Language: English
Published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1914
Seller: Object Relations IOBA PBFA, London, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 3rd printing (1914). 410pp. Original black cloth with gilt titles to spine. VG copy, binding square and tight, cloth covers clean, gilt bright, some minor nicks and creasing to some middle pages fore edges, ink name on ffep, otherwise internally very good, no dust jacket.
hardcover. Condition: VeryGood. A copy that may have been read, very minimal wear and tear. May have a remainder mark.
Published by Macmillan, London, 1959
Seller: Alexander's Books, Royal Leamington Spa, United Kingdom
Hardback. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Reprint Hardback blue cloth xxxii + 184 pp Frontispiece portrait Good condition. Latin text annotated in pencil Previous owner's name on front free end paper.
Condition: good. Fast Free Shipping â" Good condition. It may show normal signs of use, such as light writing, highlighting, or library markings, but all pages are intact and the book is fully readable. A solid, complete copy that's ready to enjoy.
Published by Macmillan, London, 1958
Seller: Kubik Fine Books Ltd., ABAA, Dayton, OH, U.S.A.
Hardcover. 410p. A small red cloth hardcover book in good condition. Front cover slightly warped and back edge of spine cloth nicked. Owner's bookplates and notes on front endpaper. Text clean and binding secure. A good reading copy. Main text in Latin; introduction and notes in English. Macmillan's Classical Series; measures approx. 6.75" x 4.5".
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Cover and edges may have some wear.
Condition: acceptable.
Published by Oxonii E Typographeo Clarendoniano, 1959
Seller: World of Rare Books, Goring-by-Sea, SXW, United Kingdom
Condition: Good. 1959. Reprinted. Unpaginated. No dust jacket. Blue cloth with gilt lettering to spine. Latin language edition of the operas of Horace, edited by H. W. Garrod and annotated by Edward C. Wickham. Binding remains firm. Pages remain bright and clear with minimal tanning. Pastedowns and endpapers remain bright, with pen marks to front pastedown. Boards have moderate edge wear with heavy rubbing to surfaces. Moderate crushing to spine ends. Heavy fading to spine and gilt, with gilt having been almost entirely worn away. Moderate tanning and foxing to textblock.
Published by E Typographeo Clarendoniano [The Clarendon Press], Oxonii (Oxford), 1963
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Reprint of the second edition. Introduction and notes by Edward C. Wickham. Edited by H. W. Garrod. Small octavo. Text in Latin. Topedge with some surface loss to the cloth and a bit of staining (not affecting the interior), an otherwise bright very good copy in a toned and moderately worn, very good dust jacket with two tiny stains along the topedge and a tiny creased tear at the spine base. Oxford Classical Texts.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: None. Blue cloth boards with faded black lettering on front and spine. Spine is wrinkled, back hinge is beginning to crack at top, but pages are tight. Margin notes, in both pencil and pen, mostly in Sermon II and Epistularum I (by George Dimock, Jr., whose name was inscribed in 1914 on endpaper.) Notes in Latin.
Published by Oxford University Press, 1967
Seller: Midtown Scholar Bookstore, Harrisburg, PA, U.S.A.
hardcover. Condition: Good. No dust jacket. Good hardcover with some shelfwear; may have previous owner's name inside. Standard-sized.
Language: English
Published by Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1907
Seller: Object Relations IOBA PBFA, London, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Pitt Press Series. 3 volume set. Mixed printings (1907-1926). 103; 69; 108pp. Original green cloth with black lettering to upper boards and spine. All vols GOOD reading copies, covers a slightly rubbed and worn at edges, spines toned, ink name on front pastedown in each volume, occasional ink annotations within.
Published by Kegan Paul, Trench & Soc., London, 1888
Seller: Jeffrey H. Marks, Rare Books, ABAA, Rochester, NY, U.S.A.
302 pp. 12mo, publisher's full vellum lettered in red and stamped in gold and black. Front (inner) hinge split but underlying structure still sound; tight and sound with some very slight soiling to the vellum.
Language: English
Published by Cambridge at the University Press, Cambridge, England, 1932
Seller: Nimbus, Norwich, United Kingdom
Cloth Hardcover. Condition: Good. First Edition, Fourth Reprint. 'Pitt Press Series'. Tan cloth hardcover. Pp xxviii, 120. Wrinkle to cloth on front board, otherwise this is a square, tight, clean copy; a few small, neat annotation but contents are bright and tight; previous owner's name to blank endpaper. Images/further information available upon request.
Condition: As New. Like New condition. Like New dust jacket. Latin edition. A near perfect copy that may have very minor cosmetic defects.
Seller: D2D Books, Berkshire, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Fair. Publisher Oxonii: Clarendoniano 1941 hardback blue cloth gold gilt title, boards are good but there are annotations throughout but still in good reading order. Full refund if not satisfied. 24 hour despatch.
Hard Cover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. First Edition. li, 406pp. Binding is grey cloth with gilt titling to spine and black titling to front board. Some light general wear. Sporadic pencil annotation. 327012.
£ 27.76
Quantity: Over 20 available
Add to basketCondition: New. In.
Oxford at the Clarendon Press / Oxonii E Typographeo Clarendoniano, London / Londini 1947. Reprinted / Editio Altera. Clothbound hardcover with gilded text along the spine. Signature and dating on the front flyleaf. Heavily annotated and underlined, all done in pencil. Unpaginated. Approximately 180 pgs. Pages and textblock slightly foxed. Text in Latin. The book is in good condition.
Published by Kegan Paul, Trench & Soc, Londini [= London], 1882
Seller: Evening Star Books, ABAA/ILAB, Madison, WI, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Later edition. Small 8vo. [9], 4-293, [3] pp. Full contemporary parchment with lettering in red on the front board and spine, black decoration on the front board; top edge gilt. Grey endpapers and pastedowns. Title page printed in red and black. Illustrated by a frontispiece engraving of Horace in repose. The rear hinge starting but the binding is secure, a small push to the top textblock. The armorial bookplate of R. Milne-Redhead on the front pastedown.
Published by Published by Cambridge University Press Warehouse, London, 1906
, xi, 410 pages. Odes are in English, the rest is in Latin. First Edition thus Reprint , spine is cracked along joints but boards well held and book block tight, stains from the leather binding along edges of free endpapers, foxing on prelim pages and rear pastedown and free endpaper, pencil notes to rear endpapers, pages clean, in very good condition , bound in brown cloth with polished calf half binding, five raised bands and gilt title on spine, red speckled book block edges , small Octavo, 17 x 12 cm Hardback ISBN:
Condition: Poor. Some marks and fading to the cover of the book. A little worn to its edges. Formerly owned, inscriptions to the front of the book. Clean and readable inside.
Published by Limited Editions Club, New York, 1961
Seller: St Philip's Books, P.B.F.A., B.A., Oxford, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Limited edition. ~FULL TITLES: Odes and Epodes: In the Original Latin and In English Translations Selected and Edited with an Introduction by Louis Untermeyer. / Pages from Earlier Editions of Horace from the Beginnings of Printing to the Present Century. Selected to Accompany the Odes and Epodes, with a Bibliographical Note by John T Winterich. ~ Limited edition: #492 of 1500. 2 books in Very Good+ slipcase. Quarter pale brown cloth, marbled paper to boards. 1 book 8vo (19 x 15cm), the other 4to (36 x 25cm). No ownership marks. ~Robust packaging. Tracking can be added to overseas orders. Size: xxiv, 394 + c. 62pp. Binding sound, text unmarked.
Hardback. Condition: Very Good. None stated (illustrator). Two collections of works by the ancient Greek and Roman authors Horace and Aeschylus, bound in full paper vellum. Two volumes.In full paper vellum uniform bindings with red decorations.Written in Greek, with English introductions.This set features two volumes of works by two influential ancient Roman and Greek authors; Horatius Flaccus, otherwise known as 'Horace', and Aeschyli, otherwise known as Aeschylus. The works feature their tragedies, poetry and operas. Bound in full paper vellum. Externally smart with handling marks, fading to the spines and rubbing to the spine to 'Aeschyli'. Offsetting and spotting to the endpapers with a past owner's signature to the front free endpaper to 'Horati'. Internally firmly bound with lightly age toned pages. Very Good. book.
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. 12mo. 293pp. Engraved frontispiece. Text in Latin. Flexible parchment printed in red and black. Lacks front fly, modest soiling on boards, front hinge a trifle tender, a very good copy.
Published by London: Kegan, Paul, Trench & Soc., 1882., 1882
Seller: Blue Mountain Books & Manuscripts, Ltd., Cadyville, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Condition: Very good. - Octavo, 8 inches high by 5 inches wide. Hardcover, bound in green morocco titled with floral decorations in gilt between raised bands on the spine and with gilt ruled frames with corner floral decorations framing the covers. The binding is further enhanced with inner gilt dentelles with floral decorations. The top edge is gilt. The spine and top edge of the front cover are faded to brown. viii & 293 deckle-edged pages with the Latin text, illustrated with an engraved frontispiece by Leopold Lowenstein (1842-1898) after an oil painting titled "A Difficult Line From Horace" by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema (1836-1912). There are minor flaws only, else near fine. Number 28 of 50 Large Paper Copies printed at the Chiswick Press during April 1882 and signed "C. Whittingham et Soc." on the colophon leaf. From the library of Lincoln MacVeagh and his wife Margaret with their "Arcades ambo" bookplate. Lincoln MacVeagh (1890-1972), a Renaissance man, graduated from Harvard magna cum laude in 1913. He went on to study languages at the Sorbonne and became fluent in German, French, Spanish, Latin, Greek and Classical Greek. He served in the Atois, St. Mihiel and Meuse Argonne campaigns of World War I as an aide to the commanding general of the 80th Division and of the Ninth and Sixth Army Corps. He rose to the rank of Major. After the war he became a director of the Henry Holt and Company publishing firm where he became friendly with the poet Robert Frost. In 1923 he left the firm and founded the Dial Press. His name appears on the imprint of many of their publications. In 1933 President Roosevelt appointed him Minister to Greece. He followed presentation of his credentials with a speech in Classical Greek. While in Greece he conducted excavations beneath the Acropolis and made archeological contributions to the National Museum in Athens. He left Greece in 1941 when the German army over ran the country. From there he was appointed the first US Minister to Iceland where he negotiated agreements for the construction of the Keflavik airfield. In late 1942 he became Minister to the Union of South Africa and coordinated American wartime agencies there. In 1943 he was sent to Cairo as Ambassador so that he could assist the governments in exile of Greece and Yugoslavia. He returned to Athens as Ambassador in 1944. MacVeagh gave secret testimony before Congress concerning the Balkans in 1947, testimony that was an important factor in the formation of the Truman Doctrine. In 1948 as Ambassador to Portugal MacVeagh was influential in admitting her into NATO. In 1952 President Truman named him Ambassador to Spain. President Truman wrote to him on March 9, 1948: "On the occasion of your appointment as Ambassador to Portugal, I would like to make some personal expression of appreciation for the high services you have already rendered your country. During the past fifteen critical years you have served with distinction as Chief of the United states Missions to Iceland, the Union of South Africa, Yugoslavia and Greece. In this last post especially - as Minister from 1933 to 1941 and as Ambassador since 1943 - your scholarly statesmanship and diplomatic judgment have been of the utmost value.".