8 611 résultats
201307315Paris, Fleuve noir, 1977 ; in-12, 215 pp., br. Bon état.
1711ST20182London: W. Lewis 1711. FIRST EDITION First Issue. 280 x 152 mm. 8 1/8 x 6". 1 p.l. 43 1 pp. <br/> VERY PRETTY DARK GREEN CRUSHED MOROCCO ELABORATELY GILT IN PERIOD STYLE BY RIVIERE & SON stamp-signed on front turn-in covers with double frames formed of floral sprigs drawer handles and other small tools the frames enclosing an elegant central wreath; raised bands spine panels densely gilt with stippling floral tools radiating from small central flower gilt lettering turn-ins densely gilt with scrolling foliate tools all edges gilt. With an attractive woodcut headpiece and tailpiece; one foliated woodcut initial. Front pastedown with the bookplate of Winston Henry Hagen and book label of William A. Strutz. Griffith 2; Rothschild 1564; Foxon P806; Day "History of English Literature 1600-1837" pp. 73-4. Sheets uniformly a little toned because carefully washed the usual offsetting on facing flyleaves from turn-ins but a very pleasing copy--the text without signs of use and the exceptionally pretty binding lustrous and virtually unworn.<br/> <br/> This first printing of Alexander Pope’s first independent publication called by Day "one of the most quoted poems in English" offers a sumptuous binding in the style of the period retains its scarce original half-title and boasts an impressive provenance. Pope 1688-1744 composed "An Essay on Criticism" early in his career possibly when he was just 18. In this poem which introduced several expressions now common in the lexicon including "to err is human; to forgive divine" and "fools rush in where angels fear to tread" Pope provides his philosophy on what makes good criticism and by extension good poetry. Of it Day writes: "no one can claim originality for the content of 'Essay on Criticism' but all must admit the incomparable mastery of verse and language." This copy retains the half-title which is often missing primarily because it was often used as part of the volume's wrappers. Our copy does lack the final leaf of ads as almost always with copies of this edition. The strikingly attractive binding done in an elaborately gilt style reminiscent of a Roger Payne design is the work of Riviere one of the foremost names among English binderies. Our copy has belonged to two notable collectors. According to Dickinson Hagen 1859-1918 was a collector whose library especially strong in English literature "reflected a highly developed intelligent connoisseurship." Beverly Chew wrote in the foreword to the catalogue for the Hagen sale at Anderson Galleries 13 May 1918 that the library which featured high spots bought at the Lefferts and Poor sales "was one of the best ever submitted to the public at auction." William A. Strutz 1934-2024 was a North Dakota attorney and passionate bibliophile who assembled a library of over 15000 rare and important literary works. Our first printing of "Essay on Criticism" is not easy to find in the attractive condition seen here. W. Lewis unknown
GF9972Photographie 7,5x4 cm - collée sur carton - vers 1900 -
12295Pré d'Auge s.e. s.d. Un volume tapuscrit, dos collé muet, couverture beige imprimée, illustrations en n&b. Traces de scotch aux premier et dernier feuillets, néanmoins bon état.
187262362London: Effingham Wilson Royal Exchange 1872. 8vo. 4 147 1 pp. 3 woodcut-engraved plates 4 collotype sepia-tinted photo plates w/ tissue guards present 5 plates 3 large folding. Brick-red publisher’s cloth gilt lettering front cover & spine scuffing & wear head & foot of spine minor wear to corners shaken still a VG- copy from the library of former Confederate officer Colonel and later Colonel Richard L. Maury 1840-1907 served in the Army of Northern Virginia for the Confederacy was Superintendent of Immigration under Emperor Maximilian and by 1868 became a respected lawyer in Virginia and was son of the noted scientist and inventor Matthew Fontaine Maury 1806-1873 best remembered for developing the electrically controlled naval mine as well as efforts to persuade European powers to support the Confederacy. First edition of this promotional work for the Fairlie articulated steam locomotive with driving wheels on bogies and at the time one named the “Mountaineer†had been ordered by the newly constructed Denver & Rio Grande Railroad and was the only Double Fairlie to operate on an American narrow gauge railway. After his initial trials for his invention Fairlie received many orders the newly developed locomotive and by 1876 43 different railways operated his patent locomotives which by 1870 were being produced by the Fairlie Engine & Steam Carriage Co. but ceased production after the death of his partner England. His locomotives proved especially popular in Mexico and 49 of his massive 0-6-00-6-0 were to remain in operation until the end of the 1920’s. See: Robin Jones Looking Both Ways: When Robert Fairlie ‘Double Up’ Steam The Railway Hub March 17 2022. Effingham Wilson, Royal Exchange, hardcover
3003Boston: The Company; Alfred Mudge & Son Printers 1878. . 8vo dusty pink wrappers front printed; some chips; slightly soiled One holding library in OCLC Boston: [The Company]; Alfred Mudge & Son, Printers, 1878. unknown
2472Boston: The Company Alfred Mudge & son Printers 1878. . 8vo buff wrappers front printed some minor fragments missing from the bottom margin of the first few leaves not affecting text One holding library only in OCLC. Lists all capital expenditures for the year bridge building and other repairs; a breakdown of all shipments sent and the usual financial disclosures Boston: [The Company] Alfred Mudge & son Printers, 1878. unknown
2687Chicago: The Company Poole Bros. Printers and Engravers 1896. . Large 8vo buff printed wrappers back pictorial; some chipping and soiling to wrappers. First published in 1887. Many of the illustrations are engraved after the photographs Jackson took on his trip with Ernest Ingersoll and which were published in Ingersoll's "Crest of the Continent". The copyright for Ingersoll's book and the present one were both give to S. K. Hooper the Passenger Agent for the railroaD. Chicago: [The Company] Poole Bros., Printers and Engravers, 1896. unknown
200159996Denver CO: Sundance Publications Inc. 2001. 4to. 416 pp. Frontisp. 100s of colour and black & white photo illustrations maps diagrams. Half-purple over colour-illustrated boards minor shelfwear very slight dustsoiling w/ glassine cover minor shelfwear minor bumping lower corners VG/VG copy signed by three authors on half-title numbered. First edition signed & No. 1285 “Display Copy†of this lavishly illustrated history and installment in the Rio Grande Southern saga against the backdrop of the rich gold mining district previously occupied by the Ute Indigenous Peoples. Sundance Publications, Inc., hardcover
19531111Winnipeg Manitoba: Department of Resources and Development Engineering and Water Resources Branch; Water Resources Division 1 October 1953. First printing. Card Covers. pp. ix 66. 4to. Card covers in duo-tang style binding. Replete with 21 plates of maps in addition to many tables charts aerial photographs etc. Light rubbing to the covers light occasional pencil marginalia otherwise bright and clean with tight sound binding; very good. At time of cataloguing not in Peel University of Manitoba Archives & Special Collections. A thorough investigation on the feasibility of diversion of river flows in excess of the channel capacity for the Greater Winnipeg region. Thorough consideration is given to all possible flood-control measures including channel improvement dyking storage and diversion. Initial cost estimates for the project ranged from 12 million dollars for protection against a flood of the 1950 magnitude to 82 million dollars for protection against a flood of the 1826 magnitude. <br/><br/> Department of Resources and Development, Engineering and Water Resources Branch; Water Resources Division unknown
1995129221Hanoi: Red River Gallery 1995. 1st edition. As New. quarto. softback with stiff wrappers 70pp. col. pls. 5 Hanoi painters go up against the wall Red River Gallery unknown
L6543Ed. Jean-Michel Place, 1991. Deux volumes in-4 reliure pleine toile éditeur, jaquettes. revue fondée en 1929 par Georges Henri Rivière et Georges Bataille. Rédacteur en chef : G. Bataille. Secrétaire de rédaction et gérant en 1930 : Michel Leiris. 15 numéros parus. Vol. 1 : 1 à 7, 1929 et vol. 2 : 1 à 8, 1930. Très belle réédition par Jean-Michel Place avec une préface de Denis Hollier. Contributions : Georges Bataille, Robert Desnos, Marcel Griaule, Marcel Jouhandeau, Michel Leiris, Marcel Mauss, Jacques Prévert, Raymond Queneau, Georges Braque, Giorgio de Chirico, Salvador Dali, Marcel Duchamp, Alberto Giacometti, Paul Klee, Fernand Léger, Joan Miro, Pablo Picasso, Carl Einstein, Hans Arp, etc.
13629L’infini, N°19, été 1987. In-8°, broché.
10055La linguistique, n° 15, 1979. In-8, broché.
12730La nouvelle revue française, n°138, 3/1925. In-8, broché.
12740La nouvelle revue française, n°174, 3/1928. In-8, broché.
12709La nouvelle revue française, n°116, 5/1923. In-8, broché.
12724La nouvelle revue française, n°108, 9/1922. In-8, broché.
12722La nouvelle revue française, n°106, 7/1922. In-8, broché.
11968Vecteurs, N°4, oct.-déc. 1982. In-8, broché.
9271LA REVUE LATINO-AMERICAINE, 1930.
10517Chroniques de minuit, n° 1, Minuit, avril 1945. In-8, broché, 136 pages.
8675N° 8 (1ère année). 15 juin 1918. Henry Spiess (" Nocturne "), Jacques Rivière (" Fragment sur Francis Jammes "), Alexandre Cingria (" L'Exposition d'art français au Musée de Genève "), Edmond Jaloux (" L'Exposition d'art français au Musée de Genève ") 13 reproductions sur vignettes hors texte de toiles de Cézanne, Corot, Daumier, Degas, Delacroix, Gauguin, Manet, Monet, Renoir, Sisley. Très bon état.
8792N° 1 (15 janvier 1935) : Paul Claudel, Pouchkine, Léon-Paul Fargue, Robert Musil, Gérard Manley Hopkins, Marcel Jouhandeau, Luigi Pirandello, Dorothy M. Richardson. - N° 2 (15 avril 1935) : André Suarès, Jacques Rivière, Federico Garcia Lorca, Henri Michaux, Archibald MacLeish, Fernando Gonzalez, Paul Eluard, André Gide, Jules Supervielle, Henri Zimmer, Elisabeth de Vautibault, Léon Tolstoï. - N° 3 (15 juillet 1935) : Paul Valéry, Robert Frost, René Daumal, Paul Claudel, Bernard Groethuysen, Catherine Pozzi, Tchouang Tseu, Jean Wahl, Marcel Arland, Manuel Altolaguirre, Amiel. - N° 4 (15 octobre 1935) : C. F. Ramuz, T. F. Powys, Max Jacob, Marcello Gallian, Georges Pelorson, Jean Tardieu, Hölderlin, André Suarès, Bharata, Marcel Jouhandeau, Dostoïevsky. // La 1ère année complète, en bon état. // 1/1.785 sur alfa.
1646Brasil. Rio de Janeiro. Journal hebdomadaire de grand format (31 x 46 cm.) de 8 pages.