Edité par Published by Charles Knight & Co, London, 1841/44, 1st edition. Six volumes bound as three. Brown cloth boards, gilt lettering and decoration to spines. Blind stamped decoration to front and rear boards. Each 10.75ins x 7.5ins. Each volume has a small circular stamp to base of front free endpaper which reads "Maynard Smith and Outram Smith Library". Volume one: frontis, illustrated title page, xx, 444pp, illustrated title page, xx, 416pp Volume two: illustrated title page, xx, 400pp, illustrated title page, xx, 400pp. Volume three: illustrated title page, xxiv, 400pp, illustrated title page, xxiv, 402pp. Numerous small illustrations within the text. Corners rubbed and worn. Wear to edges of spines, but good solid sturdy volumes. G+. Nb heav, 1841
Vendeur : Missing Books (PBFA), Great Leighs, Royaume-Uni
Membre d'association : PBFA
Edition originale
EUR 90,97
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierPublished by Charles Knight & Co, London, 1841/44, 1st edition. Six volumes bound as three. Brown cloth boards, gilt lettering and decoration to spines. Blind stamped decoration to front and rear boards. Each 10.75ins x 7.5ins. Each volume has a small circular stamp to base of front free endpaper which reads "Maynard Smith and Outram Smith Library". Volume one: frontis, illustrated title page, xx, 444pp, illustrated title page, xx, 416pp Volume two: illustrated title page, xx, 400pp, illustrated title page, xx, 400pp. Volume three: illustrated title page, xxiv, 400pp, illustrated title page, xxiv, 402pp. Numerous small illustrations within the text. Corners rubbed and worn. Wear to edges of spines, but good solid sturdy volumes. G+. Nb heavy set, c6kg, expensive to post overseas.
Edité par Riverdale, New York: The Coalbin Press, 1933. Three preliminary leaves (title-page, half-title, contents) followed by twenty-six [hand-numbered ?] pages of poetry, one blank leaf, and colophon leaf ("Twenty five copies of this book printed from/ Caslon type on Van Gelder paper/ during the damp days of/ August 1933"). The anonymous author is Leslie Clarence Dunn, the geneticist who replaced T.H. Morgan at Columbia University in 1929. The presentation inscription in ink on the front inner cover reads: "For EWS/ with all due humility/ LCD;" EWS is almost surely Edmund Ware Sinnott, professor of botany at Barnard College in 1933 and one of Dunn's co-authors of the important work, Principles of Genetics (New York, 1925). Presentation/associa, 1933
Vendeur : Waverly & Rugby Books, Pinehurst, NC, Etats-Unis
Edition originale Signé
EUR 179,99
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierEtat : Very good. First printing. Half-linen, decorated paper boards, printed paper label on spine. Very good condition; lower front corner of cover frayed; upper front cover corner bumped. One of twenty-five copies; presentation copy from the author, signed with his initials.
Edité par Three letters from and one letter from 1899; the others from around the same time. All six letters from 90 Buckingham Road Brighton, 1898
Vendeur : Richard M. Ford Ltd, London, Royaume-Uni
Manuscrit / Papier ancien Signé
EUR 145,55
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierSee his entry in the Oxford DNB. The six items - written in the semi-retirement that followed Escott's breakdown in 1885 (Joseph Chamberlain and Lord Randolph Churchill took up a subscription for him) - are in good condition, on lightly aged paper. A total of 12pp, 12mo. Closely written in a well-nigh illegible hand. All six letters are addressed to 'My dear Sir' and signed 'T H S Escott'. Considering the execrable nature of the handwriting, it is ironic that the main topic would appear to be the supplying by Escott of autographs for the recipient's collection. Names that can be made out are: 'Miss Helen Henniker' ('a very active "Society organizer["] in London'), the 'vizier to Ismail' and 'Sir John Mowbray MP for Oxford (University)'. A letter of 8 July 1898 begins in unusually readable fashion: 'Perhaps the autograph of the present head of the Rothschilds may be of interest. It is a curiosity of caligraphy [sic] at least.' Another legible passage, on 12 July 1898: 'Lady Stanhope is the great Conservative hostess just now. I add her autograph. & also that of Frederic Harrison'. Also included is an envelope (presumably one of the autographs referred to above) with penny stamp and London postmark, addressed to 'T. H. Escott. Esq. / 33. Sackville Road. / Hove. / Brighton.' Also a cutting of a longish article on 'BYGONE BRIGHTON. / BY T. H. S. ESCOTT.'.