57 résultats
2010Q-0763791288Jones & Bartlett Learning 2010-09-24. Paperback. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Jones & Bartlett Learning paperback
1860214168Glasgow: Printed for the Booksellers" 1860. No. 20 printed at foot of title. Title with woodcut vigentt of "Fair Rosanna". 8 pp. 1 vols. 12mo. Single sheet folded twice; unopened and unbound. A little dusty and wrinkled otherise very good. No. 20 printed at foot of title. Title with woodcut vigentt of "Fair Rosanna". 8 pp. 1 vols. 12mo. <br/><br/> Printed for the Booksellers" unknown
20122090502113716820Not Available 2012. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
19802082702114608718Fixed 6000 Yen Bungeishunju 1980. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Fixed 6000 Yen Bungeishunju paperback
19732091202133405419NW-SF company A5 size magazine 1973. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. NW-SF company A5 size magazine paperback
19732090502113717296Not Available 1973. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Not Available paperback
19862111902153303475Kokusho Publishing Association 1986. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Kokusho Publishing Association paperback
19662091202133001734Hayakawashobo 1966. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of books: 1 Hayakawashobo paperback
6202156104.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
6139015286.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
20397795-nnew. unknown
20397795like new. unknown
6873'Printed and Sold by J. Pitts No. 14. Great Saint Andrew Street Seven Dials'. Printed on one side of a piece of rough laid paper approximately 24.5 x 8.5 cm. Crude circular woodcut of pedlar at head diameter 3.5 cm. Good on aged paper with a little creasing at head and foot. Consists of four four-line stanzas with refrain 'Doodle doodle doo.' First stanza heavy with double-entendre reads 'HEAV'N bless my dearest little dear The wind is not quite fair From Portland Road I write this here - Oh! bless your little hair. Doodle doodle doo.' Clearly refers to a high society Regency scandal possibly that concerning the Duke of York and Mary Anne Clarke. Not listed in Shepard's Short-List. Excessively scarce: no copy on COPAC. Image on application. 'Printed and Sold by J. Pitts, No. 14. Great Saint Andrew Street Seven Dials,' unknown
2010Viva-9780763791285JONES & BARTLETT LEARNING 2010. Paperback with Sewing. New. JONES & BARTLETT LEARNING paperback
2010Viva-9780763791285JONES & BARTLETT LEARNING 2010. Paperback with Sewing. New. JONES & BARTLETT LEARNING paperback
183029079London: H. Disley 1830. Good overall. That's Where You're Wrong' includes references to emigration to Canada a spirited revolutionary song: "Rise Britons rise and ring your voices thro' the land…"<br /> <br /> This is a broadside ballad were sold for half a penny or penny on the streets in London Manchester and other British cities during the 19th century. Once newspapers became more widespread and cheaper they largely displaced this type of street literature. Printed on cheap tissue paper they included religious warnings political arguments satire comedy bawdy tales crime news fantastic tales love and relationship advice and calls for social reform. In some cases the printer would suggest a familiar tune that would fit the lyrics provided. Most had a woodcut illustration although it may have been unrelated to the subject matter. Many broadside ballads in London were printed in the Seven Dials district. They were sold in large numbers on street corners in squares and at fairs by travelling ballad singers and also pinned on the walls of alehouses where they were sung and read. However because they were meant to be disposable presaging both the consumer culture and mass media relatively few have survived. 7 1/2 by 9 1/2 inches toned edges chipped fold line repaired. H. Disley unknown
29078London. First line: "Have you heard of the rumpus there was I declare All the Popes in the world was in Belgrave Square…"<br /> With The Wonderful Crocodile. "Now list ye landmen all to me To tell you truth I'm bound What happen'd to me by going to sea…"<br /> <br /> According to Burl Ives this tune was based on an old Irish air. John and Alan Lomax collected it in Nova Scotia in 1921 from a man who said it was a song he'd known since he was a boy - "one of thoses that used to be roared out in the back rooms of taverns frequented by seamen forty or so years ago."<br /> <br /> This is a broadside ballad were sold for half a penny or penny on the streets in London Manchester and other British cities during the 19th century. Once newspapers became more widespread and cheaper they largely displaced this type of street literature. Printed on cheap tissue paper they included religious warnings political arguments satire comedy bawdy tales crime news fantastic tales love and relationship advice and calls for social reform. In some cases the printer would suggest a familiar tune that would fit the lyrics provided. Most had a woodcut illustration although it may have been unrelated to the subject matter. Many broadside ballads in London were printed in the Seven Dials district. They were sold in large numbers on street corners in squares and at fairs by travelling ballad singers and also pinned on the walls of alehouses where they were sung and read. However because they were meant to be disposable presaging both the consumer culture and mass media relatively few have survived. 7 1/2 by 10 inches. Edges slt ruffled o/w vgc. unknown
ria9781284031591_inpPaperback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; N/A paperback
2013Jul18-2nd1284031594-8962Jones & Bartlett Learning 2013-07-23. Paperback. Good. US Edition Textbook May Have Highlights Notes and/or Underlining BOOK ONLY-NO ACCESS CODE NO CD Ships with Emailed Tracking from USA Jones & Bartlett Learning paperback
1830TH262Nottingham: The Review-Office 1830. Original Ediiton . No Binding. Vg. Folio. Broadslip Ballad 32x13cms 12 3/4 x 5 inces. Attractive half page broadside with a fine and attractive printed border to the verses. Small woodcut to the head of the page depicting a printing press.NO COPY TRACED. Believed to be printed at Suttons Review Office in Nottingham and dated 1830. 8 four line verses extolling the press and reflecting on events of the year just gone.William IV had taken the throne and was welcomed as a Royal Navy sailor and a reformer. Charles and Richard Sutton printers and proprietors of the liberal Nottingham Review <br/> <br/> The Review-Office unknown
40506New York: H. De Marsan n.y. Broadside. 6¼" X 10". Very good. Numerous edge chips along right side and bit on lower edge only slightly encroaching on decorative border. This crudely printed broadside ballad undated but circa 1861 includes a thick decorative patriotic border featuring red and blue stars and stripes olive-branch clutching American Eagle etc. with publisher's data "H. De Marsan Publisher / 54 Chatham St. / N.Y." at bottom center of border. Sung to the tune of "Marshal Ney" a popular tune celebrating the Napoleonic figure this Civil War tune celebrates the 69th New York Infantry Regiment the "Fighting Irish" or "Fighting Sixty-Ninth." Two stanzas and one chorus are featured the chorus reading: "Right and left -- left and right: / We fought the Rebels with all our might; / Brave CORCORAN did wounded fall / And HAGGERTY died by a Traitor's ball." Irish-born Michael Corcoran 1827-63 led the 69th at the First Battle of Bull Run in July 1861 in which he was taken prisoner and Irish-born Captain James Haggerty the first member of the 69th to die was reportedly killed by a Louisiana Zouave which also included many Irishmen. These "penny ballads" were all the rage during much of the 19th century and were invariably printed on thin delicate stock and sold by street vendors. A quite attractive example of this rare survivor. Inkstamped on verso is "Geo. F. Hambrecht" -- a well-known Civil War collector and noted Lincoln scholar 1871-1943 who founded the Lincoln Fellowship of Wisconsin and served as director of the Wisconsin State Board of Vocational Education. H. De Marsan unknown
G1874312176I4N00Hisarlik Pr. Hardcover. Very Good. May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Hisarlik Pr hardcover
20775Paperback. New. paperback
15906Early eighteenth century. Another later version published in the Gentleman's Magazine London May 1744. 2pp. on both sides of a strip of 35.5 x 11.5 cm laid paper with fleur-de-lys watermark. In a secretary hand employing the thorn and long s. In fair condition on aged and worn paper. An untitled forty-line poem divided into five numbered eight-line stanzas. The narrator is an older married woman advising a younger woman not to marry with observations on the frailties of the male sex. The first stanza reads: 'Ere ye. read ys. ye. may suppose. That some new listed Lover. By means of Poetry has chose. His Passion to discover. Know Faire one I am a Matron Grave Which Time & Care has wasted And would thy Youth from sorrow save Which I have in Wedlock tasted.' A variation of the poem was published in the Gentleman's Magazine May 1744 with the title 'The MATRON's Advice to a YOUNG LADY A new BALLAD. Tune Sally.' The grammar of the Gentleman's Magazine version is more modern in tone its first line reading: 'Ere you read this you may suppose' and the variations are most apparent in the third stanza including 'Beset thy dwelling' in the published version for 'Surround thy Threshold' in the manuscript; 'heedless' for 'regardless'; 'Pass all your minutes' for 'Thy Moments pass on'; 'While flames are offer'd at our shrine And Men like Idols sue us' for 'Darts flames & hoards adorn Our shrine And Awful Hymen woo us.' The writer has begun to write another poem on the reverse of the slip: 'Come lesten sic ye tories & jacobites now Your Plot <.> shew'. Not present in the English Broadside Ballad Archive. Early eighteenth century. [Another (later?) version published in the Gentleman's Magazine, London, May 1744.] unknown
187048786San Francisco: Bruce's Print n.d. ca. 1870s. First Edition. Small broadside 16x8.5cm. printed within typographically decorative border on yellow stock. Miniscule loss at top left-hand margin else Near Fine. Printed at head of title "8 & 7."<br /> <br /> Reconstruction-era three verse ballad broadside addressed to Dolly Varden not /the/ Dolly Varden of Charles Dickens' novel "Barnaby Rudge" though the name was hugely popular as a result of the work and inspired a fashion craze and the name of a trout. The text makes mention of the 1872 Crédit Mobilier fraud; promotes the work of the Patrons of Husbandry "Dolly do you love the 'Granges' / Do you love to be well fed / Will you shield them from all danger / While they reap the daily bread"; and attacks the spread of carpet-bagging in the South "Search the carpet-bagger well / And the pack of high-tone stealers / Judge and send them all to L. Bruce's Print unknown