Published by New York, NY, Publishers: Fordham University Press, 1975., 1975
ISBN 10: 0823209911 ISBN 13: 9780823209910
Language: English
Seller: Ganymed - Wissenschaftliches Antiquariat, Meldorf, Germany
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Add to basketFirst Edition. Gr.-8°. VIII, 501 Pages. Publishers: Fordham University Press. 1st Edition (1975). VIII, 501 Pages. Original Cloth-Volume (gilt Lettering on the Spine). No Dust-jacket. Ex-Library-Copy. Library-Button on the Spine. Library-Stamp [dropped out] on Title. Red Feltpen-Markings on the Cutting. No Markings in the Text! No Underlinings! No handwritten Owner-Notation! Cover with small Signs of Usage.
Published by Fordham University Press,, 1975
ISBN 10: 0823209911 ISBN 13: 9780823209910
Language: English
Seller: Bookplate, Chestertown, MD, U.S.A.
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Limited Edition. Clean, unmarked copy of Volume One only. DJ VG+ condition. First edition, Limited edition of 1500 copies. BP/Letters.
Published by Fordham University Press, New York, 1975
ISBN 10: 0823209911 ISBN 13: 9780823209910
Language: English
Seller: Lazarus Books Limited, Blackpool, LANCS, United Kingdom
First Edition
Buckram. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First Edition. 1975 First edition, Limited to 1500 copies. Size large octavo, 501 and 567 pages, a heavy set. Green buckram cloth covered boards with gilt titles to the spines, with the dust jackets. Book condition very good, corners bumped and gilt on spine rubbed on volume 1, writing erased from front end-paper in each volume, otherwise the pages are very clean throughout. Dust jackets condition very good, slight edgewear, a couple of small nicks and slight curl to top edge and small green scuff mark - possibly from when produced as same colour as the ink of the titles - of jacket on volume 2, not price clipped. Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
Published by Fordham University Press, 1975
ISBN 10: 0823209911 ISBN 13: 9780823209910
Language: English
Seller: Burke's Books, Eugene, OR, U.S.A.
First Edition
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: As New. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Forest green covers w/gilt title on spine. In very good jacket with a couple small closed tears. In mylar protector.
Published by Fordham University Press, US, 1993
ISBN 10: 0823209954 ISBN 13: 9780823209958
Language: English
Seller: Rarewaves USA United, OSWEGO, IL, U.S.A.
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Add to basketHardback. Condition: New. On April 26, 1865, as Abraham Lincoln's funeral cortege paused in Union Square, New York, before being taken by rail to Springfield, Illinois, William Cullen Bryant listened as his own verse elegy for the slain president was read to a great concourse of mourners by the Reverend Samuel Osgood. Only five years earlier and a few blocks downtown, at Cooper Union, Bryant had introduced the prairie candidate to his first eastern audience. There his masterful appeal to the conscience of the nation prepared the way for his election to the presidency on the verge of the Civil War. Now, Bryant stood below Henry Kirke Brown's equestrian statue of George Washington, impressing Osgood as if he were "the 19tth Century itself thinking over the nation and the age in that presence." Bryant's staunch support of the Union cause throughout the war, and of Lincoln's war efforts, no less than his known influence with the president, led several prominent public figures to urge that he write Lincoln's biography. Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote him, "No man combines the qualities for his biographer so completely as yourself and the finished task would be a noble crown to a noble literary life." But Bryant declined, declaring his inability to record impartially critical events in which he had taken so central a part. Furthermore, while preoccupied with the editorial direction of the New York Evening Post, he was just then repossessing and enlarging his family's homestead at Cummington, Massachusetts, where he hoped his ailing wife might, during long summers in mountain air, regain her health. But in July 1866, Frances died of recurrent rheumatic fever, and, Bryant confessed to Richard Dana, he felt as "one cast out of Paradise." After France's death Bryant traveled with his daughter Julia for nearly a year through Great Britain and the Continent, where he met British statesman and novelist Edward Bulwer Lytton and French literary critic Hyppolyte Taine, renewed his friendship with Spanish poet Carolina Coronado, Italian liberator Giuseppe Garibaldi, and British and American artists, and visited the family of the young French journalist Georges Clemenceau, as well as the graves of earlier acquaintances Francis Lord Jeffrey and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. In his spare moments Bryant sought solace by beginning the translation of Homer, and Longfellow had found relief after his wife's tragic death by rendering into English Dante's Divine Comedy. Home again in New York, Bryant bought and settled in a house at 24 West 16th Street which would be his city home for the rest of his life. Here he completed major publications, including the Iliad and Odyssey of Homer and an exhaustive Library of Poetry and Song, and added to published tributes to earlier friends, such as Thomas Cole, Fenimore Cooper, and Washington Irving, memorial discourses on Fitz-Greene Halleck and Gulian Verplanck. In addition to his continued direction of the New York Homeopathic Medical college and the American Fr.
Published by Fordham University Press, 1977
ISBN 10: 082320992X ISBN 13: 9780823209927
Language: English
Seller: GreatBookPricesUK, Woodford Green, United Kingdom
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Add to basketCondition: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
Published by Fordham University Press, US, 1993
ISBN 10: 0823209962 ISBN 13: 9780823209965
Language: English
Seller: Rarewaves USA United, OSWEGO, IL, U.S.A.
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Add to basketHardback. Condition: New. In January 1872, Bryant traveled to Mexico City, where he was greeted warmly by President Benito Juarez; on this and other occasions he was feted for the Evening Post's sturdy condemnation in 1863 of the abortive invasion of Mexico, which was freshly remembered there. At the close of his visit a local newspaper remarked that the "honors and hospitality which were so lavishly and generously conferred upon him were the spontaneous outpouring of a grateful people, who had not forgotten that when Mexico was friendless Mr. Bryant became her friend." Returning in April through New Orleans and up the Mississippi by steamboat to Cincinnati, he was greeted at a public reception by Governor Rutherford Hayes, who was pleased by his "winning and lovable" manners and "pithy" anecdotes. That spring Bryant built a library for his birthplace, Cummington, stocking it with several thousand books procured for him by the publisher George Palmer Putnam in New York and London. The following year, after the last of his many travels - this time a revisit to South Carolina and Florida - he made a similar gift to Roslyn. These benefactions won him honorary membership in the newly formed American Library Association, and an invitation to open a library at Princeton University, which made him an honorary doctor of letters. Ultimately, in the final year of his life, his plans for the Bryant Library at Cummington, solicited from the White House by President Hayes, provided the basic design for the first presidential library in the country - that established by Hayes in Fremont, Ohio. An improbable by-product of the presidential race in 1872 was a proposal by leading journalists that Bryant become -in his seventy-eighth year - a candidate to oppose President Grant and his challenger for the Republican nomination, the mercurial editor of the New York Tribune, Horace Greeley. Bryant's immediate refusal to take the suggestion seriously was succinct, and tinged with humor. It was impossible, he declared in his newspaper, that he should receive the nomination, and "equally impossible," if it were offered, that he should "commit the folly of accepting it." Four years later he was distressed at being unable to switch his journal's support of the Republican candidate Hayes to the Democratic candidate, his old companion in political reform, Samuel Jones Tilden. As Bryant approached and entered his eighties, his writing and public speaking continued without slackening. Between 1872 and 1878 he published his collected Orations and Addresses, edited a revision of his anthology of poetry and two volumes of landscape sketches, Picturesque America, co-authored a four-volume Popular History of the United States, and undertook to co-edit a three-volume set of Shakespeare's plays, while also producing long monographs on several seventeenth-century English poets. He dedicated statues of Shakespeare, Walter Scott, and Fitz-Green Halleck in Central Park, and spoke elsewhere on Robert Burns, Benjam.
Published by Fordham University Press, 1977
ISBN 10: 082320992X ISBN 13: 9780823209927
Language: English
Seller: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, U.S.A.
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Add to basketCondition: As New. Unread book in perfect condition.
Published by Fordham University Press, 1977
ISBN 10: 082320992X ISBN 13: 9780823209927
Language: English
Seller: Kennys Bookshop and Art Galleries Ltd., Galway, GY, Ireland
£ 100.89
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Add to basketCondition: New. Num Pages: 567 pages, illustrations. BIC Classification: BG. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 3895 x 5830 x 43. Weight in Grams: 964. . 1977. Illustrated. hardcover. . . . .
Published by Fordham University Press, 1977
ISBN 10: 082320992X ISBN 13: 9780823209927
Language: English
Seller: GreatBookPricesUK, Woodford Green, United Kingdom
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Add to basketCondition: New.
Seller: Revaluation Books, Exeter, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Brand New. illustrated edition. 567 pages. 9.00x6.10x1.40 inches. In Stock.
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Add to basketCondition: New. Über den AutorrnrnWilliam Cullen Bryant (Edited By) William Cullen Bryant II, a collateral descendant, earned his Ph.D. at Columbia University. He taught at his alma mater and at the University of Iowa, Fordham University, and t.
Published by Fordham University Press, 1977
ISBN 10: 082320992X ISBN 13: 9780823209927
Language: English
Seller: Kennys Bookstore, Olney, MD, U.S.A.
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Add to basketCondition: New. Num Pages: 567 pages, illustrations. BIC Classification: BG. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 3895 x 5830 x 43. Weight in Grams: 964. . 1977. Illustrated. hardcover. . . . . Books ship from the US and Ireland.
Published by Fordham University Press, 1977
ISBN 10: 082320992X ISBN 13: 9780823209927
Language: English
Seller: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, U.S.A.
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Published by Fordham University Press Jan 1977, 1977
ISBN 10: 082320992X ISBN 13: 9780823209927
Language: English
Seller: AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Germany
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Add to basketBuch. Condition: Neu. Neuware - The second volume of William Cullen Bryant's letters opens in 1836 as he has just returned to New York from an extended visit to Europe to resume charge of the New York Evening Post, brought near to failure during his absence by his partner William Leggett's mismanagement. At the period's close, Bryant has found in John Bigelow an able editorial associate and astute partner, with whose help he has brought the paper close to its greatest financial prosperity and to national political and cultural influence.Bryant's letters show the versatility of his concern with the crucial political, social, artistic, and literary movements of his time, and the varied friendships he enjoyed despite his preoccupation with a controversial daily paper, and with the sustenance of a poetic reputation yet unequaled among Americans. As president of the New York Homeopathic Society, in letters and editorials urging widespread public parks, and in his presidency of the New York Society for the Abolition of the Punishment of Death, he gave attention to public health, recreation, and order. He urged the rights of labor, foreign and religious minorities, and free African Americans; his most powerful political effort of the period was in opposition to the spread of slavery through the conquest of Mexico. An early commitment to free trade in material goods was maintained in letters and editorials, and to that in ideas by his presidency of the American Copyright Club and his support of the efforts of Charles Dickens and Harriet Martineau to secure from the United States Congress and international copyright agreement.Bryant's first visit to Great Britain came at the height of his poetic and journalistic fame in 1845, bringing him into cordial intimacy with members of Parliament, scientists, journalists, artists, and writers. In detailed letters to his wife, published here for the first time, he describes the pleasures he took in breakfasting with the literary patron Samuel Rogers and the American minister Edward Everett, boating on the Thames with artists and with diarist Henry Crabb Robinson, spending an evening in the home of Leigh Hunt, and calling on the Wordsworths at Rydal Mount as well as in the distinctions paid him at a rally of the Anti-Corn-Law League in Covent Garden Theatre, and at the annual meeting in Cambridge of the British Association for the Advancement of Science.Equally fresh are most of the letters to prominent Americans, many of them his close friends, such as the two Danas, Bancroft, Cole, Cooper, Dewey, Dix, Downing, Durand, Forrest, Greenough, Irving, Longfellow, Simms, Tilden, Van Buren, and Weir. His letters to the Evening Post recounting his observations and experiences during travels abroad and in the South, West, and Northeast of the United States, which were copied widely in other newspapers and praised highly by many of their subscribers, are here made available to the present-day reader.The Letters of William Cullen Bryant: Volume II, 1836-1849 is available from the publisher on an open-access basis.
Published by Fordham University Press, US, 1993
ISBN 10: 0823209954 ISBN 13: 9780823209958
Language: English
Seller: Rarewaves USA, OSWEGO, IL, U.S.A.
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Add to basketHardback. Condition: New. On April 26, 1865, as Abraham Lincoln's funeral cortege paused in Union Square, New York, before being taken by rail to Springfield, Illinois, William Cullen Bryant listened as his own verse elegy for the slain president was read to a great concourse of mourners by the Reverend Samuel Osgood. Only five years earlier and a few blocks downtown, at Cooper Union, Bryant had introduced the prairie candidate to his first eastern audience. There his masterful appeal to the conscience of the nation prepared the way for his election to the presidency on the verge of the Civil War. Now, Bryant stood below Henry Kirke Brown's equestrian statue of George Washington, impressing Osgood as if he were "the 19tth Century itself thinking over the nation and the age in that presence." Bryant's staunch support of the Union cause throughout the war, and of Lincoln's war efforts, no less than his known influence with the president, led several prominent public figures to urge that he write Lincoln's biography. Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote him, "No man combines the qualities for his biographer so completely as yourself and the finished task would be a noble crown to a noble literary life." But Bryant declined, declaring his inability to record impartially critical events in which he had taken so central a part. Furthermore, while preoccupied with the editorial direction of the New York Evening Post, he was just then repossessing and enlarging his family's homestead at Cummington, Massachusetts, where he hoped his ailing wife might, during long summers in mountain air, regain her health. But in July 1866, Frances died of recurrent rheumatic fever, and, Bryant confessed to Richard Dana, he felt as "one cast out of Paradise." After France's death Bryant traveled with his daughter Julia for nearly a year through Great Britain and the Continent, where he met British statesman and novelist Edward Bulwer Lytton and French literary critic Hyppolyte Taine, renewed his friendship with Spanish poet Carolina Coronado, Italian liberator Giuseppe Garibaldi, and British and American artists, and visited the family of the young French journalist Georges Clemenceau, as well as the graves of earlier acquaintances Francis Lord Jeffrey and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. In his spare moments Bryant sought solace by beginning the translation of Homer, and Longfellow had found relief after his wife's tragic death by rendering into English Dante's Divine Comedy. Home again in New York, Bryant bought and settled in a house at 24 West 16th Street which would be his city home for the rest of his life. Here he completed major publications, including the Iliad and Odyssey of Homer and an exhaustive Library of Poetry and Song, and added to published tributes to earlier friends, such as Thomas Cole, Fenimore Cooper, and Washington Irving, memorial discourses on Fitz-Greene Halleck and Gulian Verplanck. In addition to his continued direction of the New York Homeopathic Medical college and the American Fr.
Published by Fordham University Press, US, 1993
ISBN 10: 0823209962 ISBN 13: 9780823209965
Language: English
Seller: Rarewaves USA, OSWEGO, IL, U.S.A.
£ 93.38
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Add to basketHardback. Condition: New. In January 1872, Bryant traveled to Mexico City, where he was greeted warmly by President Benito Juarez; on this and other occasions he was feted for the Evening Post's sturdy condemnation in 1863 of the abortive invasion of Mexico, which was freshly remembered there. At the close of his visit a local newspaper remarked that the "honors and hospitality which were so lavishly and generously conferred upon him were the spontaneous outpouring of a grateful people, who had not forgotten that when Mexico was friendless Mr. Bryant became her friend." Returning in April through New Orleans and up the Mississippi by steamboat to Cincinnati, he was greeted at a public reception by Governor Rutherford Hayes, who was pleased by his "winning and lovable" manners and "pithy" anecdotes. That spring Bryant built a library for his birthplace, Cummington, stocking it with several thousand books procured for him by the publisher George Palmer Putnam in New York and London. The following year, after the last of his many travels - this time a revisit to South Carolina and Florida - he made a similar gift to Roslyn. These benefactions won him honorary membership in the newly formed American Library Association, and an invitation to open a library at Princeton University, which made him an honorary doctor of letters. Ultimately, in the final year of his life, his plans for the Bryant Library at Cummington, solicited from the White House by President Hayes, provided the basic design for the first presidential library in the country - that established by Hayes in Fremont, Ohio. An improbable by-product of the presidential race in 1872 was a proposal by leading journalists that Bryant become -in his seventy-eighth year - a candidate to oppose President Grant and his challenger for the Republican nomination, the mercurial editor of the New York Tribune, Horace Greeley. Bryant's immediate refusal to take the suggestion seriously was succinct, and tinged with humor. It was impossible, he declared in his newspaper, that he should receive the nomination, and "equally impossible," if it were offered, that he should "commit the folly of accepting it." Four years later he was distressed at being unable to switch his journal's support of the Republican candidate Hayes to the Democratic candidate, his old companion in political reform, Samuel Jones Tilden. As Bryant approached and entered his eighties, his writing and public speaking continued without slackening. Between 1872 and 1878 he published his collected Orations and Addresses, edited a revision of his anthology of poetry and two volumes of landscape sketches, Picturesque America, co-authored a four-volume Popular History of the United States, and undertook to co-edit a three-volume set of Shakespeare's plays, while also producing long monographs on several seventeenth-century English poets. He dedicated statues of Shakespeare, Walter Scott, and Fitz-Green Halleck in Central Park, and spoke elsewhere on Robert Burns, Benjam.
Published by Fordham University Press, 1993
ISBN 10: 0823209954 ISBN 13: 9780823209958
Language: English
Seller: Mispah books, Redhill, SURRE, United Kingdom
hardcover. Condition: New. New. book.
Published by Fordham University Press, 1993
ISBN 10: 0823209962 ISBN 13: 9780823209965
Language: English
Seller: Mispah books, Redhill, SURRE, United Kingdom
hardcover. Condition: New. New. book.
Published by Fordham University Press, New York, 1975
Seller: Back in Time Rare Books, ABAA, FABA, Jacksonville, FL, U.S.A.
First Edition
£ 29.53
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First Edition. 6 1/4 X 9 1/8 Inches. Stated First Printing of each volume. One of only 1500 copies of each produced. Part of a larger six volume set. Volume one has a PO name and date on the FFEP. Hint of scuffing to jackets. Very nice copies overall.