Language: English
Published by SPCK, London, 1901
Seller: Clevedon Community Bookshop Co-operative, Clevedon, United Kingdom
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. 1st Edition. First edition and printing. In good bright red cloth boards, gilt titles to front and back strip. The covers are a little loose, quite straight, with a few marks and spine ends and corners a little bumped. Pretty green and white daisy pattern for end papers and quite clean. Dark tinted top cut edge; the fore and tail edges are slightly tanned. The text bock is quite firm and square, tanned, especially around the edges. With name and date on half title page. With 46 b/w illustrations. Good minus condition. Advertisements to rear. Without jacket. Price reflects condition.
Seller: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, U.S.A.
PAP. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Seller: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, United Kingdom
PAP. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Published by George Newnes
Seller: Country House Library, Gloucester, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Used; Good. Rev. Professor George Henslow's The Story of Wild Flowers (1901) is a botanical primer that explores the structure, distribution, and evolution of flowering plants. Rather than presenting plants as static entities, Henslow examines their life processes while heavily advocating for neo-Lamarckism?the belief that plants adapt and inherit characteristics in response to their environment. Title: The Story of Wild Flowers Author: Rev. Professor G. Henslow Publisher: George Newnes Publication Date: 1901 - possible first edition Format: Hardcover, English Condition: This book is in good condition for its age with minor board wear and marking, tanned pages.
Language: English
Published by George Newnes Limited, London, 1901
Seller: Lazarus Books Limited, Blackpool, LANCS, United Kingdom
Decorative Cloth. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. With Fifty-Six Figures in Text (illustrator). Size 6" x 3¾", 249 pages including index. Blue cloth covered boards. The front cover is decorated with lovely black stamped wild flowers with title in border in centre. Gilt titles and picture of a snowdrop on the spine and publisher's motif and Library of Useful Stories banner in black on the back cover. Condition very good, spine a little faded and grubby, corners, cover and spine edges rubbed, contents clean.
Seller: PBShop.store US, Wood Dale, IL, U.S.A.
HRD. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Seller: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, United Kingdom
HRD. Condition: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Language: English
Published by Macmillan and co., London, U.K., 1864
Seller: Sarah Zaluckyj, KINGTON, United Kingdom
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Fair. Dust Jacket Condition: No Dustjacket. First Edition. viii + 317 pages. NO dustjacket. B&W illustrations. Very damp blotched green hardback binding -lettering to front and spine is illegible. Wear/rubs to spine-ends and boards' corners. Page-edges lightly browned, flyleaf and last page of index is creased o/w pages clean and tidy.
Published by British Association for the Advancement of Science, London, 1851
Seller: Cosmo Books, Shropshire., United Kingdom
Booklet - Unbound Pages. Condition: Very Good. 9 pages, 10 tables. An authentic standalone article, extracted from a larger volume. Not a reprint or reproduction, but an original work in its own right. Supplied without title page or cover. Size: 22 x 15 cms. Category: British Association for the Advancement of Science; Cosmo Books : 29 years on ABE, 47 years taking care of customers. A bookseller you can rely on.
Seller: Forgotten Books, London, United Kingdom
Paperback. Condition: New. Print on Demand. This book is an accessible guide to the wild plants of South Africa, written to encourage people to learn about the natural world around them. The book describes the structures of native plants, their habits, and how they are adapted to their environment. The author shows how every plant is adapted to its position in life and how it has acquired the characteristics that distinguish each kind. Individual chapters focus on pollination, the structures of flowers, their classification, and the adaptations plants have for surviving in hot, arid conditions. The author's enthusiasm for his subject is evident throughout, and his writing is clear and engaging. This book will appeal to anyone interested in botany, ecology, or the natural beauty of South Africa. This book is a reproduction of an important historical work, digitally reconstructed using state-of-the-art technology to preserve the original format. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in the book. print-on-demand item.
Published by George Newnes Limited, London, 1904
Seller: COVENANT HERITAGE LIBRIS, Saint John, NB, Canada
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Sketches (illustrator). shelf wear, some cocking, blue cloth whit black decor. S1 2.
Published by SPCK. London, 1901
Seller: Patrick Pollak Rare Books ABA ILAB, SOUTH BRENT, DEVON, United Kingdom
pp. xii, (13)-189, (i), 2 Advertisements. 46 text figures. Original cloth, a bit faded, else a very good copy.
Published by R.T.S - Lutterworth Press,, 1940
Seller: Sally Smith Books, Bury St Edmunds, United Kingdom
Reprint, 1940. Hardback in dust wrapper. With 48 coloured plates of 95 wild flowers. Book near fine, just browning to eps and neat owner name on fep. Dw good - darkened on spine. Edgeworn with minor loss only, except for a piece missing (max 6cm x 3cm) from bottom front corner. Not clipped.
Published by Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, London, 1915
First Edition
Cloth. Condition: Very Good Indeed. Not Stated (illustrator). First edition. A beautifully illustrated edition of this scarce work from Professor G. Henslow. Complete with 32 colour plates. A scarce first edition of Professor George Henslow"s "Floral Rambles in Highways and Byways". Henslow was an Anglican curate, botanist, and author. Containing 32 colour plates, collated, and one hundred in-text illustrations. Including two pages of publisher"s advertisements to the rear.Previous owner has signed in ink 'F.W. Littlewood' to recto of front endpaper. In original publisher"s full cloth binding, with gilt decoration and title to the front board and spine. Externally, smart. Some light edgewear and bumping to the head and tail of the spine. Previous owners" ink signature on recto of front endpaper. Internally, generally firmly bound. Some very light spotting to a few centre pages. Otherwise pages are bright and clean. Very Good Indeed. book.
Published by 'Audley End'. 1 January, 1832
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
3 pp, 4to. Bifolium. Good, on lightly-aged paper, with minor traces of stub adhering to the blank reverse of second leaf. The year 1832 has been added in pencil in a contemporary hand. The letter is on paper watermarked 1831. Docketed at head 'Braybrooke Ld.' He begins by informing Henslow that Lord Grenville has lent him 'the Book in which his Notes upon the growth of Trees, during many years, had been made. He assures me that nothing worth your notice will be found among the MS remarks, but I am not of that opinion. Ld G is however very fond of the book as of an old acquaintance, & the entries if once lost can never be replaced, as no other Copy exists.' He feels 'very responsible' for the volume, but does not 'hesitate to entrust it to you knowing that you will lock it up & return it by a safe messenger'. The Braybrookes are 'stationary' at Audley End, and will be happy to see Henslow, if he wishes to return the volume in person. 'I have also a large specimen of lilac wood at your service, should you not have one already.' He is enclosing 'a paper which I copied from a loose MS document in my Evelyn's Sylva'. He ends the letter with a report of the fruit-bearing properties of Dr Clarke's mulberry tree: 'the indented leaves were also all on the lower part of the tree only, those above being all apparently of the common species'. In a postscript he reports that he has 'received no answer from Mr Blackie about the pruning system, perhaps he is afraid of entering the lists with you Cambridge Professors! ! !' The Prime Minister William Wyndham Grenville (1759-1834), Baron Grenville, planted at least 2500 trees at Dropmore House, and at the time of his death his pinetum contained the largest collection of conifer species in Britain.