Language: English
Published by McClure, Phillips & Co., New York, 1902
Seller: Mountain Books, Kent, CT, U.S.A.
First Edition
US$ 18.74
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Good Minus. Frontis (illustrator). First American Edition. Set of 2 books in blue cloth with gilt design. The spines have wear on the top and bottom. Inside there is foxing. We ship fast.
Language: English
Published by Constable, London, 1911
Seller: Bohemian Bookworm, Flemington, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. Volume one only (of two), lovely copy, 1st edn, khaki green with bright gilt spine title, 222pps, goes up to 1872.
Published by Archibald Constable & Co. Ltd, 1902
Seller: Kennys Bookshop and Art Galleries Ltd., Galway, GY, Ireland
First Edition
Condition: Very Good. 1902. Hardback. 2 volume set complete. Fine in original blue cloth covers, with gilt titles to spine, no dust wrapper. Covers showing some shelf wear and age. Ownership details on half title (Vol I). Lightly toned, spotting on edges, gilt edges (top) intact, text is crisp and clear and remains a good-very good set. First edition copy. . . .
Published by Unarius - Science of Life
First Edition
Condition: Good. El Cajon, CA: Unarius-Science of Life, 1973. 1st edition. Volume 1. 8vo hardcover. 451pp. B/W photos. Very Good book. Good dust jacket. (Unarius, Occultism, Spiritualism) Inquire if you need further information.
Published by Archibald Constable, 1902
Seller: HALCYON BOOKS, LONDON, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 61.87
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. First Edition. Volume 2 only. Pages clean and bright, no markings, light wear to edges. ALL ITEMS ARE DISPATCHED FROM THE UK WITHIN 48 HOURS ( BOOKS ORDERED OVER THE WEEKEND DISPATCHED ON MONDAY) ALL OVERSEAS ORDERS SENT BY TRACKABLE AIR MAIL. IF YOU ARE LOCATED OUTSIDE THE UK PLEASE ASK US FOR A POSTAGE QUOTE FOR MULTI VOLUME SETS BEFORE ORDERING.
Published by Masson et Cie, Paris, 1922
Seller: Second Story Books, ABAA, Rockville, MD, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. First Thus. Large Octavo, viii, 480 pages. In Very Good condition. Rebound in dark leather quarter binding with marbled paper boards. Spine is paneled leather, lighter brown as a result of sunning, with gilt lettering. Boards show light rubbing along fore edges, and more moderate rubbing along the bottom edges, resulting in small areas of exposed board along the bottom edge of the front board and on the fore corners. Light shelf wear visible on covers; small scuffs and scrapes on spine. Text block was trimmed for rebinding, with speckled edges. Text block is lightly age toned; light shelf wear visible on edges. Gold embossed stamp from former owner on first free endpaper and on verso of second free endpaper. Shelved in Room A. 1400946. Special Collections.
Published by 1921., 1921
Seller: Scientia Books, ABAA ILAB, Arlington, MA, U.S.A.
First Edition
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. 25 pp; 1 plate (Frontispiece of Oscar C. Tugo). Original wrappers. Wrappers unevenly sunned. Slight crease in upper corner of wrappers and text leaves. Very Good. First Edition. This is the original publication. It was also privately printed in 1922 by the Merrymount Press, with a slightly revised title ending "to Be Killed by the Enemy". Harvey Cushing Bibliography no. 200 (citing both versions). In his "The Story of U.S. Army Base Hospital No. 5" (1919), Cushing had described the bomb that killed Tugo and three others: "The Base had so far been exempt until on the night of September 4, 1917, without warning other than the extinguishing of lights in the area a few moments before, a Gotha swept over the Camiers area and dropped a succession of seven bombs, five of them being direct hits in Base Hospital No. 5's compound. The first two hits were close together among the tents of the recently attached officers. Lieutenant Fitzsimons when last seen was standing at the opening of his tent and was literally blown to pieces by a bomb which fell at his feet. Lieutenants McGuire, Whidden, and Smith, occupying adjoining tents which were literally riddled--someone counted four hundred holes in McGuire's tent--had providential escapes, though all were more or less seriously wounded. The third and fourth bombs struck one of the large marquees full of patients, killing Private Tugo, on orderly duty, and slightly wounding Miss Parmelee, the nurse who was standing beside him. Twenty-two bed patients in this and the adjacent marquee were more or less seriously wounded. The last hit, a few seconds later, was in the reception tent, where two regulars, Private Rubino and Private Woods, our bugler, together with Private McLeod and Sergeant English, were on duty. Woods and Rubino were killed, McLeod so seriously mutilated that both legs had to be amputated at the mid-thigh. Sloan, Mason, and Stanion were also wounded, and English had a serious shell shock from which he was long in recovering. There were, needless to say, many narrow escapes, with not a few acts of heroism, and it was an experience for those who participated in it that gave a profound distaste for the many subsequent air raids the unit had to live through during its year in Boulogne, where it was in a most exposed position to the Gothas coming in, as they usually did, from the sea. On September 8 the bodies of Lieutenant Fitzsimons, with Privates Tugo, Woods and Rubino, were interred in the great military cemetery in the sand dunes between Camiers and Etaples, the first of any of the American Expeditionary Forces to have made the great sacrifice, the more tragic for its having occurred at the hands of an unseen enemy far from the line of battle. Six months later other victims--nurses, officers and men--of far worse raids over hospitals in the vicinity came to lie beside them in that huge field of many thousands of wooden crosses, which lay in plain sight of the great training ground" (pp. 46-47). In his biography of Harvey Cushing, John Fulton describes these "dedication exercises": "Another occasion, and one to which he had given careful thought and preparation, claimed Cushing's attention on 18 October [1921]. At noon a simple ceremony was held at Louis Pasteur and Longwood Avenues, just in front of the Harvard Medical School, at which the members of Base Hospital No. 5 met to dedicate a memorial, the Oscar C. Tugo Circle, in memory of their comrade, the first enlisted man in the American Expeditionary Force to be killed in the great war. President Lowell presided. Bishop Lawrence led the religious preliminaries, the principal address was given by Surgeon General Ireland, and there followed remarks by Andrew Peters, then Mayor of Boston, and General Edwards. President Harding had sent a letter of greeting and regret. H.C. subsequently brought together and had published a full account of the proceedings with a suitable prefatory note" (p. 484).