496 résultats
190065535New York:: The Grolier Club 1900. First edition. publisher's elaborately decorated boards. There is some light foxing to the text and the very slightest of rubbing to the edges of the boards. . 8vo. Folding plate "Fiorenza;" frontispiece portrait. With an Introduction and a Note on the Portraits of Dante by G. R. Carpenter. Printed at the De Vinne Press. The Grolier Club, hardcover
18404022181840. Softcover. Very Good. Oblong octavo. Measuring 8.5" x 6.75". Green red and yellow marbled stiff paper wrappers with paper label. Illustrated. Text separated from spine foxing and staining on the internal top margins of the pages but very good. An album used as a rustic sketch book extensively illustrated by a boy identified as "James Carpenter" with no listed dates but possibly from the Middle Atlantic area in the 1840-50s. Insides of the wrappers have various small drawings of household objects birds and people. The pages in the front of the album feature detailed pencil drawings of houses and buildings with stone walls simplistic fences and trees. One picture depicts a lighthouse on the shore with a small boat out in the distance. Later the drawings focus more on animals with birds and dogs being the primary focus. A very lean and large dog is depicted sitting in front of a small structure looking off to the side possible a greyhound. The drawings are juvenile but otherwise quite good with attention paid to proportion in not only the animals but also in the structure of the architecture. Carpenter's signature is the only written text in the album as many of the illustrations fill up the entirety of the pages.<br /> <br /> A nicely illustrated rustic album presumably filled with the everyday objects that may have surround Carpenter in his daily life. unknown
184224300London 1842. Proof. Very good overall. A compelling portrait of Sir William Martin 1807 - 1880 noted New Zealand judge who set up New Zealand's judicial system along with Attorney General William Swainson and Thomas Outhwaite first Registrar of the Supreme Court. The image depicts a handsome young man seated in frock coat and vest. <br /> <br /> Sir Martin like his friend George Selwyn first Anglican Bishop of New Zealand was sympathetic to the missionary goals of the church and to the Maori. Martin wrote protests against Britain's failures in living up to the terms of the Treaty of Waitangi and the invasion of Taranaki. In 1861 he authored a work in support of the Maori titled 'Extracts of Letters from New Zealand on the War Question'. <br /> <br /> Below the portrait all handwritten are the notes "on stone by J. Dickson from a drawing by J. Carpenter". At the center "Wm. Martin Chief Justice of New Zealand London 1 March 1812". At the right "Mn. Hanhart lith. printer". Below this line "proof". Very slightly dusty in the margins; a slight paper fault in the background. Very faint tide mark below the image of the chair. India paper proof laid down13 5/8 x 11"; thick paper 13 1/4 x 17 1/2". <br /> <br /> See the Turnbull Library image Ref: C-022-009. An exquisite portrait. unknown
190088287Paris: Au Ménestrel - Heugel & Cie 1900. First French Edition. Quarto. 28.5cm. Twentieth century red half morocco over marbled boards titled and decorated in gilt to spine. 408pp. Light bumping and scuffing to corners otherwise strong tight and clean; internally clean and fresh edges speckled black inscription to verso of last blank preceding musical score very light spotting mainly confined to prelims. A very good clean and handsome copy in a later leather binding. <br /> <br /> Inscribed rather floridly by Charpentier on the occasion of the premiere of "Louise" in Vienna on 24th March 1903 to Princess Martha Stirbey of Romania:<br /> "A Madame la Princesse Stirbey en admiration respecteuse Gustave Charpentier 24 Mars 1903 1ere de Louise en Vienne"<br /> There is an additional musical quotation and accompanying text "You were for me in Vienna the fleeting vision O Massenet Master Friend forgive me! of the spirit and charm of Paris"<br /> <br /> Never a shy and retiring gentleman Charpentier has somewhat outdone himself with this inscription. Au Ménestrel - Heugel & Cie unknown
1896248London The Studio Magazine 1896. Embossed lithograph in colors. Contained within the bound edition of THE STUDIO AN ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF FINE AND APPLIED ART. 1894189618971898 and 1899 with their blind stamp lower right. 5 ¼ x 8 7/8 188mm x 226mm. The book is bound in green cloth with gilt letters on the cover and spine. In good condition. The Studio Magazine was an illustrated fine arts and decorative arts magazine founded in Britain in 1893 which exerted a major influence on the development of the Art Nouveau movement. The earlier editions usually had original lithographs and etchings bound into the publication as it is here. Charles Holme Editor. In the later 20th century the annuals gave increasing prominence to architecture and interior design and in the mid-1960s it was retitled Decorative Art in Modern Interiors. The annual ceased publication in 1980. THE STUDIO, AN ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF FINE AND APPLIED ART
1896248London The Studio Magazine 1896. Embossed lithograph in colors. Contained within the bound edition of THE STUDIO AN ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF FINE AND APPLIED ART. 1894189618971898 and 1899 with their blind stamp lower right. 5 ¼ x 8 7/8 188mm x 226mm. The book is bound in green cloth with gilt letters on the cover and spine. In good condition. The Studio Magazine was an illustrated fine arts and decorative arts magazine founded in Britain in 1893 which exerted a major influence on the development of the Art Nouveau movement. The earlier editions usually had original lithographs and etchings bound into the publication as it is here. Charles Holme Editor. In the later 20th century the annuals gave increasing prominence to architecture and interior design and in the mid-1960s it was retitled Decorative Art in Modern Interiors. The annual ceased publication in 1980. THE STUDIO, AN ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE OF FINE AND APPLIED ART books
18772681Paris, G. Charpentier, 1877 ; in-4, demi-maroquin rouge-sang à coins, dos à cinq nerfs décorés de filets pointillés dorés, titre doré sur bandeau noir et fauve, caissons très décorés d'un fleuron doré dans un double encadrement doré, avec encadrement de rinceaux aux écoinçons, guirlandes de fleurs et feuilles dorées en tête et pied du dos, filet doré sur les plats et les coins, tête dorée, couverture conservée (reliure de l'époque, signée Champs, célèbre relieur parisien) ; (2) ff. (faux-titre, titre), 166 pp., (1) f. (imprimeur) ; 30 dessins en noir hors-texte dont un portrait en frontispice protégés par des serpentes imprimées, dont 12 dessins au fusain et 18 dessins à la plume.
1830304041London: Printed and Published by William Carpenter 1830. First editions. Decorated head pieces. 1 vols. 4to. Disbound. First editions. Decorated head pieces. 1 vols. 4to. RARE. From 1830 to 1831 Carpenter published an unstamped series called "The Political Letters" challenging the stamp duty law as to whether any publication containing news was subject to duty. Carpenter did not feel that these should be subject to the duty. He was prosecuted and imprisoned from where he edited the "Political Magazine." <br /> The pamphlets contained are:<br /> 1. " A Report on the Trail of William Carpeter 12 pp. <br /> 2.An Expostulatory Letter to the Commissioners of Stamps." 16 pp 21 October 1830;<br /> 3. A Monitory Letter to ther People of England. 16pp. with an ad for Queen Mab.October 29 1830<br /> 4. "A Letter to the Aristocracy of England. " 24 pp 6 Nov. 1830; <br /> 5 A Second Letter to the Duke of Wellington.16pp<br /> 6. Facts and Observations connected to the Present Times. 16pp. November 18 1830<br /> 7. A Letter to Earl Gray.November 25 1830<br /> 8."A Letter to Lord Althorpe" 16 pp. 4 Dec. 1830<br /> 9. "A Second Letter to Lord Althorpe" 16 pp. 7 Dec. 1830<br /> 10. "A Political Miscellany on National Debt" 16 pp. 9 Dec. 1830<br /> 11 "A Political Compendium on Reform" 16 pp. 18 Dec. 1830<br /> 12 "A Political Digest" 16 pp. 23 Dec. 1830<br /> 13. A Supplement to Carpenter's Political Compendium. 8 pp.<br /> 14. "A Letter to the Right Hon. Wilmot Horton" 16 pp. 31 Dec. 1830<br /> 15. "A Political Mirror" 16 pp. 7 Jan. 1831<br /> 16.; "A Political Chronicle" 16 pp. 13 Jan 1831<br /> 17. ; "A Political Herald" 21 Jan 1831<br /> 18. A Political Register January 28 1831. 16 pp.<br /> 19. A Political Letter. Feburary 4 1831. 16 pp.<br /> 20. Another Political Letter Feburary 12 1831. 16 pp.<br /> 21. A Letter to the Rightr Hon. The Chancellotr of the Exchequer. 16 pp.<br /> 22. A Political Monitor Friday May 6 1831. 16 pp.<br /> 23. A Political Censor. Saturday May 14 1831. 16 pp.<br /> <br /> <br /> At an early age he began working for a bookseller in Finsbury first as an errand boy and then as an apprentice.<br /> <br /> In 1830 he issued a series of Political Letters with which he attempted to defy the stamp duty on newspapers but in May 1831 he was tried and convicted of evading the law and was imprisoned. While in prison he edited a political magazine which was republished as Carpenter's Monthly Political Magazine in 1832. NCBEL 3:1818 Printed and Published by William Carpenter unknown
1830304041London: Printed and Published by William Carpenter 1830. First editions. Decorated head pieces. 1 vols. 4to. Disbound. First editions. Decorated head pieces. 1 vols. 4to. Stamp Duty Challenged. RARE. From 1830 to 1831 Carpenter published an unstamped series called "The Political Letters" challenging the stamp duty law as to whether any publication containing news was subject to duty. Carpenter did not feel that these should be subject to the duty. He was prosecuted and imprisoned from where he edited the "Political Magazine." <br/> The pamphlets contained are:<br/>1. " A Report on the Trail of William Carpeter 12 pp. <br/>2.An Expostulatory Letter to the Commissioners of Stamps." 16 pp 21 October 1830;<br/>3. A Monitory Letter to ther People of England. 16pp. with an ad for Queen Mab.October 29 1830<br/>4. "A Letter to the Aristocracy of England. " 24 pp 6 Nov. 1830; <br/>5 A Second Letter to the Duke of Wellington.16pp<br/>6. Facts and Observations connected to the Present Times. 16pp. November 18 1830<br/>7. A Letter to Earl Gray.November 25 1830<br/>8."A Letter to Lord Althorpe" 16 pp. 4 Dec. 1830<br/>9. "A Second Letter to Lord Althorpe" 16 pp. 7 Dec. 1830<br/>10. "A Political Miscellany on National Debt" 16 pp. 9 Dec. 1830<br/>11 "A Political Compendium on Reform" 16 pp. 18 Dec. 1830<br/>12 "A Political Digest" 16 pp. 23 Dec. 1830<br/>13. A Supplement to Carpenter's Political Compendium. 8 pp.<br/>14. "A Letter to the Right Hon. Wilmot Horton" 16 pp. 31 Dec. 1830<br/>15. "A Political Mirror" 16 pp. 7 Jan. 1831<br/>16.; "A Political Chronicle" 16 pp. 13 Jan 1831<br/>17. ; "A Political Herald" 21 Jan 1831<br/>18. A Political Register January 28 1831. 16 pp.<br/>19. A Political Letter. Feburary 4 1831. 16 pp.<br/>20. Another Political Letter Feburary 12 1831. 16 pp.<br/>21. A Letter to the Rightr Hon. The Chancellotr of the Exchequer. 16 pp.<br/>22. A Political Monitor Friday May 6 1831. 16 pp.<br/>23. A Political Censor. Saturday May 14 1831. 16 pp.<br/><br/><br/>At an early age he began working for a bookseller in Finsbury first as an errand boy and then as an apprentice.<br/><br/>In 1830 he issued a series of Political Letters with which he attempted to defy the stamp duty on newspapers but in May 1831 he was tried and convicted of evading the law and was imprisoned. While in prison he edited a political magazine which was republished as Carpenter's Monthly Political Magazine in 1832. NCBEL 3:1818 Printed and Published by William Carpenter unknown books
1887283252London : Virtue 1887. First Edition. Hardcover. Finely bound set in modern gilt-labeled buckram. Remains well preserved overall; tight bright clean and sharp-cornered. Physical description; 3v. : ill. ; 38 cm. Notes; On half-title: The new illustrated Bible. Issued in 19 parts numbered ""Divisions 1-13"" and ""Parts 40-45"". Includes ""Bible dictionary or compendium of information"" compiled by Arthur Westcott and John Watt. Subjects; Bible Commentaries. Biblical Studies. London : Virtue hardcover
1897FJ08/584The Labour Press Limited 1897. 1st edition green and gilt pictorial boards radical speculative articles by among others William Morris Bernard Shaw Grant Allen very scarce. Hardcover. very good hardcover copy heed and heel of spine lightly frayed. The Labour Press Limited hardcover
186400MV597AUBURN NEW YORK NY. Very Good. 1864. On offer is a handwritten manuscript letter by L.O. Carpenter who writes lengthy letter 4 full pages 4to. to Col. Charles C. Dwight. Letter is dated Auburn NY Oct. 17 1864. A great letter about the death and funeral of their "dear and mutual friend Col. W. Babcock." Great detail about the battle death of Col. Babcock. From the internet we found the following: Lt. Colonel Babcock had command of the 75th NYVI 320 men strong at the Battle of Winchester Virginia on September 19 1864 and was wounded with a shattered leg at the head of the Regiment after two horses had previously been shot from under him. Upon being spotted lying in the field Major Andrew L. Pitzer Aid-de-Camp to General Jubil Early tended to him and offered to send Babcock's valuables along to his wife Nellie which in turn he did. After the Federal Army retook the field later in the day Babcock was moved to a field hospital where his wounded leg was amputated by Surgeon Benedict 75th NYVI. On October 6 1864 after writing letters to friends and family including a letter of thanks to Major Pitzer and a good-by to his wife Nellie Lt. Colonel Babcock died of his wounds at U.S. General Hospital in Winchester Virginia.ix He was brought north and is buried in Glenwood Cemetery in Homer New York. Comes with stamped envelope. VG.; English; 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall; CIVIL WAR WAR BETWEEN THE STATES BROTHER AGAINST BROTHER VIRGINIA CONFEDERACY CONFEDERATE UNION AUTOGRAPH HANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT antiquité contrat vélin document manuscrit papier Antike Brief Pergament Dokument Manuskript Papier oggetto d'antiquariato atto velina documento manoscritto carta antigüedad hecho vitela documento ManuscritoHANDWRITTEN MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT LETTER AUTOGRAPH DIARY JOURNAL LOG KEEPSAKE WRITER HAND WRITTEN DOCUMENTS SIGNED LETTERS MANUSCRIPTS HISTORICAL HOLOGRAPH WRITERS DIARIES JOURNALS LOGS AUTOGRAPHS PERSONAL MEMOIR MEMORIAL PERSONAL HISTORY . unknown
18054040Charleston South Carolina: Printed at the Office of the Charleston Courier 1805. First Edition. Fair. 8vo. 3-127 INCOMPLETE: lacking half-title title-page here in facsimile and pp. 93-127 paperstock browned throughout p. 5 stained and a little soiled. Recent sympathetic wrappers title written in ink on upper cover. Described in 1893 as "One of the rarest of American trials" Catalogue of the Extraordinary Collection of Law Trials made by the late Edmund B. Wynn no. 1275. Whereas our copy is significantly incomplete we invite all haters to find another but please be patient because no copy complete or otherwise has appeared at auction since 1963.<br /> <br /> McDade explains that this is "an unusual case at Goosecreek South Carolina in which the wife's lover murdered her husband outside the house and put the body in bed with the wife who attempted to conceal the crime. He was convicted and hanged. She with Southern consideration for womankind was acquitted" but nonetheless she was scorned shamed and humiliated for violating her marriage vow. <br /> <br /> But the trial was of national significance because "the Nettles-Cannon Trial gives a preliminary glimpse of the scope of state efforts to transform the criminal justice system in the first decades after the ramification of the Constitution and suggests some of the reasons those efforts remained incomplete" Dale p. 23. <br /> <br /> "The trial of Joshua Nettles and Elizabeth Cannon 1805 who presumably conspired to kill Cannon's husband serves as an example to show how key actors in the process from the detection of a crime to the actual trial were ordinary members of the community how legal arguments had little impact on the outcome of the trial how jurors judged the law rather than the facts or how Nettles did not appeal his eventual conviction. The state and the people in this period cooperated in order to achieve justice." Birte Christ 2012 review of Elizabeth Dale's "Criminal Justice in the United States 1789-1939" online at H-Soz-Kult. Dale discusses the significance of the trial on pp. 23-30. <br /> <br /> Finally: "The S.C. Carpenter reports on these two cases may be the earliest surviving records of full trial proceedings in South Carolina." W. Lewis Burke "A History of the Opening Statement From Barristers to Corporate Lawyers: A Case Study of South Carolina" in: American Journal of Legal History 1993 vol. XXXVII p. 38. <br /> <br /> This trial was featured in the 2014-2015 exhibition of "Murder and Women in 19th-Century America Trial Accounts in the Yale Law Library." <br /> <br /> COMMENT: This copy contains the complete transcripts of the witness testimonies and cross-examinations and all the arguments of the DEFENSE pleaded by the lawyers of Joshua Nettles and Elizabeth Cannon. It does not contain "The Defense Being Gone Through The Attorney-General Rose in reply and said: May it please your Honor" etc. The Attorney-General's text continues through pp. 93-114; following it is "The Judge's Charge" pp. 115-124 and an unrelated account of the execution of Richard Dennis Jun. which was appended to this edition because "it came too late to be published with the trial of Dennis and is therefore according to promise published with that of Nettles" pp. 125-127. <br /> <br /> CENSUS OF COPIES ON THE MARKET SINCE 1885:<br /> <br /> 1. Goodspeed's 1963 Catalogue 511 apparently it had appeared in Goodspeed's 1940 and 1943 catalogues. <br /> <br /> Prior to that we located the following copies at auction all of which took place 106 years ago or more:<br /> <br /> 2. John C. Brady Esq. copy sold at Henkels 19 Oct. 1917 lot 380;<br /> 3. Maj. Edward Willis copy sold at Henkels 29 Oct. 1914 lot 527;<br /> 4. Hon. Samuel C. Cobb copy sold at Anderson Galleries 30 March 1906 lot 560;<br /> 5. John H.V. Arnold Esq. copy sold at Bangs 23 April 1900 lot 1362;<br /> 6. Edmund B. Wynn copy sold at Bangs 7 Feb. 1893 lot 1275;<br /> 7. W. Elliot Woodward's 74th Sale: Trials and Criminal Biography sold at Bangs 19 April 1885 lot 1130.<br /> <br /> Sabin 11005. McDade Annals of Murder no. 715. Printed at the Office of the Charleston Courier unknown
180340303A PARIS: Imprenta de Marchant 1803. Primera edición.- 4º.- Plena piel de época lomera con doble tejuelo filetes y florones dorados ambos planos con rueda dorada formando cuadro.- 3 tomos.- I: 3 hojas.- 392 páginas.- II: 2 hojas.- VIII.- 432 páginas.- II.- III: 1 hoja.- VIII.- 400 páginas.- IV.- Un estado plegado en el tomo II. Algunas hojas oscurecidas. Trata sobre la utilización de los productos importados desde las colonias americanas. Brunet Table Méthodique 4185 - Goldsmiths 18667 - No en Graesse Imprenta de Marchant unknown
185520582Sacramento CA: B. B. Redding State Printer 1855. 1st edition. Not in Cowan nor Greenwood. Bound in later blue-grey paper wrappers. Overall VG a faint qtr-circle stain to upper left of text paper/'San Quentin / -- 1855 --" written diagonally to lower half of front wrapper. Ex-lib with 2 small stamps to t.p. & a lightly penciled purchase annotation in the gutter after the 1st leaf 10 Nov 61 JR $10.00. 54 2 pp. "Register and Descriptive List of Convicts under Sentence": pp. 12 - 35 beginning with 1851; "Transcript of Received Escaped and Returned Prisoners since the Inspection of State Prison Books": pp 38 - 40. Last leaf blank. 8vo. 23.5 cm x 14 cm. <br/><br/>This an interesting factual account regarding the early days of the prison an era when it wasn't quite impregnable edifice that now stands; in 1854 75 of 520 incarcerated individuals had escaped without recapture. This situation caused Governor John Bigler to write: "Gentlemen: Having learned from various reliable sources that quite a number of escapes have recently occurred from the State Prison which to some extent is in your charge I deem it my duty respectfully to invite your attention to the section of the law regulating your duties. These escapes permit me here to remark give great force to allegations daily and publicly made that the prison building is insecure and that its management is not such as to fully accomplish the object of its erection in prevention and punishment of crime." However since the place is still going strong one can be reasonably confident the governor's concerns were addressed. Rare; Not in Cowan Greenwood nor Rocq. Not in the LoC on-line catalogue. OCLC & Melvyl record but one copy UCSB & no copies have been at auction these last 25 years. No other copies currently offered via the on-line matching services. B. B. Redding, State Printer unknown books
187941099London 1879. <p>Carpenter William B. 1813-85. Autograph letter signed to Mr. John Paget 1811-98. London 56 Regents Part Rd. N.W. June 2 1879. 4pp. 178 x 114 mm. A few tiny pin-holes but fine otherwise.</p> <p>From English physiologist and naturalist William B. Carpenter who "helped shape the modern life sciences in Britain Oxford DNB through both his writings and his work as a teacher and administrator at what is now the University of London. Carpenter performed valuable researches in marine zoology and was directly influential in persuading the British Admiralty to sponsor the Challenger expedition the first major scientific study of the deep oceans. Carpenter is also recognized as one of the founders of the modern theory of the adaptive unconscious-he observed that the human perceptual system and the mechanism of human thought operates almost completely outside of conscious awareness. </p> <p>Carpenter's letter which discusses a false confession to murder made by a mentally unbalanced young man reads in part as follows:</p> <p>Dear Mr. Paget In turning out my papers at the University today I have come upon a document which I forward to you containing the Father's statement of his Son's relation to the "Brompton Murder" case with full particulars of the latter's confession and its inconsistency with the facts. </p> <p>I believe that I did not send in this to the Home Secy.; but that what I specially urged upon him was the evidence with which Knowles had supplied me of the "cracky" nature of the youth's mind and of the obviously hereditary tendency to brood as shown in the father and aunt-the latter an old servant of Knowles. And I remember also that there was evidence of the youth having had money in the Savings Bank and of his having drawn out a pound just before the Crystal Palace Police Fête.</p> <p>This altogether made so strong an impression on Mr. Bruce that he at once commuted the sentence; and the family were so sensible that the lad was not fit to take care of himself that they expressed no disappointment at his not having received a free pardon. . . .</p> <p>Carpenter's correspondent was the police magistrate and author John Paget whose Paradoxes and Puzzles published in 1874 included accounts of a number of sensational crimes. We have not been able to identify the murder case to which Carpenter refers in his letter.</p> . unknown books
187941099London 1879. <p>Carpenter William B. 1813-85. Autograph letter signed to Mr. John Paget 1811-98. London 56 Regents Part Rd. N.W. June 2 1879. 4pp. 178 x 114 mm. A few tiny pin-holes but fine otherwise.</p> <p>From English physiologist and naturalist William B. Carpenter who "helped shape the modern life sciences in Britain Oxford DNB through both his writings and his work as a teacher and administrator at what is now the University of London. Carpenter performed valuable researches in marine zoology and was directly influential in persuading the British Admiralty to sponsor the Challenger expedition the first major scientific study of the deep oceans. Carpenter is also recognized as one of the founders of the modern theory of the adaptive unconscious-he observed that the human perceptual system and the mechanism of human thought operates almost completely outside of conscious awareness. </p> <p>Carpenter's letter which discusses a false confession to murder made by a mentally unbalanced young man reads in part as follows:</p> <p>Dear Mr. Paget In turning out my papers at the University today I have come upon a document which I forward to you containing the Father's statement of his Son's relation to the "Brompton Murder" case with full particulars of the latter's confession and its inconsistency with the facts. </p> <p>I believe that I did not send in this to the Home Secy.; but that what I specially urged upon him was the evidence with which Knowles had supplied me of the "cracky" nature of the youth's mind and of the obviously hereditary tendency to brood as shown in the father and aunt-the latter an old servant of Knowles. And I remember also that there was evidence of the youth having had money in the Savings Bank and of his having drawn out a pound just before the Crystal Palace Police Fête.</p> <p>This altogether made so strong an impression on Mr. Bruce that he at once commuted the sentence; and the family were so sensible that the lad was not fit to take care of himself that they expressed no disappointment at his not having received a free pardon. . . .</p> <p>Carpenter's correspondent was the police magistrate and author John Paget whose Paradoxes and Puzzles published in 1874 included accounts of a number of sensational crimes. We have not been able to identify the murder case to which Carpenter refers in his letter.</p> . unknown
184143875Lausanne: Imprimerie et Labraire de Marc Lucloux Editor 1841. 8vo. 23cm first edition with lithography rear folding map & 8 litho plates 23 text illustrations some slight occasional foxing the text block is clean otherwise rebound in contemporary style quarter speckled brown calf blind ruled raised bands dark crimson calf label gilt title marbled boards and end paper signed binding “bound by Pierre Thibideau†a fine unopened attractively bound copy with the original printed wrappers and spine panel laid in. Fine. ~ Jean de Charpentier or Johann von Charpentier 8 December 1786 – 12 December 1855 was a German-Swiss geologist who studied Swiss glaciers. In 1818 a catastrophic event changed his life focus when an ice-dammed lake in the Val de Bagnes above Martigny broke through its barrier causing many deaths. Afterwards he made extensive field studies in the Alps. Using evidence of erratic boulders and moraines and drawing on the works of Goethe he hypothesized that Swiss glaciers had once been much more extensive. These boulders characteristic of glaciers were strewn as if they were brought there by glaciers that no longer existed. Even so he wasn't sure how glaciers first formed moved or how they disappeared. His ideas were later taken up and developed by Louis Agassiz. – “Charpentier. Essai Sur le Glaciers…†1841 a classic of scrupulous care in weighing evidence describing the erratic blocks and explaining the function of glaciers in transporting them.<br /> Save for a bit of light foxing to a few pages the text pages are typically fresh clean and bright as are the engraved plates and colored map. The map "Carte du terrain erratique de la Vallée du Rhône" unfolds to 18 by 15 inches and is like new. The folding plate of the Rhône Glacier is striking. Imprimerie et Labraire de Marc Lucloux, Editor unknown
1892013597NY: Harper & Brothers 1892. First American Edition. Hardcover. Very Good. First US edition. 8vo light blue cloth over boards with dark blue "GORDIUS NODUS" emblem on front cover. Gilt title and black lantern motif on spine. Ownership name in period cursive on ffe: "H. W. Carpenter June 1893." All 16 plates are present. This is most likely the copy owned by American philologist and Columbia University provost William Henry Carpenter 1853-1936. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes is a collection of 12 short stories by A. Conan Doyle first published in October 1892. This American edition was published without "The" in the title. This edition contains two errors on page 65: "Now if had borrowed" on line 4 and "to think of ! and I" on line 10. Some chipping to cloth at head of spine and tiny slit to cloth at foot. Leaves moderately toned. Harper & Brothers hardcover
1897108143Manchester: The Labour Press Limited 1897. First edition. Hardcover. An anthology that includes contributions by: Tom Mann William Morris Enid Stacy Grant Allen Bernard Shaw and several others. An about near fine copy in decorated cloth binding with some bumping to the top corners and a little fraying to the spine crown but internally a clean copy. A very nice copy of this important and uncommon collection. The Labour Press Limited unknown books
1878LBW-62971878. En 48 sections montées sur toile et pliées, formant une carte de 1,17 x 1,04 m, sous chemise et étui portant le titre en lettres dorées sur le premier plat et au dos.
1841102946Lausanne, Imprimerie et Librairie de Marc Ducloux, éditeur, 1841, in-8, X-363 pp. 9 pl. dont 2 dépliantes, Demi chagrin vert de l'époque, dos lisse à titre doré et fleuronnés, Édition originale illustrée de 22 croquis dans le texte, 9 planches lithographiées par Spengler et 1 grande carte dépliante du terrain erratique du bassin du Rhône dessinée par A. Dürr. Intéressant ouvrage d'un des pionniers de la glaciologie, le premier à formuler la théorie des ères glaciaires successives. Exemplaire enrichi d'une "Notice nécrologique sur M. Jean de Charpentier, Directeur en chef des Mines et salines du canton de Vaud, professeur honoraire à l'Académie de Lausanne, mort à Bex le 12 septembre 1855 par M. Lardy, Extrait du Bulletin de la Société géologique de France, 2e série, T. XIII, séance du 5 novembre 1855." (5 p. en feuilles non coupé). Cachets annulés de l'Institut catholique de Paris. Dos frotté, mors fendillés, quelques rousseurs claires et éparses. "Rare et recherché." Perret, I, 955. Poggendorff I, 423. Ward and Carozzi, 474. Couverture rigide
184121631Lausanne, Impr. et libr. de Marc Ducloux, 1841. In-8 de [4]-X, 361 pages, demi-maroquin brun, dos à nerfs orné de filets et fleurons dorés.
1841173308Lausanne: Marc Ducloux 1841. First edition of this classic work on glaciology by one of the field's progenitors. Charpentier's book is among the earliest to develop the theory that much of Northern Europe was once covered by glacial sheets of ice. Jean de Charpentier 1786-1855 by profession a mining engineer undertook extensive studies to examine the movement of boulders in the Alps. By studying the huge blocks of granite mysteriously scattered throughout the Rhône Valley Charpentier revised and systematized the theory proposed in 1821 by his friend Ignatz Venetz that these so-called "erratic" blocks could only have been moved by the action of glaciers. Given that many of the blocks were mineralogically identical to the rocks found in some Alpine peaks these glaciers must equally have arisen after the formation of the Alps themselves. Octavo 217 x 140 mm. Contemporary red pebbled quarter morocco smooth spine ruled and lettered in gilt marbled paper sides and endpapers edges sprinkled red green silk bookmarker. Large folding engraved map of the Rhône Glacier 8 numbered lithographed plates 1 folding all bound at rear 23 text illustrations. Bookseller's ticket of Lard-Esnault Paris to front free endpaper. Short contemporary manuscript shelf mark to initial blank. Light wear minor browning and foxing to outer leaves text otherwise bright slight tear to outer margin of pp. 1-2: a very good copy indeed. Norman 462; Perret 0955; Poggendorff I 423; Zittel Geschichte der Geologie p. 226. Marianne Klemun "Questions of periodization and Adolphe von Morlot's contribution to the term and the concept 'Quaternär'" in R. H. Grapes Algimantas Grigelis & David Oldroyd eds History of Geomorphology and Quaternary Geology 2008. unknown