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2008RABROHG00EFMechling Bookbindery 2008. Very Good. Abraham Abie. Oh God Where Are You. Chicora Pennsylvania: Mechling Bookbindery 2008. 599pp. 8vo. Paperback. Signed by author. Book condition: Very good with lightly bumped edges and gently curled corners. Rear cover is creased. A few pages lightly bumped but clean. Business card of Abraham a handwritten note by Abraham and a typed biography are laid-in. Gift inscription by Abraham and his address label on title page. Mechling Bookbindery paperback books
11017Lincoln Mourning Stationary. Autograph Letter Signed 'W. Hunter' Acting Secretary on rare Lincoln mourning stationary for the Department of State 1 page dated June 9 1865 addressed to Benj. Marks in Boston it reads in part: '.In reply to your communication.making inquiries relative to the death of your brother W.V. Marks. I enclose herewith an extract from dispatch no. 52 received at this Department from the U.S. Consul at Mauritins containing the particulars of that sad event.' In very good condition. unknown books
166035775London: Printed for Henry Herringman 1660. Hardcover. Very good/No dust jacket. London: Printed for Henry Herringman 1660. title page 19 pp. Hardcover. 4to. Bound in red cloth covered boards. "Ode Cowley" stamped in gilt on the front board. All edges dyed red. Signatures: A-B4 C-C3 A A3 A4 B2 B4 C3 unsigned. Light wear to boards with small patch of rubbing on spine. Corners slightly bumped. Pages have been trimmed leading to loss of text on title page top half of "Ode" page 9 most of the final line of text and the second set of page numbers near the top margin of each page. A small section at the lower margin of the final three leaves has chipped away not affecting text. Previous owner and bookseller notations on added ffep. Inked note on title page. With faults as noted quite good. Very good/No dust jacket. Cowley 1618-1667 a poet and sometime diplomat/secretary to Queen Henrietta Maria wife of Charles I may have worked as a spy for the royalists during the late Cromwell era. His collections "The Mistress" 1647 and "Poems" 1656 were immensely popular during the poet's lifetime. MacLean writes of this piece "Cowley's Ode is highly figurative blending biblical and classical allusions with motifs from astrology and medicine. Highly dynastic in argument the poem is structured as a royal entry in which the king other members of the royal family Monk and members of the two houses of parliament mingle with allegorical personifications of Liberty Plenty Riches Honour and Safety. Along the way Cowley notices the slightly embarrassing absence of Henrietta Maria who had stayed behind in France having become estranged from Charles as a result of her Catholicism." Samuel Johnson who made Cowley his first subject in "The Lives of the Poets" wrote that he had been "at one time too much praised and too much neglected at another." A lovely example of Restoration-era political verse. ESTCR202041; Wing 1994 C6677; Pforzheimer 229. Insurance required to ship this item. Printed for Henry Herringman hardcover books
1955208269New York: Harper 1955. Reprint. paperback. very good. Illustrated. 27 pages tall slim 8vo original printed wrappers. New York: Paul Hoeber/Harper & Brothers 1955. Very good.<br/><br/> Reprinted from Psychosomatic Medicine Vol. XVII No. 6 November-December 1955. Presentation by the author Bernard Meyer.<br/><br/> Harper unknown books
1865WRCAM55213N.p. but almost certainly Springfield Il 1865. Broadside 12 x 9 inches. Printed in three columns edged with a printed black border. Old folds center vertical fold with some separation. Moderate staining. Still very good. Framed. Likely a proof copy of the exceedingly rare broadside announcing the funeral procession for President Abraham Lincoln in Springfield in early May 1865. Struck down by assassin John Wilkes Booth on April 15 1865 Lincoln's body lay in state in the White House on April 18 and a ceremonial funeral service took place in Washington D.C. around noon on April 19. Two days later President Lincoln's casket was loaded on a funeral train headed for Springfield Illinois stopping at Baltimore Harrisburg Philadelphia New York City Albany Buffalo Cleveland Columbus Indianapolis Michigan City and Chicago before arriving in Lincoln's adopted hometown early on the morning of May 3. At this time Springfield's population numbered around 15000 but Lincoln's funeral train pulled into a town swollen with over 100000 visiting mourners. Immediately upon arrival Lincoln's coffin was transferred by hearse to Representatives' Hall inside the Illinois Old State Capitol. For the next twenty-four hours from about ten o'clock in the morning on May 3 to the same time the next day about 75000 mourners were allowed to pass by the open coffin of the slain president to pay last respects. <br> <br> According to the present broadside President Lincoln's funeral procession left the Old State Capitol "on Thursday the 4th Inst. at 10 o'clock a.m. precisely." The funeral party of over 10000 people then turned right on 7th Street to pass by the Lincoln family home and then right up Cook Street to proceed past the Governor's Mansion before heading north to Oak Ridge Cemetery. <br> <br> This broadside printing of the order of the procession for Lincoln's Springfield funeral was probably printed the afternoon of May 3 or possibly even the morning of May 4 the day of the funeral. Surrounded by a heavy black band the broadside lists all the persons and units involved in the procession along with their places and the rules for the day. The entire procession was divided into eight divisions with Gen. Joseph Hooker acting as Marshal in Chief. The first three divisions of the military escort represented all the elements of the Army and Navy. After them came the attending clergy and Lincoln's attending physicians. Next was the casket itself the only wheeled vehicle in the procession with the pall bearers to each side followed by Lincoln's horse and then the immediate family. Three more military divisions followed interspersed with government officials ambassadors and state officials followed by delegations from Springfield and other Illinois towns. Next were representatives of various organizations delegations from colleges lawyers doctors and the press Masons Odd Fellows and firemen all interspersed with two more military divisions. The final segment of the funeral procession was designated for "Citizens at large" and "Colored Persons." <br> <br> The broadside gives directions for locations for the forming up of each group. Only marshals were allowed to be on horseback; all others walked. Bands were under the direction of the Committee on Music. Other particular directions follow including regulations for the colors of the various scarves worn by the marshals. The text of the document ends with directions to keep the streets through which the procession passes "clear from sidewalk to sidewalk." <br> <br> This broadside must have been widely distributed to assist the mourners in Springfield but like all such ephemeral pieces few copies have survived. OCLC locates only six at Indiana University the Abraham Lincoln Memorial Library the Boston Athenaeum the Chapin Library at Williams College the John Hay Library at Brown University and the Library Company of Philadelphia. The latter location also attributes the place of printing to Springfield. There is also a copy at the Library of Congress and a copy formerly owned by noted collector James Copley and previously sold by this firm. <br> <br> The present copy is likely an early printer's proof of the broadside as it lacks the first three letters of the word "FUNERAL" in the title. The Library of Congress copy is also likely a proof with its variant title omitting the words "ORDER OF." Both copies also lack the letter "e" in "Order" in the first sentence of text. These errors speak to the haste and stress under which this broadside was surely produced perhaps the day before or the very morning of the day when America's greatest president the Savior of the Union and Illinois' favorite son was laid to rest in a city teeming with seven times its own population in attendance. <br> <br> A remarkable and moving document reflecting a moment of national grief perhaps only approached by the John F. Kennedy funeral and memorializing the day when America's first assassinated president was solemnly committed to the earth. OCLC 5023077 79462381. unknown books
1985200514Sao Paulo: Sherit Hapleita 1985. 110p. wraps edges slightly foxed black and white photos including atrocity photos. Was also published in English as "The Angel of Death: the Mengele dossier " by the Brazilian Association of the Survivors of Nazism. Sherit Hapleita unknown books
1767D11183n.p. Berlin 1767. Hardcover. Very Good. 8vo 160 x 90mm. 4 363 1 pages. 18th-century mottled calf marbled endpapers and edges spine ends chipped scattered stains mostly marginal. Front flyleaf with contemporary French verse inscription Sur cet coteaux depouilles de verdure; je vois courir le lievre fuigtif et loiseau mort de froide accuse la nature and ownership inscription on title Elisabeth Lagravere. <br/><br/>French translation of Sulzers theory on the origins of pleasure following a Cartesian school of thought. Zurich native Johann George Sulzer was a well-established member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences and Belle-Lettres who published widely on the appreciation of art. Sulzers influence on aesthetic theory was well known within theoretical circles in late eighteenth century Berlin. Owing to the work of Descartes particularly his Passions of the Soul 1649 Sulzers work on the origins of pleasure aimed to initiate a move toward moral psychology and ethical theory within studies of the mind. Sulzer focused on the derivation of joy and gladness in the model of a Cartesian system; simply it opposed the idea of Hedonism which believed pleasure was the sole aim of humankind. Instead Sulzers theories supported a metaphysical experience within ones own cognitive condition. Sulzers work supplements the great accomplishment of many of his near contemporary theorists who contributed to the study of emotions Descartes Hobbes Malebranche and Spinoza. His work preceded that of Kants division of the mind into pleasure or pain and who with later Kant outwardly disagreed with the weakness of the proofs promulgated by Sulzer. Abraham Gotthelf Kästner was a German poet and mathematician also a devout Lutheran. He was known in his professional life for compiling and reflecting on content for textbook study. Kästner translated and revised this Sulzers theoretical work on pleasure showcasing his encyclopedic interests but remains better known for his contributions on the history of mathematics and his various epigrams. hardcover books
171025803Amsterdam 1710. Copper-engraved map period hand-colouring in outline. Tables upper left and along the right side. Attractive map of North America based upon De L'Isle's highly influential map of North America published in 1700.<br/> <br/>By combining a wealth of information and geographical observation with delicate engraving and an uncomplicated composition this elegant map is a superb example from the golden age of French mapmaking and was published in Chatelain's Atlas Historique an important encyclopaedic historical atlas. California is shown as a peninsula with a number of villages and mountains; the Mississippi River extends far north of its true source. The table along the right side details the various native tribes from each region with lettered references for locating on the map.<br/> <br/>Lowery 263; Phillips 579. unknown books
1848008085btWashington D.C.: Wendell and Van Benthuysen. Very Good. 1848. Hardcover. 30th Congress Executive Doc No. 41 ordered for printing in February 1848. Reports from the 1846-1847 topographical expedition across the southwest known for its maps and descriptions of the landscapes flora and fauna and people of the region. The text and maps were to become important resources in the development and exploration of the region. Handsomely rebound in tan leather which is scuffed in places. Lithography by C. B. Graham. Interior is foxed throughout pages are free of markings. Missing plates 25 and 25 and 9 in the Abert report. Both fold-out maps are present. Wagner-Camp 148:5 Howes E-145.; Book; 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall . Wendell and Van Benthuysen hardcover books
1948228651Washington DC: Government Printing Office 1948. Single 5.5x8.5 inch sheet printed both sides reproducing Congressman Multer's comments in the Congressional Record. Multer reacts here to rumors that the territory of Israel was to be divided to take away the Negev and swap it for the western Gallilee. "If there is to be peace in Palestine it will not be brought about by demanding that the Israeli who have been attacked give up more of their territory to the invaders who have broken the peace. Government Printing Office unknown books
19919027964Oxford: Clarendon 1991. 1st . Hardcover. Fine. Includes bibliographical references and indexes. <br/><br/> Clarendon hardcover books
18616230New York: Privately Printed for the Association 1861. Very Good/A selection from the "Tomlinson Collection" manuscripts gathered by Abraham Tomlinson of New York and purchased by the Mercantile Library Association. The historical notes are with few exceptions by H.B. Dawson. Includes bibliographical references and index. Contents: New York city in 1767 by H.B. Dawson--The Stamp act riot: A letter written the day following Nov. 2 1765.--New York in 1770: The "Sons of liberty" extract from a letter by B.Y. Prime--Col. Marinus Willett's narrative: Seizure of arms from the British troops ordered to Boston 1775.--The Hickey plot: Letters from P.T. Curtenius John Varick jr. and Solomon Drowne M.D.--New York correspondence: Extracts from letters . 1775 and 1776.--The battle of Harlem Plains: A letter written by Gen. George Clinton.--New York loyalists of 1776: Addresses to Lord and General Howe and to Sir William Tryon with the names of nearly one thousand signers.--Preparations for evacuation: Letters from Lieut.-Col. Smith . in 1783.--Statement of William Butler esq.: Account of the occupation of New York city by the British from 1776 to 1783.--Sir Henry Clinton's defence: Reasons for not attacking Washington . near King's Bridge . 1781. 28 cm; 194 2 pages and 1 folding frontispiece map of the city of New York 1766-67. Illustrations and maps in text. Title page printed in red and black. This copy sound and entire in original purple ribbed cloth. Slight blemish to title page otherwise clean bright no sign of foxing and no stains. Upper hing a bit worn apparently treated with an amateur's remedy which has left a white residue. Some other discoloration to cloth and title on spine faded. Yet survives in very good condition! Privately Printed for the Association hardcover books
1961UKAPNEW00VGVintage Books 1961. Good. Kaplan Abraham. New World of Philosophy. New York: Vintage Books 1961. 345pp. Indexed. Mass Market. Book condition: Good. Lightly rubbed and bumped outer edges with previous owner's name on first page and a penciled note on last page. Vintage Books paperback books
1955D7425London et al: Oxford University Press 1955-1986. Hardcover. Very Good/Good. All volumes: blue cloth gilt-stamped lettering on spine. Volumes I III and V in dust jackets. All volumes VG or better some light rubbing here and there the occasional ownership marking on FFEP but all text blocks bright clean and unmarked. Dust jackets a bit wrinkled creased dust-soiled; some light chipping along the edges; price-clipped. A copious reference with extensive notes and bibliographies. An excellent working set -- but heavy and may require additional shipping. <br/><br/> Oxford University Press hardcover books
1982D7424London et al: Oxford University Press 1982. First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine. Blue cloth gilt-stamped lettering on spine. Spine tips lightly rubbed; ownership signature pencilled on FFEP; otherwise fine clean and unmarked. <br/><br/> Oxford University Press hardcover books
1986D7422Oxford / New York: Oxford University Press 1986. Hardcover. Near Fine. Blue cloth gilt-stamped lettering on spine. Spine tips and corners very lightly rubbed otherwise fine. A copious resource including an extensive bibliography. <br/><br/> Oxford University Press hardcover books
1968D7420London: Oxford University Press 1968. Hardcover. Very Good. Publisher's blue cloth gilt-stamped lettering on spine. Spine a little sunned; spine tips lightly frayed; boards lightly rubbed. Previous owner's notations pencilled on FFEP otherwise internally clean and unmarked. An copious resource. <br/><br/> Oxford University Press hardcover books
1960D7419London et al: Oxford University Press 1960. Hardcover. Very Good/Very Good. Publisher's blue cloth gilt-stamped lettering on spine; dust jacket. Spine a little sunned; spine tips gently bumped. Dust jacket lightly dust-soiled and creased; chipped along the edges; price-clipped. An excellent working copy internally clean and unmarked. <br/><br/> Oxford University Press hardcover books
70216hardcover. illus. 8vo cloth d.w. Boston 1930.<br/><br/> unknown books
633xxxx 256 pp. 8vo cont. paste-paper boards minor foxing uncut. Freiberg: Gerlach 1791. First edition. This work by Werner who is known as the father of historical geology describes his "theory of the origin of ore deposits which would be consistent with his general theory of the origin of the earth's crust.Many of its elements were of lasting value. Werner formulated basic questions about the origin and history of veins and their contents established criteria for determining the relative age of veins and vein materials and presented a comparative study of the structure of veins and rock masses.Perhaps the most important contribution of Von den Entstehung der Gänge however was that it made the study of vein formation an integral part of historical geology."D.S.B. XIV pp. 262-63. Fine copy. Hoover 878. hardcover books
186047254Chicago: Press & Tribune Office 1860. Reproduction ca 1955. Mounted on stiff card stock. Now housed in an archival mylar sleeve. Age-toning. 1 cm discoloration spots in margin corners glue. Small paper snag to top edge of upper margin. A Very Good copy. Broadside. Patriotically themed wood engraving in masthead. 13-15/16" x 8-15/16" 35.5 cm x 22.8 cm. <br/><br/>The 1860 Republican National Convention met in Chicago Illinois from May 16 to May 18. The convention selected former Congressman Abraham Lincoln of Illinois for president and Senator Hannibal Hamlin of Maine for vice president. The platform of 17 declaration of principles was drafted by the Platform Committee chaired by Judge William Jessup of Pennsylvania the entirety of which was adopted by the convention members verbatim save for the insertion in the Second clause of famous language from the Declaration of Independence that "All men are created equal; and they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights." Regarding the platform 10 clauses dealt directly with the issues of free soil principles slavery the Fugitive Slave Act and the preservation of the Union while the remaining 7 dealing with other issues. Clauses 12 through 16 of the platform called for a protective tariff enactment of the Homestead Act freedom of immigration into the United States and full rights to all immigrant citizens internal improvements and the construction of a Pacific railroad. In addition to the preservation of the Union all five of these additional promises were enacted by the Thirty-seventh Congress and implemented by Abraham Lincoln or the presidents who immediately succeeded him. Wiki. In a presumed later printing of the platform we find added after the 17th declaration a Supplementary Resolution not present on our copy but present on one held by the Clements wherein the Committee expresses its sympathies "with those men who have been driven . and are now exiled from their homes on account of their opinions; and we hold the Democratic Party responsible for this gross violation of that clause of the Constitution which declares that the citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States." The original is quite rare known in but a few copies. The one here offered was apparently reproduced in the mid-20th C as it is accompanied by a 1955 letter from the LoC to a Mr Chester Arthur of Oakland acknowledging receipt of a "copy of the recently published reprint of the original broadside containing the Republican Platform of 1860 which is in your possession.” Even in this mid-20th C. reproduction this platform a rare & important document. in which it guides and outlines the philosophy "all men are created equal" policies "True to the Union" & direction "Slavery . is a dangerous political heresy" for the United States as well as its future president Abraham Lincoln at the beginning of one of the nation's most turbulent times. Press & Tribune Office unknown books
1980182702New York: Shengold Publishers Inc 1980. Signed and Inscribed. Hardcover. VG/G light rubbing to corners. dustjacket has edge-wear w/ tears & chips; rubbing chipping & tear to corners; spine ends chipped; back cover upper edge torn & curled. red cloth boards w/ gilt spine printing. 14 pgs w/ 79 bw plates. glossy illustrated dustjacket w/ red printing. Signed and inscribed by the artist on title page. Also includes a typed letter from former Isreal Prime Minster Menachem Begin to the artist discussing a possible project letter also has a copy in Hebrew. Shengold Publishers, Inc hardcover books
18261197002Boston Philadelphia: Cummings Hilliard & Co.; Carey and Lea 1826. First American. Octavo; vg-/none; brown cloth spine with remnant white paper label and black text; near total loss; unreadable; ex libris signature title-page; shelf wear and bumping; text block clean; deckle; Part I "Northern and Central Africa" 255 pp.; Part 2 "Journal of an Excursion" 104 pp.; Part 3 "Appendix" 112 pp.; light foxing; tables maps plates split starts hinges and joints; spine crown and foot chipping and tears; spot staining; edges wear and fraying; front board with very old arithmetic study; else very good. 1197002. Rockville Non-Retail Listings. Cummings, Hilliard & Co.; Carey and Lea unknown books
1601208175Antwerp: Ortelius Abraham 1601. unbound. very good. Map. Engraving with hand coloring. Image measures 15.5" x 20.25".<br/><br/> Lovely map of the Namur region of Belgium. Includes a compass rose and a cartouche incorporating the Belgian coat of arms. From the 1601 Latin edition of Ortelius' "Theatrum Orbis Terrarum" the first modern Atlas. Margins have been cropped some chipping and tears along margins. Stain to top center margin and also to lower left and right of image.<br/><br/> Ortelius, Abraham unknown books
1968004369Leiden: E. J. Brill 1968. xv 143p. slightly chipped dj small folio format A complete concordance to Flavius Josephus. Supplement 1. E. J. Brill unknown books