Language: English
Published by Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1996
ISBN 10: 0847681874 ISBN 13: 9780847681877
Seller: Blindpig Books, Salt lake city, UT, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condition: Used - Good. Some wear. Very serviceable copy.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Former owner's gift ded on fep, else crisp and unmarked in illustrated, original, unclipped dj. 60pp. The original of this narrative poem was thought to have been written by a D.W. Nash around 1870, the time of the Franco-Prussian War which resulted in a crushing defeat for the French; the poem was full of foreboding about the future. In the 1918 edition, a new foreword suggested that those fears were justified and that the events of 1870 gave rise to World War I. In this new edition, the "Daily Telegraph" columnist Willy Poole reveals in his commentary how much of that prophecy is worthy of thought in 1995 - from the wavering of Altar and Crown, to the derision of words such as "honor" and "truth", and to the possible lack of wisdom to "yield to foreigners", for which read the EC.
Published by The Brynmill Press Ltd, 1983
Seller: Shore Books, London, United Kingdom
Magazine / Periodical
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 96 pages. Roger Nash "God and Beauty" / Roy Kerridge "Squeers, Social Workers" / Richard Poole "Childhood Sonnets & other Poems" / Duke Maskell "Does it Matter How Historians Write?" / John Ware "The Boy in the Crowd: the Thoughts of Sergei Nikolayevich Yurodkin".
Language: English
Published by Michael Joseph. London. 1995, 1995
ISBN 10: 0718138791 ISBN 13: 9780718138790
Seller: Coch-y-Bonddu Books Ltd, MACHYNLLETH, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
ALL UK PARCELS SENT TRACKED! ALL OVERSEAS PARCELS SENT AIRMAIL, TRACKED! (S/hand, Hardcover, 1995). (1871) & (1995) 1995 reprint. Square 16mo (133 x 165mm). Ppiv,60. B/w illustrations by Diana E. Brown. Orange-brown boards, spine titled in gilt. Very good copy in dust-wrapper. This is an extremely nice edition of D.W. Nash's poem, with black and white illustrations by Diana E. Nash. A commentary by R.W.F. Poole appears on each left-hand page and the poem itelf on each right-hand page. According to Willy Poole's introduction, the poem's manuscript was discovered in Aston-Ingham, Gloucestershire by the Rev. Whatley. The manuscript was dated 'Cheltenham 1871' but lacked an author's name. Rev. Whatley gave the manuscript to the master of the Ledbury, William Gordon Canning, who produced the first edition in 1914 in aid of charity. There was a further edition, in aid of the Red Cross, in 1918, and it was in this edition that the poem was first attributed to D.W. Nash. In passing, Poole offered the proceeds of this edition to the Red Cross, who refused out of disapproval of the poem's theme. This edition was therefore published in aid of the Hunt Servants' Fund. .