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Poems by John Greenleaf Whittier - c1900: by John Greenleaf Whittier

by John Greenleaf Whittier

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Poems by John Greenleaf Whittier - c1900

Poems: by John Greenleaf Whittier

by John Greenleaf Whittier

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Although John Greenleaf Whittier's reputation as a poet declined drastically in the twentieth century, his career is of continuing interest as an example of the writer functioning as a deeply committed reform activist. In the thirty-year struggle to abolish slavery Whittier played an important role as a poet, as a politician, and as a moral force; and yet, though he was among the most ardent of the antebellum reformers, he was saved from the besetting sin of that class—a narrowing and self-consuming zeal—by his equal insistence on tolerance, a quality he had come to cherish all the more through his study of the persecution of his Quaker ancestors. But if Whittier's life was dramatic for the moral, political, and, on occasion, physical conflicts it included, his poetry—the best of it—is of at least equal significance. Whittier was a highly regarded poet during the second half of the nineteenth century, enshrined in the pantheon of "Schoolroom Poets" along with William Cullen Bryant, Ralph Waldo Emerson, James Russell Lowell, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Whittier knew that he had written too much and that much of what he had written for the abolitionist movement had been hastily composed and for ends that were essentially political. Nevertheless, his collected poetry includes a core of excellent work, at the head of which stands his masterpiece, Snow-Bound. A Winter Idyl (1866), a lovingly imaginative re-creation of the good life in rural New England. This work—together with "Telling the Bees," "Ichabod," "Massachusetts to Virginia," "Skipper Ireson's Ride," "The Rendition," "The Double-Headed Snake of Newbury," and a dozen or so others—suggests not only the New England source of Whittier's finest achievements but also the predominant appeal that folk material had for his imagination.

Whittier's youth—indeed, his whole life—was deeply rooted in the values, history, and traditions of rural Essex County, Massachusetts. Born on 17 December 1807 near Haverhill, Massachusetts, in a farmhouse that his great-great-grandfather had built in the seventeenth century, John Greenleaf Whittier grew up in a poor but respectable household characterized by hard work, Quaker piety, and warm family affection. A more distinctive part of his background was the rich tradition of folklore in the region; tales of witches and ghosts told on winter evenings by the fire exercised the young Whittier's imagination. But his discovery of the Scottish poet Robert Burns, who could speak the beauty of the commonplace circumstances of a rural environment, made him wish to be a poet.

In 1829 at the age of twenty-two, too frail to be of much help on the farm, too poor to have given himself more than a year at the Haverhill Academy, and beginning already to doubt his abilities as a poet, Whittier accepted the editorship of The American Manufacturer, a political weekly in Boston. This position had been secured for him by William Lloyd Garrison, himself a young newspaper editor who was just then beginning his long career as an abolitionist. Whittier entered journalism for the opportunity to write. What he learned from the experience, however, were politics and polemics. His editorials, first in The American Manufacturer and later in the Hartford, Connecticut, New England Review, were at least as fierce in their denunciation of the Democrat Andrew Jackson as they were warm in support of the Whig Henry Clay.

In February 1831, while at Hartford, Whittier published a collection of tales and poems, Legends of New-England. Although the volume received little attention at the time, it is significant as a pioneering effort to render New England folklore, and in some respects it may be said to anticipate the works of Nathaniel Hawthorne. Whittier was never entirely comfortable with the Gothic mode, however, and suppressed the book in later life. On one occasion he paid five dollars for the privilege of destroying a copy of this rare early volume.

Toward the end of 1831 Whittier retired in ill health to Haverhill and spent the winter convalescing. He knew that he was at a crossroads in his life and wished to settle finally on a vocation. Poetry hardly paid at all, but he had come to like politics and found that his vociferous public support for Clay had made him a popular man in Massachusetts. The answer to Whittier's dilemma about his vocation arrived in the mail on 22 March 1833. His friend and patron, Garrison, who had begun publishing his The Liberator two years before, wrote to Whittier urging him to enlist in the gathering struggle against slavery. "Your talents, zeal, influence," he told Whittier, "all are needed." Whittier knew that to enlist in this cause, unpopular as it then was in New England, would be tantamount to giving up all hope of ever gaining elective office. To form such an alliance would also exclude him from influential literary circles and make publishing his poetry difficult, if not impossible. Still, Whittier had been slowly coming to the conclusion that Garrison now urged on him—that the evil of slavery had to be resisted actively.

Whittier responded in June 1833 with a privately printed pamphlet called Justice and Expediency; or, Slavery Considered with a View to Its Rightful and Effectual Remedy, Abolition, a closely reasoned and carefully documented attack on the Colonization Society. Widely supported by Northern and Southern churches, the Colonization Society was a conservative reform group that proposed to resolve the issue of slavery by sending American blacks, both slave and free, back to Africa. The society was, at the time of Whittier's pamphlet, headed by Clay. An abolitionist group in New York republished the work and distributed hundreds of copies. Whittier's commitment to the cause was now sealed; as he expressed the experience many years later in "The Tent on the Beach" (1867), he


Had left the Muses' haunts to turn
The crank of an opinion-mill,
Making his rustic reed of song
A weapon in the war with wrong,
Yoking his fancy to the breaking-plow
That beam-deep turned to the soil for truth to spring and grow.

On the basis of this pamphlet and as a friend of Garrison, Whittier was chosen to be a delegate to the Philadelphia convention that in December 1833 founded the American Anti-Slavery Society. Accepting this position was an important moment in his life, and though his identification with the movement entailed many sacrifices throughout his career, he never regretted his decision. "I set a higher value on my name as appended to the Anti-Slavery Declaration of 1833," he later said, "than on the title-page of any book."

Though he could no longer hope to fulfill his dream of winning important political office, in 1835 he was able to gain a seat in the state legislature from his small home district of Haverhill. In the legislature he was an effective spokesman for his cause, winning over many to his views on the slavery question, sending petitions to the Congress, trying to get a bill through the state house granting trial by jury in cases involving the return of runaway slaves, and even organizing opposition to the death penalty. Whittier served only one term, having again jeopardized his always precarious health by hard work. He continued meanwhile to express his abolitionism in poems published in Garrison's The Liberator and in the columns of the Essex Gazette, which he now edited, but opposition to his moral stand was mounting. He was forced out of the Essex Gazette for failing to toe the orthodox Whig line and was threatened with violence in September 1835 by a mob in Concord, New Hampshire."

In 1836 Whittier sold the 148-acre family farm and moved with his mother and sister a few miles away to Amesbury in order that he and they might be closer to the Friends' meetinghouse. He was, however, frequently away. In 1837 he was in the New York office of the Anti-Slavery Society directing a nationwide petition campaign, and in the following year he moved to Philadelphia to edit the Pennsylvania Freeman, which he succeeded in turning into a vigorous organ of the abolitionist movement. During this period he was in close contact with all the most prominent American antislavery leaders, from Garrison and the Grimkè sisters (Angelina Weld and Sarah Moore) to Lydia Maria Child and John Quincy Adams."

Poems Written During the Progress of the Abolition Question in the United States, Between the Years 1830 and 1838--the first collection of Whittier's poetry--was brought out in 1837, without his knowledge, by some of his antislavery associates in Boston. In 1838 Whittier authorized an expanded and corrected edition, called Poems, which was published in Philadelphia. Included in these collections are some of his most heartfelt polemics, such as "Clerical Oppressors," a poem attacking the hypocrisy of the Southern clergy in lending the support of Christianity to the slave system:


Feed fat, ye locusts, feed!
And, in your tasselled pulpits, thank the Lord
That, from the toiling bondman's utter need,
Ye pile your own full board.

In such poems as "Stanzas" (later called "Expostulation") Whittier contrasted the apparent commitment of the United States to slavery with its historic dedication to freedom. He appealed to the regional pride of New England in "The Yankee Girl" and "Stanzas for the Times," but in these poems, as in most of the antislavery poems of the period, Whittier's anger swept everything before it, often including artistic control. The poems were meant to be, and indeed were, effective propaganda. During the late 1830s a split developed within the ranks of the abolitionists: some, such as Whittier, preferred to work through the political system for change and hoped to preserve the Union; others, such as Garrison, were less concerned with the Union and believed that slavery could not be abolished without also destroying the U.S. Constitution. While Garrison, working with the extreme "nonresistants," placed his reliance on moral suasion, Whittier was busy helping to organize the Liberty Party. He retired to Amesbury in 1840 but continued to work actively for Liberty Party candidates and for the election of others, regardless of party, who favored emancipation."

The publication in 1843 of Whittier's Lays of My Home, and Other Poemsmarked his return to the poetic treatment of regional materials. Included in this collection are poems such as "The Merrimack," treating the local scenery with the touch of the pastoral landscape artist; poems such as "The Ballad of Cassandra Southwick," exploring New England history; and poems such as "The Funeral Tree of the Sokokis," based on Indian lore. The near relation of Whittier's regional and abolitionist poetry is indicated not only in the consistent advocacy of tolerance and brotherhood in the regional poems but also in the appeal to New England pride that so often forms the basis for his antislavery discourse. The finest poem of this sort, "Massachusetts to Virginia," was first published in this volume. After the overwhelming enthusiasm of the 1830s had dissipated in division and recrimination within the antislavery ranks, Whittier was able, during the next two decades, to maintain a healthier, maturer balance between his twin commitments to poetry and reform.

In 1846 Whittier published his last collection of antislavery poems, Voices of Freedom, and in 1847 brought out a collection of prose sketches titled The Supernaturalism of New England. A caustic review of the latter volume by Hawthorne, who pointed out its author's fundamental lack of sympathy with Gothic themes, may have contributed to Whittier's decision to suppress the book. In the same year he became a contributing editor with The National Era, a Washington-based antislavery journal that, until the founding of The Atlantic Monthly ten years later, served as his main publishing outlet. The most significant of Whittier's works to appear in The National Era was Leaves from Margaret Smith's Journal in the Province of Massachusetts Bay. 1678-9(published as a book in 1849). His only novel, Leaves from Margaret Smith's Journal is cast in the form of the letters and diary of a seventeenth-century New England Quaker, Margaret Smith. The story is sprightly and realistic, and the character of Margaret-- "among the first of our native heroines," as Lewis Leary has observed--is carefully and sensitively portrayed.

On 7 March 1850 Massachusetts Senator Daniel Webster affirmed his support of compromise with the Southern slave power. Shocked and saddened by this unexpected defection, Whittier responded with his powerful protest "Ichabod." The poem is one of his best, its invective tightly controlled and deepened by the poet's acknowledgment of the frailties of all men, even the greatest:"

So fallen! so lost! the light withdrawn
Which once he wore!
The glory from his gray hairs gone
Forevermore!
Revile him not, the Tempter hath
A snare for all;
And pitying tears, not scorn and wrath,
Befit his fall!
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Then, pay the reverence of old days
To his dead fame;
Walk backward, with averted gaze,
And hi


Meanwhile, Whittier was busy trying to get a reluctant Charles Sumner to run for the other senatorial position of Massachusetts. Whittier's maneuvers were successful and Sumner, with Whittier's advice and encouragement, became perhaps the most outspoken abolitionist in Washington."

Whittier's books of poetry were appearing at fairly regular intervals now that he had settled on the Boston publishing firm of Ticknor, Reed, and Fields (later Houghton, Mifflin). Sales, however, continued to be moderate at best. In 1850 appeared Songs of Labor and Other Poems, which, besides "Ichabod," included "Calef at Boston," "On Receiving a Quill . . . ," and the series of occupational poems that gives the volume its title. The Chapel of the Hermits and Other Poems was published in 1853, and The Panorama and Other Poemsfollowed in 1856. The popular "Barefoot Boy," a sentimental tribute to the naturally free and unspoiled life of poor New England children, was collected in the latter volume together with a fine antislavery poem, "The Haschich."

An important turn in Whittier's career occurred in 1857. The founding of The Atlantic Monthly in that year gave him a regular forum with all the most prominent writers of New England. His contributions to the earliest issues--including "Skipper Ireson's Ride" and "Telling the Bees"--were better poems than he had ever written. Symbolic of Whittier's entry into the literary establishment of Boston was the publication, also in 1857, of the "Blue and Gold Edition" of his poetry in a format to match Longfellow's. Toward the end of the year, Whittier's mother died and the poet himself turned fifty."

The poetry of this period shows Whittier's increasing disengagement from broadly political issues. His attention was turning more and more to his own personal past, as shown in the nostalgic, quasi-autobiographical poems "Telling the Bees" and "My Playmate"; he was also increasingly drawn to the larger but still personal past of New England history, as shown in the many fine ballads that he wrote at this time, such as "Skipper Ireson's Ride," "The Garrison of Cape Ann," "The Prophecy of Samuel Sewall," "The Double-Headed Snake of Newbury," and "The Swan Song of Parson Avery." All of these poems were first collected in Home Ballads and Poems, published in 1860. Almost the only hint of the impending Civil War that the volume included was the poem Whittier wrote in response to the raid on Harpers Ferry, "Brown of Ossawatomie."

Whittier's Quaker pacifism did not prevent him from being an ardent supporter of the Union cause when the Civil War broke out. He admired President Abraham Lincoln and was particularly proud of having voted for him four times, as a citizen and as an elector in 1860 and 1864. Whittier wrote many patriotic poems during the war, of which "Barbara Frietchie" is the most famous. In War Time and Other Poems, published in 1864, included several fine examples of Whittier's public poetry--"Thy Will Be Done" and "Ein Feste Berg. . . ," for example--in addition to several more "home ballads," including "Cobbler Keezar's Vision," "Amy Wentworth," and "The Countess." This volume was republished in 1865 under the title National Lyrics and included "Laus Deo," in which Whittier joyously recorded the death knell of slavery, the moment for which so much of his career had been a preparation."

With the Civil War over and the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution ratified, a part of Whittier's public life came to a close, just as, a year earlier, a part of his personal life had come to a close with the death of his beloved younger sister, Elizabeth. Whittier's whole mood was retrospective and memorial as he set to work on the "Yankee pastoral" that he had promised The Atlantic Monthly editor James Russell Lowell he would write. The result was Snow-Bound, his masterpiece.

The poem recalls a winter storm at the old Whittier homestead when the poet was a child. A day and a night of driving snow had transformed everything:

We looked upon a world unknown,
On nothing we could call our own,
Around the glistening wonder bent
The blue walls of the firmament,
No cloud above, no earth below--
A universe of sky and snow!

The threat of isolation, of freezing or starving, is countered by the family at the wood fire on the hearth, the warmth of which is a symbol of life and family affection."

Shut in from all the world without,
We sat the clean-winged hearth about,
Content to let the north-wind roar
In baffled rage at pane and door,
While the red logs before us beat
The frost-line back with tropic heat.

The physical and spiritual sufficiency of this besieged family circle is the subject of Whittier's reminiscence precisely because most of those who were then present were now dead. By recalling each of them in turn, Whittier substitutes the light of affectionate memory for the light of the burning oaken log by which that night they gathered together. The effect is to make the poem itself stand witness to "The truth to flesh and sense unknown, / That Life is ever lord of Death, / And Love can never lose its own!"

Unlike many of Whittier's poems, Snow-Bound has lost none of its appeal with the passing of time. A large part of its charm is in its presentation of what Whittier called "Flemish pictures of old days," composed of the common detail of rural life in early nineteenth-century New England: the few books, the schoolmaster boarding with the family, the sounds to be heard on windy winter nights ("We heard the loosened clapboards toss, / The boardnails snapping in the frost"), the importance of newspapers in gaining a sense of the larger world outside, and especially the companionship of nature. In 1866 the kind of life that Snow-Bound describes was as surely departed in fact as it was present to the mellowed childhood memory of thousands of readers. The poem was Whittier's first genuine commercial success as well as his most complete artistic success. He realized $10,000 from the sale of the first edition and never wanted for money again."

The Tent on the Beach and Other Poems, which followed in 1867, continued the success; twenty thousand copies were sold in three weeks. "The Wreck of the Rivermouth," "The Changeling," "The Dead Ship of Harpswell," and "Abraham Davenport"--all first collected in this volume--show Whittier's abiding fondness for legendary and historical New England material, while "The Eternal Goodness" and "Our Master" indicate the new importance that the liberal religious tradition of the Quakers was coming to assume in his later poetry. If, after the Civil War, anything may be said to have taken on the personal importance that Whittier had before attached to the fight against slavery, it was his desire to see religion in America liberalized and the last vestiges of repressive Puritanism swept away. Oliver Wendell Holmes, who shared this hope, maintained that Whittier had done as much in America as Robert Burns had done in Scotland toward "humanizing" the hard theology of Calvinism. Whittier's edition of The Journal of John Woolman, published in 1871, gave new currency to that classic work of Quaker spiritual autobiography."

The remainder of the poet's long life was spent quietly and uneventfully in Amesbury and, after 1876, in a spacious home in Danvers, Massachusetts, called Oak Knoll, which he left only for his regular summer excursions into the lake and mountain region of New Hampshire. He continued to write almost up to the time of his death. Among the Hills and Other Poems (1869) is evidence that he knew of the darker and more solitary side of rural life in New England and can sustain comparison to some of the local-color realism then being written by female authors. The title poem in The Pennsylvania Pilgrim, and Other Poems (1872), one of Whittier's more successful long narratives, concerns the seventeenth-century German Pietist, Francis Daniel Pastorius, who founded Germantown near Philadelphia and who, after formally joining the Quakers, drafted one of the earliest American antislavery statements. The volume also includes "The Brewing of Soma," from which the popular hymn "Dear Lord and Father of Mankind" is taken. The Vision of Echard, and Other Poems (1878) includes, among other poems, "The Witch of Wenham," "In the 'Old South,'" and an astonishingly good courtly love lyric titled "The Henchman." Whittier's last book of poems, At Sundown, was privately printed in 1890 for close friends, and was republished for the public, with additions, at about the time of the poet's death on 7 September 1892. The last poem that Whittier wrote was a tribute to his friend Oliver Wendell Holmes on the occasion of Holmes's eighty-third birthday. They had outlived all their generation."

Whittier's reputation was never higher nor more apparently secure than at the time of his death. For years his birthdays had virtually been public holidays and were marked by celebrations throughout New England and the West. Whittier was essentially a public poet, a poet speaking to a large segment of the American people, including many who were not otherwise readers of poetry. They often came to his work to bask in the poet's moral tone, to attend to the heroic or prophetic voice in his poems, or to receive comfort from his characteristic optimism. Whittier, for better or worse, rarely challenged his audience. The popularity he enjoyed among his contemporaries seems to have been based largely on just those poems ("The Barefoot Boy" and "Barbara Frietchie," for example) that modern readers have rejected as sentimental. A reaction against the kind of soft-focus vision of the world that Whittier too often invoked set in during the early years of the twentieth century when a new, more astringent style of poetry was being established, in part by overturning the Victorian canons of taste that had elevated the work of Whittier's generation."

As critics today take a new look at the sentimental and local-color traditions in writings by Whittier's female contemporaries, however, Whittier may emerge in a somewhat fresher light. Some of his antislavery poems, such as "A Sabbath Scene," are especially conscious of gender issues and deploy an aesthetic rather similar to that found in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin (1852), to which, indeed, the poem may be responding. Whittier's Quaker-derived acknowledgment of female equality surely formed a basis for his many friendships with such women authors of the period as Harriet Prescott Spofford, Celia Thaxter, the Cary sisters (Alice and Phoebe), Rose Terry Cooke, Lucy Larcom, Gail Hamilton, Ina Coolbrith, Annie Fields, and Sarah Orne Jewett. The personal and professional admiration that all of these authors expressed for Whittier and his poetry suggests that they may not, after all, have been working in dissimilar ways.

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  • Format/Binding Rare Hand-Painted Hurst "Burnt" Leather Cover (c1897-1904)
  • Book Condition Used - Good
  • Jacket Condition Good
  • Edition First
  • Publisher Hurst & Company
  • Place of Publication New York
  • Date Published c1900
  • Keywords Whittier's Poems Rare Hurst Burnt Leather c1900

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POEMS

by Whittier, John Greenleaf

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Poems

by John Greenleaf Whittier

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Books, Inc, 1948-01-01. Hardcover. Good. Good hardcover in Fair DJ. Previous owner's name on end paper, pages are otherwise clean, crisp and unmarked, though tanned. Binding is tight, hinges strong. Dj is torn on front face.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day!
Item Price
£6.89
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Poems

by Whittier, John Greenleaf

  • Used
  • good
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Good
Jacket Condition
No Jacket
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Slate Hill, New York, United States
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This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£3.25

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New York: P F Collier & Son. Hardcover. Good/No Jacket. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall. Undated. Spine lt sunned, worn at ends. Endpp & flyleaf foxed, front hinge cracked. American Authors in Prose and Poetry series. Poetry; American 909 po
Item Price
£3.25
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Poems; The Worlds Popular Classics

by John Greenleaf Whittier

  • Used
  • Acceptable
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Acceptable
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
2
Seller
Seattle, Washington, United States
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Item Price
£7.24

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Books, Inc., 1940. Hardcover. Acceptable. Disclaimer:A readable copy. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. Pages can include considerable notes-in pen or highlighter-but the notes cannot obscure the text. The dust jacket is missing. At ThriftBooks, our motto is: Read More, Spend Less.
Item Price
£7.24
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Poems; The Worlds Popular Classics

by John Greenleaf Whittier

  • Used
  • good
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Good
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Seattle, Washington, United States
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£7.24

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Books, Inc., 1940. Hardcover. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed.
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£7.24
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POEMS

by Whittier, John Greenleaf

  • Used
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Good with no dust jacket; Light corner wear.
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Amherst, Wisconsin, United States
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£3.23

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Worthington Company. Good with no dust jacket; Light corner wear.. Hardcover. 8vo; 319 pages; Embossed design on cover and gold on edges. I would guess late 1800's or early 1900's based on cover, paper and designs. .
Item Price
£3.23
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Poems

by John Greenleaf Whittier

  • Used
  • good
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Good
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States
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Item Price
£7.30

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Description:
W. B. Conkey Company, 1875. Leather Bound. Good. Fair hardcover (three quarter leather). No date found.....looks to be pre-1900. Text unmarked. Covers show edge wear with rubbing/scuffing and bumped corners. Spine edge wear/chipping. Binding is tight, hinges strong.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day!
Item Price
£7.30
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POEMS - VOLUME 2

by Whittier, John Greenleaf

  • Used
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Good; Decorative Cover
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Hobe Sound, Florida, United States
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This seller has earned a 2 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£4.17

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Description:
Phila.: Henry Altemus. Good; Decorative Cover. 1899. Hardback. Volume 2 only; 476 pages .
Item Price
£4.17
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Poems (Soft Leather Gilt Edged)

by John Greenleaf Whittier

  • Used
  • good
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Good
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
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£5.96

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Description:
Hurst and Company, 1900-01-01. Hardcover. Good. 318 pages
Item Price
£5.96
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Poems

by Whittier, John Greenleaf

  • Used
  • fair
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Fair
Jacket Condition
No Jacket
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Tolar, Texas, United States
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Item Price
£5.69

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Description:
New York: Hurst & Company, Publishers, 1843. Spine & corners bumped with worn edges & browning. Cover scuffed. Binding pulling loose from pages. Pages tore out but still with book. Page edges well worn. Text browning but still readable.. Hard Cover. Fair/No Jacket. 8vo.
Item Price
£5.69
Immortal Prairie (INSCRIBED) (FIRST)
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Immortal Prairie (INSCRIBED) (FIRST)

by Ransom, James H

  • Used
  • near fine
  • Hardcover
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Used - Near Fine
Jacket Condition
Near Fine
Binding
Hardcover
ISBN 13
9781460257432
ISBN 10
146025743X
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Tempe, Arizona, United States
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£14.61£5.84
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Description:
2015 - Stated First Edition - Limited Edition - INSCRIBED by author on the title-page "Fran Marie, Friend for many years," - "Unlike the tradition of most books of poetry, Ransom includes photos and paintings." - book: near fine - tight, sound, and square - pages are clean and unmarked - dj: near fine
Item Price
£14.61£5.84
Save £10.78 !
Shoemakers Best Selections Number 5 For Readings and Recitations
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Shoemakers Best Selections Number 5 For Readings and Recitations

by Shoemaker, J. W

  • Used
  • Hardcover
Condition
Used - Good+
Jacket Condition
None
Edition
1906
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, United States
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£14.63

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Rare original poetry book with cloth covered boards, copyright 1880 by J. W. Shoemaker & Co. This edition published in 1906 by the Penn Publishing company, Philadelphia. From the estate of my great-great grandfather.Includes many unique poems and recitations such as "To a skull", "Uncle Daniel's Introduction to a Mississippi Steamer", "The Leak in the Dyke", etc. More well-known poetry includes "Song of Birds", "Old Ironsides", and "Bannock Burn" by Robbie Burns. Light rubbing and bumps to outside spine edges. Back cover and interior cloth covered board has a stain at top. Original owner's name and address from 1908, but no other writing or marks. First 2 pages have a stain at top, but text of 192 pages of poetry and recitations is totally clean with light tanning of pages.
Item Price
£14.63
Just God And Me

Just God And Me

by Mary Frances Reyes

  • Used
  • Fine
  • Hardcover
  • Signed
Condition
Used - Fine
Binding
Hardcover
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Surrey, British Columbia, Canada
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Item Price
£12.95

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Description:
Comet Press Books, New York, 1956, Fine Hardcover / no dustjacket, 56 pages, 5.5" x 8.25". Inscribed by author on ffep.
Item Price
£12.95
A Ballet of Lepers: A Novel and Stories
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A Ballet of Lepers: A Novel and Stories

by Cohen, Leonard

  • New
  • Paperback
Condition
New
Jacket Condition
Not Issued
Edition
Advance Uncorrected Proof (ARC)
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 13
9780802160478
ISBN 10
0802160476
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Lukeville , Arizona, United States
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This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£14.27

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New York, Grove Press, 2022, trade paperback, 272 pp, Advance Uncorrected Proof (ARC), New. Straight, tight and clean with no wear or markings in bright, pictorial card covers, no dustjacket as issued. The pieces in this collection, written between 1956 and 1961 and including short fiction, a radio play, and a stunning early novel, offer startling insights into Cohens imagination and creative process. Cohen explores themes that would permeate his later work, from shame and unworthiness to sexual desire in all its sacred and profane dimensions to longing, whether for love, family, freedom, or transcendence. ISBN 9780802160478
Item Price
£14.27
Quartering
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Quartering

by Reza, Seema

  • Used
  • first
Condition
Used - Fine with no dust jacket
Edition
Numbered Edition; First Printing
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Williamsville, New York, United States
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£14.63

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Trumansburg, NY: Out of Step Press. Fine with no dust jacket. 2016. Numbered Edition; First Printing. Pamphlet. The author's non-linear poem about the billeting of soldiers in civilian homes in wartime. Copy 89 of a limited edition of 250. Folded into the form of a letter, the work was letterpress printed in wraps of handmade "combat paper" made from military uniforms. The author says: "Some time ago-maybe a year, maybe two? I had a conversation with some of my Combat Paper brothers (well, the kids call them their combat paper uncles, so it follows…) that led to me writing the poem "Quartering." Which was informed by them, of course, and by all the rooms I'm in, and by imagining what is really required of all the caregivers I love. It's a thought experiment: if we tore down the barracks at military hospitals and offered incentives for Americans in the surrounding neighborhoods to quarter injured service members, what would the honest instructions… Read More
Item Price
£14.63
Fan poems
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Fan poems

by Tom Clark

  • Used
  • very good
  • first
Condition
Used - Very Good
Edition
First Edition
ISBN 13
9780913028452
ISBN 10
0913028452
Quantity Available
1
Seller
St. Paul, Minnesota, United States
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Item Price
£16.26

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Description:
Plainfield: North Atlantic Books, 1976. First Edition, 8vo. [60pp], no pagination. Softcover, pictorial wraps. Very good condition, faint creasing, slight rubbing, top corner bumped and back cover small stain. This project was partially supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in Washington, D.C., a federal agency. Please see photos for specifics. A portion of all book sales from Babcock & 68th are donated to charity.
Item Price
£16.26
Pantone 125

Pantone 125

by Lee, Madeleine

  • Used
  • very good
  • Paperback
  • first
Condition
Used - Very Good
Edition
First Edition
Binding
Paperback
ISBN 13
9789810728496
ISBN 10
9810728492
Quantity Available
1
Seller
GRASS VALLEY, California, United States
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£20.32

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Description:
Singapore: Math Paper Press. Very Good. 2012. First Edition. Softcover. 9810728492 . Printed white wrappers, show moderate soil; light vertical crease front cover. Two Poem anthology, arising from the accidental advocacy of one poet, coming off the back of her love for walking about in the less beaten paths in Singapore. In a series of chapbooks borne of the Babette's Feast public gathering of writers.; 12mo - over 6¾ - 7¾" tall .
Item Price
£20.32
Melodie d'Infinito; Rime e Canti dei Chiarori Stellari.

Melodie d'Infinito; Rime e Canti dei Chiarori Stellari.

by Sparito, Giosue [Enrico Fagone]

  • Used
  • Paperback
  • Signed
Condition
Used
Binding
Paperback
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Doylestown, Pennsylvania, United States
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Item Price
£15.93

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Description:
Palermo Edizioni Arte e Pensiero, 1947, paperback. Poetry, text in ITALIAN. SIGNED, inscribed by Giosue Sparito (pseudonym of Enrico Fagone). 123 pages. Softcover. Good used condition: binding unglued from spine, covers edgeworn, page margins tanned.
Item Price
£15.93
Dreamer's Den

Dreamer's Den

by Alsup, Byron K

  • Used
  • near fine
  • Hardcover
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Used - Near Fine
Jacket Condition
Good+
Edition
First Edition
Binding
Hardcover
ISBN 13
9780682486231
ISBN 10
068248623X
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Piggott, Arkansas, United States
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This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Item Price
£20.32

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Description:
NY: Exposition Press, 1976. Burgundy leatherette boards, bright gilt lettering. Pages [63] clean, unmarked, binding tight and square. Semi-transparent waxpaper dust jacket, appears to be original; in new archival mylar, age discoloration at edges and spine, some edge wear, small bit missing. The author graduated Kennett (Missouri) High School in 1973. Copy of newspaper [DDD] article about the KHS reunion on Jan 18, 2004 laid in. Now also available is a signed copy, same condition but without the transparent dust jacket. Media Mail, Priority & most international shipping include free tracking information. Every book listed is located in my smoke free and climate controlled shop. All are inspected by me and will have qualities and/or flaws described. . First Edition. Hard Cover. Near Fine/Good+.
Item Price
£20.32
THE WATER POEM AND OTHERS

THE WATER POEM AND OTHERS

by Friedberg, Martha

  • Used
  • Fine
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Used - Fine
Edition
First Edition
Quantity Available
1
Seller
Roosevelt, New Jersey, United States
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£20.32

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Description:
Winnetka, IL: Vixen Press, 1985. First Edition. Pictorial Paper Covers. Fine. 20pp, colophon; six colored wood engravings by Caryl Seidenberg. 9.5" x 6.5" This is #222 of 250 copies only, set in Centaur and Arrighi types and printed by hand on dampened Rives heavyweight. Signed under the colophon by Seidenberg and by Friedberg.
Item Price
£20.32