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Library buckram. Ex-library with some pages bumped. Very good condition otherwise. Rebound with green library buckram. With assistance of Thomas W. Klink, W. John Minter and James D. Glasse 258 pages. 258 pp.
Published by Hardpress Publishing, 2013
ISBN 10: 1313170151ISBN 13: 9781313170154
Seller: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, U.S.A.
Book
PAP. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Published by Forgotten Books, 2018
ISBN 10: 1332949894ISBN 13: 9781332949892
Seller: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, U.S.A.
Book
PAP. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Published by Forgotten Books, 2019
ISBN 10: 1331888026ISBN 13: 9781331888024
Seller: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, U.S.A.
Book
PAP. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
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Publication Date: 2023
Seller: True World of Books, Delhi, India
Book Print on Demand
LeatherBound. Condition: New. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. Bound in genuine leather with Satin ribbon page markers and Spine with raised gilt bands. A perfect gift for your loved ones. Reprinted from 1781 edition. NO changes have been made to the original text. This is NOT a retyped or an ocr'd reprint. Illustrations, Index, if any, are included in black and white. Each page is checked manually before printing. As this print on demand book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages, but we always try to make the book as complete as possible. Fold-outs, if any, are not part of the book. If the original book was published in multiple volumes then this reprint is of only one volume, not the whole set and contains approximately 36 pages. IF YOU WISH TO ORDER PARTICULAR VOLUME OR ALL THE VOLUMES YOU CAN CONTACT US. Resized as per current standards. Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Language: English.
Published by Wentworth Press, 2019
ISBN 10: 0526727837ISBN 13: 9780526727834
Seller: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, U.S.A.
Book
Condition: New.
Published by J. Walter, et al.,, London, 1781
Seller: G. W. Stuart, Jr., ABAA(emeritus), Yuma, AZ, U.S.A.
Quarto, Disbound, name on title with date "19 Oct. 1781," very fine. First edition.
Published by Printed for J. Walter; sold also by Mr. Merrill, at Cambridge; and by Mr. Cruttwell, at Bath. 1781, 1781
Seller: Jarndyce, The 19th Century Booksellers, London, United Kingdom
19, [1]pp; 4to. Blank verso of last leaf a bit dusted. Disbound. Ownership inscription of Abel Smith (trimmed) Trinity Coll. at head of title. ESTC T125221. Verse. Feilding, b.1761, was the son of Basil Feilding, 6th Earl of Denbigh & educated at Trinity College, Cambridge. This is his only volume of published verse. In 1779, James Donally tried to blackmail Feilding by accusing him of sexual assault; Feilding countered by accusing Donally of highway robbery in Soho Square. Donally was found guilty & executed.
Published by London: printed for J. Walter at Charing Cross; sold also by Mr. Merrill at Cambridge and by Mr. Crutwell at Bath, 1781
Seller: Christopher Edwards ABA ILAB, Henley-on-Thames, OXON, United Kingdom
4to, pp. 19, [1]; first and last page very lightly dustsoiled; small unobtrusive old ink library number on the title page, but a good copy, uncut; in recent wrappers. Charles John Fielding (b. 1761) was the younger son of the Earl of Denbigh: the poem is dedicated to his brother William, styled Viscount Feilding. This is a somewhat sentimental poem in a pastoral mode: the brothers are two shepherds, and at the end the poet reveals that he is to be identified with Damon, and his brother William with Dorylas: 'May'st thou, blest Youth, with endless laurel cround, Renown'd for conquest, as for worth renown'd, Long live thy Country's firm defence to prove, And gain a Nation's, as a Brother's love!' The young Lord Feilding (b. 1760) was indeed an army officer, and raised a regiment of light dragoons in 1794; he died in 1799 the year before his father.
Published by Printed for J. Walter, London, 1781
Seller: Antiquates Ltd - ABA, ILAB, Wareham, Dorset, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
First edition. 19pp, [1]. Original publisher's marbled wrappers. Lightly rubbed and marked. Internally clean and crisp. Presentation copy, inked inscription to verso of upper wrapper: 'From the Author'. The sole edition, in original state, of Charles John Feilding's (1761-1788) only published work, a sentimental verse dialogue dedicated to his brother, British Army officer and politician William Robert Feilding, Viscount Feilding (1760-1799). An archetypal contribution to the pastoral genre, the poem takes the form of an impassioned discussion between two shepherds, siblings Damon and Dorylas, whom at the conclusion are revealed to be representations of the author and his brother respectively. ESTC T125221. Jackson p.85. Size: Quarto.
Published by [Ralph Maud], Vancouver, B.C
Seller: Tony Power, Books, North Vancouver, BC, Canada
First Edition
Original Wraps. Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. 40 issues (of total 57 published between 1996 and 2012. some are double or triple issues). Most are fine or near fine -- mimeo 8 x 11 wraps (one staple). A substantial run of this one-man journal of Olson scholarship edited by Raph Maud. Includes 47 of total 57 issues (some are double or triple issues): #4 (March 1994), #8 (June 1995)--#47/48 (Nov. 2002), #50 (Sept. 2003)--#52 (April 2004), #59/60/61 (Sept. 2006), #63 (June 2010), #67 (March 2012). (Contents of first 26 issues: #1. Jack Clarke memorial; "Duende, Muse, and Angel" (Vancouver, 1963) tape transcription; Charles Olson Society business. #2. Olson reading at Goddard College (1962) tape transcription; Olson letter to George Bowering; chronology of Olson's visits with Ezra Pound. #3. Harry Levin on Olson's Harvard reading (1962); "Reading at Berkeley: The Next Day" (1965) tape transcription; Goddard reading, part 2. #4. "Talk at Cortland" (1962) tape transcription; Ralph Maud's visit with Philip Whalen. #5. A Melville Issue: Maud's critique of the Northwestern-Newberry edition of Moby-Dick; Goddard reading, part 3. #6. Berkeley miscellany; Olson's visit to Toronto (1960) by Kenneth McRobbie. #7."A Challenge to Marjorie Perloff;" Olson's correspondence with Suzanne Mowat, Zoe Brown et al. at Berkeley, 1965 and after. #8. A Special Issue for the Robin Blaser Conference: "Quicks and Strings," with 15 letters from Olson to Blaser (1957-59); Perloff's reply re. Olson's "misogyny." #9."Death of a Poet" (newspaper account of Olson's funeral, and an obituary); Thomas Parkinson obit. and linkage with Berkeley '65; Richard Wilbur on Olson at Wesleyan U.; Gerald Burns on errors in the UCal Maximus Poems; Rachel Blau Duplessis on Perloff. #10. The Charles Olson Festival in Gloucester (1995), transcript of panel discussion, with photos. #11. "As I Recall: Charles Olson and Ezra Pound," a memoir of post-war Washington by Frank Moore, with two letters from Olson. #12 "The 'Christine Kerrigan' Affair:" Maud on Tom Clark's interpretations of Olson's relationship with Panna Grady; Olson's review of Hemingway's Death in the Afternoon. #13. A Buffalo Issue: Memoirs byAlbert Cook and Mac Hammond; Olson letter to Maud re. the Feinberg Certificate; Olson's answer to a faculty questionnaire. #14/15. "The Correspondence of Robert Payne and Charles Olson," edited by Ralph Maud. #16. Letters to the editor; "Background to Berkeley?IX;" annotations and corrections of the original Muthologos version of "Reading at Berkeley." #17. The Ralph Maud Collection of Charles Olson's Books; proposed Charles Olson Centre; topics for Olson studies; Maud's involvement in Olson studies. #18. Vancouver press on photographer Harry Redl; contact sheets of Redl's photos, San Francisco, 1957; Joseph E. Garland's memorial to Olson; Maud on Olson's place in Melville scholarship, part 2. #19. Recollections of Olson in Buffalo by Albert Glover, with letters from Olson to Glover. #20 "Berkeley: Free Speech and Free Verse" in The Nation (1965), with Olson's and others' responses and a manifesto by Mario Savio and others; Gerald Burns on Olson's difficulties with the typography of Maximus Poems IV, V, VI. #21. Barry Miles's review of Maximus IV, V, VI and liner notes for Olson's Folkways recording; "A Melville Section;" "Letter for Melville 1951" explicated byMaud; Berkeley '65, continued; Asheville, NC show honoring Black Mountain College. #22. "The William Bronk-Charles Olson Correspondence," edited by Burt Kimmelman. #23/24. Storrs Special Double Issue; news from UConn Special Collections curator Rutherford Witthus; Olson's notebooks listed; detailed transcription from the 1945 notebooks. #25. Letters from Fielding Dawson; Hilda Morley's review of Duberman's Black Mountain College; John Clarke on Tom Clark; Gerald Burns's review of Maud's Charles Olson's Reading. #26. Greg Gibson's memoir of Jean Kaiser; Michael Rumaker's Black Mountain.).