found: 18 books on 2 pages. This is page 1 - Next page |
First American edition.
Part of the "New Aspects of Archaelogy" series, edited by Sir Mortimer Wheeler. Very good .
First edition.
"The adventures of Sir Jaufry of Normandy were being sung by the troubadours of southern France three centuries before Malory wrote his Morte d'Arthur. Consequently, this story forms one of our earliest pictures of English knighthood..'Jaufry the Knight' was written by an unknown twelfth-century troubadour." - From the dw copy.
Scarce, especially so with the dust jacket. Very good .
First American edition. Very good .
First edition.
Among the cast members for the 1917 Provincetown Players production of "The Angel Intrudes" and the 1918 production of "Sweet-and-Twenty" was Edna St. Vincent Millay; among the cast members for the 1916 Provincetown Players production of "King Arthur's Socks" was Max Eastman.
"These plays, with one exception, were written in Greenwich Village, and, with another exception, first performed there--some at the old Liberal Club, and others by the Provincetown Players. They are souvenirs of an intellectual play-time which, being dead, deserves some not-too-solemn memorial." [Author's prefatory note]. Very good .
A humourous version of the life of Sir Galahad. Good .
Second printing.
The "alliterative" Morte Arthure, published as part of the York Medieval Texts series of Middle English writing. The text of the poem is in Middle English. Very good .
First edition. An exploration of the various Tristan legends, their origins and development through the ages. The author pays close attention to the versions circulated by the early troubadours as well as to Malory's and Spenser's. Those versions by Matthew Arnold, Sir Walter Scott, Tennyson, Swinburne and Wagner are all observed as are the modern versions by John Masefield and Edwin Arlington Robinson. Very good .
First edition. Very good .
First edition.
Essays on medieval romances, Malory, Chaucer, Charlemagne, King Athelstan, etc. Good .
First edition.
"An inquiry into the beginnings of Arthurian romance, centring on the first extant work in that tradition, Eric et Enide by Chretien de Troyes, and ranging over texts as far south as Italy and as late as Malory." [From the dw copy]. Good .
First American edition.
"A personal tour of England, Scotland and Wales by one of the world's leading Arthurian scholars" [from the dw copy]. Very good .
The text is in French. Fair .
An early reprint. Good .