SAMPLE
ROWE, Elizabeth Singer (1674-1737).:
Friendship in Death; in Letters from the Dead to the Living. To which are added letters moral and entertaining, in prose and verse. Cooke's Edition. - hardcover
1797, ISBN: eee7b65f813a6aa832d9925da4e5b9ef
Cape Town: Struik Publishers (Pty) Ltd. Near Fine with no dust jacket. 1995. Sixth Printing. Hardcover. Bottom rear corner bumped. ; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 224 pages; Extra post… More...
Cape Town: Struik Publishers (Pty) Ltd. Near Fine with no dust jacket. 1995. Sixth Printing. Hardcover. Bottom rear corner bumped. ; 4to 11" - 13" tall; 224 pages; Extra postage required for priority and international shipping. ., Struik Publishers (Pty) Ltd, 1995, 4, London:: C. Cooke, [1797]., 1797. 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; heavily worn, cover off. Ink signatures on title and title verso (Madam Codman, Josh. Brooksby and George Wilson), rubber-ink stamped numbers on title verso, blind emboss stamps on first and last few leaves, including title. Bookplate of Charles T. Congdon [Charles Taber Congdon (1821-1891) "Pernoctant Nobis"]. As is. Elizabeth Singer Rowe was an English religious poet, this being her most popular work. Provenance: "Charles Taber Congdon began his journalistic career by cleaning the floors of the New Bedford Courier and delivering papers. He went to Brown University in 1837 (he provides details of this experience in his 1880 memoir Reminiscences of a Journalist), but left the program after three years and returned to New Bedford. There he first worked as a reporter for the Daily Register and later as editor of the Daily Bulletin and associate editor of the Daily Mercury. In 1857 Horace Greeley personally asked Congdon to come to New York City and work for the New York Tribune. During this time, he became known as "Greeley's right hand man." Other Tribune reporters noted that "Congdon wrote from the head while Greeley wrote from the heart" (J. Lee). Congdon was an avid supporter of the abolitionist movement." Lehigh University. See: Peter Walmsley, "Whigs in Heaven: Elizabeth Rowe's Friendship in Death". Eighteenth-Century Studies. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011; Paula R. Backscheider, Elizabeth Singer Rowe and the Development of the English Novel. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013. Full title: De Variis Disputandi Methodis Veteris Ecclesiae. Rectore Universitatis Eberhardinae Carolinae Magnificentissimo Serenissimo ac Potentissimo Duce et Domino, Domino Carolo, Duce Wirtembergiae et Tecciae Regnante. . .., C. Cooke, [1797]., 1797, 0<
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SAMPLE
ROWE, Elizabeth Singer (1674-1737).:
Friendship in Death; in Letters from the Dead to the Living. To which are added letters moral and entertaining, in prose and verse. Cooke’s Edition. - used book
1797, ISBN: eee7b65f813a6aa832d9925da4e5b9ef
[SC: 25.27], [PU: C. Cooke, [1797]., London:], POETRY, 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; he… More...
[SC: 25.27], [PU: C. Cooke, [1797]., London:], POETRY, 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; heavily worn, cover off. Ink signatures on title and title verso (Madam Codman, Josh. Brooksby and George Wilson), rubber-ink stamped numbers on title verso, blind emboss stamps on first and last few leaves, including title. Bookplate of Charles T. Congdon [Charles Taber Congdon (1821-1891) "Pernoctant Nobis"]. As is. Elizabeth Singer Rowe was an English religious poet, this being her most popular work. Provenance: "Charles Taber Congdon began his journalistic career by cleaning the floors of the New Bedford Courier and delivering papers. He went to Brown University in 1837 (he provides details of this experience in his 1880 memoir Reminiscences of a Journalist), but left the program after three years and returned to New Bedford. There he first worked as a reporter for the Daily Register and later as editor of the Daily Bulletin and associate editor of the Daily Mercury. In 1857 Horace Greeley personally asked Congdon to come to New York City and work for the New York Tribune. During this time, he became known as "Greeley’s right hand man." Other Tribune reporters noted that "Congdon wrote from the head while Greeley wrote from the heart" (J. Lee). Congdon was an avid supporter of the abolitionist movement." â€Â" Lehigh University. See: Peter Walmsley, "Whigs in Heaven: Elizabeth Rowe’s Friendship in Death". Eighteenth-Century Studies. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011; Paula R. Backscheider, Elizabeth Singer Rowe and the Development of the English Novel. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013. Full title: De Variis Disputandi Methodis Veteris Ecclesiae. Rectore Universitatis Eberhardinae Carolinae Magnificentissimo Serenissimo ac Potentissimo Duce et Domino, Domino Carolo, Duce Wirtembergiae et Tecciae Regnante. . .<
| | ZVAB.comJeff Weber Rare Books, Montreux, VAUD, Switzerland [82135430] [Rating: 4 (von 5)] Shipping costs: EUR 25.27 Details... |
(*) Book out-of-stock means that the book is currently not available at any of the associated platforms we search.
SAMPLE
ROWE, Elizabeth Singer (1674-1737).:
Friendship in Death; in Letters from the Dead to the Living. To which are added letters moral and entertaining, in prose and verse. Cooke's Edition. - used book
1797, ISBN: eee7b65f813a6aa832d9925da4e5b9ef
[SC: 18.55], [PU: C. Cooke, [1797]., London:], POETRY, 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; he… More...
[SC: 18.55], [PU: C. Cooke, [1797]., London:], POETRY, 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; heavily worn, cover off. Ink signatures on title and title verso (Madam Codman, Josh. Brooksby and George Wilson), rubber-ink stamped numbers on title verso, blind emboss stamps on first and last few leaves, including title. Bookplate of Charles T. Congdon [Charles Taber Congdon (1821-1891) "Pernoctant Nobis"]. As is. Elizabeth Singer Rowe was an English religious poet, this being her most popular work. Provenance: "Charles Taber Congdon began his journalistic career by cleaning the floors of the New Bedford Courier and delivering papers. He went to Brown University in 1837 (he provides details of this experience in his 1880 memoir Reminiscences of a Journalist), but left the program after three years and returned to New Bedford. There he first worked as a reporter for the Daily Register and later as editor of the Daily Bulletin and associate editor of the Daily Mercury. In 1857 Horace Greeley personally asked Congdon to come to New York City and work for the New York Tribune. During this time, he became known as "Greeley's right hand man." Other Tribune reporters noted that "Congdon wrote from the head while Greeley wrote from the heart" (J. Lee). Congdon was an avid supporter of the abolitionist movement." â€Â" Lehigh University. See: Peter Walmsley, "Whigs in Heaven: Elizabeth Rowe's Friendship in Death". Eighteenth-Century Studies. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011; Paula R. Backscheider, Elizabeth Singer Rowe and the Development of the English Novel. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013. Full title: De Variis Disputandi Methodis Veteris Ecclesiae. Rectore Universitatis Eberhardinae Carolinae Magnificentissimo Serenissimo ac Potentissimo Duce et Domino, Domino Carolo, Duce Wirtembergiae et Tecciae Regnante. . .<
| | ZVAB.comJeff Weber Rare Books, Montreux, VAUD, Switzerland [82135430] [Rating: 4 (von 5)] Shipping costs: EUR 18.55 Details... |
(*) Book out-of-stock means that the book is currently not available at any of the associated platforms we search.
SAMPLE
ROWE, Elizabeth Singer (1674-1737).:
Friendship in Death; in Letters from the Dead to the Living. To which are added letters moral and entertaining, in prose and verse. Cooke's Edition. - used book
1797, ISBN: eee7b65f813a6aa832d9925da4e5b9ef
[SC: 18.55], [PU: C. Cooke, [1797]., London:], POETRY, 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; he… More...
[SC: 18.55], [PU: C. Cooke, [1797]., London:], POETRY, 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; heavily worn, cover off. Ink signatures on title and title verso (Madam Codman, Josh. Brooksby and George Wilson), rubber-ink stamped numbers on title verso, blind emboss stamps on first and last few leaves, including title. Bookplate of Charles T. Congdon [Charles Taber Congdon (1821-1891) "Pernoctant Nobis"]. As is. Elizabeth Singer Rowe was an English religious poet, this being her most popular work. Provenance: "Charles Taber Congdon began his journalistic career by cleaning the floors of the New Bedford Courier and delivering papers. He went to Brown University in 1837 (he provides details of this experience in his 1880 memoir Reminiscences of a Journalist), but left the program after three years and returned to New Bedford. There he first worked as a reporter for the Daily Register and later as editor of the Daily Bulletin and associate editor of the Daily Mercury. In 1857 Horace Greeley personally asked Congdon to come to New York City and work for the New York Tribune. During this time, he became known as "Greeley's right hand man." Other Tribune reporters noted that "Congdon wrote from the head while Greeley wrote from the heart" (J. Lee). Congdon was an avid supporter of the abolitionist movement." â€Â" Lehigh University. See: Peter Walmsley, "Whigs in Heaven: Elizabeth Rowe's Friendship in Death". Eighteenth-Century Studies. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011; Paula R. Backscheider, Elizabeth Singer Rowe and the Development of the English Novel. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013. Full title: De Variis Disputandi Methodis Veteris Ecclesiae. Rectore Universitatis Eberhardinae Carolinae Magnificentissimo Serenissimo ac Potentissimo Duce et Domino, Domino Carolo, Duce Wirtembergiae et Tecciae Regnante. . .<
| | ZVAB.comJeff Weber Rare Books, Montreux, VAUD, Switzerland [82135430] [Rating: 5 (von 5)] Shipping costs: EUR 18.55 Details... |
(*) Book out-of-stock means that the book is currently not available at any of the associated platforms we search.
SAMPLE
ROWE, Elizabeth Singer (1674-1737).:
Friendship in Death; in Letters from the Dead to the Living. To which are added letters moral and entertaining, in prose and verse. Cooke's Edition. - used book
1797, ISBN: eee7b65f813a6aa832d9925da4e5b9ef
London:: C. Cooke, [1797]., 1797. 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; heavily worn, cover of… More...
London:: C. Cooke, [1797]., 1797. 12mo. 300, xii, 12 pp. Four engraved plates, tailpieces, small engraving on title; stained, foxed throughout. Original dark calf; heavily worn, cover off. Ink signatures on title and title verso (Madam Codman, Josh. Brooksby and George Wilson), rubber-ink stamped numbers on title verso, blind emboss stamps on first and last few leaves, including title. Bookplate of Charles T. Congdon [Charles Taber Congdon (1821-1891) "Pernoctant Nobis"]. As is. Elizabeth Singer Rowe was an English religious poet, this being her most popular work. Provenance: "Charles Taber Congdon began his journalistic career by cleaning the floors of the New Bedford Courier and delivering papers. He went to Brown University in 1837 (he provides details of this experience in his 1880 memoir Reminiscences of a Journalist), but left the program after three years and returned to New Bedford. There he first worked as a reporter for the Daily Register and later as editor of the Daily Bulletin and associate editor of the Daily Mercury. In 1857 Horace Greeley personally asked Congdon to come to New York City and work for the New York Tribune. During this time, he became known as "Greeley's right hand man." Other Tribune reporters noted that "Congdon wrote from the head while Greeley wrote from the heart" (J. Lee). Congdon was an avid supporter of the abolitionist movement." Lehigh University. See: Peter Walmsley, "Whigs in Heaven: Elizabeth Rowe's Friendship in Death". Eighteenth-Century Studies. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011; Paula R. Backscheider, Elizabeth Singer Rowe and the Development of the English Novel. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013. Full title: De Variis Disputandi Methodis Veteris Ecclesiae. Rectore Universitatis Eberhardinae Carolinae Magnificentissimo Serenissimo ac Potentissimo Duce et Domino, Domino Carolo, Duce Wirtembergiae et Tecciae Regnante. . .., C. Cooke, [1797]., 1797, 0<
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(*) Book out-of-stock means that the book is currently not available at any of the associated platforms we search.