2 164 résultats
P., Librairie. Delagrave, 1930. Grand in-4 reliure d'éditeur pleine percaline verte décorée. Dos lisse parsemé d'abeilles dorées. Premier plat orné des emblèmes de Napoléon, d'une silhouette de Napoléon et de son épée et des initiales de Napoléon en écoinçons, l'ensemble inséré dans un encadrement floral parsemé d'abeilles frappées or souligné de filets dorés. Tête supérieure dorée. Avec des illustrations en noir et blanc de JOB dans et hors texte, 310 pp.
191032644Paris. F. Alcan, 1910. 8vo. Cont. half cloth, orig. printed wrappes withbound. Some underlinings. (1),III,412,(4) pp.
184738728Providence: Charles Burnett Jr. 1847. First edition. Stitched paper wrappers. Very good wrappers foxed small chip to bottom fore edge corner. 32 pp. 8vo. Freedom of religion. The Hon. Job Durfee was the Chief Justice of Rhode-Island; he had previously been a member of the U.S. House Representatives for Rhode Island. A second issue was published which included a poem by Sarah Helen Whitman. Charles Burnett, Jr. unknown books
184234680Bristol 1842. 16pp caption title as issued. Disbound else Very Good<br/><br/> Chief Justice Durfee says that the Dorr rebels are traitors. "The first duty which every person residing within the jurisdiction of this State owes to it is that of allegiance." The Dorr Constitution "can find no justification in law." Durfee explains with references to Rhode Island's original Charter of 1643 that sovereignty is "found in the body politic and corporate and no where else.No one within this jurisdiction can lawfully renounce this allegiance and transfer it to another sovereignty." The Chief Justice denounces "this principle of revolution by an unauthorized and irresponsible movement of masses."<br/> Dorrites must have trembled when not long after giving this Charge they learned that Durfee would preside at the trial for treason of Thomas Dorr. <br/>FIRST EDITION. Cohen 3298. Bartlett RI page 115. unknown books
184956158Providence: Gladding and Proud 1849. First edition 8vo pp. xxvi 523 1; contemporary half brown morocco over marbled boards; binding scuffed ex-Brown University with an Ives Collection bookplate withdrawn call slip on the rear pastedown; no external markings; good and sound. Durfee was the jurist who first called the Dorr Rebellion illegal and treasonable. Includes two lectures "History of the Subjection and Extermination of the Narragansetts" and "The Idea of the Supernatural among the Indians." Bartlett p. 115. <br/><br/> Gladding and Proud hardcover books
184355252Providence: B. Cranston and Company 1843. First edition 8vo pp. 52; removed from binding wrappers wanting; very good. Durfee here propounds the theory that "the recent revolutionary development of steam power was not merely an instance of man making progress it was a revelation of the divine 'law of progress' and of a 'higher destiny' planned by God himself for the new age" Schneider History of American Philosophy. These ideas were adumbrated by Durfee in The Panidea; Or An Omnipresent Reason Considered as the Creative and Sustaining Logos 1846 "a pretentious work that nobody read" DAB. More charitable comments are made by Joseph Blau in his collection of American Philosophic Addresses 1700 to 1900 page 381 ff where the Oration is reprinted in full. An important aspect of Durfee's deterministic theory of history is that "there is no absolute undefinable popular sovereignty which can in a manner its own and at any moment carry a certain supposed natural equality into social and political life and thereby elevate poor human nature however rude and degraded in condition at once as by a sort of magic into a state of supreme and absolute perfection" quoted by Blau. This is because the advances of science and technology impose conditions upon society which democracy cannot control and to which it must adapt. Blau notes that Durfee's views were influenced by German transcendentalism as mediated by Coleridge and Cousin. Not surprisingly given his skepticism on the efficacy of popular sovereignty Durfee as Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court played a prominent role in opposition to the Dorr forces. Not in American Imprints Bartlett or Parks; Sabin 21427 note. <br/><br/> B. Cranston and Company unknown books
184385836Providence: B. Cranston and Company 1843. Paperback. Very Good. 52p. pamphlet. 22 cm. Disbound removed from a bound volume. Stitch marks along left side. Wrapper not preserved. Durfee served as Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court for the last 12 years of his life 1835-1847. <br/><br/> B. Cranston and Company paperback books
184740377Providence: Charles Burnett jr. 1847. 8vo 22.5 cm 9". 42 5 1 pp. <br><br>Durfee 17901847 Chief Justice of Rhode Island expounds on "the Rhode-Island Idea of Government" p. 40 and his words were "Published at the request of the Society" title-page. This was first printed in the Journal of the Rhode Island Institute of Instruction Providence: Charles Burnett Jr. 1847 vol. II no. 1.<br>Â Â Â Â But for many of far more interest is the "Poem by Sarah Helen Whitman. Recited before the Rhode-Island Historical Society on the evening of January 13 1847; previous to the delivery of Judge Durfee's discourse" sectional title at rear. Whitman 180378 was variously a poet essayist Transcendentalist spiritualist and romantic interest of Edgar Allan Poe! The author of her page on the Poetry Foundation website characterizes her as "intelligent gifted witty and warm" and says "She was widely read." The fact is she is one of few women given space in the Bibliography of American Literature that bastion of white male authors.<br>Â Â Â Â Provenance: Gift inscription on front wrapper "Jno. McClellan Esq. with the respects of E. Dyer Jr. <br>Â Â Â Â <br>Â Â Â Â BAL 21359B; Sabin 21425. Yellow printed wrappers. Very good. Charles Burnett, jr. unknown books
184654235Boston: Thomas H. Webb & Co 1846. First edition 8vo pp. 176; original printed wrappers backed with red cloth at an early date manuscript paper label on spine; wrappers lightly soiled and worn with minor loss to back wrap; a few corners creased and curled but text generally clean. A good sound copy. A work of Emersonian pantheism by the Chief Judge of the Rhode Island Supreme Court who presided over the Dorr trials. In an earlier work The Influence of Scientific Discovery and Invention on Social and Political Progress 1843 Durfee believed that he had found in the advent of steam power a sign of divine intervention indicating a "law of progress" in man's development. Panidea adumbrates this theme: all is eventually assimilated into the "Theanthropoid" Durfee's term for the Divine Mind. See Schneider History of American Philosophy. DAB offers a concise assessment: "a somewhat pretentious philosophical work which nobody read." American Imprints 2262. <br/><br/> Thomas H. Webb & Co hardcover books
1832bas27Providence RI: Cranston & Hammond 1832. First Edition. Octavo tan cloth hardcover paper label 200 pp. Fair with edgewear that includes chipping to spine; foxing age darkening throughout. Cranston & Hammond, 1832. First Edition. hardcover books
1359169016.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1825260376Rhode Island 1825. unbound. very good. 1 page 12 x 7.75 inches Rhode Island October 29 1825. Written to President John Quincy Adams trying to convince him that he is a supporter in part: ".Mr. Pearce who is my competition for the seat which of lately occupied in Congress. Sir I am informed stated publicly and repeated that in conversation with you whilst last at Newport on your way to Washington you said to him that a short time since - that the whole delegation of the state of Rhode Island of course including myself were opposed to you. I have no confidence in the correctness of this report but their sic may be some who will believe it. The people of this state knowing that I have amongst them uniformly avowed my friendship for you as far as the report is credited be inclined to believe I have asserted one opinion at home and another at Washington. It is therefore injurious to my private character and I would feel myself under great obligation to you could you think there be no impropriety in enabling you to correct it." Several small spots and holes; very good- condition.<br/> <br/> Job Durfee was a politician and jurist from Rhode Island. Born at Tiverton he graduated from Brown University in 1813 and was admitted to the bar. He was a member of the Rhode Island House of Representatives from 1816 to 1820 and was elected as a Democratic-Republican to the Seventeenth Congress and was reelected as an Adams-Clay Republican to the Eighteenth Congress serving from March 4 1821 to March 3 1825. He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1824 to the Nineteenth Congress and for election in 1828 to the Twenty-first Congress; he was again a member of the State house of representatives from 1826 to 1829 serving as speaker from 1827 to 1829. He declined to be a candidate for reelection and resumed the practice of law; in May 1833 he was elected associate justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court. He was chief justice from June 1835 until his death in Tiverton in 1847.<br/> <br/> unknown
6288704like new. unknown
184956158Providence: Gladding and Proud 1849. First edition 8vo pp. xxvi 523 1; contemporary half brown morocco over marbled boards; binding scuffed ex-Brown University with an Ives Collection bookplate withdrawn call slip on the rear pastedown; no external markings; good and sound. Durfee was the jurist who first called the Dorr Rebellion illegal and treasonable. Includes two lectures "History of the Subjection and Extermination of the Narragansetts" and "The Idea of the Supernatural among the Indians." Bartlett p. 115. Gladding and Proud unknown
1240001118.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1437334946.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1165133806.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1275643264.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1346254095.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
184355252Providence: B. Cranston and Company 1843. First edition 8vo pp. 52; removed from binding wrappers wanting; very good. Durfee here propounds the theory that "the recent revolutionary development of steam power was not merely an instance of man making progress it was a revelation of the divine 'law of progress' and of a 'higher destiny' planned by God himself for the new age" Schneider History of American Philosophy. These ideas were adumbrated by Durfee in The Panidea; Or An Omnipresent Reason Considered as the Creative and Sustaining Logos 1846 "a pretentious work that nobody read" DAB. More charitable comments are made by Joseph Blau in his collection of American Philosophic Addresses 1700 to 1900 page 381 ff where the Oration is reprinted in full. An important aspect of Durfee's deterministic theory of history is that "there is no absolute undefinable popular sovereignty which can in a manner its own and at any moment carry a certain supposed natural equality into social and political life and thereby elevate poor human nature however rude and degraded in condition at once as by a sort of magic into a state of supreme and absolute perfection" quoted by Blau. This is because the advances of science and technology impose conditions upon society which democracy cannot control and to which it must adapt. Blau notes that Durfee's views were influenced by German transcendentalism as mediated by Coleridge and Cousin. Not surprisingly given his skepticism on the efficacy of popular sovereignty Durfee as Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court played a prominent role in opposition to the Dorr forces. Not in American Imprints Bartlett or Parks; Sabin 21427 note. B. Cranston and Company unknown
184385836Providence: B. Cranston and Company 1843. Paperback. Very Good. 52p. pamphlet. 22 cm. Disbound removed from a bound volume. Stitch marks along left side. Wrapper not preserved. Durfee served as Chief Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court for the last 12 years of his life 1835-1847. B. Cranston and Company paperback
1023448610.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
1104527936.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1359589104.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
40246DURFEE Job. Whatcheer or Roger Williams in Banishment. Original cloth paper spine label. Providence R.I.: Cranston & Hammond 1832. First edition. Some spotting to pages. Spine faded covers a bit soiled. Overall very good. unknown