5 995 résultats
3730409<p>Philadelphia: Likely published by William Duane 1800. 8vo. 8pp. Caption title. Self-wrappers as issued; once sewn. Near fine housed in a custom cloth clamshell box with gilt-lettered leather spine label.</p> <p>Webster’s Federalist Riposte to Hamilton’s Political Betrayal</p> <p>Pseudonymously authored by Noah Webster as “Aristides†this pamphlet delivers a searing rebuke of Alexander Hamilton for his public denouncement of President John Adams and his behind-the-scenes intrigues within the Federalist Party. Issued in response to Hamilton’s Letter. Concerning the Public Conduct and Character of John Adams Webster defends Adams—particularly his support for naval defenses—and accuses Hamilton of undermining constitutional authority for personal ambition.</p> <p>A key moment in the bitter internal collapse of the Federalists the pamphlet reflects Webster’s political alignment with Adams but also his alarm at Hamilton’s ambitions. “Think not sir†writes Webster “that all the monstrous schemes of daring ambitious men to overawe and controul sic the constitutional powers of our government are either hidden or approved by federal men.†Hamilton’s letter issued late in the 1800 campaign proved a catastrophic miscalculation accelerating the Federalist defeat and Adams’s loss to Jefferson.</p> <p>Though unsigned Webster’s authorship was swiftly exposed. In November of 1800 the New York Gazette mocked the pamphlet: “A more puerile catch penny production never blotted paper†declaring the author “appears from his work about as well qualified for the task as a Billingsgate oyster is to contemplate the principles of Newtonian philosophy.â€</p> <p>Sabin 29960; see also 102361. Skeel-Carpenter 729. Not in Ford but see 61–62. Evans 39045 incorrectly suggesting New York as place of publication. ESTC W41582. Sheidley 44. Skeel records six variant printings all from 1800; only one bears an imprint and no priority has been established. Ours is the only printing Skeel attributes to Philadelphia which in 1800 was giving way to the District of Columbia as the nation’s capital. Skeel pointedly refuted Wilberforce Eames’s claim that it was published in New York.</p> unknown
4aa1091Kelly London um 1850. Plattenmaß: ca. 40 x 22 cm unten mittig typographisch bezeichnet Blattrand etwas fleckig und leicht gebräunt und mit kleinen Randeinrissen. unknown
1926333084Buenos Aires: Ediciones de Nosotros 1926. First edition. 603 2. Errata sheet present at end. 1 vols. 8vo. Later green cloth preserving front wrapper. Fine. First edition. 603 2. Errata sheet present at end. 1 vols. 8vo. Compendium of twentieth century Argentinian poets including Leopoldo Lugones Enrique Banchs Evaristo Carriego Fernández Moreno Martínez Estrada A. Storni Jorge Luis Borges Córdova Iturburu Oliverio Girondo González Tuñón Ricardo Güiraldes Francisco López Merino Leopoldo Marechal Conrado Nalé Roxlo Horacio Rega Molina etc. <br /> Borges appears at pp. 453-9 and has contributed a biographical notice later collected in in Textos recobrados 1919-1929 p. 234. Ediciones de Nosotros unknown
182676418Paris 1826. 8vo. Nyere lysebrunt helskinnbind med tittelfelt i rødt skinn. Bundet med begge de originale omslagene. 3 1 blank iii 1 blank 288 s. Med 2 kolorerte foldekarter og 19 kolorerte litografier. 8vo. More recent full calf tile in red leather. Bount with the original wrappers. 3 1 blank iii 1 blank 288 pp. Two coloured folding maps and 19 coloured lithographs. Imprimé par autorisation du Roi à l’Imprimerie Royale. Fransk. <br/><br/><em>Colas 2208. Lipperheide 1584. Blackmer 1204. Abbey Travel 350. Materien svakt plettet. Litografiene med kraftige farver.Louis Pantaléon de Noé 1728-1816 fransk-kreolsk offiser.Internally some staining. The lithographs being beautifully coloured.Louis Pantaléon de Noé 1728-1816 French-creole officer. </em> hardcover
a51982Providence 1818 Miller & Hutchens. 8vo. 23pp. stringbound wraps.Good inding string broken very light browning and light wear. paperback
a80511Cambridge 1815 1st Hilliard and Metcalf. ".By Rulers over the Laws of God and the Lives of Men in Making War and Omar's Solitary Reflections ." Octavo 42pp. one page of publisher's ads original stringbound wraps. Contemporary signature of J. T. Gilman on top of title.page. Gilman was Governor of New Hampshire and died in 1828. Good worn edges frayed. Complete. Very Scarce. . paperback
ria9781015715523_inpHardcover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it.This work is in the "public domain in the United States of America and possibly other nations. Withi hardcover
1355577616.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1172647712.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
78453o. O. MeadWestvaco Corp. 2003. Gr.8° 346 S. einige Taf.; 1 DVD OLwd. u. Kart. in Schmuckschuber. Tadellos. EA dieser Ausgabe. Die DVD mit dem von National Geographic produzierten Dokumentarfilm «Lewis & Clark - Great Journey West» Laufzeit 40’.- Die Lewis-und-Clark-Expedition 14. Mai 1804 bis 23. September 1806 war die erste amerikanische Überlandexpedition der Vereinigten Staaten zur Pazifikküste und zurück. Der Louisiana-Landkauf im Jahre 1803 weckte Interesse an einer Erweiterung der Vereinigten Staaten bis zur Westküste. Einige Wochen nach dem Landkauf ließ US-Präsident Thomas Jefferson ein Befürworter der Expansion gen Westen den US-Kongress 2500 Dollar bereitstellen um „intelligente Offiziere mit zehn bis zwölf Männern auszusenden um das Land bis zum westlichen Ozean zu erkunden“. Wichtigstes Ziel der Expedition neben der Suche nach einem schiffbaren Wasserweg zum Pazifik war die Gründung einer mächtigen Nation zwischen Atlantik und Pazifik. Außerdem sollten die Teilnehmer Indianer Tiere und Pflanzen sowie die Geologie der Region studieren. 010 o. O., MeadWestvaco Corp., 2003 unknown
193022910Athol Springs NY: Carter-Heath 1930. Softcover. Very good-. 32 pp in original stapled wrappers. Light handling wear one gathering detached from staples which are rusted; about very good. Carter was a self-described "reformed "drunkard dope fiend criminal leader and character in the underworld" who found religion in 1922 while incarcerated at the Arizona State Prison. Upon his release the same year he began conducting revivals in churches and prisons around the country. By 1935 newspapers were reporting that Carter had visited 3000 correctional institutions in North America. Carter-Heath unknown
1808List2316Hartford: Hudson and Goodwin 1808. Letterpress broadside measuring 13 x 7 ¾ inches. Some slight toning near fine overall. Fine. A broadside announcing the candidates for the United States House of Representatives a list which includes Noah Webster. Webster received 212 votes in the preliminary election in May enough to get him a spot on the ballot but lost in the general election in a generally difficult time for Federalist politicians. Webster experienced a religious conversion during this period after being a not particularly devout Congregationalist earlier in his life and embraced the church completely perhaps due to the death of his infant son in 1806. Webster would run again for U.S. Representative in 1810 1812 and 1816 losing each time and eventually abandoned politics his last office held being in the Connecticut House of Representatives ending in 1807 shortly before his first campaign for national office. We find no record of this broadside in OCLC or other ephemera relating to Webster’s political career in Connecticut in the trade. The collected acts from this session were published in octavo format but we find no other record of this broadside printing. Hudson and Goodwin unknown
197175199San Francisco:: The Book Club of California 1971. First edition; one of 500 copies. publisher's cloth-backed boards. A few small and unobtrusive spots on the rear board and slightest of sunning at the top edge of the boards; otherwise unworn clean tight and sound; contents fine. . Folio. The Book Club of California, hardcover
188852480New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons 1888. 12mo. xiii 1 476 pp. plus 4 pp. publisher’s ads. Steel-engraved frontisp. w/ tissue guard 50 woodcut text engravings. Blue-green publisher’s cloth decorated & illustrated in red & black black lettering minor edgewear rubbing front inner hinge starting still a G copy w/ former ownership inscription on flyleaf as well as 4 page Putnam’s Handy-Book Series catalogue laid-in. First edition of this informative biography which was the 3rd volume in The Boys and Girls Library of American Biography by Putnam’s. Brooks was a close personal friend of Abraham Lincoln and includes a number of personal accounts and observations. G.P. Putnam’s Sons, hardcover
178577397Hartford:: Barlow & Babcock 1785. This is probably the first edition of Part III. old boards with a later old leather backstrip. 18th c. ink ownership signature; genealogical notes to blank areas of two leaves of text; some dampstaining and age-toning to text; short horizontal tears to a few leaves no loss of text; boards chipped and worn. . 12mo. Part III contains "The necessary Rules of reading and speaking and a Variety of Essays Dialogues and declamatory Pieces moral political and entertaining; divided into Lessons for the Use of Children. Barlow & Babcock, hardcover
1796LG76705Philadelphia: Mathew Carey 1796. 1/4 leather & decorative brown paper over boards; A fair copy with worn binding & toned textblock; 95 pages. Size: 3.75"x6.5". Hardcover. Mathew Carey Hardcover
187040664New York: Samuel French 1870. 39 1 blank pp. Original printed orange wrappers rear wrapper trimmed closely shaving several letters. Wood-engraved frontispiece. The pamphlet stitched into contemporary thick muslin wrappers "Coleman Sisters" written in ink on front wrapper. Very Good.<br /> <br /> Jewish American Mordecai Noah wrote and published this play in Charleston in 1812 under the title "Paul and Alexis; or The orphans of the Rhine." According to Jonathan Sarna "The Wandering Boys" was ranked among the best of its genre and only the second American play to appear on the London stage hence it represents the first play by an American Jew to appear on the London stage see Jonathan D. Sarna Jacksonian Jew: The Two Worlds of Mordecai Noah New York 1981. <br /> This copy lists the cast of the 1849 Boston performance so it was not published before then and the publisher moved from the listed address 122 Nassau Street in 1870 or shortly thereafter thus providing a date range of publication. Samuel French unknown
18462210160<p><i>Vignette title and 15 hand coloured lithograph plates heightened with gum-arabic; lightly foxed in places and three plates with repairs to tears in lower margin; </i><i>original publisher's glazed pictorial boards the upper board reproducing the title-page in uncoloured state and little rubbed and chipped to extremities and with loss to foot of spine nevertheless still a very appealing copy.</i></p><p>Uncommon first edition and the more desirable coloured version of this humorous French view of British eccentricities.</p><p>Of this seemingly endless subject Noé gives full vent to the ridiculous ways and customs of the British. The English Scots and Irish all have fun poked at them with stock characters of English yeomen in smocks Irishmen in rags wielding shillelagh clearly a reference to the famine then raging in Ireland and Scots with tammies and tartan plaid. Each plate is subjoined with a title and humorous descriptive text:=- 'Une femme bien attachée;' 'Le Quaker;' 'Le Recruteur;' 'Visite au Musée;' 'Mariage d'inclination;' 'Les Hauts grades;' 'Philanthropie. Bien entendue' 'Les Boxeurs;' 'l'Écossais;' 'Un Costume national;' 'Baragouin Britannique;' 'In the Stocks;' 'Le Péage du turn-pike;' 'L'Invalide de Chelsea;' and 'Smithfied Market.'.</p><p>The prolific French illustrator Amédée de Noé 1819-1879 produced a number of similar themed works including an idiosyncratic look at the Great Exhibition of 1851 and a series of pamphlets depicting French life dating from the late 1860's. Noé who used the nom de plume Cham i.e Ham the son of Noah was said to have an idea a day contributing much of his best work like Daumier to the <i>Le Charivari</i>. </p><p>OCLC lists copies at the V&A Getty UCLA Texas and the Morgan all curiously mis-dated to 1870 and unascribed to Noé; and a copy at Fribourg.</p> Chez Aubert & Cie. Editrs des Caricatures du Jal le Charivari. place de la Bourse. 29. hardcover
0091581818.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
185464149Springfield: George and Charles Merriam 1854. Thick heavy quarto. Original full sheep with morocco spine labels; pink printed endpapers; lxxxiv13661pp; engraved frontispiece portrait. Text in triple column. The endpapers are printed with testimonials and adverts for Webster's works. Slight overall rubbing but no structural damage to the binding; occasional foxing within; old damp-stain with mild rippling to final three leaves; early decorative hand-colored illustration laid down to verso of front endpaper; in all a sound and attractive copy in the original binding Very Good. Later bookplate of James G. Mead to front flyleaf. George and Charles Merriam unknown
1790465383Hartford: Printed by Elisha Babcock 1790. Hardcover. Good. First edition. Edited by Noah Webster and signed by him on the dedication page. Octavo. 6 364 4pp. Contemporary calf over boards with leather titling label on spine. Two contemporary owners’ names in ink at top margin of title page. A third autograph has been neatly clipped from the top edge of the title page. Wear to the edges of the boards and corners spine back and label are scuffed front joint is split both hinges neatly reinforced with one thin strip of cloth tape a good copy with modest scattered foxing. Copied from Winthrop’s original manuscript by Connecticut Governor John Trumbull the editor is identified as Noah Webster by Skeel and by his signature in this copy. A desirable copy of Winthrop’s historically important journal which includes the first written account of the ascent of Mt. Washington in 1642. ESTC W20590; Evans 23086; Skeel E.E.F. Webster 781; Trumbull J.H. Connecticut 1695. Printed by Elisha Babcock hardcover
181924603New-York: Printed by C.S. Van Winkle 1819. 39 1 blank pp. Disbound wrapper remnants in inner margins of first and last page. Light soil Good. <br /> <br /> This pamphlet advocates in response to the Panic of 1819 "two restrictions on banks: first they may discount no 'accommodation paper' i.e. simple loans that were not self-liquidating in the course of active trade; and second that they grant no renewals of loans." The absence of such restrictions the author argues encouraged excessive speculations and brought about the depression. See Rothbard 'The Panic of 1819' page 132 1962. As evidence Aristides cites the "wild enthusiasm" which characterized resumption of commerce after the 1815 Treaty of Ghent and the resulting extensions of credit "to the utmost limit." <br /> Authorship has been variously attributed to Webster and Van Ness. Skeel doubts Webster's hand. "Among other reasons she states that the Letter does not seem to be written in his style and that she finds no allusion to it in his letters. The pamphlet has also been ascribed to William P. Van Ness another who used the pseudonym 'Aristides.'" <br /> Sabin. <br /> AI 49978 4. Sabin 102364. See Skeel page 563 note 12. Printed by C.S. Van Winkle unknown
1913584New York: privately printed 1912 1913. First edition 8vo 2 volumes; presentation copy "from the daughter of Emily Ellsworth Fowler Ford i.e. the editor Emily E.F. Skeel Xmas 1913" to name erased. A note on the verso of each title reads "Printed by Kathleen Gordon Ford Turle Rosalie Greenleaf Ford Barr Grace Kidder Ford Williams Emily Ellsworth Ford Skeel Worthington Chauncey Ford Roswell Skeel Jr." A printer's imprint at the end of each volume shows that the book was printed in Glasgow by Robert Maclehose & Co. The work contains seven first printings of certain Webster materials mostly extracts letters and memoranda -- see Skeel 766. With two frontispiece portraits browned from acidic tissue and 7 plates; extremities lightly rubbed and with some slight chipping spines soiled else a good sound set in original blue cloth. privately printed, 1912 unknown
1787256660New York: Samuel Loudon 1787. First. hardcover. very good. Illustrated with 2 plates one torn and one edgeworn and 1 table torn and with some paper loss. 602 pages with continuous pagination. Thick 8vo contemporary leather-backed boards with red label well-worn but sound and attractive. New York: Printed by Samuel Loudon and sold for the printer by Messieurs Berry and Rogers Hodge Campbell Allen and Greenleaf December 1787 - July 1788. 8 of 12 issues bound together. First editions. Some light toning and foxing and a handful of contemporary ink marginalia still a very good copy of these scarce American periodicals edited by Noah Webster. OCLC list NO physical copies in any library.<br/> <br/> Issues include: moral fiction curiosities travel descriptions of unusual or exotic places science religion biographical anecdotes poetry etc. A section of European and American current events marriages and deaths concludes each issue.<br/> <br/> Samuel Loudon unknown
1796ST20740Philadelphia: Printed by Matthew Carey 1796. 165 x 102 mm. 6 1/2 x 4". 95 pp. <br/> Late 19th century brown half roan over marbled boards smooth spine divided into panels by gilt fillets each with gilt daisy red morocco label marbled endpapers. Sabin 102386; Evans 31599; ESTC W28973. Very light rubbing to joints and extremities mild foxing throughout but unusually clean and bright for a book printed on 18th century American paper and in a convincing retrospective binding showing almost no wear.<br/> <br/> This is a very pleasing copy of a work that demonstrates an important early American lexicographer's philosophy toward the impact of language. After graduating from Yale and briefly studying law Noah Webster 1758-1843 established an elementary school and discovered the need for spelling and grammar books in the new country. According to ANB "Webster believed that the new nation needed a feeling of identity a consciousness of self that bound it together and distinguished it from others. Not surprisingly Webster concluded that this revolution of mind and heart should begin with children and with the acquisition of books that would reflect the American language culture and history." He produced textbooks on spelling and grammar as well as his famous dictionary a book PMM tells us "marked a definite advance in modern lexicography." In the present work Webster goes beyond the words themselves into a concern with their usage telling us in the preface that he is attempting "to find the method of writing calculated to do the most general good" in society. The author serves as "prompter" giving lines to "the numerous actors upon the great theatre of life"--that is providing discussion on "common sayings" to help improve writers and by extension the "world at large." "The Prompter" was published anonymously in Hartford Connecticut in 1791 and enjoyed considerable popularity in New England well into the 19th century. Webster revealed his authorship in a 1796 advertisement in the federalist newspaper "American Minerva" which he had helped to found and edited from 1793-98. Our copy in a pleasing replica binding and quite fine condition internally is particularly appealing since many copies that have appeared on the market are in the condition expected of a book meant for the schoolroom. Printed by Matthew Carey unknown