5 122 résultats
19771241631Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1977. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19831241604Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1983. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19801241588Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1980. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19821241598Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1982. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19791241575Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1979. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19781241581Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1978. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19731241636Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1973. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19821241600Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1982. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19701241641Agenda Publishing Co. Good. 1970. Soft Cover. H427 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19851241611Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1985. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19771241629Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1977. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19781241579Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1978. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19801241639Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1980. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19721241719Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1972. Soft Cover. H447 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
19811241587Agenda Publishing Co. Very Good. 1981. Soft Cover. H417 . Agenda Publishing Co. paperback
17-0944Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution 2011; Berkeley CA: University of Berkeley 2007. 4to. 80 pp. Stapled soft cover magazine. Very Good. Color and black & white plates throughout. 4to. 56 pp. Soft cover. Very Good. Color and black & white plates throughout. From the Collection of the Art Historian Peter Selz 1919-2019. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 2011; Berkeley, CA: University of Berkeley, 2007. paperback
63-4323Princeton NJ: Ontario Review 1982. Typed Letter Signed 8.5" x 5.5" on Ontario Review letterhead VG.Provenance: Herb Yellin 1935-2014 was the highly respected publisher and founder of Lord John Press considered by many to be one of the most important small presses of the 20th century. Princeton, NJ: Ontario Review, 1982. unknown
63-4321Windsor Ontario: Ontario Review 1975. Typed Letter Signed 8.5" x 5.5" on Ontario Review letterhead VG.Provenance: Herb Yellin 1935-2014 was the highly respected publisher and founder of Lord John Press considered by many to be one of the most important small presses of the 20th century. Windsor, Ontario: Ontario Review, 1975. unknown
19092092902137302663Hakubunkan 1909. Soft Cover. Fine. The book is in fine condition. Hakubunkan paperback
22050Office of Works London. 8 December 1853. 3pp 12mo. Bifolium. In good condition lightly aged and worn. Folded once. Endorsed on reverse of second leaf. At the time of writing Molesworth was serving as First Commissioner of Works in Lord Aberdeen's coalition government. In the year of his death Aberdeen would appoint him Colonial Secretary. The letter begins: 'My dear Merivale Last November I moved for the enclosed return and since then I have spoken to Pal i.e. Viscount Palmerston about it who promised that it should be made. Do you know any thing about it' Molesworth asks when the return will be ready and whether Merivale author of "Lectures on Colonization and Colonies" 1841 has 'in the Library of the Colonial Office a Report by Dr Andrew Smith see Wikipedia of the expedition for exploring Central Africa from the Cape of Good Hope in 1834. It was published in Cape Town.' He asks Merivale to send the work to him if it is there and he asks him to ask the Duke of Newcastle to let him 'had sic again the last despatches from Sir G. Clerk about the Orange Sovereignty' Office of Works [London]. 8 December 1853. unknown
19716On his 'Biblical Dictionary' letterhead 31 Regent's Villas Avenue Road N.W. London. 21 January 1858. 2pp. 12mo. In fair condition lightly aged. He asks to be informed if the recipient has 'commenced any of your articles in C' as he 'may be able to restore some of the articles to you which have gone astray'. Clearly referring to an entry in the Dictionary he offers to 'take Canticles off your hands'. On his 'Biblical Dictionary' letterhead, 31 Regent's Villas, Avenue Road, N.W.. [ London]. 21 January 1858. unknown
25967'April. 19. 1855 / Privy. Council.'. Coleridge was the nephew of the poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. See his entry and that of Cranworth in the Oxford DNB. The letter relates to Palmerston’s first ministry. 1p 16mo cut down to a 12 x 10 cm piece of wove paper. In fair condition lightly aged and discoloured with traces of glue from mount adhering to one edge of blank reverse. Signing himself ‘J. T C’ Coleridge writes: ‘My dear Awdry / I have been with the Chancellor in consequence of the above - & promised to send him a minute in writing - where we have had trouble. Can you help me with your recollection. / In haste. / Yours ever / J. T C’. The context is partially explained by seven lines from a letter in Cranworth’s autograph surviving on the reverse: ‘. am told that you can give me some hints as to parts of the bill not working well - or not likely to work well - When can I see you - Could you look in at the house of Lords tomorrow .’. 'April. 19. 1855 / P[rivy]. C[ouncil].' unknown
239667 November 1921 and 30 March 1922; each on letterhead of The Quarterly Review 50A Albemarle Street London W.1. In addition to the entry for Prothero in the Oxford DNB see those of H. W. C. Davis 1874-1928 and H. W. V. Temperley 1879-1939 which reveal the interest all three had in the Paris Peace Conference of 1919. Both items in good condition lightly aged. Each folded once. Both addressed to 'Davis'. ONE: 7 November 1921. 4pp 12mo. Dictated and entirely including signature in the hand of an amanuensis. He is ‘delighted’ that Davis will be able to ‘write about Temperley & Co.’ Temperley published his six-volume account of the Conference between 1920 and 1924 and will be sending the books as soon as he can ‘get the American one which I have sent for’. He will also be sending the number of the Quarterly Review ‘containing Satow’s Art.’ He continues: ‘Temperly is certainly rather prickly & was annoyed with something in Satow’s paper & in the end I had to be rather short with him’. He thanks Davis for his enquiry after his health: ‘It is not good! but better than it was. I had to spend all last winter abroad which I did not like & not long after I got back I broke down again - but I am pulling round. You see this letter is not in my hand writing - but it saves time & trouble to dictate.’ His Chichele Lectures delivered in 1920 at Oxford ‘are really not fit for publication’: they ‘want a lot done’ but he hopes he ‘may be able to publish them some day’. In a postscript he sends belated congratulations to him on his professorship. TWO: 30 March 1922. 2pp. 12mo. Following on from Item One he begins by informing Davis that the article he agreed to write on the Paris Conference the previous November for publication that April is ‘too late for this number which is all in type & in page now but I shd. be glad to know if I may expect it for the July number.’ The fact that the article is late cannot be helped but as ‘there have been so many Conferences since that people have ceased to take an interest in Paris’ and he thinks the best way to treat the subject is ‘to bring it into connexion with the later Conferences showing how these have grown out of the Paris one & to confine oneself so far as the books are concerned to contrasting the views of Tardieu André Tardieu Clemenceau’s deputy at the conference & the Americans with the “official†- or semi-official - Temperley.’ He concludes: ‘I must not publish more than 6000 words at most on the subject & shd. prefer the art. to be shorter if possible.’ 7 November [1921] and 30 March 1922; each on letterhead of The Quarterly Review, 50A Albemarle Street, London, W.1. unknown
260861935. ‘Published by Portsmouth and Sunderland Newspapers Limited Stanhope Road Portsmouth. Price ONE PENNY.’. A scarce item: no copies on WorldCat or JISC nor at the Caird Library National Martime Museum though the latter does have a signed print of one of the illustrations. Twenty-six broadsheet pages on news stock paper in shiny paper covers printed in red blue and brown. Filled with illustrations and topical advertisements for everything from corsetry to bicycles from a full-page one on the inside front cover for ‘Brickwoods Jubilee Brew / 4d. per Small Bottle in Public Bars’ to one on the back cover reading ‘On Review / United Ales & Stout Are Supreme’. First article is ‘Britain’s Dependence On Sea Power / A Review Foreword / By / Admiral of the Fleet Sir Roger Keyes Bart. / G.C.B. K.C.V.O. C.M.G. D.S.O. LL.D. M.P. for Portsmouth North and a former Commander-in-Chief Portsmouth.’ Among many other articles are ‘Warship Design in our Sailor King’s Reign / Dreadnought Types - Good Looking and Ungainly Ships - Greater Armament Efficiency’ by Frank C. Bowen and the poem ‘Semper Fidelis’ by Evelyn H. Healey. Central ‘Admiralty Plan of Ships at Spithead’. 1935. ‘Published by Portsmouth and Sunderland Newspapers, Limited, Stanhope Road, Portsmouth. Price ONE PENNY.’ unknown
20122111902160900483University of Japan Silk Science Research Institute 2012. Soft Cover. Fine. Number of pages: 123p University of Japan Silk Science Research Institute paperback