4 489 résultats
Foxing to top of textblock and lightly to endpapers. ; 7.7 X 5.0 X 0.7 inches; 237 pages
Creasing and some edgewear to wraps. Pages tanned. Scholar's name to ffep (Robert Brown). ; Penguin Books For Philosophy; 7.8 X 5.1 X 0.8 inches; 464 pages
Rebound in attractive red leather boards with marbled boards. Gilt lettering and tooling to spine. 5 raised bands to spine. Top edges gilt. Marbled endpapers. Very attractive. A bit of chipping along edges of boards. ; Xxviii, 406 pp. English only. No date. Early 1900s? ; Philobiblion Edition; 406 pages
Scholar's name to ffep (Robert Brown). Creasing to spine. ; Penguin Classics; 6.9 X 4.4 X 0.5 inches; 128 pages
Light edgewear to spine. 1 small tear to head of spine. ; Modern Library Classics; 7.8 X 5.1 X 0.8 inches; 352 pages
120195E Typographeo Clarendoniano, Oxonii (Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis). 19 cm ; Leinen.
4to., Second Edition, with title-vignette, numerous photographs (a number full-page) and pictorial endpapers; brown cloth, backstrip lettered in navy, a fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper. With the advertisement leaf at end. One of the scarcest titles in this much-loved series. This is the revised version of Piper's original edition of 1938. SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.
4to., First Edition, with numerous plates and illustrations in the text; cloth, gilt back, a fine copy in the dustwrapper
2007160883New York & Oxford: Oxford University Press 2007. XX, 1027. Zweispaltiger Dünndruck. 8° (17,5-22,5 cm). Orig.-Pappband. [Hardcover / fest gebunden].
1953014070Oxford & Cambridge [Eric Losfeld] 1953 In-8 broché, pièce de titre sur le premier plat
197021998Oxford, Basil Blackwell 1970. VIII, 218 Seiten, Gr. 8° (23 x 15 cm), goldgeprägter Orig.-Leineneinband.
197035871Oxford, Basil Blackwell 1970. VIII, 218 Seiten, Gr. 8° (23 x 15 cm), Hardcover/Paperback, goldgeprägter Orig.-Pappeinband
2010SKU0470058Oxford University Press 2020-10-01. Hardcover. Good. Textbook May Have Highlights Notes and/or Underlining BOOK ONLYNO ACCESS CODE NO CD Ships with Emailed Tracking Oxford University Press hardcover
25838ONE Okill's ALS: '2 Duke Street / Liverpool 30th. June 1848'. TWO Bliss's Unsigned Autograph notes: Without date or place. This forgotten case of identity fraud predates the celebrated Titchborne case by more than a decade. The only other refence to it located is in a document in the Derbyshire Records Office: a copy of a printed circular appeal for money from Okill dated 13 October 1849 a little more than a year later than the present item on behalf of Thomas Hudson whose claim to the Dukedom of Devonshire is ‘said to be inherited through grandmother Lady Mary Garget claimant of property left in trust by 4th Duke for his Duchess and Daughter imprisoned for life as lunatic by Trustees with further specious undated details’. For the recipient Philip Bliss see his entry in the Oxford DNB. Both letter and response are on a 12mo bifolium. It is in good condition lightly aged and worn. ONE: ALS to ‘Revd Doctor Bliss / &c &c &c’ signed ‘William Okill’. 2pp 12mo. Fifty-four lines. Neatly and closely written on the first leaf of the bifolium. Begins: ‘Revd Sir / I have before me your kind communication to my friend Mr. Joshua Hainsworth of Sunnyside Rawtenstall in this County under date Feby 24th. 1848 / We have again to trespass upon your attention for another poor Gentleman who is claiming the Title dignity and Estates of his Ancestor the last rightful Duke of Devonshire - The present possessor & his reputed Father are not Cavendishes but Smiths - the last was a steward on the Estates and we have affidavits from the old Tenants who knew him as Mr. Smith and also afterwards when he had usurped the name & assumed the Title of Duke’. Should Bliss wish to know more he is enclosing not present ‘Hudson’s Petition to Her Majesty requiring her aid in his behalf and which has been referred to Her Attorney General for his report’. He goes into great detail about a ‘Pedigree of the Ducal Line’ ‘remodelled to bring in these Smiths but is has been compiled in so slovenly a way that the plastering or patching up is as visible as new cloth upon an old Garment’. He asks various questions in relation to ‘the different Sons who were entered at the university of Oxford’. He asks Bliss to insert the names ‘as you did in detail as you did sic the “Leighs†for it is rather important that we have the Christian name of the Dukes as they occur thus / “John Son of William Earl of Devonshire &câ€. Ends: ‘Please to state your charge & it shall be remitted by a Post Office order in due course - / Mr. Ainsworth desires his kind respects’. TWO: Bliss’s notes. 1p 12mo. On recto of second leaf. Unsigned but in Bliss’s unmistakable elegant hand. Apparently made by Bliss for his own purposes while retaining Okill’s letter. Punctilious to a fault Bliss would certainly have conveyed the information in a letter to Okill. Ten lines in Latin comprising three entries regarding matriculation of members of the Cavendish family in 1715 1724 and 1755. See Image of pp.2/3 ONE (Okill's ALS): '2 Duke Street / Liverpool 30th. June 1848'. TWO (Bliss's Unsigned Autograph notes): Without date or place. hardcover
18-5760Oxford England: Phaidon Press Limited 1978. . 4to. 704 pp. Brown cloth-covered boards with gilt spine and red printed dust jacket. Very good. Color and black and white plates. First edition. Heavy volume extra shipping may apply. Oxford, England: Phaidon Press Limited, 1978. hardcover
Sm. 8vo., First Edition, with 121 plates on 80, and numerous plans (a number full-page), illustrations and 3 double-page maps in the text; black cloth gilt, gilt back, a near fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper. THE ORIGINAL EDITION IS SCARCE, ESPECIALLY IN THIS CONDITION. Buildings of England, BE45. Cherry 45; HB4, HJ3.
Thin marker line to barcode. Light shelfwear. ; Meridian Books; 192 pages
75-0499Oxford UK: R.R. Bowker Company 1978. 1st Edition. 8vo. Hard Cover with dust jacket. Beige cloth binding with red pattern on cover. Handwritten numbers on first page. 304pp. Fine. Black and white plates. Oxford, UK: R.R. Bowker Company, 1978. hardcover
13919Dated by Levi to the period November 1957 to January 1958. Moraes' note dated 10 June 1963. 14pp. 4to. In exercise book with green printed wraps. Good on lightly-aged and worn paper. The first page carries the title 'The Element' with the words 'Peter Levi S.J. Nov. '57-Jan. '58' in the top right-hand corner. With occasional light corrections. The second poem 'Out of shaking' has the directions: 'No title & no commas' and the last but one 'Unfinished Elegy' which is the longest at 4pp. is annotated: 'There ought to be three parts or possibly four. I can't write the last part.' First lines with titles where present following in brackets: 'The lads of course arrived too late'; 'Out of shaking'; 'Death in the heart'; 'This heart twin magnet of the mind' 'Emblem'; 'Five o'clock ploughs its pale yellow furrows' 'Dream of a hermitage'; 'Midwater afternoons a single line' 'Image of an afternoon'; 'Like strangers who casually press'; 'Neglected Eldoradoes of the mind' 'Unfinished Elegy. For R. S.'; 'What if the world were a horrible mad fit'. Moraes' note on a sheet of grey paper 1p. 4to reads: 'Father Peter Levi S.J. has published two books of verse. The poems in this notebook which he gave me some years back comprise 12 of the 30 in his second book "WATER ROCK & SAND." His first book "THE GRAVEL PONDS" Deutsch was a Poetry Book Society Choice in 1960 & the second won the Lamont Prize in America. Dom Moraes 10th. June 1963'. Dated by Levi to the period November 1957 to January 1958. Moraes' note dated 10 June 1963. paperback
13918Place not stated. December 1960. 2pp. foolscap 8vo. In fair condition on lightly aged and worn paper. A fair copy of a twenty-eight line poem arranged in seven four-line stanzas. Signed at end 'P. L. December 1960.' The first stanza reads 'Rain-threaded gull-wheeling bell-clamorous air by wind shifted by smoke lightly weighted in which sirens beautifully despair no monumnet crumbles uncelebrated'. The poem ends with a simile of 'Adam when he woke: stood for a moment as if he had been blind and bent suddenly over Eve and spoke.' There is no indication that the poem has been published. A regular of the Colony Room Henrietta Moraes was noted for her bohemian and hedonistic lifestyle in the Soho of the 1950s and 1960s. She met Dom Moraes in 1956 and the couple married in 1961 divorcing a few years later. Place not stated. December 1960. unknown
13917Card postmarked from Campion Hall Oxford and with postmarked date 21 November 1971. Three Poems: Sycamore Press 4 Benson Place Oxford; Spring 1970. 'To our friends': No. 33 April 1962; with note on letterhead of Heythrop College Chipping Norton. The three items in good condition with light age and wear. CARD: He has been told about Korn by 'Barbara <Ghilan> and Cyril Connolly': 'Maybe we might meet though I shall now be leaving England for a time. Do you ever have a catalogue If so please put me on your list. I chiefly want classics & archaeology & old travels in Greece & Central Asia but sometimes modern poetry. I am always at or c/o this address. Peter Levi.' THREE POEMS: Landscape 8vo folded twice to make three panels. Printed in blue. The first poem is titled 'Riddle' and the other two are untitled. TO OUR FRIENDS: 20pp. 12mo. Stapled pamphlet printed in green and black. Accompanying the pamphlet is a card with letterhead of Heythrop College Chipping Norton Oxon with the following in Levi's autograph: 'This underlined I did write & hideous as it is I thought you might underlined like a copy love Peter'. Card postmarked from Campion Hall, Oxford, and with postmarked date 21 November 1971. Three Poems: Sycamore Press, 4 Benson Plac unknown
5899University College 9 Feb. 1867. 2pp. c.12 x 14cmsremnants of laying down process obscuring af ew words. "I am not much in the habit of corresponding with great people but I enclose you a few autographs." He then discusses a curacy and a pupil. University College, 9 Feb. 1867. unknown
2010AME_9781848164154Imperial College Press 2010. 1st. Hardcover. New/New. Imperial College Press hardcover
ria9780415740463_inpPaperback / softback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; In this critical and historical interpretation of Petrarchs major Italian work the collection of poems he called the Rerum vulgarium fagmenta Peter Hainsworth presents Petrarch as a poet of outstanding sophistication and seriousness paperback
200920659<p>new oversize hc remainder mark expedited shipping not availabl</p> Charlesbridge hardcover