Type d'article
Etat
Reliure
Particularités
Pays
Evaluation du vendeur
Vendeur : Patrik Andersson, Antikvariat., Lund, Suède
Stockholm; Bonniers, 1905. (Mästerverk ur världslitteraturen. 7). Originalets titel: En Jøde. Novelle af Adolph Meyer (Köpenhamn, 1845). 18,5x12,5 cm. Porträttplansch, xxxii, 311, (1 blank) s. Samtida grönt marmorerat halvfranskt band (Hedberg) med ryggetikett i rött skinn, förgylld ryggdekor och upphöjda bind, marmorerade pärmpapper , snitt och försättsblad. Främre omslaget medbundet. Exlibris för Gustaf Sperling. Ryggen blekt till brunt, något nött samt med ytlig sprickbildning. S. 55/56 med hörnveck upptill. Inlagan med ett fåtal spridda småfläckar. Bra exemplar av den första svenska utgåvan av Goldschmidts debutroman som initierat skildrar de ortodoxa judarnas vardagsliv.
Vendeur : Lynge & Søn ILAB-ABF, Copenhagen, Danemark
Membre d'association : ILAB
(København), 1846-47. Lex8vo. Smukt nyere papbd. med marmoreret overtrækspapir. Skindtitel på ryg. Talrige træsnit i teksten. Velbevaret række. De manglende numre er: 294, 305, 307, 313, 326, 347, 353, 360 og 367-376.
Edité par Kjobenhavn, 1844
Vendeur : Eternal Return Antiquarian Bookshop, San Diego, CA, Etats-Unis
Membre d'association : IOBA
Edition originale
Etat : good+. First Edition. Goldschmidt, M. A. (Meir Aron), Corsaren [The Corsair] Kjobenhavn, 1844.An nearly complete set from 1844. Includes issues 174 - 180; 182 - 184; 186 - 189; 193; 195 - 207; 209; 211 - 215; 215b + Tillade; 217; 219 - 223.Includes censored issue "no. 176" but with bottom corner of title page missing, replaced with newer blank paper resulting in loss of text on verso. This satirical weekly typically was issued with 8 pages with numbered columns (2-per page). Filled with short polemics and dozens of caricatures of various public figures in Denmark. A wonderful snapshot of literary and political life in mid-19th century Denmark, often the target of political and police censure due to its scathing depictions of powerful figures.CONDITION: Good++ in contemporary quarter leather with marbled boards. Leather along front hinge slightly starting. Staining and moderate wear to leather with light to moderate foxing to pages.
Date d'édition : 1842
Vendeur : Eternal Return Antiquarian Bookshop, San Diego, CA, Etats-Unis
Membre d'association : IOBA
Edition originale
Hardcover. Etat : Good. 1st Edition. Goldschmidt, M. A. (Meir Aron), Corsaren [The Corsair] Kjobenhavn, 1842.An nearly complete set from 1842. Includes issues 62, 64, 66, 69, 71 - 72, 74 - 76, 78, 81 - 82, 84 - 97, 99 - 108, 110 - 111.This satirical weekly typically was issued with 8 pages with numbered columns (2-per page). Filled with short polemics and dozens of caricatures of various public figures in Denmark. A wonderful snapshot of literary and political life in mid-19th century Denmark, often the target of political and police censure due to its scathing depictions of powerful figures.Profusely illustrated with numerous charicatures.CONDITION: Good++ in contemporary quarter leather with marbled boards. Staining and moderate wear to leather with light to moderate foxing to pages.
Edité par 3 South Street Finsbury 21 June, 1854
Vendeur : Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Royaume-Uni
Three pages, 16mo, bifolium, last page laid down and slightly larger paper, good condition. Text: "When I was at your door some time back and left my card, I thought: Well, Mrs. Bensusan has, no doubt, completely forgotten, that there exists in the world such a being as I, for how can any one living in the great world of London remember a person not seen for two whole years, and what have I done to be particularly remembered? Thinking thus I walked through the streets homeward bound and soon after left town for Sydenham. | Now I beg you to judge, how agreeably surprised I felt, when yesterday on my return to town I found your kind letter and beautifully worked presents. Really, I have no words to thank yoy, but I hope one day to send you a work that may prove me not unworthy to be remembered. | Pray be assured, that I deeply sympathize with you in your sorrow, but I trust, that your seclusion will not prevent me from the honour of seeing you soon, when I shall take the liberty of calling, the period of my stay in London being of limited duration. | I am going to remain for a few days longer at Sydenham [.] where I shall feel happy to receive the visit of Mr Bensusan, which you have the kindness of promising me." Note: "On 30 June, on a visit to Mary Howitt [.], one of the translators of Goldschmidt's novel ["En Jode"], Goldschmidt met a 'Mistress Bensusan', probably the Esther Levy Bensusan to whom Mrs. Howitt dedicated her translation. Goldschmidt frequently visited the Bensusan family [.]". (Kenneth H. Ober "Meir Goldschmidt and the main currents in 19th Century Judaism" [Nordisk Judaistik, vol. 22, No. 1, 7-45; online]).
Edité par Kjobenhavn, 1844., Forlaegger: M. Goldschmidt,, 1844
Vendeur : Alec R. Allenson, Inc., Westville, FL, Etats-Unis
Hardcover. woodcuts by Johan Aagaard. (illustrateur). Fair quarter cloth under marbled sides; 24 cm. Lower third of pages heavily dampstained, but not musty and not obscuring text. This satirical weekly - a Danish counterpart to Punch - usually appeared with 8 pages (title-page, columns 1-14). It was first issued on 8 October 1840 with a plain title-page, incorporating from no. 27 the motto 'Ca ira, ca ira' - derived from Benjamin Franklin's response when, as envoy in Paris of the Continental Congress, he was asked about the course of the American Revolutionary War: 'It'll be fine.' The motto then became the refrain in a song of the French Revolution. From no. 95 in 1842 various versions of a privateer, with this motto on a flag, appeared on the title-page - briefly replaced, in this volume on nos. 187 to 223 (and on nos. 224-227 in 1845) with 'CORSAREN' in characters from a devils' alphabet, below a band of three imps flying the pirate flag. -- Mo. 218, under the heading: 'Nationalitetens Portner. Optrin af Gruundtvigs Kaempeliv' gives a caricature of N.F.S. Grundtvig (by Johan Aagaard, named as illustrator from no. 140 in 1843: older brother of landscape artist C.F. Aagaard) and a series of dialogues. A double-page frontispiece, almost separated at the center fold and the text cropped at foot of the sheet, portrays comic views of Danish life (see photographs). -- [The famous attack on Soren Kierkegaard began with no. 276 in January 1846] Censored nos. 176, 199 present; also 215b + Tillade to 215-216.