Type d'article
Etat
Reliure
Particularités
Pays
Evaluation du vendeur
Edité par Longmans, London, 1907
Vendeur : San Francisco Book Company, Paris, France
Hardcover. Etat : Good. Cloth/no dust jacket Octavo. green cloth gilt lettering no dust jacket 64 pp.
Edité par Oxford University Press (The World's Classics), GB, 1932
Vendeur : Richard Sylvanus Williams (Est 1976), WINTERTON, Royaume-Uni
Edition originale
Hardback. Etat : nrVG. Etat de la jaquette : No DW. 1st Edition. Blue cloth lettered in gold on spine. No Catalogue. Inscription of owner at start of book. Book is in near very good condition with minor but just noticeable signs of wear and/or age.
Edité par Longmans Green & Co, 1876
Vendeur : M Godding Books Ltd, Devizes, WILTS, Royaume-Uni
Livre
hardcover. Etat : Good. No Jacket. Previous owner's ink inscription. 1876 edition. Posted within 1 working day. 1st class tracked post to the UK, Airmail with tracking worldwide. Robust recyclable packaging. Picture is the actual item.
Edité par Published by Longmans, Green and Co. Ltd., 39 Paternoster Row, London First Edition . Volume II. London 1876., 1876
Vendeur : Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, Royaume-Uni
Membre d'association : PBFA
Edition originale
First edition hard back binding in publisher's original bottle green cloth covers, gilt title and author lettering to the spine. 8vo. 9'' x 6''. Contains [viii] 480 [8 Publisher's Catalogue] printed pages of text, maroon end papers. Shallow rubs to the softened spine ends, gutters and corners , upper closed edges age darkened and in Good condition, no dust wrapper. Member of the P.B.F.A. BIO (Résumé, Memoir).
Edité par Longmans, Green & Co, London, 1889
Vendeur : Transformer, Glasgow, Royaume-Uni
Edition originale
Hard Cover. Etat : Very Good_. No Jacket. First Edition Thus. 704pp. 7.5 inches. No dw. Blue buckram, blind-stamped in simulation of half-leather ie spine covering and corners textured to resemble a leather binding, gilt titles spine. Covers mainly vg, slightly rubbed corners, fold and spine tail, top of spine rubbed to fray. Hinges starting. All edges marbled, tops darkened, other edges in full colour. Endpapers very dramatically marbled in the combed design, in rich colours. Heavily foxed prelims, contents vg, clean and clear. "Popular Edition" would appear to be a reprint of the 2nd edition of 1876. 620g (Biography, History, Politics, Britain, England) Size: 12mo - over 6¾" - 7¾" tall.
Edité par Longmans, UK, 1889
Vendeur : Anytime Books, London, Royaume-Uni
Livre
Cloth. Etat : Very Good. No Jacket. Quite a life! pp.xiv.704. Unusually good condition; unread. Marbled endpapers.
Edité par Belford Brothers, Detroit, 1877
Vendeur : Ragabooks, Palo Alto, CA, Etats-Unis
Cloth. Etat : VG. Orig brown cloth with gilt lettering on the spine, some light edge-wear, gift insciption in ink on blank pg before title pg of 1st vol, 1 signature loose, still attached and bdg tight and clean; vol 1, 307 pp; vol 2, 311 pp.
Edité par Longmans, Green, and Co., London, 1881
Vendeur : Raymond Tait, Beccles, SUFFO, Royaume-Uni
Livre
Full-Leather. Etat : Very Good. Second Edition. Second edition in one volume of a book originally published in two volumes in 1876. The leather binding has a gilt coat of arms on the front panel and has rubbing and a little fraying to the corners with slight splitting at the top of the right corner of the rear panel next to the spine. Brown spotting to the top edges of the pages. Book plate on front pastedown. Marbled enpapers. Previous owner's name stamped to page after endpapers. Spotting at the front and rear of the book. Browning to the top corner of page 54 which also has a thin one inch long ink stain. Light spotting in a few places but the pages are otherwise generally clean and unmarked.
Edité par Longmans, Green & Co, London, 1901
Vendeur : Dorley House Books, Inc., Hagerstown, MD, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
Leatherbound. Etat : Very Good. Etat de la jaquette : No Jacket as Issued. 2nd. full brown/green leather w/raised bands; gilt deorations/titles; all eded gophered, maarbled end papers; owner's forum prise plate from Bath college; 704 clean, unmarked pages Size: 12 vo.
Edité par Longmans, Green and Co., London, 1879
Vendeur : McGonigles', Cerne Abbas, Royaume-Uni
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Very Good. No Jacket. Leather bound hard cover with gilt borders and gilt decorative spine including gilt titles within black frame on spine, and negligible cover wear. Internal hinges have been reinforced with 'attractive' blue tape on background marbled lining paper. Clean interior with 1883 inscription, xi, 475 pages with marbled edges. Attractive 1879 edition in very good to near fine condition.
Edité par Longmans, Green And Co Ltd, London, New York, Bombay, 1906
Vendeur : Stirling Books, Stirling, Royaume-Uni
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Good. No Jacket. Spine Slightly Loose Though Showing No Signs Of Damage Other Than Slight Fraying And Denting At Ends. Boards Has Some General Scruff Marks And Minor Shelfwear. All Pages Tanned With Some Foxing.
Edité par Longmans, Green, and Co., 1889
Vendeur : Allsop Antiquarian Booksellers PBFA, Warwick, Royaume-Uni
Membre d'association : PBFA
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Good. 5 vols. 8vo. half calf, marbled bds., eps., and fore-edges. Edges and bds. rubbed, spines faded, occasional foxing, else generally good. (Heavy item, will require extra postage).
Edité par ONE: 7 April ; Wallington Cambo Northumberland. TWO: 25 November 1883; letterhead of Chief Secretary's Lodge Phoenix Park Dublin. THREE: 3 February 1897; letterhead of Welcombe Straford on Avon. FOUR: 29 June 1911; Wengen, 1880
Vendeur : Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Royaume-Uni
Manuscrit / Papier ancien
A total of 12pp, 12mo. On bifoliums. All addressed to 'Dear Shuttleworth'. In good condition, lightly aged. A curious feature of the four letters is that the handwriting of each differs from the others. ONE: 7 April 1880. Trevelyan condoles with Shuttleworth, who has lost his Hastings seat in the General Election. He states that he is 'so heartily disgusted' with Shuttleworth's constituents, adding 'The loss, most temporary I feel sure, to the House will be very sensible, and I shall sorely miss you as a friend. I am sure no one less deserved a misfortune either by want of party loyalty or political energy.' He takes comfort in his belief that 'every man of a certain stamp begins with a bad seat, and changes to a good one; with all the more credit if he sticks to the good one to the last.' Postscript: 'My polling is not till the 12th! I have been electioneering in North Northumberland in the meanwhile.' TWO: 25 November 1883. He has to decline Shuttleworth's invitation, as 'From the day we came to Ireland, till the Session begins, we shall not be able to leave it, except for the inside of a week, when I shall be speaking to my constituents.' He is 'sorry to miss this pleasant visit: but we have nothing pleasant and that is about the long and short of it.' He hopes Shuttleworth 'will have pleasing meetings with Hartington', whom he is sure 'will speak well and wisely'. THREE: 3 February 1897. Shuttleworth's letter, written on Trevelyan's resignation from parliament, is 'kindness itself', but 'The fact is that I am really unfit for the work of public life, and cannot possibly stay in it. But with a regular and quiet régime I hope I may yet be able to get a fair amount of other work done.' He regrets 'losing the comradeship with you, which has been one of unbroken confidence and satisfaction on my part. Happily friendship is quite as likely to gain as to lose among people who both livein London at the due time.' He and his wife are concerned at Lady Shuttleworth's illness, and think Shuttleworth is 'wise to get her abroad'. Letter ends: 'I value very much your description of me as "an old and dear friend," which I heartily reciprocate'. FOUR: 29 June 1911. He has had 'great pleasure' from Shuttleworth's letter: 'I like to be told, however well I know it, that you regard yourself as an "old and attached friend." Since we rode together in the Park in the sixties we have both gone far, through some rough ways; and have both reached a happy goal, in the world, and still more in our respective homes.'.
Edité par Bernard Tauchnitz Edition, 1876
Vendeur : Structure, Verses, Agency Books, Spray, OR, Etats-Unis
Livre
Hardcover. Etat : Very Good. Bernard Tauchnitz Edition. Scarce in the trade in this condition, there being currently no additional copies available on-line. An attractive set, complete in four volumes, of the Bernard Tauchnitz Edition of the life and letters of Lord Macaulay (Thomas Babington Macaulay, 1800-1859), "Son of Old Aulay," edited and compiled by his nephew, Sir George Otto Trevelyan (1838-1928). Volume I frontis portrait engraving of Lord Macaulay, quite fine, by A. Weger, tissue-protected, producing slight shadowing behind, on title page. The first of the four volumes appears to be a First Edition Thus, being the Bernard Tauchnitz Edition (Todd & Bowden 1988, Nos. 1571-1574, according to previous owner twice-removed), but the remaining three appear to have had bound in half-titles of later issues of same that read Collection of British Authors Tauchnitz Edition, Nos. 1572, 1573, 1574, respectively. Uniformly and handsomely bound in pebbly cloth over boards, dark brown leather over tips and spines, lightly sunned along edges, five raised bands to spines, gilt fleurs-de-lis to each band, some rubbed, gilt lettering over red leather in two tooled compartments to each spine, ditto, and with fine gilt decorations at spine heads and tails. Protected now in stiff Mylar jackets. Toned endpapers, lightly toned text-blocks thereafter. All three edges stained neatly and uniformly in red, and with heavier brown endpapers, the first of each of which is embossed with the stamp that reads "Fonthill Villa, Keynsham, Near Bristol." Faint shadows where once were affixed smallish bookplates inside each front flap. Measuring 6 3/8" x 4 5/8" tall and wide, respectively, they are collated as complete and paginated thus: Volume I: viii, 1-296 pp., including two-page Preface by editor; Volume II: vi, 266 pp.; Volume III: vii, 286 pp.; Volume IV: vi, 281 pp. Macaulay was a British historian and Whig politician, says his Wikipedia entry, "who served as the Secretary at War between 1839 and 1841, and as the Paymaster-General between 1846 and 1848." His nephew, Sir George Otto Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet, was a British statesman and author. Trevelyan served two long stints in Scotland under William Ewart Gladstone and the Earl of Rosebery. Trevelyan notes up-front and multiply that his uncle had no plans to publish his life and letters but that posterity demanded that someone do so. The part-biography, part-hagiography is rendered strictly chronologically and according to Lord Macaulay's posts and accomplishments. All in, four fine exemplars of a scarce edition.Member, I.O.B.A., C.B.A., and adherent to the highest ethical standards. Additional postage may be required for oversize or especially heavy volumes, and for sets.
Edité par London Longmans, Green, and Co 1876, 1876
Vendeur : Buddenbrooks, Inc., Newburyport, MA, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
2 volumes. First Edition. With an engraved frontispiece in the first volume. 8vo, publisher s original green cloth lettered in gilt on the spines xi, 475; viii 480 [8 ads] pp. A nice copy, the bindings slightly shaken and showing just a bit of age, but still a handsome and pleasing set. FASCINATING WRITINGS BY THOMAS BABINGTON MACAULAY, BRITISH HISTORIAN, WHIG POLITICIAN, ESSAYIST, AND POET. "Besides being a man of letters, Lord Macaulay was a statesman, a jurist, and a brilliant ornament of society, at a time when to shine in society was a distinction which a man of eminence and ability might justly value. In these several capacities, it will be said, he was known well, and known widely. But in the first place, as these pages will show, there was one side of his life (to him, at any rate, the most important,) of which even the persons with whom he mixed most freely and confidentially in London drawing-rooms, in the Indian Council chamber, and in the lobbies and on the benches of the House of Commons, were only in part aware. And in the next place, those who have seen his features and heard his voice are few already and become yearly fewer; while, by a rare fate in literary annals, the number of those who read his books is still rapidly increasing. For everyone who sat with him in private company or at the transaction of public business, for every ten who have listened to his oratory in Parliament or from the hustings, there must be tens of thousands whose interest in history and literature he has awakened and informed by his pen, and who would gladly know what manner of man it was that has done them so great a service." G.O.Trevelyan.