59 résultats
2 vols., 8vo., First Edition, with frontispieces and plates; terracotta cloth, gilt backs, a bright working set. The set comprises Vol.I: 1889-1914; Vol. II: 1914-1926. First volume with small personal bookplate on front paste-down, annotations in pencil on front free endpaper, ink annnotations on rear free endpaper verso; Second volume is ex-Foreign and Commonwealth Office Library with press mark on backstrip, label on front free endpaper, small stamp on title, accession stamp on title verso.
8vo., Second Impression; cloth, gilt back, covers a little faded, corner bruised else a very good, clean copy. Published a month after the first edition. 'The 'Shallonford' error of the first edition remains uncorrected. Gretton 28 (first edition); Matthews A29 (1941b)
8vo., Second Impression; orange cloth, gilt back, a very good, clean copy in unclipped dustwrapper, the latter mildly sunned at backstrip. Published a month after the first impression. 'The 'Shallonford' error of the first edition remains uncorrected. Gretton 28 (first edition); Matthews A29 (1941b); O'Brien E146 (first edition).
8vo., First Edition thus, with a plate; buff printed wrappers, a fine copy. First published in 1941; reissued by the HWS to celebrate the centenary of Lawrence's birth. O'Brien E146 (recording the first edition).
3403Planète plus, n°17, Paris, 8-1970. In-8, br., 146 p.
196272518New York: Richard Davis 1962. Folio. 26 32 26 pp. White paper covers with black and red lettering & an illustration to the front cover in a protective plastic jacket. The programme from the 'Royal World Premiere' of Lawrence of Arabia in London 'to aid S. S. A. F. A Soldier's Sailors' and Airmen's Families Association and Save the Children in the gracious presence of Her Majesty the Queen and His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh' on the 10th December 1962. Tied with gold rope and containing the standard programme. Light edge-wear and a couple of markings small marks to the covers. A number of the leaves are a little creased at the top right corner and bear a small tear at the fore edge and the first-page image of Queen Elizabeth II is folded at the bottom corner. Internally clean. 32cm x 24.5cm. . Very Good. Paper Covers. 1962. Richard Davis 1962 unknown
1963ABE-801525120628 PAGES-EN UNE "DEUX CENTS ANS D'AMITIE.QUI RESISTERONT AUX DIVERGENCES DU MOMENT"/FRANCE ETATS UNIS-DEVANT LA COUR MILITAIRE DE VINCENNES LE COMMANDO DU PETIT CLAMART/DESSIN-LES ACCORDS D'EVIAN COMPLETES A ALGER PAR M.DE BROGLIE/PHOTO BEN BELLA-L'ONU CONDAMNEE A "COLLABORER" AVEC TSHOMBE/PHOTO-QUAND LE FROID INQUIETE (TROP TARD) LES POUVOIRS PUBLICS-LA NEURO SYNTHESE SUPPRIMERA-T-ELLE LA DOULEUR?/2P/2 PHOTOS-PIERRE LAVAL UN HOMME QUI N'A PAS FINI D'ALIMENTER LES CONTROVERSES/PAR ANDRE STIBIO/PHOTO DEPART POUR LONDRES 2 AOUT 1931-LEAUTAUD EN ZONE OCCUPEE/PAR PASCAL PIA-JEAN PAULHAN L'EMINENCE GRISE PASSE AU VERT D'ACADEMIE/1P/PHOTO AVEC COCTEAU ACHARD JEAN ROSTAND-DES IMAGES D'EPINAL SUR LE PETIT ECRAN/PAR BERNARD HEU-UN ENFANT DU BON DIEU: "LE PETIT SOLDAT" DE GODARD/PAR BERNARD GEORGE/PHOTO MICHEL SUBOR ET ANNA KARINA-CINEMA: "LANDRU"/PHOTO CHARLES DENNER ET MICHELE MORGAN-"LAWRENCE D'ARABIE" FILM DE DAVID LEAN/UN GRANDIOSE WESTERN ORIENTAL/2P/PAR MICHEL MOHRT-LOUIS JOUVET UN ANIMATEUR COMME IL EN FAUDRAIT AU THEATRE D'AUJOURD'HUI/PAR CHRISTIAN MEGRET-MOSCOU CELEBRE FERNAND LEGER/1P/PHOTO-MANQUE QUART DERNIERE PAGE
1994Q-0811804925Chronicle Books 1994-03-01. Hardcover. New. In shrink wrap. Looks like an interesting title! Chronicle Books hardcover
1919366927London 1919. Two pages on a bifolium. 1 vols. 8vo. Old folds some soiling two tiny patches of thinning from old adhesion on first page a minute strip of cellotape on verso not affecting signature page. Good plus. Two pages on a bifolium. 1 vols. 8vo. Lawrence of Arabia at the height of his acclaim and celebrity in Britain treads a careful line in his response to a letter from editor James Louis Garvin 1868-1947 editor of the Observer newspaper and a leading spokesman for the Conservative party:<br /> <br /> "I'd be delighted to talk to you personally about the Middle East: which looks a sad tangle because our focus is wrong: all's very well really: only I can't write either now or in the future about it since most of my views are based on official information and it wouldn't do to give it away. I know I'm supposed to have written upon it but actually all I did was one short letter to the Times not controversial and that was by request"<br /> <br /> He expresses his willingness to meet with the editor subject to these reservations and concludes "Yours sincerely T E Lawrence By the way I'm not a Colonel now!"<br /> <br /> A choice letter right around the time that Lawrence lost the draft manuscript of Seven Pillars in the Reading train station. Two weeks later he began "to scribble out what I remembered of the first text"; the disenchantment with British policy in the Middle East was still ahead. unknown