By Steamer to the Essex Coast. [With] By Steamer to the Kent Coast, Cosens Pleasure Steamers [and] London's Pleasure Steamers
The Hill, Amberley Publishing, 2012, 2013, 2013 and 2015. More
The Hill, Amberley Publishing, 2012, 2013, 2013 and 2015. More
London, John Lane The Bodley Head, 1908 (third edition)/ 1905. Hunting panther, tiger, leopard, buffalo and gazelle (among others) near Junglypur. More
Westmead, Gregg International Publishers, 1973. With the ownership signature of W.D. Borrie, sometime Commonwealth Government Statistician. 'With one exception, this volume contains reprints of all the main contributions to the 18th century controversy on the trend of population in England and Wales'. More
London, Houlston and Sons, 1873/ [circa 1860s]. More
London, Herbert Jenkins Ltd, 1970. Dated, (July 1970), inscribed and signed in ink by the author on the front free endpaper. More
Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1956. More
London, The Golden Cockerel Press, 1949. Number 283 of 500 copies (with the first 100 'specially bound and contain one extra engraving'). More
London, Golden Cockerel Press, 1934. Number 125 of 250 copies signed by the author. The ninth book in the Golden Cockerel series of first editions by contemporary authors. Chanticleer 99. More
Waltham Saint Lawrence, The Golden Cockerel Press, 1926 (first thus). Number 325 of only 325 copies. 'The text is taken from the Edition of 1598' (from the colophon). A bookplate (one of many) of Kaz Posney is mounted on the front pastedown; this one is Peake 4338. Chanticleer 46... More
Waltham Saint Lawrence, The Golden Cockerel Press, 1928 (first thus)/ 1908. Number 308 of only 500 copies. More
London, The Golden Cockerel Press, 1925. Number 26 of only 30 copies in full vellum signed by John Nash; the standard edition (unsigned, in quarter parchment) comprised a further 350 copies. Swift's satirical essay was first published posthumously in 1745. Chanticleer 23. 'An experiment, possibly in this case retrograde, in..... More
London, The Golden Cockerel Press, 1944. Number 338 of 500 copies (the first 50 being a deluxe issue in full morocco). Cockalorum 163. More
London, Faber and Faber, 1967. '... patterns compounded of sex and calf love, rebellion and submission, dottiness, class distinction, tragedy and near-farce'. More
London, Faber & Faber, 1980, 1987 and 1989 (all first editions). [3 items]. More
London, The Folio Society, 1969 (first thus). The ten-page introduction by Rosalind Vallance is essential. More
Norwalk, The Easton Press, 1978 [first thus]. Illustrations by T.M. CLELAND. More
Cupar, G.S. Tullis, and St Andrews, Melville Fletcher (Printed by G.S. Tullis, Printer to the University of St Andrews), 1838 (third edition)/ 1807. Not least, 'The Company of Golfers' (pages 237-247). More
London, Henry S. King, 1876 [second edition]/ 1876. James Graham Goodenough (1830-75), naval officer, was appointed commodore of the Australian station in May 1873. 'His duties included the maintenance of law and order among British subjects in the Pacific and control of their relations with indigenous peoples. On 12 August..... More
London, Collins, 1982. The illustrations are from paintings by Terence Lambert and Norman Arlott. More
London, H.K. Lewis, 1870. Mounted on the pastedown is the presentation plate from Surgeon Major Fleming (late of the 4th Dragoon Guards) to the Royal United Service Institution, with the RUSI Library blindstamp on two leaves. More
London, Hodgson, 1928. More
London, The Folio Society, 1972 (first thus). More
London, Royal Institute of British Architects, 1934. With the ownership signature of [Professor] David Saunders. Also with a presentation slip to the New South Wales chapter of the Royal Australian Institute of Architects and a Royal Institute of British Architects compliments slip loosely inserted. More
London, The Folio Society, 1983 (first thus). An early eighteenth-century local history; edited with an introduction and notes by David Hey. More
London, The Folio Society, 1983 (first thus). Edited and with an introduction and notes by David Hey. More