpse of France late in afternoon a low-lying headland off to right. A very heavy windy &sea steadily getting rougher. Many are getting 'mal de mer.' By night waves dashing over forward hatch & bow In very tip of ship protected from waves by covering overhead. Most motion of any part of ship but I like it. Bed early."</p><p> "June 26</p><p> Up for breakfast fed fine but nearly everyone sick especially the 'smokes.' They are whiter than I thought it possible a negro to get. Still windy and rough. Good dinner. Moderating slightly in afternoon. War brides not in evidence. Oh but they are a hard-looking bunch. One looks like someone's washwoman about 40 years old. I sure don't want anything in that class. Would be ashamed to be seen with one of them. No foreigners in mind…"</p><p> "June 30</p><p> For breakfast boiled eggs first time since I left Wash. Barracks that had eggs in regular mess. But these were so old I expected the chick to peck me when I opened the shell absolutely not fit to eat. Am sure getting tired of this trip every day is a month you read sleep eat talk watch the porpoises or simply look at the sea & think of home what you will do when you get there etc. The boat is so crowded it is very hard to get a place to sit-down & are mixed up with Negroes in everything. And the Y man takes candy & tobacco up on the promenade deck & he and the officer amuse themselves by throwing it to the fellows and laughing at them scrambling for it. It is really disgusting just like a bunch of little kids. But there is always that would do anything if they think they are getting something for nothing. Well anyhow I can stay clear of it…"</p><p> "July 5</p><p> Rolled my pack last night while I had a little room but slept perfectly comfortable. Sighted land at 12:30 debarked at New Port News at 4 P.M. 'Y' with cigarettes & candy. Marched under the 'Victory Arch' & thru town. When we halted people gave us water bought ice cream and cola at drugstore. It seems so strange to hear civilians speak English and especially children. But oh boy! It sure seems good. And everything moves along briskly and in a modern manner street cars locomotives autos & everything are so different. But unless one has spent a year in France he does not know the relief & joy it is to get back…"</p> books
1832221925Hartford Silas Andrus; Cincinnati Roff and Young 1832. 1832. First edition. 16mo. Woodcut illustrations. Contemporary gilt stamped 1/2 red calf over brown marbled boards rubbed. Good-very good. Purported memories of one "General P." told in dialogue form. Engraved E.D. French bookplate of C.L. F. Robinson Newport RI on the verso of the front free endpaper. F. Hardcover. Hartford, Silas Andrus; Cincinnati, Roff and Young, 1832. hardcover books
1906044958New York: Wehman Bros 1906. First Edition. Softcover. Fair Condition. Original decorative wraps with a large tear to the front cover - lightly browned but otherwise unmarked internally. 58pp plus 6 pages of ads. Size: 16mo . Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Magic Paranormal & Occult; Inventory No: 044958. <br/><br/> Wehman Bros paperback books
182010199Oxford 1820. Broadside 13'10 in. some browned small hole along one fold affecting a couple of letters in the word family. Very good. A poem in 3 columns warning about the evil son-in-law who will steal all and put you out. unknown books
195841166Minot MA: Anthoensen Press 1958. Inscribed Whitehill pamphlet - "A Fable for Historical Editors" - laid in. Both in fine condition. xv 92 pp. b/w plates and ills. (Anthoensen Press) books
185239691<i>Two volumes 16mo 15.5 cm. 173 2 ads; 176 pp b/w wood engraved frontispieces title page vignettes and plates </i><br /><br /><i>"Voyages" consists of extracts from Ross' 1818 voyage and Parry's voyages of 1819 and 1820. "Travels" covers the overland expeditions of Hearne Mackenzie and Franklin. Both are "recast in a question-and-answer style for young people." - Arctic Bib. 655 656. See also Sabin 100841. These were apparently originally published in Dublin in the 1830s for the Sunday School Union. The imprint on these New York editions reads "Published by Lane & Scott for the Sunday-School Union of the Metropolitan Episcopal Church." Volume 1 bears the bookplate of engineer and businessman Edwin Stanton Fickes and the pencil inscription "A school book of Geo J and Henry H. Fickes used in the 1850s in Oskaloosa IA. - ESF." Scattered foxing but presentable copies in matching half calf over marbled boards. Labeled "153" and "!55" at base of spines.</i> Lane & Scott hardcover books
005811Weer: Uitgave Van De Procure Der Minderbroeders 1924. First American Edition. Orginal Wraps. Octavo. 199 pp. Library copy. Dutch text. Light tear along upper spine. Many in-text photos. Jubilee festschrift of Franciscan friars in Brazil. Weer: Uitgave Van De Procure Der Minderbroeders, 1924 unknown books
40428Dayton: 1970. Corner-stapled mimeographed sheets; 4ppillustrated cover sheet. Very Good. Proposal following a gender-equallity consciousness raising workshop on the Campus of the University of Dayton for a "Female-Mode Process for Creating Space" also defined as "A sexual revolution on a Catholic campus! The Marianist Power Brokers would be entirely impotent to the whole. OK!." Signed at close of text "The Aggressive Space Creators." The text is sufficiently incoherent that we cannot say whether the authors intended the work as social criticism satire or simply an elaborate keg-party invitation. unknown books
003969Wraps. Very Good. N.d. circa 1890. 16mo. 17 by 11. 12 pp. plus wraps. Six charming color plates accompanying the story set it would seem in the Norman countryside with a windmill -- a real and a toy one clogs etc. <br /><br /> paperback books
195313063n.p. Bender 1953. 1953. Square 4to. Publisher's preface. Text by various sportsmen. Illustrated. Original eige boards stamped in blue soiling. Very good. Includes race results winners and place winners for 1952. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Very Good/No Jacket. [n.p., Bender, 1953]. hardcover books
042783Glasgow: Blackie and Son. Hardcover. Very Good Condition. Undated ca. 1890s. 10 full page illustrations 3 in color and 1 double page color illustration. Light wear to red cloth spine mild wear and bumping to corners. An attractive copy of a scarce book. Size: Octavo 8vo. Previous owner's signature in ink. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Children; Inventory No: 042783. <br/><br/> Blackie and Son hardcover books
1920576131920. ANON. A TRIP OVER THE MOHAWK TRAIL. North Adams Ma.: Benjamin Lenhoff ND. c. 1920. Souvenir album illustrated with 27 scenic photographic views one panoramic and a map with illustrated margins depicting the early motor-tourist trade and one page of text. Oblong 8vo. blue stapled paper wrappers printed in black and pink to upper board and illustrated with anachronistic drawing of Native Americans camped by the roadside. Decorative stamped glassine end papers. Lightly bumped upper corners with one gathering loose; wrappers are spotted creased and lightly soiled with tear to upper board. Good plus. unknown books
19704N.p. N.d. Original typescript 5pp on ruled bond. Typed rectos-only. Light soil; single horizontal fold; Very Good. A highly accomplished and moving long poem written in the voice of an unemployed mill-town woman during the Great Depression. Unattributed and undated but apparently based on paper and degree of wear contemporary with the events described.<br/><br/>Whether actually written by an unemployed mill-worker's wife or by a "trained" writer adopting that voice for proletarian effect the poem is remarkable for its unpretentious style and its graphic realistic depiction of the tribulations of unemployed workers during the Great Depression. From its opening line: "All I've ever done in this / Damned life of mine is cry" the poem recounts a series of bleak episodes in a poor southern woman's life: "My man was workin' full - / But now the mill's down / We're all down. / But we still gotta eat / We still got babies to feed . Them big guys up there / They got their bellys full / They got plenty of coal. / Their kids don't have to / Walk tracks lookin' for coal." The author goes on to relate her battles with the "government man" and the WPA but ends the work on a hopeful note: "I'm just so glad that / They give free books at schools / Cause now my boys and girls / Can finish high school And then they'll always have jobs . Too much around me that don't look nice So I'm gonna keep thinking somepin' that is nice."<br/><br/>The poem is unknown to us in any published version though the setting and theme are by no means unique for the period. unknown books
1301LONDON NISTER ND. VERY GOOD. LONDON, NISTER [ND] unknown books
1851045184Halifax: Milner and Sowerby 1851. Early Edition. Hardcover Original Cloth. Good Condition. Original black cloth corners bumped joints weak and cracked but binding still sound. Acattered foxing heavier in a few spots notes to endpaper and one margin. Folding frontis and in text illustrations. 384pp A charming collection of magic and juvenile science tricks. Size: 16mo . Previous owner's book-plate inside front cover. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Science & Technology; Inventory No: 045184. <br/><br/> Milner and Sowerby hardcover books
320unknown books
188757481NY: Fords Howard & Hulbert 1887. First Edition. 8vo pp. 350 adv. Bound in red cloth stamped in black a VG tight copy. Scarce. A scarce account of the New York City draft riot of 1863. Minor riots occurred in Rutland Vt. Wooster Ohio Boston MA. and Portsmouth NH but none equaled in length or destructiveness those in New York City. Fanned by Democratic opposition to the war . for four days the city was a welter of conflagrations assaults and defiances costing a thousand casualties and 1.5 Million property lossDictionary of American History vol. 2 p. 164. Fords, Howard & Hulbert unknown books
1802042317London: J. Cundee for T. Hurst 1802. First Edition. Hardcover Half Leather. Good Condition. Later half leather worn at the edges hinges rubbed. Scattered foxing but generally quite clean internally. Size: duodecimo 12mo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Theatre & Plays; Biography & Autobiography. Inventory No: 042317. <br/><br/> J. Cundee for T. Hurst hardcover books
183115840London: Tegg 1831. A new and improved edition. 8vo pp. 322. Bound in scuffed 3/4 calf little stained and watermarked engraved title-page but a very good tight copy. A collection of music and lyrics to popular songs. Tegg unknown books
179539112Newcastle Upon Tyne: D. Akenhead and Son 1795. Maritime customs and laws including freight salvage quarantine keeping accounts weights and measures as well as recent acts pertaining to seamen and navigation etc. With a list of goods wares and merchandise and the net duty for importing into Great Britain and drawback for exporting. Seventh Edition. Adams & Waters 3177. A rough copy in original badly worn covers. Pages untrimmed chipped and dusty at edges but clean inside. Backstrip perished sewing holding. In later cardboard protective binder. 339 1 ad pp. D. Akenhead and Son books
41001Salem n.d. 12mo. 42 1 pp. <br /><br />Founded in 1895. Act of Incorporation By-Laws House Rules Lists of officers and members. Very good condition in original cloth binding. Backstrip is sunned and stained. hardcover books
41000Salem n.d. 12mo. 47 pp. b/w photo plates. <br /><br />Founded in 1895. Constitution Rules Lists of officers and members. Very good condition in original cloth binding with gold cover lettering. hardcover books
1802041902Boston: Isaiah Thomas and Ebenezer T. Andrews 1802. Sixth Ed. Hardcover Full Leather. Good Condition. Full contemporary calf heavily worn front board loose morocco spine label worn. The sixth edition of the 1st U.S. dictionary originally printed in Worcester by Isaiah Thomas in 1788. Lacking the title page and last leaf 595/6 facsimiles laid in but otherwise complete with the Appendix with a separate title dated 1801. The dictionary is unpaginated but the pagination picks up with the appendix which is paginated 563-596. EAI 2886 Size: Octavo 8vo. Quantity Available: 1. Shipped Weight: Under 1 kilo. Category: Reference; Anthropology. Inventory No: 041902. <br/><br/> Isaiah Thomas and Ebenezer T. Andrews hardcover books
1820005318London: T. Dolby. Printed by J. Swan 1820. Seventh Edition. NA. Good. 8vo. 22 by 14 cm. 32 pp. Two illustrations. Satiric verse and caricature illustrations arising from George IV's divorce case against his Queen Caroline. Moderate wear. <br /><br /> T. Dolby. Printed by J. Swan books
SKU1037299Dorset: Royal Armoured Corps tank museum 1973 - 2nd ed. PAPERBACK. Very Good. B0045NIV9A Clean has a good binding no marks or notations. 52 pp. Royal Armoured Corps tank museum, 1973 - 2nd ed paperback books