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1890253961890. Parisiis Paris apud Dionysium Thierry 1671. Un fort vol. au format in-4 252 x 192 mm de 6 ff. n.fol. 780 pp. et 24 ff. n.fol. Reliure de l'ÂŽpoque de pleine basane marbrÂŽe havane plats jansÂŽnistes dos ˆ nerfs ornÂŽ de doubles caissons d'encadrement dorÂŽs larges fleurons dorÂŽs titre dorÂŽ palette dorÂŽe en tÂte et queue tranches mouchetÂŽes. ''Edition originale de cette histoire de France depuis la mort de Louis XII jusqu'en 1652. La Barde a oeuvrÂŽ comme diplomate en Suisse o il avait ÂŽtÂŽ nommÂŽ ambassadeur par Louis XIV. Moreri estime que son histoire ''relate sans flatterie et avec beaucoup de connaissances les intrigues du cabinet''''. Angles ÂŽmoussÂŽs. Frottements affectant les plats. Petits manque en queue du dos et en coupes. Coiffe de tÂte arasÂŽe. Dos prÂŽsentant un ÂŽclat lÂŽgÂrement altÂŽrÂŽ. InÂŽgales mais claires rousseurs dans le texte. Cerne en marge de la moitiÂŽ des feuillets. Rare. b42961 unknown
189025396Parisiis [Paris], apud Dionysium Thierry, 1671. Un fort vol. au format in-4 (252 x 192 mm) de 6 ff. n.fol., 780 pp. et 24 ff. n.fol. Reliure de l'époque de pleine basane marbrée havane, plats jansénistes, dos à nerfs orné de doubles caissons d'encadrement dorés, larges fleurons dorés, titre doré, palette dorée en tête et queue, tranches mouchetées.
1812028559New York: Collins and Co. 1812. Second edition enlarged 1812 originally published 1807. Important early American reference on midwifery illustrated with 19 woodcuts. Full marbled calf with gilt-lettered tan spine label and gilt ruled spine 17.5 cm tall 255 pages. Covers rubbed at the extremities with small internal chip to the upper front cover joints good text block sound pages age-toned and lightly foxed but clean with the exception of a transparent brown stain at the lower page corners that begins at page 107 and extends through the remainder of the book affecting text only on a handful of pages completely legible throughout name in ink and repeated in pencil on the front free endpaper no other markings. Hard Cover. Good. 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall. Collins and Co. Hardcover
1826WRCLIT65110Paris: N. Pichard & Ch. Gosselin 1826. 276pp.plus errata leaf. Large octavo 23.8 x 16cm. Original printed wrappers untrimmed sewn into protective 20th century pastepaper boards. Wrappers slightly frayed and smudged with repaired tear/chip at lower edge occasional minor foxing but a very good copy. First edition. One of an unspecified number of copies printed on large thick paper. This copy bears the author's presentation inscription on the half-title to "Mr Edouard." Joseph Bard 1803-1861 published several collections of verse as well as works in the fields of antiquities archaeology and travel. This would appear to be if not his earliest certainly among his earliest book publications. OCLC/Worldcat reports four locations none of them in North America. In his subnote to the entry on LES MÉLANCOLIQUES 1832 Vicaire records other early titles but not this work. VICAIRE I:317 ref. N. Pichard & Ch. Gosselin hardcover books
183268027L.T. Hivert L. Babeuf Louis Perrin | Paris & Lyon 1832 | 15.50 x 21 cm | 2 volumes reliés en 1
1808BOOKS341538New York NY: Printed and Sold By Collins and Perkins. Good/NO DUSTJACKET. 1808. Early Edition with the same corrections as a First Edition. Hardcover. One-word ink correction on p. 62 not on errata leaf - consistent with First Edition conditions; 19 woodcuts; First textbook of midwifery by an American physician; "A COMPENDIUM OF THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF MIDWIFERY Containing Practical Instructions for the Management of Women During Pregnancy in Labour and in Child-bed; Calculated to Correct the Errors and to Improve the Practice of Midwives; As well as to serve as an Introduction to the Study of this Art for Students and Young Practitioners." . 12mo. 239pp. cover light shelf wear to edges and corners some rubbing and bumping to corners and edges and spine tips very light soiling otherwise quite good; Former owner's signature on title page edges of text block spotted/soiled water stained to top edge of text block and front and rear pastedowns and free-endpapers scattered foxing throughout text one-word ink correction on p. 62 consistent with First Edition corrections see photo. . Printed and Sold By Collins and Perkins hardcover
183268027Paris & Lyon: L.T. HivertL. BabeufLouis Perrin 1832. Fine. L.T. Hivert L. Babeuf Louis Perrin Paris & Lyon 1832 15.50 x 21 cm 2 volumes reliés en 1 First edition published anonymously for the first volume third edition statement for the second volume. Half old rose sheep binding smooth spine lightly faded decorated with gilt garlands minor rubbing to spine scuffing to marbled paper boards contemporary binding. The second subscription list of the ""Pélerin"" is absent from our copy. Occasional light foxing. L.T. HivertL. BabeufLouis Perrin hardcover
18479863Lyon, Librairie Burgundo-lyonnaise de M. Chambet Fils (Beaune, Imprimerie Blandeau-Dejussieu), 1847 ; grand in-8 ; plein veau fauve, dos à faux nerfs dorés, fleurons dorés, pièce de titre orange (reliure de l'époque) ; XIII, (3), 548 pp., 5 planches lithographiées hors-texte.
1862020395London: William Johnston. Volume 2 only. Full leather. xvi 424 pp. plus 12-page index. The four called-for folding plates are very nice. Chipping at head and foot of spine both covers detached faint apothecary stamps on the covers single stamp of a medical society some previous owners' names edge dampstaining along the top of a number of pages at the beginning and end of the book Fair. Bard's article in this book was the first scientific paper involving a surgical subject from the North American colonies. It described the first abdominal operation for extrauterine pregnancy in America. Bard was the first physician in the colonies to take part in a systematic dissection for the purpose of instruction. Bard practiced in Philadelphia and New York. Important. . Fair. Hardcover. 1st Edition. 1862. William Johnston hardcover
189036700Annandale NY: 1890 through 1896. 1890's 1890's. Good. - A collection of original photographs and original brochures and ephemeral publications relating to St. Stephen's College of Annandale NY which was founded by John & Margaret Bard and was later to become Bard College of Annandale-on-the-Hudson. Included are 30 original photographs including 29 cyanotypes 13 of which depict college buildings the remaining 17 being portraits and scenery including the campus Zabriskies Falls and interiors. The cyan-tinged images range from 4 inches high by 3-1/4 inches wide to 9 inches high by 6-1/2 inches wide with a variety of sizes in between. One of the images is an exception being sienna-toned and not in fact a cyanotype. The photographs are in various condition some are fine while others are creased or lightly stained with one portrait having several tears to the edges.<p>Also included in this collection are 14 ephemeral publications and brochures relating to St. Stephen's College with programs and flyers for events including 3 relating to the ritual burying of the algebra by incoming freshmen. The items were all apparently once removed from a scrapbook and thus the condition varies. A few have stains while several have remnants of paper or glue on the versos. <p>Following is a list of the images represented by the photographs:<p>1 The entrance to Potter Hall part of Stone Row with a horse-drawn cart.<p>2 An unidentified image which looks like a dormitory building.<p>3 Chapel of Holy Innocents and St. Margaret's Well with the Stone Row dormitories in the background<p>4 Chapel of Holy Innocents & St. Margaret's Well 1890 Part of Stone Row in the background.<p>5 Bard Hall 1891. There are glue or chemical stains to the edges of this photo.<p>6 An unidentified image. This is a small photo with creasing & stains.<p>7 Aspinwall Hall.<p>8 Interior of the Chapel of Holy Innocents Christmas 1890. There is a light corner stain.<p>9 Chapel of Holy Innocents 1891. There is a light corner stain.<p>10 Interior of the Chapel of Holy Innocents decorated at Christmas.<p>11 Chapel of Holy Innocents.<p>12 Landscape in snow with the Chapel of Holy Innocents & St. Margaret's Well. There is creasing to this photo mainly at the edges.<p>13 "Stone Row" dormitories 1893 with the Chapel of Holy Innocents & St. Margaret's Well in the foreground.<p>14 Interior of a dorm room with 2 students.<p>15 A staged photo of 2 students in wedding attire one is in drag.<p>16 Three Class of 1894 students. This photo has a crease along the center.<p>17 through 22 Six different photos of Zabriskies Falls. One a small sepia-toned photo has a crease along the edge another has minor creases and a third has a light stain.<p>23 Large group of students in front of the Chapel of Holy Innocents.<p>24 Three students. There is creasing to this photo.<p>25 A view of the campus.<p>26 Photo of the Class of 1897. This photo is quite dark.<p>27 Interior of a room with 2 students.<p>28 A group of 13 students June 1893.<p>29 A view from the campus showing the Catskills & Hudson River.<p>30 A portrait of the President of the College Robert B Fairbairn.<p>The ephemera related to St. Stephen's College consists of:<p>1 A 4-page "St. Stephen's College Glee Club" program bound in cream wraps titled in red with a silk cord. The program is dated "March '93" in ink at the bottom of the cover.<p>2 A 2-page "St. Stephen's College" brochure. The top edge of the second page is trimmed without loss of text.<p>3 A 4-page St. Stephen's College "Field Day / June 20 1893" brochure with penciled notes indicating the winners.<p>4 The 4-page "Thirty-Fourth Commencement" program. Dated June 21 1894.<p>5 "The St. Stephen's College Messenger" issue dated April 1896.<p>6 A broadside of the St. Stephen's College schedule and rules. The broadside is stained.<p>7 A small card with the program for the "Eulexian Society Reunion Supper" a literary society dated June 21 1893.<p>8 An announcement printed on mourning stationery regretting that "The Class of Ninety-six" could not invite the recipient to "the burying of its Algebra on account of the secrecy of the burial". Together with the original mourning envelope.<p>9 A 3-page program for the "Laying of the Corner-stone" of the Hoffman Library dated June 22 1893. Construction of the library began in 1893 and was completed in 1895.<p>10 A humorous description of the death and burial of algebra in 1894 and it's subsequent exhumation by the class of 1897. The 4-page announcement is printed on light gray card stock shaped as a tombstone. The original mourning envelope is present.<p>11 A 4-page program with class statistics entitled "Class Day S. Stephen's College. June 15 1892". In addition to age height and weight the statistics include favorite drink "brandy" "rain water" "blood" etc favorite study "himself" "women" "how to do nothing" etc favorite amusement "sleeping" scrapping" "being sick" etc and others.<p>12 The 4-page "Thirty-Third Annual Commencement" program dated June 22 1893 with profuse penciled notes.<p>13 Unused 4-page "St. Stephen's College" letterhead.<p>14 The 1894 "Funeral" program for algebra printed in red on buff card stock in the shape of a coffin. Purple mourning lines frame the edges of the 4 pages of card stock which is bound at the top with red cotton ribbon.<p>The tradition behind the burial of the algebra was sort of a light hazing ritual performed by freshmen students. Thirty days after arriving at Bard the freshmen were to steal an algebra book which they were to then sign and bury with several bottles of wine. Then the night before commencement the students now seniors would dig it up and consume the wine raising a toast to their graduating class. The ritual is described as follows in a 1930 issue of the Lyre Tree a student newspaper: "There is a tradition of long standing at St. Stephen's that within 30 days after the close of the first semester the Freshman class shall with all the ritual and solemnity due to the occasion secretly inter an algebra autographed by each member of the class and with it a certain quantity of wine. To be legal every Freshman must be at the grave during the burial. At the end of the four years the algebra is exhumed and burned on a funeral pyre during the Class Day exercises. Toasts are drunk to the college and to the outgoing and incoming Senior class."<p>"St. Stephen's College was established as a Training College for the Ministry and as such it was requested to make an annual report to the Convention of the Diocese of New York. The object was the supervision of the young men who had devoted themselves to the ministry of the Church. It was afterwards opened to any who would not disturb the general purpose for which it was originally instituted." Quoted from "The Thirty-First Annual Catalogue of St. Stephen's College Annandale N.Y. 1892-93".<p>The land now owned by Bard College was once composed of several country estates Blithewood Bartlett Sands Cruger's Island and Ward Manor/Almont among them. John & Margaret Bard purchased a part of the Blithewood estate in 1853. Renaming the property as Annandale they established a parish school the following year. They then began building the Chapel of the Innocents next to Bard Hall in 1857 and the following year donated the unfinished Chapel and surrounding acreage to New York's Episcopal diocese which had promised financial support to grow the school into a theological college. St. Stephen's College was thus founded in 1860. In honor of its founder the school changed its name to Bard College in 1934. Ten years later in 1944 Bard became a co-educational school welcoming female students and faculty. Annandale, NY: 1890 through 1896. [1890's] paperback
1807014368New York: Printed and Sold By Collins and Perkins 1807. Contemporary calf new calf spine and leather spine label One-word ink correction on p. 62 not on errata leaf. Lightly browned; a little soiling especially on lower corners and occasional minor stains; small repairs in one blank outer margins and two blank upper corners. Collation: 239 1 pp. Nineteen wood-engraved text illustrations.First textbook of midwifery by an American physician. Bard prepared this book for prospective midwives who could not afford an adequate formal education. His text "embodied the standard obstetric teaching of his day leaning heavily on the authority of Smellie Baudelocque Perfect and Denman and quoting selectively from their case reports. . . . He described well the mechanism of labor and presented an excellent picture of pre-eclampsia"Speert Obstetrics and gynecology in America: a history 126-27. Bard was one of the leading New York physicians of his time. His favorite branch of medicine was midwifery. . . . Perhaps no physician in this country has ever enjoyed a larger share of practice in this department or acquired a higher reputation as an accoucheur" Kelly and Burrage Dictionary of American medical biography p. 60. Garrison-Morton 6163.1; Austin 116; Norman 120. See Cutter and Viets Short history of midwifery pp. 160-64 213-14; Kelly and Burrage pp. 58-60; Thoms Chapters in American obstetrics pp. 26-34 the title page is reproduced on p. 29. First Edition. Hard Cover. Very Good. Printed and Sold By Collins and Perkins Hardcover