Verlag: Vantage Press., 1971
Anbieter: Alex Alec-Smith ABA ILAB PBFA, Everthorpe, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 9,51
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In den WarenkorbHardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Good. pp. 204. 8vo. D/W, slightly faded & frayed.
Verlag: New York, Washington & Hollywood: Vantage Press, 1971
Anbieter: BookLovers of Bath, Peasedown St. John, BATH, Vereinigtes Königreich
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EUR 38,63
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In den WarenkorbHardback in Dust Wrapper. Zustand: Very Good. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Very Good. Condition Notes: Unlaminated dust wrapper a little edgeworn and faded. Previous owners' name to the first blank. Blanks and endpapers tanned; First edition (first printing). Hardback. Dust wrapper over red boards with gilt titles to the spine; Measures 8¼" x 5½" (0.6 kg); pp 204; || The book is on the shelf, ready to be appropriately packed, and posted from the pastoral paradise of Peasedown St. John, Bath, by a real bookseller in a real book shop - with my personal guarantee and beady eye on the Consumer Contracts Regulations. REMEMBER! Buying my copy means the book shop Jack Russells get their supper! My Book #108411 ||.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: John Benjamins Publishing Compan, 1994
ISBN 10: 1556194978 ISBN 13: 9781556194979
Anbieter: Books From California, Simi Valley, CA, USA
Hardcover. Zustand: Good. Cover and edges show heavy wear. Pages are clean and intact. Has some heavy dirtiness on the outside from handling.
Anbieter: Plurabelle Books Ltd, Cambridge, Vereinigtes Königreich
Verbandsmitglied: GIAQ
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EUR 114,09
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In den WarenkorbHardback. Zustand: As New. xix 344p large sturdy hardback, bright green cloth with white lettering, like new condition, no noticeable wear, binding tight, pages clean and neat, free from highlighting and annotation, endpapers unmarked, an excellent unused copy Language: English Weight (g): 580.
EUR 134,30
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In den WarenkorbHardcover. Zustand: Brand New. 364 pages. 9.60x6.40 inches. In Stock.
Sprache: Englisch
Verlag: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1994
ISBN 10: 1556194978 ISBN 13: 9781556194979
Anbieter: Mispah books, Redhill, SURRE, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 275,73
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In den Warenkorbhardcover. Zustand: Good. Good. Dust Jacket NOT present. CD WILL BE MISSING. . SHIPS FROM MULTIPLE LOCATIONS. book.
Verlag: London, Nicholas Vane., 1960
Anbieter: Inanna Rare Books Ltd., Skibbereen, CORK, Irland
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First edition / Limited Edition: One of only 290 copies. 16 x 24 cm. 76 pages. Hardcover / Original cloth. Excellent, near Fine condition of a very rare book. [The Centenary Edition of the Letters of Frederick William Rolfe: II]. contains Rolfe's letters to Leonard Moore, edited and with an introduction by Cecil Woolf and Rabbi Bertram W. Korn. Leonard Parker Moore (1876 - 1959) was a literary agent. A partner of Christy & Moore and of the Lecture Agency, Ltd., his clients included George Orwell (from 1932 to 1950), Gordon Campbell, Mary Butts, Georgette Heyer (for nearly 30 years from 1922), Carola Oman, Marco Pallis, Catherine Cookson, Jane Mander, Ruby M. Ayres, Gareth Jones, Wilfred Grenfell, and Ruth Collie. Injured in the leg in the First World War, Moore worked as a journalist before becoming a literary agent. He was the brother of the novelist Henry Moore. (Wikipedia) Frederick William Rolfe, better known as Baron Corvo, and also calling himself 'Frederick William Serafino Austin Lewis Mary Rolfe', (22 July 1860 25 October 1913), was an English writer, artist, photographer and eccentric. Rolfe was born in Cheapside, London, the son of a piano manufacturer. He left school at the age of fourteen and became a teacher. He taught briefly at The King's School, Grantham, where the then headmaster, Ernest Hardy, later principal of Jesus College, Oxford, became a lifelong friend. He converted to Roman Catholicism in 1886 and was confirmed by Cardinal Manning. With his conversion came a strongly-felt vocation to the priesthood, which persisted throughout his life despite being constantly frustrated and never realised. In 1887 he was sponsored to train at St Mary's College, Oscott near Birmingham and in 1889 was a student at the Scots College in Rome, but was thrown out by both due to his inability to concentrate on priestly studies, his "reputation as a pederast", and his erratic behaviour. At this stage he entered the circle of the Duchess Sforza Cesarini, who, he claimed, adopted him as a grandson and gave him the use of the title of "Baron Corvo". This became his best-known pseudonym; he also called himself "Frank English", "Frederick Austin" and "A. Crab Maid", among others. More often he abbreviated his own name to "Fr. Rolfe" (an ambiguous usage, suggesting he was the priest he had hoped to become). Rolfe spent most of his life as a freelance writer, mainly in England but eventually in Venice. He lived in the era before the welfare state, and relied on benefactors for support. But he had an argumentative nature and had a tendency to fall out spectacularly with most of the people who tried to help him and offer him room and board. Eventually, out of money and out of luck, he died in Venice from a stroke on 25 October 1913. He was buried on the Isola di San Michele, Venice. Rolfe's life provided the basis for The Quest for Corvo by A.J.A. Symons, an "experiment in biography" regarded as a minor classic in the field. This same work reveals that Rolfe had an unlikely enthusiast in the person of Maundy Gregory. Rolfe was entirely comfortable with his homosexuality and associated and corresponded with a number of other gay Englishmen. Early in his life he wrote a fair amount of idealistic but mawkish poetry about boy martyrs and the like. These and his Toto stories contain pederastic elements, but the young male pupils he was teaching at the time unanimously recalled in later life that there had never been any hint of impropriety in his relations with them. As he himself matured, Rolfe's settled sexual preference was for late adolescents. Towards the end of his life he made his only explicit reference to his specific sexual age preference, in one of the Venice letters to Charles Masson Fox, in which he declared: "My preference was for the 16, 17, 18 and large." Grant Richards, in his Memories of a Misspent Youth (1932), recalls "Frederick Baron Corvo" at Parson's Pleasure in Oxford where scholars could bathe naked "surveyi.