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The bookseller31.08.1863
  • Datum
    Montag, 31. August 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 9
[...] illustrated very copiously with coloured drawings, which were intermingled with the text. These drawings were not mere fancy sketches, but the result of careful study not only in costume and architecture, but also in the main incidents which [...]
[...] rendered the undertaking practicable, and the volume now announced is the result. It is, however, by no means a mere reproduction of the original MS., for the history has been carefully revised and minutely studied from the Old Chroniclers and [...]
[...] “The case made by the bill was that this catalogue was, in many parts, copied verbatim from that of the plaintiff, and that other parts were merely colourable alterations. “Sir Hugh Cairns and Mr. E. B. Lovell moved [...]
[...] first editions of any work might always be pirated with impunity. It was of vital importance in these cases to see that there had been no mere copying of errors, no merely colourable alterations; and lastly, that the MS. should be produced. Applying these [...]
[...] old or new edition, are in no way of the nature or character of Mr. Hotten's catalogues, which appear to me to be ephemeral, and merely calculated for a temporary object. Even Mr. Hotten's recent and last catalogue, copies of which have been in [...]
[...] “The price affixed to a catalogue is ordinarily affixed in order to prevent persons applying for and obtaining the same for the mere purpose of waste paper, and I say that out of the many thousand cata logues which I have from time to time received, I [...]
[...] oxen with the plough ; it being the intention of the surveyors to represent thereby, not the amount of arable land merely, in such and such a locality, but the amount of arable land in actual cultivation at that moment. In p. xxvi. we meet, as on most of [...]
[...] the other subjects treated of, with much interesting information about the ‘‘hide ’’; but that in reality it signified merely a piece of land devoted to the support of one family, varying in size according to the richness of the soil and the will of the superior [...]
[...] which we commenced by awarding to the learned Editor: they are little, if anything, more than those mere divergences which will always be found to occur where persons, however well prepared for the jour ney, are travelling upon a long and intricate route, [...]
The bookseller30.08.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. August 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] & Son appear determined to occupy the first place in the country stationer's estimation. Not satisfied with merely producing and selling everything that is required, they have now issued a new edition of their catalogue, which the trade will find indis [...]
[...] The “Cottage Picture,” in the month of “August,” is perhaps, even better in another way; but we must be contented with merely drawing at tention to its merits. There is a singular reality in its description of the homely rural dwelling. We [...]
[...] ventured upon. The shop was at the corner of Hutchesson and Wilson Streets, and at first was merely retail, with the addition of a large library— the business was carried on under the name of R. Griffin & Co., the Co. being understood to be the [...]
[...] pathy with the hopelessly-lost bibliomaniac than the bookseller, and this not always, or even very often, from a merely mercenary motive. He is in many instances afflicted with a kindred passion, and loves his books as dearly as his patron does his. He [...]
[...] reminiscences of his rare catches and lucky hits; and the interest is too keen to be accounted for by setting it down to the mere desire of making money. An interesting book might be written about book-hunting booksellers; he who undertakes it, [...]
[...] and long credits—a state of matters which is fast driving the best men out of the trade, and filling the ranks with mere hucksters and vendors of raw material, to the great injury of literature and all its belongings. [...]
[...] “What a painful shock do we not all experience at the intelligence of the sudden death of a friend, or even of a mere acquaintance whom we may have seen and spoken to but a few hours or a few days before, and whom we believed to be in good health ! We are struck with terror; we find it [...]
[...] history which made martyrs and confessors of the ejected Nonconformists of 1662,” &c. It is, per haps, all a mere matter of taste, but our palate does not approve of such high seasoning. [...]
[...] bent on being happy, and, therefore, did not trouble themselves to get into circumstances which could yield them no pleasure, merely for the sake of putting their experiences, afterwards, into a book; in this respect, unlike a good many travellers who [...]
[...] might be specified, if we were at liberty to enter into a closer examination of what it contains. As it is, we merely point out its claim to the attention of all lovers of Shelley's writings. Besides the poetical relics, the volume contains [...]
The bookseller30.09.1863
  • Datum
    Mittwoch, 30. September 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] Northfleet, Greenhithe, and Erith, while from Pegwell Bay, Minster, Richborough, and the neighbouring parts aré within easy reach. Mr. Dodd is not merely a pleasant gos siping companion, he is a correct one, full of statistics and facts of the most varied character, and we cannot be in his [...]
[...] A grammar, or rather the first part of a grammar, intended for the higher class of schools, where the object is to teach French thoroughly, and not to give a mere smattering only. Visscher (Jacob C.) Letters from Malabar. Trans lated, &c., by Major H. Drury, 8vo. Trübner 8/6 [...]
[...] Is drawing a mere accomplishment, or should it be regarded as one of the branches of an ordinary education? We are disposed to agree with Mr. Scott Burn in thinking that [...]
[...] Sketch, of English History from the Earliest Times to the end of the Fifteenth Century, illustrated very copiously with coloured drawings, which were intermingled with the text. These drawings were not mere fancy sketches, but the result of careful study not only in costume and architecture, but also in the main incidents which they were meant to illustrate. The original MS. had been seen and admired by a large circle of competent judges; and it [...]
[...] opposed an insurmountable obstacle to its publication... But a recent improvement in the art of printing in colours has rendered the undertaking practicable, and the volume now announced is the result. It is, however, by no means a mere reproduction of the original MS., for the History has been carefully revised and minutely studied from the Old Chroniclers and other original sources; and much additional thought has been bestowed throughout on the Illustra [...]
[...] “This is a book which every Protestant clergyman in the United Kingdom ought not merely to read, but to study diligently.”—St. James's Chronicle. [...]
[...] *...* The People's Portable Dictionary has been compiled on a more comprehensive scale than a mere pocket dic tionary, and will therefore be found more useful in the counting-house and in the family, whilst it is not too bulky [...]
[...] Bibliothèque des Mères de Familles, Tomes I. et II. [...]
The bookseller30.06.1862
  • Datum
    Montag, 30. Juni 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] fined to works of high art : there is a host of appli cations in the useful arts to which it has become subservient, the mere enumeration of which would occupy much space. We may, however, specify the production of Walentines by Mr. Canton, and by [...]
[...] Of its unlimited resources and numerous applica tions only a comparatively limited application has yet been made. Its usefulness, apart from mere pictorial representation, is, however, becoming more generally recognized and appreciated; and could the [...]
[...] notwithstanding the not at all sparing application of the pruning-knife, forces us to postpone this article till our next number. We merely give, by way of instalment, the first item in our list, a notice of one of the most eminent firms of Germany. . [...]
[...] ing, in greatly-changed form, the comfort and well being of mankind. Dr. Lankester's sketches, it is necessary to state, are not mere dry, cyclopaedia ike accounts of facts and doings, but highly-philo sophical disquisitions of the why and wherefore of [...]
[...] Pilgrims” will make many converts; the effect of reading the story of their lives is, if anything, merely sleep-producing. [...]
[...] Les Récréations Instructives, tirées de l’Education Nouvelle, Journal des Mères et des Enfants. Re cueil publié à Paris, sous la Direction de M. JULES DELBRUCK. 2me Sèrie. Paris: C. Borrani. [...]
[...] without any reference to the distinctions of Whig and Tory. Such a book as this is valuable if it has merely the effect of showing young people that so import ant a subject as the political history of their own [...]
[...] “Really a first-rate novel.”--Press, June 7, 1862. “A better told, and a more interesting novel, has not appeared for some time past.”—Observer, June 1, 1862. “The characters he brings upon the stage are to him no mere phantoms, but real flesh and blood; and, accordingly, he i." his readers away with him, transporting them to scenes which glow vividly before their eyes.”—Parthenon, June 14, [...]
[...] INSECTES NEUROPTERES (Demoiselles, Ephé meres, &c.), par M. le Docteur RAMBUR. 1 vol. avec une livraison de planches. Fig. noires, 9 fr. 50 c. Fig. co loriées .................................... ... ---------.... 12 fr. 50 c. [...]
[...] physical infirmity rendered the labour impossible. But I drew on rich sources, and my encroachments have taken no thing from their value. y object has been merely to separate simple truths from more abstruse and scientific ones —and this must be my apology, if the extremely rudimental [...]
The bookseller28.02.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 28. Februar 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] an entire failure. Object it appears to have had none, unless the intention of the conductors was to show how utterly impossible it is for mere literary men, whatever their ability, to carry out such a work successfully. There has been an abundance [...]
[...] and have the weakness to think that the money subscribed was for the purpose of relieving distress, and was not intended to be merely reported as in sufe custody at the bank. They also profess to believe that many more gentlemen in the trade [...]
[...] matter which has no more to do with Joseph Locke and engineering than with the Man in the Moon ; the biography, if so it can be called, is a mere peg for a gingerbread kind of fine writing. The burden of the song is that Joseph Locke was a great hero, [...]
[...] shown, and rules altogether dispensed with. The advantages of this plan of teaching arithmetic are manifest; for the pupil, instead of being a mere mechanical cipherer, becomes an intelligent rea soner. Difficult problems in the higher branches of [...]
[...] D'Arlincourt (Le Vicomte) Le Masque d'Or. 2 vols. 8vo ............... ................. • • • • • • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6 Dehous (Le Dr. Achille) Lettres à uno Mère i l'Alimentation et l'Hygiène du Nouveau-Né. 12mo .....................................................: 3/6 [...]
[...] Mère. 12mo................ • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••• • • • • • • • , 3/6 Wolf-Dupuy. Les Petits Amis. 12mo . 2/ Zaccone, Les Deux Robinsons. 12mo............... 2/ [...]
[...] It has been the aim of Mr. Southgate to produce a résumé of the finest passages in English Literature. He has scrupulously excluded from his volume all merely pretty conceits, or sentimental fancies, and brought together only thoughts conceived in power, and fertile in suggestions to the reader's mind. [...]
The bookseller31.10.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. Oktober 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 10
[...] under the delusive title of Staunton's ‘New Library Edition.’ “The fact is, this work is merely a reprint of Staunton's Illustrated Shakespeare, without the Illustrations.—I am, sir, yours obediently, [...]
[...] Colenso and his heterodox friends assailing them on one hand, while on the other, they find Colenso's opponents confining their attention to the mere stubble and rubbish of the outworks his strong points being untouched. We do not hear that there is any lack of clergymen willing to un [...]
[...] illustrated very copiously with coloured drawings, which were intermingled with the text. These drawings were not mere fancy sketches, but the result of c reful study, not only in costume and architecture, but alo in the main inci [...]
[...] improvement in the art of printing in colours has rendered the undertaking practicable and the volume now announced is the result. It is, however, by no means a mere repro duction of the original MS., for the history has been care [...]
[...] This edition will form eight volumes 8vo, of which the first will be published in November, and one every alternate month after: it is not a mere reprint of the preceding edition of 1857, but, on the contrary, will present a text very materially altered and amended from beginning to end, with [...]
[...] seeing it. The Americans having no fear of our copyright laws before their eyes, collected Mr. Praed's poems, and sold two editions, while the author's friends were merely thinking about it. [...]
[...] CARRUTHERS and WILLIAM CHAMBERS. *** No portion of the Wit or Wisdom is lost in the purify ing process. The blemishes are mere surface blots, “re | sulting,” said Lord Jeffrey, “from the misdirected wanton ness of too lively a fancy, or the grosser speech and manners [...]
[...] T H E W 0 R K S 0 F SHA KE SPEAR E. Edited by the REW. ALEXANDER DYCE. This Edition is not a mere reprint of that which appeared in 1857: on the contrary, it will present a text very materially altered and amended from beginning to end, with a large body of critical Notes almost entirely new; and with a Glossary, in which the language of the Poet, his allusions to customs, &c., will [...]
[...] others the peculiar styles of the authors; some to exhibit beauty of sentiment, and others merely to afford subjects for pictorial illustration—few have appeared possessing a definite and practical life-purpose. The ob [...]
[...] avoiding high ideal flights that might lie be yond the comprehension of ordinary readers, he has been equally careful in excluding mere rhymes that would fail to attract, or, from their inferiority, cease to be remembered. [...]
The bookseller30.04.1863
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 30. April 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 6
[...] suffering. However, the whole can scarcely be called a history, as there is a sad want of order and arrangement * ...; matter, making the book a mere series of detached Sketches. [...]
[...] The investigation of the antiquity of the people of Egypt is not merely a learned hobby, but a study which, owing to its philosophical and religious aspect, ought to be of the highest interest to all educated men. There is much valuable mate [...]
[...] gathered in a course of reading extending over a number of years. This reading, however, has not been of the profoundest. Looked upon as mere tales, the “remarkable” and “unre vealed” accounts of notable men and events may pass muster; but considered as historical contributions they are utter trash. [...]
[...] event in agricultural chemistry. As in all his former writings on the same subject, Liebig is very severe upon the merely “practical agriculturist,” who is guided by no other principles than those of experience. “The opinions of prac tical men seem to be inherited like some inveterate disease; [...]
[...] of the great German chemist, appears to have to some ex tent seceded from Liebig's views, and as such, perhaps, thought it more convenient to “edit” than to merely trans late the work. Paul (William, F.R.H.S.) The Rose Garden. In Two [...]
[...] clearness and beauty of the type, which almost converts into a pleasure the mere act of föllowing the printer's lines, and leaves the author's mind free to exert its unobstructed force upon the reader.”—Examiner. - “Nothing could be better as to size, type, paper, and general getting-up.”—Athenæum. [...]
The bookseller30.05.1863
  • Datum
    Samstag, 30. Mai 1863
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] by the Printsellers' Association against the sale of jº. ; intricate, because, while those pains and penalties are mere bugbears in many instances, in others they are realities; and to discriminate be tween them requires a far greater legal knowledge [...]
[...] memories than if we had read it in the more orthodox form. We have therefore no hesitation in saying that, while the reader will be pleased with the mere perusal of the volume, he will learn more from it and retain more of it in his memory than he will from the perusal of any similar work [...]
[...] he will learn more from it and retain more of it in his memory than he will from the perusal of any similar work with which we are acquainted. It is not a mere chronicle of the kings, of their quarrels and their wars, but gives a comprehensive history of civilization, the growth of the [...]
[...] advertisers as a medium for gaining the attention of the public. The Reflector is not intended to form, merely another ordinary addition to the penny publications comprehended under the term “the cheap press.” It [...]
[...] the working classes; and to do so in such a form, and with matter of such a character, that what is urchased will also be preserved, and not merely H. an immediate interest, but also a permanent value as a book for future reading. [...]
[...] ought to think who wish to contemplate the realities of life with earnestness. Their object will be, how ever, not merely to give forth the reflections of the writers themselves, but to endeavour to stimulate a healthy tone of reflection generally, on the part of [...]
[...] occasionally be humorous, are intended to have some permanent interest, The Reflector will not be written as a mere catch-penny publication to excite a mo mentary interest, and, after being read hurriedly in the railway carriage or omnibus, to be thrown aside, [...]
[...] adventures in various parts of the world—so wild and yet so vraisemblant that, despite its unpretending style as a mere literary production, it cannot fail to be read with interest by those who prefer the real to the fanciful. Among the constituency of “Young [...]
The bookseller31.03.1864
  • Datum
    Donnerstag, 31. März 1864
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 7
[...] to the wholesale destruction of antient manu scripts by the ignorance and cupidity of monks, who sold valuable works as mere parchment, or erased the productions of Greek and Roman thinkers to replace them with their own foolish [...]
[...] very earliest founded, and long renowned for its classic treasures. He asked to see the library, and found it a mere lumber-room. On inquiring why so many priceless works were mutilated as he saw them, he was told that when the monks [...]
[...] higher qualifications to authorship than a British School affords its pupils, could put together such a book as this from merely noting down daily what she has seen and heard among the “members of the family.” Publications of this nature will damage the reputation of Miss Faith [...]
[...] attempted we have rant; for plot we have clumsily con trived improbabilities. The heroine, intended to be something terrible, is merely ridiculous; a lady who buys arsenic by the half-pound by way of deepening the atrocity of her crime and heightening the tragic interest. [...]
[...] writings. They are disposed to admit that the Mosaic narration does not apply to the whole human race, but merely to the Adamites, from whom sprung Gods people; that it is nowhere said that the sons of Adam contracted incestuous alliances with their own sisters; that be-ites [...]
[...] No portion of the Wit or Wisdom is lost in the purifying process. The blemishes are mere surface blots, “resulting,” said Lord Jeffrey, ‘from the misdirected wantonness of too lively a fancy, or the grosser speech and manners of a former age; that the author himself, had he lived to have set forth and [...]
[...] “In the centre of the card is a bust of Shakespeare, and in the compartments of a rich border are illustrations of the Seven Ages of Man, as described by the poet. As a mere artistic print the effect is pretty. Among the odds and ends of this Shakespeare year, many persons may like to preserve a pack [...]
The bookseller31.05.1862
  • Datum
    Samstag, 31. Mai 1862
  • Erschienen
    London
  • Verbreitungsort(e)
    London
Anzahl der Treffer: 8
[...] The Art of Illumination is no longer to be a mere aristocratic amusement, but is being taken up by all classes, and will possibly become as popular as cro [...]
[...] interesting articles which the daily, weekly, and monthly press brings forth uninterruptedly, that so much valuable matter should serve merely to satisfy a passing appetite, and not be stored up for future use. Periodicals of all kinds, even if regu [...]
[...] appears such an equal degree of excellence amongst all the exhibitors that we shall merely enumerate the chief of them ; they are— R. Barclay, 29, Bucklersbury (5105), indelible paper, [...]
[...] about forty are now ready. Some of these will Serve as copies for modern binders, while others must be looked upon as mere curiosities; in this latter class must be placed Plate WI. “Menologium Sanctorum,” a MS. of the eleventh century, the [...]
[...] we are disposed to think that this is a mistake. We are living in an age of progress, not in one where mere Chinese copying, however, exact, should be commended as deserving of the first place—more praise is due to the clumsy artist who designed the [...]
[...] praise is due to the clumsy artist who designed the basket-work pattern Bible in the case of Messrs. Jarrold than to anyone who is a mere imitator. Our remarks are not caused by any desire to find fault with the workmanship of the books exhibited, [...]
[...] independent of the immense stock of the same books in quires. It is principally with the bound books we have to do; so, merely premising that about seven hundred binders are employed upon the pre mises we will at once set to work upon the pro [...]
[...] “This delightful book is no mere tale, but a faithful photograph of certain phases of social life.”— Record, [...]
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