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  • [KRILOFF] KRYLOV, IVAN & COXWELL, C FILLINGHAM (TRANS)

    Published by Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co n/d

    Seller: Hard to Find Books NZ (Internet) Ltd., Dunedin, OTAGO, New Zealand

    Association Member: IOBA

    Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars 5-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

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    US$ 15.06

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    Octavo hardcover (VG) lacks d/w; all our specials have minimal description to keep listing them viable. They are at least reading copies, complete and in reasonable condition, but usually secondhand; frequently they are superior examples. Ordering more than one book will reduce your overall postage costs.

  • Seller image for Kriloff's Fables for sale by Dividing Line Books

    KRILOFF, Ivan; C. Fillingham Coxwell, translation & intro.

    Language: English

    Published by Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co./E. P. Dutton & Co., London/NY

    Seller: Dividing Line Books, Ridgewood, NY, U.S.A.

    Association Member: ESA IOBA

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    US$ 75.00

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. London/NY: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co./E. P. Dutton & Co., [n.d.; circa 1920]. 176pp; 4 plates; index. Blue publisher's cloth stamped in gilt to spine; no jacket. Light toning to leaves, a few of which have been roughly opened. Very good. Eighty-six verse fables by Russian fabulist Ivan Andreyevich Krylov (1769-1844), as translated into English "in the original metres" by C. Fillingham Coxwell. With four black-and-white plates reproducing earlier Russian illustrations.

  • Seller image for Fables russes tirees du recueil de M. Kriloff et imitees en vers francais et italiens par divers auteurs ; précédées d'une introduction de M. Lémontey, d'une préface italienne de M. Salfi. Publiees par M. le Comte Orloff. Ornees du portrait de M. Kriloff et de cinq gravures. Tome Premier for sale by Stony Hill Books

    US$ 3,600.00

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    Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Small octavo measuring approx. 20.5 x 12.5 cm, bound in glazed marbled paper-covered boards, brown leather spine label as well as spine itself printed and decorated in gilt; the first volume only of this 2-volume set, with Krylov's fables in Russian followed by translation in French and Italian; separated into 2 livres, paginated continuously, engraved portrait frontispiece and 2 other full-page engravings, one preceding each book, all with original tissue guards; paginated LXI, 242, [8]; pages clean and unmarked, light foxing to frontispiece and title page; binding square and tight, small 1/4 inch chip at base of spine.

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    Half-Leather. Condition: Good. Cain, Isabey (illustrator). 1° Edition. Language: French. Russian fables drawn from the collection of Mr. Kriloff and imitated in French and Italian verses by various authors; preceded by a French introduction by Mr. Lémontey; and an Italian preface by Mr. Salfi; published by Count Orloff, Text in Russian, Italian, and French. Portrait. gr. at the front of Krilov after Cain, 5 engravings, 2 vol. (LXI-242-[6] p., 378-[4] p.): portr., ill. ; in-8, half leather, many foxing spots, the cover is not fresh, very rare. [This description may have been translated by AI.] 0.

  • Seller image for Basni russkiia [.] Fables russes [.] imitées en vers Français et Italiens par divers auteurs for sale by PY Rare Books

    KRYLOV - KRILOFF, Ivan Andreevich

    Published by Didot for Bossange, Paris,, 1825

    Seller: PY Rare Books, London, United Kingdom

    Association Member: ABA ILAB

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    US$ 12,112.65

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    Russian fables for Europe: illustrated and translated --- A landmark edition of Krylov's celebrated fables: his first book published in Europe*, first Italian translations, and first multilingual translation, uniting three nations in their mutual influence and collaboration. A publication organised by the Count Orlov, and elegantly produced by Didot, with new types specially cast. A lovely, unusually fresh example in full green morocco, with the Isabey plates in clean, strong impressions. The Countess Orlov (Orlova), née Anna Ivanovna Saltykova (1779-1824), had a particular interest in Krylov and began collecting Italian translations during her stay in Italy, with the ultimate aim to publish the 'Russian La Fontaine' in Europe. Her untimely death however prevented her to see what her husband would finally carry out: a significant edition of more than 85 original fables by Krylov, all translated and adapted into French and Italian by more than 80 writers, authors, poets and other gens de lettres. Indeed Count Grigorii Vladimirovich Orlov (1777-1826), the youngest son of the famous Orlov brothers, favourites of Empress Catherine the Great, managed to gather an impressive array of personalities, "the most outstanding poets of Italy [and France]": naturally a relatively large number of aristocrats, but also authors with very different backgrounds, including well-established fabulists, such as Auguste Rigaud, Antoine Le Bailly and Baron de Stassart; many women, with in particular "the first woman to be admitted to the Lyceum des Arts" ( Letzter) La Princesse Constance de Salm (1767-1845), the writer Sophie Gay and her daughter Delphine Gay; the dramatist Casimir Delavigne, then at the height of his tremendous popularity; the historian and ambassador to Russia in 1784-89 Le Comte de Ségur - grand-father of the famous Comtesse's husband; and even the author of "La Marseillaise" Claude Rouget de Lisle. Firmin Didot himself produced a fable too. Italian writers included the poets Antonio Mezzanotte and Pietro (Celestino) Giannone among others, and many contributions were due to the liberal Neapolitan writer and journalist Urbano Lampredi, who was employed by the Orlovs in Paris in the early 1820s. This wide-ranging European community worked on a rich material, including Krylov's most famous fables, hailed by Terras as being "among the top achievements of Russian literature": "Martyshka i ochki" ["Monkey and the Glasses"], "Kvartet" [The Quartet], "Slon i moska" ["The Elephant and the Pug"], "Lebed, Shchiuka i rak" [The Swan, the Pike and the Crayfish] and "Demianova Ukha" ["Demyan's Fish Soup"] among many others. Interestingly, many French and Italian 'translations' of the Russian fables are rather adaptations, or even sometimes (as indicated on the titles) imitations, significantly differing in length or content. Their authors made them poems of their own, inspired by Krylov's original but evolving within the context of their own language and culture: for example, one French version quotes Alexis Piron's Métromanie (1736), absent from Krylov. To illustrate this wealth of inspiration and the possibilities of 'translation', some fables have two versions in one language, sometimes very different indeed: "Ruchei" ["The Stream"] for example has two Italian versions, and "Gusi" ["The Geese"], two translations in French, one of which is Rouget de Lisle's (volume II, p. 90) - who might have sympathised with the subtle revolutionary spirit of Krylov's fable as he was recently afflicted by the restoration of the monarchy in France: as Smirnov-Sokolskii noticed, "the comprehensive significance of Krylov's satire applied not only to Russian circumstances and events". The work includes extensive introductions: first a letter by Orlov in Russian (with a section title in French) to his "dear friend" Krylov about the outcome of this laborious project; then a long presentation in French by the scholar and politician Pierre-Édouard Lémontey; followed by a discourse in Italian by F. Salfi, one of the translators, about the genre of fables in Italian literature and the importance of mutual influences in European literary traditions through translations. In response to Lémontey's preface, reprinted the same year in the magazine Syn otechestva [Son of the Fatherland], Aleksandr Pushkin wrote: "I will say that we must thank Count Orlov, who chose a truly popular poet to introduce Europe to the literature of the North. Of course, no Frenchman would dare to rank anyone above La Fontaine, but we seem to prefer Krylov to him. Both will forever remain the favourites of their fellow countrymen [.] La Fontaine and Krylov are representatives of both nations' spirit" (in Smirnov-Sokolskii). Krylov was then at the height of his career: a celebrated national poet, he had become in 1816 librarian of the Imperial Public Library, which he contributed to create, and he received the Russian Academy Golden Medal in 1823. "The Orlovs' undertaking was extremely useful in popularising Russian literature, which is the main significance of the Paris edition of Krylov's fables" (Smirn.-Sok.). It was also noted for its quality: "both parts are printed in the best print shop of Firmin Didot and are really splendidly published" (Smirn.-Sok.). The book is printed on thin vergé paper, with an elegant Cyrillic type specially ordered by Didot, and classical, graceful head- and tailpieces. It includes six plates: five after Jean-Baptiste Isabey, and a portrait of Krylov engraved by Cain after Otto (Ermolai) Esterreich, a Russian artist of Austrian origin. Vereshchagin noted that "the book is rare": indeed immediately after publication most copies were sold in Paris and very few were actually brought to Russia. *Just a couple of fables translated into French had already been published here and there in French almanacs, and Dupré de Saint-Maure included ten in his innovative Anthologie russe in 1823. There was an 1822 Choix des fables de M. Kryloff w.

  • Seller image for COLLECTION OF RUSSIAN FABLES for sale by Elder Books

    IVAN A. KRYLOV [KRILOFF]

    Publication Date: 1872

    Seller: Elder Books, Ross on Wye, Herefordshire, United Kingdom

    Seller rating 5 out of 5 stars 5-star rating, Learn more about seller ratings

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    US$ 657.54

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    Hardcover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. HARDBACK BOUND IN THE ORIGINAL CLOTH BINDING WITH A LATER CLOTH SPINE ADDED & RETAINING PART OF THE ORIGINAL SPINE, ENDPAPERS HAVE BEEN REPLACED, 36 FULL PAGE CHROMOLITHOGRAPH ILLUSTRATIONS, RUSSIAN TEXT. BOOK MEASURES APPROX 8 x 6 INCHES WITH 24 + 275 + 16 PAGES. FEW MARKS TO CLOTH BOARDS, CORNERS BUMPED, MAJORITY OF PAGES WITH VARYING DEGREES OF FOXING, SOME CREASES OR WRINKLES TO A NUMBER OF PAGES, OCCASIONAL PENCIL UNDERLINING OR REFERENCE NOTES TO PAGES, SMALL PEN SCRIBBLE TO BOTTOM OF TITLE PAGE. OVERALL A NUMBER OF FAULTS BUT STILL A GOOD- VERY GOOD COPY. EXTRA POSTAGE COSTS MAY APPLY TO OVERSEAS ORDERS.