Vendeur
CHILTON BOOKS, SUDBURY, Royaume-Uni
Évaluation du vendeur 3 sur 5 étoiles
Honoris Librarius
Membre AbeBooks depuis 1996
A very good full leather binding. The boards with intricate gilt decoration. "The cover of this issue of the Anglo-Saxon Review is a facsimile of the binding of Raderus' 'Bavaria Pia,' . Large 8vo. 11.75" x 7.75" x 1.25". [8pp.]/pp.256 . Intricate gilt decorated boards. Crimson leather, spine with gilt titles. Edges lightly rubbed and bumped, spine dulled. Top page edges gilt. Light foxing to page edges, and first few leaves. Armorial bookplate to verso of the front board: "Baron Barrymore", with motto: "Boutey En Avant". Intermittent brown spots to some leaves, otherwise clear English text with 6 full-page monochrome illustrations. VG. * "Arthur Hugh Smith-Barry, 1st Baron Barrymore, PC (Ire) (17 January 1843 22 February 1925), was an Anglo-Irish Conservative politician. On the death of Arthur Hugh Smith Barry in 1925, the estate, which was entailed, passed to his brother, James Hugh Smith Barry. On his death, it passed to James Hugh's son, Robert Raymond Smith-Barry. In 1939, the estate of Fota Island and the ground rents of areas was acquired by Arthur Hugh's daughter (from her cousin), Mrs. Dorothy Bell, for the sum of £31,000. On her death, in 1975, it passed to her daughter, Mrs. Rosemary Villiers, and Fota House is now the property of The Irish Heritage Trust." - See Wikipedia ** Contents: Note on the binding of this volume / Cyril Davenport - England and America 'Strangers yet' / Arnold White - The spirit of romance / Egerton Castle - The poetry of the South-African campaign / Arthur Waugh - A study in dreams / William Hodgson - Napoleon / Judge O' Connor Morris - A past Incarnation / Ethel Wheeler - The yellow perils / Lloyd Sanders - Some umknown portraits and letters of the Wellesleys / Florence A. Fulcher - Drawbacks of certain games / Andrew Lang - The impartial Ottoman museum / Sir Vincent Caillard - St. Patrick Hooligan / Clarence Rook - The bridal hymn of Cattallus / W.H. Mallock - Anglo-Saxon enamels on gold / Cyril Davenport - The strange christening of the Orange river / J.M. Bulloch - The way of a man / G. Stanley Ellis - Abraham Lincoln / His excellency the honourable Joseph Choate - Mrs. Russell / Maarten Maartens. *** "The Anglo-Saxon Review was a quarterly miscellany edited by Lady Randolph Churchill, and published in London by John Lane. It was short lived, running to 10 volumes, from June 1899 to September 1901. Churchill's son, Winston Churchill, was one of her devoted advisors during the months preceding publication. He suggested that the magazine take as its purpose "to preserve a permanent record of the thoughts and aspirations of our times, which vary as swiftly as light changes on running water, for wiser ages yet unborn." It contained articles by Henry James, Winston Churchill, George Gissing, Stephen Crane, Henry De Vere Stacpoole, Robert Barr, Henry Duff Traill, Henry Swinburne, Ethel Rolt Wheeler, Henry Watson Fowler and Frank Swettenham. Each issue was individually decorated in an elaborate pattern of gilt tooling on leather covers. The subscription list included heads of state, royalty, and some of the wealthiest families of Britain and the United States. Many of the magazine's contributors, too, were members of the nobility, officers of the Church of England, members of parliament, titled servants of the crown, and foreign dignitaries. A fictional account of the magazine's creation is provided by Robin Paige in the novel Death at Whitechapel." - See Wikipedia . N° de réf. du vendeur 51733
Titre : The Anglo-Saxon Review, A Quarterly ...
Éditeur : London And New York: John Lane
Date d'édition : 1899
Reliure : Couverture souple
Vendeur : RightWayUp Books, Woodbridge, SUFFO, Royaume-Uni
Hardcover. Etat : Good. Churchill, Lady Randolph Spencer, editor. The Anglo-Saxon Review : a quarterly miscellany. Vol. III. December 1899. London: John Lane, 1899. Hardback, Good with FAIR spine. Black leather with shelfwear and rubbing to edges. Spine rubbed and and cracked along the length of the front hinge. Front board thus loose. The top 2" of the backstrip have come away from the block. Elaborate gilt embossed decoration to front and back, based on an English royal design made for Charles I. Spine in 5 panels with 4 raised bands; gilt lettering and decoration. Binding firm. Ex-libris bookplate to front pastedown. Light foxing and tanning to endpapers. Frontispiece b/w illustration with tissue guard. Title page in red and black. Errata slip tipped in. 256pp., some uncut; 6 b/w full-page illustrations. Occasional foxing spots, otherwise contents clean and bright. Top edge of the page block gilt. The Anglo-Saxon Review was a quarterly miscellany edited by Lady Randolph Churchill; it was short lived, running from June 1899 to September 1901 a total of 10 volumes. Churchill's son Winston suggested that the magazine take as its purpose "to preserve a permanent record of the thoughts and aspirations of our times, which vary as swiftly as light changes on running water, for wiser ages yet unborn." Each issue was bound in a copy of a magnificent antique binding. RightWayUp Books aims to provide accurate and detailed descriptions. All images are of the actual book for sale - no stock images are ever used. Thank you for looking at this listing. PLEASE NOTE: THIS IS A HEAVY ITEM AND WE WILL NEED TO QUOTE SEPARATELY FOR POSTAGE OUTSIDE THE UK. N° de réf. du vendeur ABE-1727799313729
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