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pp. 265, 30 [Robert Smith Surtees Sketch of His Career], 30 [John Leech His Illustrations to Surtees' Novels, etc.] + Eight handsome full page hand colored steel engravings by John Leech. Full page and text engravings by H. K. Browne and W. T. Maud. Title page decorated in color with a fox jumping a fence. Top edge gilt. 215mm. Virtually disbound. Leather and cloth boards detached. Bookplate of J. Frederic Byers, a prominent Pittsburgh businessman and sportsman, who had a large estate at Sewickley. Lacks spine. Text is very nice, but should be rebound. ENGLAND BX 5
pp. 300, 12 [Publisher's catalogue] + Engraved Portrait Frontis. Portrait, Title Page and Text dampstained and very foxed. Bookplate of the Bible Class Library of the Church of the Nativity, Philadelphia. Inked inscription on first fly leaf "Emma Heilman with the love of Clara L. Webb, Dec. 31, 1856 (Note: earlier than book's publishing date - but not that ususual for a Christmas / New Years gift) "Fight the good fight of faith. Looking unto Jesus". Also a light inked ownership of Richard R. Moore. First inner hinge cracked. 175mm. Original full cloth binding decorated and embossed in blind. Rear edge of spine worn and fragile with loss. Tail of spine worn with loss. Hardbound. Good. BIOGRAPHY BX 1
Two Parts. pp. 56: 48. Illustrated with top margin woodcuts. 4to. Original full purple cloth binding. Edges sun faded. Owned by Judge Mayer Sulzberger (1843-1923). XLib. [Dropsie College]. Scarce reprint of the rare original 1700's edition. Interesting poems describing public houses (Pubs) in London and Westminister during the 1700's. Describes the kinds of beers they served and the sorts of people that frequented them. Wood cut images accompany each verse. Ward (1667-1731), was a humourist, of `low extraction' and with little education. In early life he visited the West Indies, and afterwards he began business as a publican in Moorfields. By 1699 he had moved to Fulwood's Rents, where he kept a punch-shop and tavern (probably the King's Head), next door to Gray's Inn, until his death. Giles Jacob (Poetical Register, 1723) says: `Of late years he has kept a public-house in the city (but in a genteel way), and with his wit, humour, and good liquor, has afforded his guests a pleasurable entertainment; especially the high-church party. A man of considerable natural parts and with a gift of humour, `Ned Ward,' as he is frequently called, imitated Butler's `Hudibras' both in his style and in his attacks on the Whigs and low-church party. Though vulgar and often grossly coarse, his writings throw considerable light on the social life of the time of Queen Anne, and especially on the habits of various classes in London; but much allowance has to be made for exaggeration" - DNB. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! WHISKEY 4
pp. (36), (8) [Publisher's catalogue] + Full page and text drawings. Inked ownership of Smyser Bair (York, PA) on first fly leaf. 190mm. Original full gray cloth binding, very soiled around edges and spine. Front board decorated with a town in red and orange. Hardbound. Very good. First Edition. St. Botolph (d. ca. 680) was an English abbot and saint. He is the patron saint of travellers and various aspects of farming. He founded the monastery of Ikanhoe in East Anglia, and the place name was "Botolphston" (from "Botolph's stone" or "Botolph's town"), later shortened to "Boston". He is remembered in the names of both the market town of Boston in Lincolnshire (100 miles north of London), and Boston in Massachusetts, United States. LIT BX 4
1st edition. Later cloth, 4to. English with occasional Hebrew. The Jewish Chronicle, Founded in 1841, it is the oldest continuously published Jewish newspaper in the world. It was initially under the editorship of D. Meldola and M. Angel. On Oct 18, 1844, to the editorship of Joseph Mitchell, it took the title of "The Jewish Chronicle (New Series) and Working Man's Friend"; it appeared only fortnightly till July 9, 1847, when it became a weekly; from Aug. 18, 1854, it was edited by M. H. Bresslau, who changed the title to "The Jewish Chronicle and Hebrew Observer. " From Jan. 12, 1855, A. Benisch assumed the editorship, which he retained till April 2, 1869, when Michael Henry took charge of the paper until his death (JE, 1905) . Includes numerous ads and announcements from the period, indicating deaths, weddings, and celebrations of all kinds. Anniversary dinners and events often list participants, which sometimes read like whos whos of Anglo-jewry of the period, and at other times mention names from the far reaches of the British Empire. Much on selection and early activity of Adler as new Chief Rabbi, controversy about the Burton Street Synagogue. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- Great Britain -- Newspapers. Masthead is occasionally trimmed close, with parts of "Sefer Zikaron" clipped, 1 closed tear, otherwise in outstanding condition in modern library binding. (br-11-7)
Original Brown Stapled Wrappers. 8vo. [12]-19 pages ; 22 cm. Offprint from Essays Presented To Leo Baeck On The Occasion Of His Eightieth Birthday, published by East and West Library in London in 1954. This copy is inscribed by Bentwhich on the wrappers, With Normans Love and Apologies. Norman De Mattos Bentwich OBE MC (1883 1971) was a British barrister and legal academic. He was the British-appointed attorney-general of Mandatory Palestine and a lifelong Zionist Norman Bentwich was the oldest son of British Zionist Herbert Bentwich. (Wikipedia, 2017) Creased along the middle of every page. Otherwise about very good condition. (BR-11-56)
1st Edition. Original Boards. 8vo. 200 pages ; 23 cm. Rabbi David Abraham Jessurun Cardozo (1896 1972) was a Dutch-born American Sephardic Rabbi who served as assistant minister of the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue in New York City, the oldest synagogue in the United States and was the first rabbi to conduct High Holidays services in Spain since the Alhambra Decree of 1492 expelled Jews from that country. (Wikipedia, 2016) Includes two sections: 1) From the Dedication of the ynagogue to the Death of Sir Moses Montefiore by Cardozo while he was serving as Hazan at the Synagogue. And 2) The Montefiore Endowment by Paul Goodman. This book on the historic Montefiore Synagogue was published before Rabbi Cardozo immigrated to New York and rose to national prominence. SUBJECT(S) : Synagogues -- Organization and administration. Inscribed on the front end page from Rabbi Cardozo to Rabbi Max D. Klein. Includes photos throughout of the synagogue. Ex-library with Jewish Institutional Stamp/Bookplate and usual markings. Very good condition. (BR-11-37)
5575 (1815) 1st edition. Later Paper Wrappers, 8vo, 10, 10, 2, 2, 56, 56, [1], 6 pages [143 pages total]. Includes the often missing 6-page list of subscribers. The Introduction states that the book was undertaken at the behest of the Rabbi of the Aschkenazic community of London, Solomon Hirschell, together with Raphael di Meldola, Rabbi of the Sephardic community. It also includes the approbation of di Meldola as well as that of Rabbi Solomon ben Zevi Hirsch, the purpose of the work being to protect Jewish children from the inroads of Christian missionaries.The author indicates that the lack of understanding of Judaism among youth is the principle reason why he composed this work. Yet it was intended not just for Jews: Prof. David Ruderman has noted that, "except for its denunciation of Christian missionaries, Cohen's catechism with its English translation, seems to be nothing more than an innocent, uncontroversial presentation of the Jewish faith meant for both Jewish and Christian eyes" (D. B. Ruderman, Jewish Enlightenment in an English Key: Anglo-Jewry's Construction of Modern Jewish Thought, p. 250). Cohen's work was indeed shared with American non-Jews. The Jewish merchant David Isaacs, in his correspondence with Thomas Jefferson, sent the President a copy of the book [see University of Virginia exhibit (2001), To Seek the Peace of the City: Early Jewish Settlement in Charlottesville]. In 1818 Rebecca Gratz offered a copy to her friend Maria Fenno Hoffman, wife of the Attorney General of New York, Ogden Hoffman [see E. Wolf & M. Whiteman, The History of the Jews of Philadelphia, p. 304]. Jacob Marcus Rader lists Cohen's work as one of the Jewish educational books available to Rebecca Gratz when she began operating her Sunday School in Philadelphia [see United States Jewry, 1776-1985, 1-2, p. 393]. A review of this book was printed by Rabbi Yom Tov Benet in his book Tene Bekorim (1767). Shalom ben Jacob Cohen (17721845) himself was a Hebrew writer, poet, and editor. Born in Mezhirech, Poland, he studied German and read the new Hebrew literature, particularly Ha-Me'assef. His first book, Mishlei Agur (1799), was a collection of Hebrew fables in rhyme, with German translation, aimed at teaching Jewish children simple and clear Hebrew. Cohen went to Berlin in 1789 and taught in the Hinnukh Ne'arim school and in private homes. After the publication of several works he renewed the publication of Ha-Me'assef and served as its editor (180911). In 1813 Cohen left Germany, spent a short period in Amsterdam, and moved to London where he tried unsuccessfully to establish a Jewish school. From London, Cohen moved to Hamburg (1816 or 1817), where he spent three controversy-laden years. In a posthumously published poem he attacked the hypocrisy of the "reformists" for their lack of religious belief and national feelings and considered the establishment of the Reform temple in Hamburg an act of blasphemy. However, he refrained from public intervention on this controversy. In 1820 Cohen was invited by Anton Schmid to serve as head proofreader in the Hebrew section of his printing press in Vienna where he remained for 16 years. In 1821 Cohen established the annual Bikkurei ha-Ittim, three issues of which appeared under his editorship. In 1834 he published his poetic work, Nir David, a description of the life of King David, one of the first romantic works in Hebrew literature. In 1836 Cohen returned to Hamburg, where he lived until his death. His last extensive work was Kore ha-Dorot, a history of the Jewish people (1838). His other works include: Mattaei Kedem al Admat Zafon (1807), poetry; Amal ve-Tirzah (1812), an allegorical and utopian drama, a sequel to M.H. Luzzatto's La-Yesharim Tehillah; and Ketav Yosher (1820), a literary miscellany. Roth, Magna Bibliotheca Anglo-Judaica, p. 428, no. 2. Vinograd London 205. Roest 283. BE shin 2421; EJ; CD-EPI 0140837. SUBJECT(S): Judaism -- Juvenile literature. Juvenile works. OCLC: 44005964. OCLC lists 17 copies worldwide, High quality 18th Century paper and internal binding are in exceptionally good condition a very nice copy. (BR-4-2-B-xr)
1st edition. Original paper wrappers. 8vo. 72 pages, 19 cm. Includes illustrations and portraits. In Yiddish. Title translates to Sacco-Vanzetti: The History of their Martyrdom. Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were Italian-born American anarchists who were controversially convicted of murdering a guard during an armed robbery. The trial was highly publicized and inspired protests around the world. Their innocence was even argued by future Supreme Court justice, Felix Frankfurter (Wikipedia, 2018) . The author, Melech Epstein, became a leading writer on the history of Jewish Communism in Amerca. SUBJECTS: Sacco-Vanzetti Trial, Dedham, Mass. , 1921. Trial (Murder) -- Massachusetts -- Dedham. Anarchists -- United States. OCLC lists 9 copies worldwide (OCLC: 191805432) . Bound into pamphlet protector, with binding affecting a couple letters on original ilustrated cover. Good Condition. (YID-40-99A-M)
8vo; 43 pages; Period boards. 8vo., 43 pages, 22 cm. Privately printed by D. B. Updike, The Merrymount press "This tells of the publication of the first Jewish sermon to have been bothdelivered and printed in the United States, of a mystic oriental visitor to Colonial America, and of his portrait which through four generations of the family of the third president of Yale, journeyed from the college to Chicago, with the backgroud of the Jewish community which made Newport a great commerical center in pre-Revolutionary days. " Ex-library with usual markings. Gilt lettering on spine. Wear to cloth. Pages clean. Very good condition. (Sef-43-8A)
1st edition thus. Period Wrappers, 12mo, 35 pages ; 19 cm. In Hebrew with added English title page (Abraham Aben Ezra's Commentary on the Book of Esther, after another version... Edited for the first time by Joseph Zedner) . Vinograd, Y. , ; London 487. "Copied from an old ms. In the Harleian Collection, and edited for the first time . Haytah ? Emdah genuzah ? Ad henah, ? E-? Atah hi mutset me-afelah le-orah ? Al yede Yosef Tsedner. OCLC lists 18 copies worldwide. Bibliographer Alexander Marx copy with his namestamp. SUBJECT(S) : Commentaries. Bible. Esther -- Commentaries. Light wear, Very Good Condition. (sef-55-6)
New York: George H. Doran, 1918. 1st edition. Wrappers; 12mo. Vii, 93 pages. A brief and comprehensive survey of the various forms of celebration in Jewry in honor of the promulgation of the British Charter of Zionism, confined to the events and utterances of the first few weeks following publication of Mr. Balfour's historic letter. Chapters include: Resolutions, Statements, and Messages of Zionist Organisations; Resolutions of Other Jewish Organizations; Views of Jewish Leaders; Public Demonstrations; Press Comment. SUBJECT (S) : Jews -- Palestine. Zionism. Note(s) : "The charter of Zionism, letter from the British government ... To Lord Rothschild, in which Mr. A. J. Balfour, secretary of state for foreign affairs, declared the sympathy of the British government with Zionist aspirations and its favourable attitude towards the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people. " Wear to spine & front cover, which also has institutional stamps. Otherwise Good Condition. (ZION-16-24)
1st Edition. Original Boards. 8vo. Vi, 159 pages; 21 cm. Israel Abrahams was one of the most distinguished Jewish scholars of his generation. He wrote a number of classics on Judaism, most notably, Jewish Life in the Middle Ages (1896) . (Wikipedia, 2016) Herbert Martin James Loewe (18821940) was a noted scholar of Semitic languages and Jewish culture. His grandfather, Louis Loewe (18091880) , had been Sir Moses Montefiores secretary and the first Principal of the Judith, Lady Montefiore College at Ramsgate. (Wikipedia, 2016) Published four years after Loewes death. Includes a portrait of Abrahams adjacent to the title page. SUBJECT(S) : Jews -- England -- Biography. Abrahams, Israel, 1858-1925. OCLC lists 18 copies worldwide. Ex-library with Jewish intuitional stamp and usual markings. About very good condition. (BR-11-31)
1st Edition. Original Green Boards. 8vo. [cviii], 853 pages ; 23 cm. Inscribed by Loewe on the front end page. The last published work by Claude Joseph Goldsmid Montefiore, who edited this volume with Herbert Martin James Loewe. Loewe (18821940) was a noted scholar of Semitic languages and Jewish culture. His grandfather, Louis Loewe had (also) been Sir Moses Montefiores secretary... (Claude Montefiores great uncle) . (Wikipedia, 2016) Claude Joseph Goldsmid Montefiore was the intellectual founder of Anglo-Liberal Judaism and the founding president of the World Union for Progressive Judaism, a scholar of the Hebrew Bible, rabbinic literature and New Testament, an influential anti-Zionist leader in the communal body, the Anglo-Jewish Association, and an educator. He was a significant figure in the contexts of modern Jewish religious thought, Jewish-Christian relations, and Anglo-Jewish socio-politics. (Wikpedia, 2016) SUBJECT(S) : Judaism. Jewish ethics. Jewish literature. Ex-library with Jewish institutional stamp and usual markings. Overall good condition. (BR-11-32)
Third edition. Carefully revised, corrected, and improved. Original board with paper label on front, as issued, 8vo, 83 pages ; 22 cm. In English with Hebrew. Singerman 1263. Goldman (183), notes, Joshua Seixas, the son of Gershom Mendes Seixas (the minister of New York's Shearith Israel congregation), was born in New York in 1802. Little is known about his life. He taught in Shearith Israel's Hebrew school in the mid-1820s and he established the congregation's first choir. Seixas moved to Charlestown, MA, in the early 1830s and gave lessons in Hebrew. Among his pupils were Harvard students. Seixas began referring to himself as James while in Charlestown and it is assumed that he converted to Unitarian Christianity while there. Seixas then settled in Hudson, OH. He offered private Hebrew classes to students at Oberlin College, and later at Western Reserve University...He also taught groups of Mormons- the center of the movement at the time was in Kirtland, OH- and among his students were Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, and Orson Hyde, another early leader of the movement. Seixas left Ohio in 1836 and he was living in Staten Island, NY, by 1838. It is not clear what his relationship to the Jewish community was in his later years. His death in 1874 is not mentioned in Shearith Israel's records, but the death of his wife is. (The two lived apart after retuning to New York.) Also, a few of his many children remained within the community; others did not. Seixas was in regular contact with Christian Hebraists throughout his life. He corresponded with Moses Stuart on personal and scholarly matters and he proofread the grammars published by Stuart and George Bush. Seixas himself authored grammars for Hebrew, Aramaic, Syriac and Arabic .An expanded second edition (119 pp.) was published in 1834 UA #590]; a third revised and corrected edition (83 pp.) was published in 1852 UA #1263]. Seixas's grammar was reviewed favorably in its time (Goldman, 'Joshua/James Seixas," 72), though Chomsky later criticized it (Chomsky [1958], 133-4). For detailed analysis of Seixas' relationship with the founders of the Mormon church, see Rick Grunder's 2015 essay "A Teacher for the Temple: The Infectious Exuberance of Joshua Seixas" (www.rickgrunder.com/seixas.pdf). Interesting assortment of period ownership inscriptions including Jackson Coffing; A.J. Sem, NY City Nov 21st 1853; and Geo Wilson Lemert (?), From his sister Josephine, Antioch Apr. 24th 1869. SUBJECT(S): Hebrew language -- Grammar. OCLC: 4821518. OCLC lists 17 copies worldwide. Lacks backstrip. Dampstains throughout, original boards show moisture damage as well, but book is solid. In fitted buckram archival clamshell box (AMR-65-31)
First Edition. Original board with paper label on front, as issued, 8vo, 54 pages ; 22 cm. In English with Hebrew. Singerman 564; Rosenbach 368; Bruntjen 21148; Goldman-Kinsberg 183. Goldman notes, Joshua Seixas, the son of Gershom Mendes Seixas (the minister of New York's Shearith Israel congregation), was born in New York in 1802....He taught in Shearith Israel's Hebrew school in the mid-1820s and he established the congregation's first choir. Seixas moved to Charlestown, MA, in the early 1830s and gave lessons in Hebrew. Among his pupils were Harvard students. Seixas began referring to himself as James while in Charlestown...Seixas then settled in Hudson, OH. He offered private Hebrew classes to students at Oberlin College, and later at Western Reserve University...He also taught groups of Mormons- the center of the movement at the time was in Kirtland, OH- and among his students were Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, and Orson Hyde, another early leader of the movement." This is presumably the very edition of his book that he would have used with his Mormon students there. "Seixas left Ohio in 1836 and he was living in Staten Island, NY, by 1838.....a few of his many children remained within the community; others did not....Seixas's grammar was reviewed favorably in its time (Goldman, 'Joshua/James Seixas," 72), though Chomsky later criticized it (Chomsky [1958], 133-4). In addition, the printer, Gould, was a relative of Joseph Smith, who is descendant of Zaccheus Gould by the marriage of Samuel Smith and Priscilla Gould. The Smiths came from Topsfield, near Andover, where Gould had his press. For detailed analysis of Seixas' relationship with the founders of the Mormon church, see Rick Grunder's 2015 essay "A Teacher for the Temple: The Infectious Exuberance of Joshua Seixas" (www.rickgrunder.com/seixas.pdf). SUBJECT(S): Hebrew language -- Grammar. OCLC: 4821518. Period ownership signiture. Bookplate on rear pastedown. Lacks backstrip. Some foxing and staining, Good Condition (AMR-65-31A)
pp. x, 266. LACKS frontis and another plate. Evans calls for 2 plates. OCLC calls for just frontis. This example no plates. Age stain. Browned. Pages 233 & 234 worn with loss of a few letters. Penciled manuscript ownership of Francenia Ely (Eby)? on title page. Probably a Mennonite ownership. 12mo. 170 mm. Original full leather binding, worn. Front board detached. Hardbound. Poor. Evans 35067. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! PALIB 6
pp. 1-291, 22 (some fold.) pls., maps, diagrs. and sections, several illus. in text, refs. Journal issue, orig. wrs. - Symposium, including 9 papers n Triassic stratigraphy and correlations and related subjects in the British Isles.
Moderate wear to boards. Former owner's name on front free endpaper. Moderate foxing. Front hinge weakening; Short portraits of important politicals figures, including Winston Churchill; B&W Photographs; 8vo
Boards with light rubbing to extremities. Spine and boards darkened. Endpapers frail and with light chipping. First and last few pages browned ; 12mo 7" - 7½" tall; 301 pages
Bound in modern vellum. 8vo, [14] pages+ 286 columns, [14] pages+1336 columns. In French. TItle translates as The Grand Thresor, or Dispensary, and antidotary both general and special, or particular of remedies serving the health of the human body. [Originally] Presented in Latin and Now Translated into French and Enriched with Annotations & Notes ... With a Brief and Easy Method of Extracting Faculties From Purgative Medicines. Not in Caillet, Ferguson; Krivatsy 1259 (1609), Duveen, 613 (1609). Two volumes bound together, as issued, with separate title pages. Includes tables, charts and illustrations. One of the most prolific pharmacopoeia of his time, mixing medical prescriptions and alchemy. An important early 17th Century treatise in two parts, one dealing with alchemy and the other with pharmacopoeia; this French translation wasproduced by Jean Du Val, doctor of Issoudun. The work describes a number of pharmaceutical preparations: oils that beautify the face, potions to moisten the stomach, waters that warm the chest, cerates, scents, tablets. At the end a short and easy method "d'extraire les vertus et facultez des medicaments purgatifs et de separer les formes des metaux et mineraux (to extract the virtues and facilitate purgative drugs and to separate the forms of metals and minerals). The author, Johannes Jacob Wecker was a Swiss physician and philosopher. He worked as a doctor from 1566 and wrote a number of works about medicine, some of which were in both French and Latin. Doubtless fleeing accusations of sorcery, Wecker moved to Basel after having published Les Secrets de Wecker. For a number of years, he worked as a professor of logic at the local university. He published Antidotarum generale, a work about alchemy. His work is known for the elaborate bibliography on chemistry-alchemy. He also reported the first known case of diphallia. (wikipedia) OCLC: 14298187, OCLC lists 9 copies worldwide. Faint blindstamps on blank endpapers. A few period notes in 17th Century hand on title page; ink has burned through paper in one small blank area, small hole on title page. Six pages in final essay on mineral and metals extraction include period marginalia. Worming to upper margin of 30 leaves, in a few cases just touching the top chapter title text. Some light staining to pages, Very Good Condition Overall. (Med-1-6)
Paris, Mengès, 1993; in-folio, 12 pp. + 40 planches avec légende, reliure d'éditeur pleine toile, sous jaquette imprimée. Edward-Burnes Jones est un peintre britannique, né en 1833 et décédé en 1898. Il fut un ami du critique d'art, John Ruskin. Avec Gabriel Rosetti, il est un des grands représentants du célèbre mouvement d'art le « préraphaélisme ». Très bon état.
Paris, Association Française d'Action Artistique, 1959; in-8, 80 pp. + planches, broché. Bon état.
Berlin, Holle & Co Verlag, s.d. (vers 1960); in-8 oblong, 38 pp., cartonnage d'éditeur, sans jaquette. En langue allemande. Nombreuses illustrations (32) en noir et blanc. Très bon état.
Boston, Museum of Fine Arts, 1993; in-4, 238 pp., broché, couverture pleine toile grise, jaquette imprimée. Edition anglaise. Ce catalogue est le premier d'une série en deux volumes. 16 illustrations en couleur et 362 bichromies (nuances de noir et blanc).