Chez Guillaume de Luyne | à Paris 1663 | 14 x 8.50 cm | relié
Seconde édition parue quelques mois après l'originale , cette seconde édition a pour mérite de contenir les hommages de Saint Aignan, Scudery, Bertault, Ménard. Reliure de l'époque en plein veau porphyre. Dos à quatre nerfs orné de caissons et flerons dorés, ainsi que d'une pièce de titre de maroquin rouge. Double filet doré en encadrement des plats. Toutes tranches marbrées. Adam Billaut (1602-1662) fut l'un des premiers poètes ouvriers ; Les chevilles de Maître Adam parurent en 1644 et eurent un grand succès critique. Billaut devint le protégé du prince de Condé, fut pensionné par Richelieu et admiré par ses pairs. Si sa poésie brille peu par l'élégance, dans un siècle qui en fut plein, sa langue est pleine de verve et d'originalité et ses recueils font de lui un des tous premiers poètes du XVIIe, l'un de ceux dont la langue est toujours appréciée, dénuée d'afféteries et d'ornements inutiles. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Paul Ollendorff | Paris 1902 | 12 x 18.50 cm | relié
Edition originale sur papier courant. Reliure en demi percaline rose, dos lisse passé orné d'un motif floral doré, double filet et date dorés en queue, plats de papier marbré, couvertures conservées, tête dorée, reliure signée de A. Mertens. Envoi autographe signé de Paul Adam au poète Jean Ott. Notre exemplaire est enrichi d'une carte postale autographe signée de l'auteur adressée au même. Nous joignons également le faire-part conviant à la messe funèbre pour le repos de Paul Adam. Ouvrage illustré de planches hors-texte. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Bureau d'Éditions et de Diffusion | Paris 1932 | 18 x 23.50 cm | agrafé
Édition originale. Brochure illustrée de 16 dessins de Georges Adam. Superbe exemplaire de cette rare plaquette de Louis Aragon, véritable catéchisme «?anticlérical, anticapitaliste, anticolonialiste, antipatriotique?» (Pierre Juquin) destiné aux enfants des masses laborieuses exploitées. * «?Le 25 juin 1932, lImprimerie centrale achève dimprimer pour le Bureau des Éditions et de diffusion, 132, faubourg Saint-Denis, à Paris, une belle plaquette, aujourdhui devenue une rareté bibliophilique [...] Sur la couverture une grand étoile rouge image importante et récurrente chez Aragon simprime sur des cerveaux denfants. Seize quatrains, drolatiques et didactiques, ponctués pour faciliter la lecture, alternent avec des dessins de Georges Adam, qui chargés dune dérision quasi-expressionniste comme des peintures de Rouault, renversent tabous et mythes?» (Aragon. Un destin français 1897-1939). Aragon sétait jeté corps et âme dans le journal de la Lutte antireligieuse après sa rupture avec les surréalistes, et écrit depuis Moscou une plaquette publiée sur les presses du Parti afin déveiller la ferveur de la jeunesse prolétaire. Jacques Prévert fera de même avec sa pièce Émasculée Conception. Lactivisme anticlérical au sein des associations communistes françaises battait alors son plein?: tous les symboles et événements de la vie religieuse étaient réappropriés au prisme de la lutte des classes. On organisait alors des «?baptêmes rouges?» formant une communauté denfants «?sans-Dieu?» (daprès lAssociation des travailleurs sans Dieu) qui correspondaient avec les enfants «?sans-Dieu?» soviétiques. Aragon contribua à ces nouveaux rituels en fournissant ce livre pour enfants particulièrement radical jugé trop antipatriotique par Maurice Thorez quil désavouera à la fin de sa vie. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Leipzig, Weidmann, 1776-78. 8vo. Bound in two nice uniform contemporary half calf bindings with five raised bands and gilt lettering to spine. Ex-libris pasted on to pasted down front free end-papers and a small embossed stamp to front free end paper on volume 1 (""Buchhändler u. Antiquar Carl Helf""). Stamp to p. 1 of both volumes. Spines with light soiling and capital on volume 1 lacking a small part of the leather. A few light brown spots throught. A fine set. VIII, 632 pp"" XII, 740 pp.
First German edition, also being the very first overall translation, of Adam Smith's ground-breaking main work, the ""Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations"". This seminal first translation of the work was undertaken by J.F. Schiller, who finished the first part of the translation in time for it to appear as soon as 1776, the same year as the original English edition. The second part appeared in 1778, the same year as the exceedingly scarce first French translation. This first German translation has been of the utmost importance to the spreading of Smith's ideas throughout Europe, and, after the true first, this must count as the most important edition of the work.""The influence of the Wealth of Nations [...] in Germany [...] was so great that 'the whole of political economy might be divided into two parts - before and since Adam Smith"" the first part being a prelude, and the second a sequel."" (Backhouse, Roger E., The Methodology of Economics: Nineteenth-Century British Contributions, Routledge, 1997.)""The first review of the translation, which appeared in the Göttingische gelehrte Anzeigen for March 10, 1777, by J. G. H. Feder, professor of Philosophy at the University of Göttingen, was very favorable. In the words of the reviewer: ""It is a classic"" very estimable both for its thorough, not too limited, often far-sighted political philosophy, and for the numerous, frequently discursive historical notes,"" but the exposition suffers from too much repetition."" (Lai, Cheng-chung. Adam Smith Across Nations: Translations and Receptions of The Wealth of Nations, Clarendon Press, UK, 2000).Until 1797, [...], the work of Adam Smith received scant attention in Germany. While Frederick II was living, Cameralism held undisputed sway in Prussia, and the economic change which began with the outbreak of the French Revolution had still not gained sufficient momentum to awake the economic theorists from their dogmatic slumber."" (Lai, Cheng-chung. Adam Smith Across Nations: Translations and Receptions of The Wealth of Nations, Clarendon Press, UK, 2000).Various German economist read the german translations and was inspired by it.""Christian Garve, [...], must be considered as among the important contributors to the spread of Smith's views. Himself a popularizer of philosophical doctrines, he was early attracted by the Scotch writers and became one of their foremost exponents in Germany."" In 1791 Garve began a second translation of the Smith's work and in the introduction to the the translation he wrote: ""It (Smith's work) attracted me as only few books have in the course of my studies through the number of new views which it gave me not only concerning the actual abject of his investigations, but concerning all related material from the philosophy of civil and social life"". Georg Sartorius, August Ferdinand Lueder and, perhaps the most important economist of the period, Christian Jacob Kraus, were all important figures in the spread of Smith's thought. ""The most significant of Kraus' works and that also which shows his conception of economic science most clearly is the five-volume work entitled State Economy. The first four volumes of this work are little more than a free paraphrase of the Wealth of Nations"". Kraus was: ""to a large extent responsible for the economic changes which took place in Prussia after 1807, in so far as they can be ascribed to Smithan influence."" (Lai, Cheng-chung. Adam Smith Across Nations: Translations and Receptions of The Wealth of Nations, Clarendon Press, UK, 2000).Kraus wrote of the present volume: ""[T]he world has seen no more important book than that of Adam Smith.... [C]ertainly since the times of the New Testament no writing has had more beneficial results than this will have.... [Smith's doctrines form] the only true, great, beautiful, just and beneficial system."" (Fleischacker, Samuel , A Third Concept of Liberty, Princeton University Press, 1999.)_____________Hailed as the ""first and greatest classic of modern thought"" (PMM 221), Adam Smith's tremendously influential main work has had a profound impact on thought and politics, and is considered the main foundation of the era of liberal free trade that dominated the nineteenth century. Adam Smith (1723-1790) is considered the founder of Political Economy in Britain, mainly due to his groundbreaking work, the ""Wealth of Nations"" from 1776. The work took him 12 years to write and was probably in contemplation 12 years before that. It was originally published in two volumes in 4to, and was published later the same year in Dublin in three volumes in 8vo. The book sold well, and the first edition, the number of which is unknown, sold out within six months, which came as a surprise to the publisher, and probably also to Smith himself, partly because the work ""requires much thought and reflection (qualities that do not abound among modern readers) to peruse to any purpose."" (Letter from David Hume, In: Rae, Life of Adam Smith, 1895, p. 286), partly because it was hardly reviewed or noticed by magazines or annuals. In spite of this, it did evoke immense interest in the learned and the political world, and Buckle's words that the work is ""in its ultimate results probably the most important book that has ever been written"", and that it has ""done more towards the happiness of man than has been effected by the united abilities of all the statesmen and legislators of whom history has preserved an authentic account"" (History of Civilisation, 1869, I:214) well describes the opinion of a great part of important thinkers then as well as now. Kress S. 2567Goldsmith 11394Menger 521Not in Einaudi
Leipzig, Weidmann, 1776-78. 8vo. Bound in two nice uniform contemporary half calf bindings with five raised bands, black title-label and gilt lettering to spine. Small paper-label to upper compartment (Catalogue-number from an estate-library). Light wear to extremities, otherwise a very nice set. VIII, 632 pp" XII, 740 pp.
First German edition, also being the very first overall translation, of Adam Smith's ground-breaking main work, the ""Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations"". This seminal first translation of the work was undertaken by J.F. Schiller, who finished the first part of the translation in time for it to appear as soon as 1776, the same year as the original English edition. The second part appeared in 1778, the same year as the exceedingly scarce first French translation. This first German translation has been of the utmost importance to the spreading of Smith's ideas throughout Europe, and, after the true first, this must count as the most important edition of the work.""The influence of the Wealth of Nations [...] in Germany [...] was so great that 'the whole of political economy might be divided into two parts - before and since Adam Smith"" the first part being a prelude, and the second a sequel."" (Backhouse, Roger E., The Methodology of Economics: Nineteenth-Century British Contributions, Routledge, 1997.)""The first review of the translation, which appeared in the Göttingische gelehrte Anzeigen for March 10, 1777, by J. G. H. Feder, professor of Philosophy at the University of Göttingen, was very favorable. In the words of the reviewer: ""It is a classic"" very estimable both for its thorough, not too limited, often far-sighted political philosophy, and for the numerous, frequently discursive historical notes,"" but the exposition suffers from too much repetition."" (Lai, Cheng-chung. Adam Smith Across Nations: Translations and Receptions of The Wealth of Nations, Clarendon Press, UK, 2000).Until 1797, [...], the work of Adam Smith received scant attention in Germany. While Frederick II was living, Cameralism held undisputed sway in Prussia, and the economic change which began with the outbreak of the French Revolution had still not gained sufficient momentum to awake the economic theorists from their dogmatic slumber."" (Lai, Cheng-chung. Adam Smith Across Nations: Translations and Receptions of The Wealth of Nations, Clarendon Press, UK, 2000).Various German economist read the german translations and was inspired by it.""Christian Garve, [...], must be considered as among the important contributors to the spread of Smith's views. Himself a popularizer of philosophical doctrines, he was early attracted by the Scotch writers and became one of their foremost exponents in Germany."" In 1791 Garve began a second translation of the Smith's work and in the introduction to the the translation he wrote: ""It (Smith's work) attracted me as only few books have in the course of my studies through the number of new views which it gave me not only concerning the actual abject of his investigations, but concerning all related material from the philosophy of civil and social life"". Georg Sartorius, August Ferdinand Lueder and, perhaps the most important economist of the period, Christian Jacob Kraus, were all important figures in the spread of Smith's thought. ""The most significant of Kraus' works and that also which shows his conception of economic science most clearly is the five-volume work entitled State Economy. The first four volumes of this work are little more than a free paraphrase of the Wealth of Nations"". Kraus was: ""to a large extent responsible for the economic changes which took place in Prussia after 1807, in so far as they can be ascribed to Smithan influence."" (Lai, Cheng-chung. Adam Smith Across Nations: Translations and Receptions of The Wealth of Nations, Clarendon Press, UK, 2000).Kraus wrote of the present volume: ""[T]he world has seen no more important book than that of Adam Smith.... [C]ertainly since the times of the New Testament no writing has had more beneficial results than this will have.... [Smith's doctrines form] the only true, great, beautiful, just and beneficial system."" (Fleischacker, Samuel , A Third Concept of Liberty, Princeton University Press, 1999.)_____________Hailed as the ""first and greatest classic of modern thought"" (PMM 221), Adam Smith's tremendously influential main work has had a profound impact on thought and politics, and is considered the main foundation of the era of liberal free trade that dominated the nineteenth century. Adam Smith (1723-1790) is considered the founder of Political Economy in Britain, mainly due to his groundbreaking work, the ""Wealth of Nations"" from 1776. The work took him 12 years to write and was probably in contemplation 12 years before that. It was originally published in two volumes in 4to, and was published later the same year in Dublin in three volumes in 8vo. The book sold well, and the first edition, the number of which is unknown, sold out within six months, which came as a surprise to the publisher, and probably also to Smith himself, partly because the work ""requires much thought and reflection (qualities that do not abound among modern readers) to peruse to any purpose."" (Letter from David Hume, In: Rae, Life of Adam Smith, 1895, p. 286), partly because it was hardly reviewed or noticed by magazines or annuals. In spite of this, it did evoke immense interest in the learned and the political world, and Buckle's words that the work is ""in its ultimate results probably the most important book that has ever been written"", and that it has ""done more towards the happiness of man than has been effected by the united abilities of all the statesmen and legislators of whom history has preserved an authentic account"" (History of Civilisation, 1869, I:214) well describes the opinion of a great part of important thinkers then as well as now. Kress S. 2567Goldsmith 11394Menger 521Not in Einaudi
Kiøbenhavn [Copenhagen], 1779-80. 8vo. Two very nice contemporary brown half calf bindings with raised bands, gilt ornamentations and gilt leather title- and tome-labels. Volume two with a bit of wear to upper capital. Corners slightly bumped. Pencil annotations to verso of title-page in volume one" title-page in volume two mounted to cover up a small hole caused by the removal of an old owner's name. Internally very clean and bright. All in all a very nice, clean, fresh, and tight copy. Engraved (by Weise, 1784) armorial book plate to inside of front boards (Gregorius Christianus Comes ab Haxthausen). (12), 575" (8), 775, (3, - errata) pp.
The extremely scarce first Danish edition of Adam Smith's seminal main work, ""the first and greatest classic of modern economic thought"" (PMM 221), the main foundational work of the era of liberal free trade. This publication constitutes the first Danish work worth mentioning in the history of economic thought - in spite of the great interest in political economy that dominated Danish political thought in the last quarter of the 18th century. The value of Smith's work was not immediately recognized in Denmark at the time of its appearance and a quarter of a century had to go by for its importance to be acknowledged and for Danish political economy to adapt the revolutionizing theories of Adam Smith. Few copies of the translation were published and sold, and the book is now a great scarcity. As opposed to for instance the German translation of the work, Smith concerned himself a great deal with this Danish translation. As is evident from preserved correspondence about it, he reacted passionately to it and was deeply concerned with the reaction to his work in Scandinavia (see ""Correspondence of Adam Smith"", Oxford University Press, 1977).- As an example, Smith writes in a letter to Andreas Holt on Oct. 26th, 1780: ""It gives me the greatest pleasure to hear that Mr. Dreby has done me the distinguished honour of translating my Book into the Danish language. I beg you will present to him my most sincere thanks and most respectful Compliments. I am much concerned that I cannot have the pleasure of reading it in his translation, as I am so unfortunate as not to understand the Danish language."" The translation was made by Frants Dræby (1740-1814), the son a whiskey distiller in Copenhagen, who mastered as a theologian and was then hired by the great Norwegian merchant James Collett as tutor to his son. There can be no doubt that Dræbye's relation to the Collett house had a great impact upon his interest in economics. In the middle of the 1770'ies, Dræbye accompanied Collett's son on travels throughout Europe, which took them to England in the year 1776, the same year that the ""Wealth of Nations"" was published for the first time. Through the Colletts, Dræbye was introduced to the mercantile environment in England and here became thoroughly acquainted with English economics and politics at the time. It is presumably here that he gets acquainted with Adam Smith's freshly published revolutionary work. When Dræbye returned to Denmark at the end of 1776, he was appointed chief of the Norwegian secretariat of the Board of Economics and Trade. He began the translation of the ""Wealth of Nations"" that he brought back with him from England immediately after his return.""WN [i.e. Wealth of Nations] was translated into Danish by Frants Dræbye and published in 1779 (three years after the first English edition). The translation was initiated by Andreas Holt and Peter Anker, who were acquainted with Smith. Dræbye was a Dane who lived mainly in Norway, reflecting the fact that Norway was much more British-oriented than Denmark proper (Denmark and Norway were united until 1814, when Sweden took Norway away from the Danes"" in 1905 Norway became an independent state). Norwegian merchants lived from exporting timber to Britain and tended on the whole to be adherents of a liberal economic policy, whereas the absolutist government in Copenhagen was more German-oriented and had economic views similar to those in contemporary Prussia."" (Cheng-chung Lai (edt.): ""Adam Smith Across Nations"", p. (37)). The last quarter of the eighteenth century in Denmark was dominated by a lively discussion of monetary policy and the institutional framework best suited to realize that policy. There was a vital interest in questions of economic concern, and contemporary Danish sources refer to the period as ""this economic age"" and state things such as ""never was the world more economically minded"" (both from ""Denmark and Norway's Economic Magazine""). During this period, Smith's revolutionary ideas did not play a major role, however, and only at the beginning of the 19th century did Danish politicians and economists come to realize the meaning of Smith's views. ""Without exaggeration it can essentially be said that a quarter of a century was to pass from the time of the publication of the book in Denmark before Danish political economy fully made Adam Smith's theories and points of view its own. It took so long a time because the economic conditions as a whole in the years from 1780-1800 did not make desirable or necessary the changing of their concepts. That glorious commercial period had to pass before it was understood that we had altogether too little help in our own natural resources and that a different course was, therefore, necessary. Only when one had come so far could the new thinking find a nourishing soil so that it could develop strength with which to push aside the old ideas.""(Hans Degen: ""On the Danish Translation of Adam Smith and Contemporary Opinion Concerning It."" Translated by Henrietta M. Larson. In: Adam Smith Across Nations, p. 51). This first Danish translation is one of the very earliest translations of ""Wealth of Nations"""" it is only preceded by the German (1776-78) and the extremely scarce French (1778-79). As a comparison, the Italian translation does not appear until 1790-91, the Spanish 1792, the Swedish 1800-1804, the Russian 1802, etc.Adam Smith Across Nations: A4 - nr. 1. ""All five books were translated"" appears to be a complete translation. The long letter from Governor Pownall to Adam Smith (25 Sept. 1776) is added as the Appendix (vol. 2, pp. 683 ff.).""(PMM 221 - first edition)
Kiøbenhavn [Copenhagen], 1779-80. 8vo. Two nice contemporary half calf bindings with four raised bands and gilt leather title label to spines. Volume one lacking one cm of upper part of spine. Volume two with a small tear to lower part of spine. Both volumes with light brown spotting throughout, however, mainly affecting first and last five leaves of both volumes. A fine set. (12), 575"" (8), 775, (3, - errata) pp.
The extremely scarce first Danish edition of Adam Smith's seminal main work, ""the first and greatest classic of modern economic thought"" (PMM 221), the main foundational work of the era of liberal free trade. This publication constitutes the first Danish work worth mentioning in the history of economic thought - in spite of the great interest in political economy that dominated Danish political thought in the last quarter of the 18th century. The value of Smith's work was not immediately recognized in Denmark at the time of its appearance and a quarter of a century had to go by for its importance to be acknowledged and for Danish political economy to adapt the revolutionizing theories of Adam Smith. Few copies of the translation were published and sold, and the book is now a great scarcity. As opposed to for instance the German translation of the work, Smith concerned himself a great deal with this Danish translation. As is evident from preserved correspondence about it, he reacted passionately to it and was deeply concerned with the reaction to his work in Scandinavia (see ""Correspondence of Adam Smith"", Oxford University Press, 1977).- As an example, Smith writes in a letter to Andreas Holt on Oct. 26th, 1780: ""It gives me the greatest pleasure to hear that Mr. Dreby has done me the distinguished honour of translating my Book into the Danish language. I beg you will present to him my most sincere thanks and most respectful Compliments. I am much concerned that I cannot have the pleasure of reading it in his translation, as I am so unfortunate as not to understand the Danish language."" The translation was made by Frants Dræby (1740-1814), the son a whiskey distiller in Copenhagen, who mastered as a theologian and was then hired by the great Norwegian merchant James Collett as tutor to his son. There can be no doubt that Dræbye's relation to the Collett house had a great impact upon his interest in economics. In the middle of the 1770'ies, Dræbye accompanied Collett's son on travels throughout Europe, which took them to England in the year 1776, the same year that the ""Wealth of Nations"" was published for the first time. Through the Colletts, Dræbye was introduced to the mercantile environment in England and here became thoroughly acquainted with English economics and politics at the time. It is presumably here that he gets acquainted with Adam Smith's freshly published revolutionary work. When Dræbye returned to Denmark at the end of 1776, he was appointed chief of the Norwegian secretariat of the Board of Economics and Trade. He began the translation of the ""Wealth of Nations"" that he brought back with him from England immediately after his return.""WN [i.e. Wealth of Nations] was translated into Danish by Frants Dræbye and published in 1779 (three years after the first English edition). The translation was initiated by Andreas Holt and Peter Anker, who were acquainted with Smith. Dræbye was a Dane who lived mainly in Norway, reflecting the fact that Norway was much more British-oriented than Denmark proper (Denmark and Norway were united until 1814, when Sweden took Norway away from the Danes"" in 1905 Norway became an independent state). Norwegian merchants lived from exporting timber to Britain and tended on the whole to be adherents of a liberal economic policy, whereas the absolutist government in Copenhagen was more German-oriented and had economic views similar to those in contemporary Prussia."" (Cheng-chung Lai (edt.): ""Adam Smith Across Nations"", p. (37)). The last quarter of the eighteenth century in Denmark was dominated by a lively discussion of monetary policy and the institutional framework best suited to realize that policy. There was a vital interest in questions of economic concern, and contemporary Danish sources refer to the period as ""this economic age"" and state things such as ""never was the world more economically minded"" (both from ""Denmark and Norway's Economic Magazine""). During this period, Smith's revolutionary ideas did not play a major role, however, and only at the beginning of the 19th century did Danish politicians and economists come to realize the meaning of Smith's views. ""Without exaggeration it can essentially be said that a quarter of a century was to pass from the time of the publication of the book in Denmark before Danish political economy fully made Adam Smith's theories and points of view its own. It took so long a time because the economic conditions as a whole in the years from 1780-1800 did not make desirable or necessary the changing of their concepts. That glorious commercial period had to pass before it was understood that we had altogether too little help in our own natural resources and that a different course was, therefore, necessary. Only when one had come so far could the new thinking find a nourishing soil so that it could develop strength with which to push aside the old ideas.""(Hans Degen: ""On the Danish Translation of Adam Smith and Contemporary Opinion Concerning It."" Translated by Henrietta M. Larson. In: Adam Smith Across Nations, p. 51). This first Danish translation is one of the very earliest translations of ""Wealth of Nations"""" it is only preceded by the German (1776-78) and the extremely scarce French (1778-79). As a comparison, the Italian translation does not appear until 1790-91, the Spanish 1792, the Swedish 1800-1804, the Russian 1802, etc.Adam Smith Across Nations: A4 - nr. 1. ""All five books were translated"" appears to be a complete translation. The long letter from Governor Pownall to Adam Smith (25 Sept. 1776) is added as the Appendix (vol. 2, pp. 683 ff.).""
La Revue Indépendante | Paris Août 1887 | 12 x 19 cm | relié
Edition originale. Reliure à la bradel en plein cartonnage chocolat, dos lisse, une tache affectant marginalement le premier plat, couverture conservée, reliure de l'époque. Nous tenons à préciser que le précédent possesseur a fait uniquement conserver par le relieur l'article du comte Villiers de l'Isle Adam. Rare. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Alphonse Lemerre | Paris 1870 | 12.50 x 18.50 cm | relié
Edition originale sur papier courant, il n'aurait été tiré que cinq rarissimes Chine en grands papiers. Reliure à la bradel en demi maroquin chocolat, dos lisse, date en queue, plats de papier marbré, couvertures (comportant d'habiles restaurations marginales) et dos conservés, tête dorée, reliure signée de Boichot. Envoi autographe signé de Villiers de l'Isle-Adam à Victor Wilder, traducteur poétique de l'oeuvre de Richard Wagner. L'envoi dépeint l'amitié des deux hommes, qui se poursuit notamment lors de leur collaboration dans la revue wagnérienne jusqu'en 1888. Bel exemplaire agréablement établi. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
N. Scheuring & Cie | Paris 1888 | 10 x 16 cm | relié
Edition originale publiée à compte d'auteur et à petit nombre. Quelques petites rousseurs. Reliure à la bradel en plein papier rappelant la couverture quadrillée or de l'ouvrage, dos lisse, pièce de titre de maroquin rouge, fragiles couvertures conservées, tête dorée, reliure signée Thomas Boichot. Rare envoi autographe signé d'Auguste Villiers de l'Isle-Adam au marquis de Monthec. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Charpentier | Nantes Paris 1874 | 48.80 x 33.50 cm | une feuille
Lithographie originale en couleurs gravée par Albert Adam d'après un dessin de Léon Jean-Baptiste Sabatier et ayant servi d'illustration àParis et ses ruinesdeVictor Fournel, ouvrage témoignant des ravages de la Commune de Paris. Quelques salissures marginales, sinon bel exemplaire. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Charpentier | Nantes Paris 1874 | 48.80 x 33.50 cm | une feuille
Lithographie originale en couleurs gravée par Albert Adam d'après un dessin de Léon Jean-Baptiste Sabatier et ayant servi d'illustration àParis et ses ruinesdeVictor Fournel, ouvrage témoignant des ravages de la Commune de Paris. Quelques salissures marginales, sinon bel exemplaire. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Charpentier | Nantes Paris 1874 | 48.80 x 33.50 cm | une feuille
Lithographie originale en noir et blanc gravée par Albert Adam d'après un dessin de Léon Jean-Baptiste Sabatier et ayant servi d'illustration àParis et ses ruinesdeVictor Fournel, ouvrage témoignant des ravages de la Commune de Paris. Quelques salissures marginales, sinon bel exemplaire. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Charpentier | Nantes Paris 1874 | 33.50 x 48.80 cm | une feuille
Lithographie originale en couleurs gravée par Albert Adam d'après un dessin de Léon Jean-Baptiste Sabatier et ayant servi d'illustration àParis et ses ruinesdeVictor Fournel, ouvrage témoignant des ravages de la Commune de Paris. Quelques piqûres marginales et une petite déchirure sans manque en marge basse, sans atteinte à l'image. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Charpentier | Nantes Paris 1874 | 48.80 x 33.50 cm | une feuille
Lithographie originale en couleurs gravée par Albert Adam d'après un dessin de Léon Jean-Baptiste Sabatier et ayant servi d'illustration àParis et ses ruinesdeVictor Fournel, ouvrage témoignant des ravages de la Commune de Paris. Quelques piqûres marginales, sinon bel exemplaire. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Charpentier | Nantes Paris 1874 | 48.80 x 33.50 cm | une feuille
Lithographie originale en couleurs réalisée par Albert Adam, Léon Jean-Baptiste Sabatier et Félix Benoist et ayant servi d'illustration àParis et ses ruinesdeVictor Fournel, ouvrage témoignant des ravages de la Commune de Paris. Quelques piqûres marginales, sinon bel exemplaire. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Jean Jobert | Paris s. d. [circa 1923] | 12.50 x 18.50 cm | broché
Edition originale de l'adaptation par Emile Blémont de cet opéra-comique du XIIIème siècle du trouvère Adam de La Halle. Agréable exemplaire complet de son prière d'insérer. Adaptation musicale de Julien Tiersot. Précieux envoi autographe signé d'Emile Blémont à l'hydropathe Joseph Uzanne. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Richard WAGNER - Catulle MENDÈS - Auguste de VILLIERS DE L'ISLE-ADAM
Reference : 84667
(1885)
Boyer & Cie Imprimeries Morellet | Paris 1885-1888 | 16.80 x 24.60 cm | 3 volumes reliés
Collection complète en 36 numéros (dont trois numéros doubles) reliée en trois volumes - Première année : 12 numéros, du 8 février 1885 au 6 janvier 1886 - Deuxième année : 12 numéros, du 8 février 1886 au 15 janvier 1887 - Troisième année : 12 numéros, de février 1887 à janvier 1888. Illustrée de 4 lithographies hors-texte de Fantin-Latour :L'Évocation d'Erda- Odilon Redon :Brünnhilde- Jacques-Emile Blanche :Tristan et IsoldeetLe pur-simple. Reliure en demi-maroquin chocolat, dos lisse, titres dorés, plats de papier à la cuve, gardes et contreplats de papier marbré, couvertures conservées, reliure signée Dupré. Contributions nombreuses d'écrivains, critiques, poètes et musiciens parmi les plus représentatifs de la fin du XIXe siècle, incluant celle du maître Wagner lui-même : Charles et Pierre Bonnier, Jules de Brayer, Alfred Ernst, Joris-Karl Huysmans, Fourcaud, René Ghil, Stuart Merrill, Stéphane Mallarmé, Catulle Mendès, Éphraïm Mikhael, Pierre Quillard, Jean Richepin, Émile Hennequin, Charles Vignier, Charles Morice, Paul Verlaine, Villiers de l'Ilse Adam, Teodor de Wyzewa, Stewart Chamberlain, Gerard de Nerval (Souvenirs sur Lohengrin), Jean Ajalbert, Gabriel Mourey, Adolphe Jullien, Tola Dorian, Swinburne, Evenepoel, Franz Liszt... Très précieuse collection complète de cette revue avant-gardiste à la fois littéraire et consacrée, à travers une nouvelle esthétique, à la diffusion de l'uvre de Richard Wagner. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Paul Ollendorff | Paris 1899 | 13.50 x 20 cm | broché
Edition originale, un des rares exemplaires d'auteur sur Hollande, il n'est pas fait mention de grands papiers. Envoi autographe signé de Paul Adam à Gustave Larroumet. Bel exemplaire à toutes marges. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Imp. & Lib. Francisque Guyon | Saint-Brieuc 1866 | 16.50 x 25 cm | broché
Edition originale hors commerce imprimée à petit nombre et pour laquelle il n'a pas été tiré de grands papiers. Dos factice habilement refait à l'identique des plats, petites déchirures angulaires et manques marginaux restaurés sur les plats, rares piqûres intérieures. Envoi autographe signé de Auguste Comte de Villiers de l'Isle-Adam. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Vuibert & Nony | Paris 1908 | 11 x 18.50 cm | relié
Edition originale pour laquelle il n'a pas été tiré de grands papiers. Reliure en demi chagrin rouge, dos à cinq nerfs sertis de filets noirs comportant de petites taches noires en tête, plats de papier marbré, gardes et contreplats de papier rouge, couvertures (deuxième plat comportant un petit manque en tête) conservées. Envoi autographe signé de Paul Adam à Paul Ollendorff,légèrement rogné. Provenance : bibliothèque de Paul Ollendorff. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Paul Ollendorff | Paris 1911 | 11 x 18 cm | relié
Edition originale sur papier courant, il n' a été tiré que 25 Hollande en grands papiers. Reliure en demi chagrin chocolat, dos à cinq nerfs sertis de filets noirs, plats de papier marbré, gardes et contreplats de papier rouge comportant une petite déchirure sans gravité en pied, couvertures conservées. Envoi autographe signé de Paul Adam à son éditeur Paul Ollendorff. Provenance : bibliothèque de Paul Ollendorff. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
Apud J.C. Pyron | Cadomi (Caen) 1777 | 9.50 x 16 cm | relié
Nouvelle édition après la première de 1771. Impression de Caen. Pleine basane d'époque marbrée. Dos à nerfs orné. Pièce de titre en maroquin rouge. Manque en tête avec le carton présent. Mors inférieur fendu en tête. Frottements. Manuel de logique philosophique destiné aux étudiants. Jean Adam était professeur à l'université de Caen. - Photographies et détails sur www.Edition-Originale.com -
Phone number : 01 56 08 08 85
[ADAM, Juliette] – ADDE (Brigitte), François Beautier, Georges Boneville, Pierre Cayla... [et al.].
Reference : 110335
(1988)
ISBN : 2-9502628-0-5
Gif-sur-Yvette, SAGA (Société des amis de Gif et d'alentour), 1988 pt in-4° à l'italienne (24 x 16), 160 pp, 68 gravures et portraits en noir, 16 pl. en couleurs hors texte, liste des œuvres de Juliette Adam in-fine, reliure toile éditeur, jaquette illustrée, bon état. Edition originale numérotée sur beau papier (non justifiée)
Sur la célèbre femme de lettres, polémiste, salonnière féministe et républicaine Juliette Adam, née Lambert (1836-1936). — Juliette Adam veuve de Alexis La Messine en 1867, épouse l'avocat Edmond Adam, député de la gauche républicaine, fondateur du Crédit foncier, préfet de police en 1870, puis sénateur. Juliette Adam qui, toute jeune, prend la succession de Marie d'Agoult à la tête du plus célèbre salon républicain, et qui garde jusqu'aux années 1930 une influence prépondérante grâce à son génie d'hôtesse. Elle fit et défit des carrières, promut Gambetta, soigna Guizot, protégea Henri Rochefort. Femme d'influence, Juliette Adam se veut l'incarnation de la Grande Française, déterminée à rendre à la France abaissée son rang en Europe. Amie de George Sand, de Julie-Victoire Daubié et de Marie-Anne de Bovet, elle se détache de Gambetta lorsqu'il accède à la présidence de la Chambre, et elle se tourne vers la littérature. En 1879, elle fonde La Nouvelle Revue, qu'elle anime pendant vingt ans. Elle y publie notamment les premiers romans de Paul Bourget ou Le Calvaire d'Octave Mirbeau. Elle encourage également les débuts littéraires de Pierre Loti, d'Alexandre Dumas fils et de Léon Daudet. Conduite par une santé prétendument chancelante, qui ne l'empêchera pas de vivre presque centenaire, elle découvre Golfe-Juan où elle achète en 1858 un terrain pour y construire une villa lançant la vogue de cette station balnéaire. Le 5 août 1882, elle achète à Gif-sur-Yvette (Essonne) le domaine de l'Abbaye où elle vit de 1904 jusqu'à sa mort en 1936. Elle se convertit au catholicisme en 1905 et est inhumée au cimetière du Père-Lachaise.
Stockholm, Henrik A. Nordström, 1797-1801. 8vo. Uncut, partly unopened in the original wrappers. In 22 volumes as issued. Last volume name written on title-page, otherwise an exceptionally fine, clean and untouched set rarely seen in this condition. (4),102 pp." (2),182 pp. (2),107 pp. (2),157,(1) pp. (2),176,(4) pp. (4),138,(2) pp. (2),205,(1) pp. + 1 folded table (2),188 pp (2),190 pp. (2),89,(4) pp. (4),135,(1) pp. (2),116,(1) pp. (2),157 pp. (2),120 pp. (2),151,(1 blank,10) pp. + 1 folded map (2),215 pp. + 1 folded table (2),131,(5) pp. (4),207 pp. (2),183,(1) pp. + 1 folded table (2),218 pp. (2),144,(4) pp." (6),449,(1) pp. + 5 folded plates.""Om Beskatning"", Part: 36, 37, 38:Pp. 145-177""Om Jordbrukets förfall i Europa, efter Romerska Väldets undergäng"", Part: 27, 28. Pp. 93-120""Om Handelsbalancen"", Part: 25,26. Pp. 92-114""Om Jordbruks-systemet I en Rikshushållning, samt om Economisterne I Frankrike"", Part: 25-26. Pp. 43-92""Om Pappers-myntet I Norr-Amerika Kolonierne, före Revolutionen"". Part: 27-28. Pp.57-62""Om Krono-jord"". Part: 29,30,31. Pp 139-146.""Theorien för statsskulder"". Part: 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49 & 50. Pp. 151-161.
First, however partial, translation of Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations in Swedish rarely seen in this condition, thus making it the very first opportunity for Swedish speakers to study Adam Smith. A more lengthy translation was made in 1909 - 1911 but to this day a full Swedish translation has not been made.""Von Schulzenheim [nobleman, physician, country squire and politician] also published shorter articles in the review 'Läsning I blandade ämnen', an organ of the opposition to the absolutist and obscurantist regime of Gustavus IV Adolphus. The editor of the review was count Georg Adlersparre, an army officer and a political writer who in 1809 was to become one of the prime-movers behind the dethronement of the king. Adlersparre to was an admirer of Adam Smith. In 1799-1800 he published in the 'Läsning' his own Swedish translation of several selections from Wealth of Nations. In some cases Adlersparre added footnotes, making it easier for the readers to apply Smith's ideas to Swedish conditions. Those translations, to the best of my knowledge, were the first ones of Wealth of Nations in Sweden. They were followed by translations of other parts of Wealth of Nations, published in 1800 amd 1808. This time the translator was Erik Erland Bodell, an official of the Swedish Customs and thus, if you like, a colleague of Adam Smith."" ( Cheng-chung, Adam Smith Across Nations). Despite the comparatively late translation into Swedish, it still had a profound influence, not on economists since they were well aware of the original work in English, but upon politics and public opinion in general: ""There are few things more striking to the modem student of the history of ideas in Sweden than the negative phenomenon that Sweden was almost entirely uninfluenced by this fact and thus remained almost unaffected by English economic thought during a period when its superiority was most evident. As far as I am acquainted with the Swedish economic discussion and our popular economic literature of the 1860's and 1870's, there is almost no trace of any influence from English writers. [...]Of Adam Smith we have still only one abbreviated translation of his famous work and that was published as late as during this century"" and, as far as I know, nothing of Ricardo's or Malthus' exists in Swedish, nor do any of the major economic works of J.S. Mill."" (Heckscher, A survey of economic thought in Sweden, 1875-1950).The journal was preceded by Adlersparre's ""Läsning för landtmän"" 1795-96. The content is a mixture of literature, agriculture, law, philosophy and politics. Apart from the many contributions by Swedish authors, ""Läsning i blandade ämnen"" also contains texts by Kant, Gibbon and De Lolme OCLC lists copies at Yale, Minnesota, and Texas.