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6564327Edition: reprint . Excellent Condition. No Hassle 30 Day Returns Ships Daily Underlining/Highlighting: NONE Writing: NONE Publisher: Oxford University Press USA Pub Date: 2/17/2005 Binding: Paperback Pages: 1280 paperback
195428550Oxford, Clarendon, (1954). 8vo. Nicht paginiert. Blaue OLwd. m. goldgeprägt. Rückentitel.
2012DADAX1903018897Prospect Books 2012-12-07. paperback. New. 7.00x1.00x10.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Prospect Books paperback
2012SONG1903018897Prospect Books 2012-12-07. paperback. Used: Good. 7.00x1.00x10.00. Buy with confidence. Excellent Customer Service & Return policy. Prospect Books paperback
019815366X.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
196275535Oxford: At the Clarendon Press 1962. XII, 244 Seiten. 8° (17,5 - 22,5 cm). Orig.-Leinenband mit goldgeprägtem Rückentitel. [Hardcover / fest gebunden].
B9781019994856Hardback. New. hardcover
1556939-nnew. unknown
1556939like new. unknown
225182 4 and 14 January 1897. All three on letterhead of Brasenose College Oxford. The three letters total 7pp 12mo. All three in good condition on lightly aged paper. From the papers of Sir Richard Harington 1835-1911 11th Baronet whose father Rev. Dr Richard Harington 1800-1853 had been Principal from 1842 to his death. All three endorsed by Harington with date of receipt. The subject is the replacement of a stained glass window in the college with Harington receiving the old window which he put up at his Worcestershire country house Whitbourne Court. In the first letter 2 January he writes that 'the glass is now being taken down gradually and it will probably be sent to you in about a fortnight'. He has told 'Mr. Kempe's man' to pack the glass carefully and 'to keep the post together as much as possible'. The man tells Heberden 'that with all care it may be impossible to avoid doing some injury to the glass in taking it down but I hope that this will not be anything serious.' Heberden has had 'a photograph taken of the window' which he will send Harington as soon as it is printed off. In a postscript he expresses the hope that 'when the new window is put up' Harington will 'come and stay with me in order to have a good look at it'. In the second letter 4 January he states that it will suit Heberden and his sister if Harington and his wife will stay with them for a weekend at the end of the month. 'It is quite certain that the new window will be completed by that time. A portion of it is already put in and Mr. Kempe has undertaken that it shall be all finished by the beginning of term i.e. by Jan 22.' In the final letter 14 January he expresses sorrow that Harington and his wife will not be able to stay over with his wife and daughter and the hope that when they visit for the day on 30 January they will at least come for lunch. 'The new window is completed today and the old glass has been packed and will I believe be sent off today or tomorrow. I trust it will reach you safely.' He ends in the hope that in the coming week he will be able to send Harington a photograph of the old window. 2, 4 and 14 January 1897. All three on letterhead of Brasenose College, Oxford. unknown
8vo., with 6 plates on 3 and 6 illustrations (2 full-page) in the text; original printed wrappers, a fine copy. Printing Historical Society, Publication No. 2
25472‘6 Margaret St / W. London Septr. 26. 19.’ 1919. See the two men’s entries in the Oxford DNB. Plain postcard with stamp printed in red. In fair condition discoloured and worn. Addressed by Gore to ‘W. D. Ross Esq / 6 Charlbery Road / Oxford’. Begins: ‘Will you forgive a p. c. I have no secretary & am rather overwhelmed with applications. You may not know that I did the thing you suggest at the meeting for Oxford House in Magd. Hall last summer. But besides this I must respectfully say that I cannot undertake any more work than I have already on hand up to next Easter. Forgive me. I have the best will. / Charles Gore’. The subject of the letter is presumably the Oxford House Anglican settlement in Bethnal Green. ‘6 Margaret St / W. [London] Septr. 26. 19.’ [1919] unknown
20505'Oxford & Cam Club' London . 16 July no year . 3pp 12mo. Bifolium with mourning border. In good condition lightly aged with reverse of second leaf laid down on leaf removed from album. Valentia's father had been like Neate a Member of Parliament for Oxford. The letter begins: 'Dear Lord Valentia. I am sorry it so happens that I was away and shall be till next Monday - when I return home <> to <> street for the next six Weeks'. He would have been 'very glad to meet even a Yankee at your <> - though I dont like those northerns especially those that stay in England just now.' If 'the Yankee' should be with Valentia or in the neighbourhood the following week he will be 'happy to show him Oxford'. 'Oxford & Cam Club' [ London ]. 16 July [ no year ]. unknown
26144'Magd Coll Magdalen College Oxford / Sunday. Feb 14 1862.'. Reade was a fellow of Magdalen College Oxford from 1836 to his death. According to his entry in the Oxford DNB: ‘in the years of his fame and particularly in the early 1860s he did much of his writing in his rooms at Magdalen using them as a retreat. His tenure of the fellowship was contingent on his remaining unmarried a stipulation he complained of bitterly but continued to put up with even when he was earning thousands a year as a writer’. 1p 12mo. In fair condition lightly discoloured on thin wove paper. Folded once. Reads: ‘Mr Charles Reade requests he cannot dine out of College this evng. but if Mr. Aldeman Spiers will allow him he will have the pleasure of looking in about nine o clock -’. ‘1862’ is written beneath the date in a contemporary hand. 'Magd Coll [Magdalen College, Oxford] / Sunday. Feb 14 [1862].' unknown
2007M135172007. Lloyd Gareth Fine hardback in dustjacket ownership inscription on fly leaf hardcover
2241428 August no year. On letterhead of Elderfield Otterbourne Winchester. 4pp 16mo. Bifolium of grey paper with letterhead printed in red. In good condition lightly aged. Folded three times. The recipient is undoubtedly Elizabeth Missing Sewell or a member of her family and the letter begins: 'My dear Miss Sewell I wish you could have accomplished giving us a day hoping you might have found me in more lively and sensible trim than when you were here when I had a headache just enough to make me stupid.' She is going to post her Roscoe's 'William I' which she got 'from the Lending Library'. She has not yet read the book 'but a glance made me think we might get a good extract'. She will send it before 6 September 'when we go to my uncle's in Devon a place that always brightens me beyond all others'. She will write again before departing and returns in October. Changing the subject she writes: 'I was much provoked with the Saturday Review it was such a specimen of people reading and misunderstanding things never meant for them. I am vexed not to have had the book yet Hookham's Library never send above half the books one asks for - and they say it is because people will read nothing but novels'. 28 August [no year]. On letterhead of Elderfield, Otterbourne, Winchester. unknown
1947100147201At the Clarendon Press 1947 in8. 1947. Relié. Ouvrage académique de H.S. Bennett analysant l'influence de Geoffrey Chaucer sur la littérature anglaise du XVe siècle couvrant la poésie et la prose de cette période. Le livre inclut des tables chronologiques et une bibliographie étendue s'inscrivant dans la série Oxford History of English Literature
BWE-CS29871Oxford University Press. . Brand New. We ship fast via USPS/FedEx/DHL/Aramex Express Services. No shipping to PO BOX APO FPO addresses. Kindly provide day time phone number in order to ensure smooth delivery. Printed in black & white in English language. We may ship from Asian regions for inventory purpose. 100% Customer satisfaction guaranteed! We use Fast Shipping via DHL/FEDEX/UPS Oxford University Press unknown
ria9780198791041_inpPaperback / softback. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; Chemistry for the Biosciences introduces the essential concepts of chemistry central to understanding biological systems. With an emphasis on straightforward explanations it features biological examples that illustrate how integral che paperback
ria9781315891521_inpHardcover. New. New Book; Fast Shipping from UK; Not signed; Not First Edition; Originally it was our intention to produce a single-volume book covering all aspects and approaches to the problem of specific inhibitors of respiratory viruses. hardcover
30690753like new. unknown
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2017x-1315891522Taylor & Francis 2017. Hardcover. New. 231 pages. 10.00x7.01x0.37 inches. Taylor & Francis hardcover
0125317506.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
Z1-X-015-02016Published for the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy by Academic Press. Used - Acceptable. Used - Acceptable. Ships from UK in 48 hours or less usually same day. Ex-library with wear - may contain significant amounts of highlighting and underlining in pen or pencil. Your purchase helps support Sri Lankan Children's Charity 'The Rainbow Centre'. 100% money back guarantee. We are a world class secondhand bookstore based in Hertfordshire United Kingdom and specialize in high quality textbooks across an enormous variety of subjects. We aim to provide a vast range of textbooks rare and collectible books at a great price. Our donations to The Rainbow Centre have helped provide an education and a safe haven to hundreds of children who live in appalling conditions. We provide a 100% money back guarantee and are dedicated to providing our customers with the highest standards of service in the bookselling industry. Published for the British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy [by] Academic Press unknown