Irish Literature
Results 2281 - 2304 of 3080
Irish Literature
Hardcover. 87pp. ( Illustrations. One of a limited edition of 50 copies, printed for private circulation. T e g. Fore and bottom edges uncut. Damp- stained. very rare
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- Constable
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1918
- Edition
- First American Edition
- SKU
- KHS1003733
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 695.00
€ 695.00
Hardcover. Bound in publishers cloth, very little wear. D.J. has some light wear, but is sunned at and around spine. Binding is strong and tight. Text is bright and clear. Very nice copy
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- Maunsel
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1912
- SKU
- KST0006431
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 50.00
€ 50.00
Hardcover. 41pp. 18 cm. Boards faded. Pages untrimmed. Good tight copy with clean text. Inscribed by Thomas Bodkin
- Condition
- Used, Good
- Publisher
- Maunsel
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1912
- SKU
- KHS0021308
Hardback
Condition: Used, Good
€ 95.00
€ 95.00
Hardcover. 41pp. Fore and bottom edges uncut. Some reviews of earlier poems inside rfep
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- Maunsel
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1912
- SKU
- KHS1003879
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 145.00
€ 145.00
Hardcover. Clean copy in original cloth covers with gilt title to spine. Covers dulled and showing some age and shelf wear. Previous owner's inscription to ffep. No dust wrapper. Remains a good copy
- Format
- Hardback
- Publisher
- Sampson Low, Marston & Co
- Condition
- Used, Good
- SKU
- KMK0005489
Hardback
Condition: Used, Good
€ 4.99
€ 4.99
Hardcover. Clean copy in original cloth covers with gilt title to spine. Covers dulled and sunned to spine, showing some age and shelf wear. Previous owner's inscription to ffep. No dust wrapper. Remains a good copy
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1928
- Publisher
- Sampson, Low, Marston
- Edition
- First Edition
- Condition
- Used, Good
- SKU
- KMK0005488
Hardback
Condition: Used, Good
€ 4.99
€ 4.99
Hardcover. Clean copy in original cloth covers with gilt title to spine. Covers dulled and showing some age and shelf wear. Previous owner's inscription to ffep. No dust wrapper. Remains a good copy
- Format
- Hardback
- Publisher
- Sampson Low, Marston & Co, Ltd
- Condition
- Used, Good
- SKU
- KMK0005487
Hardback
Condition: Used, Good
€ 4.99
€ 4.99
Hardcover. Clean copy in original cloth covers with gilt title to spine. Covers dulled and showing some age and shelf wear. Minor damage to binding. No dust wrapper. Remains a good copy
- Format
- Hardback
- Publisher
- Sampson Low
- Condition
- Used, Good
- SKU
- KMK0005481
Hardback
Condition: Used, Good
€ 4.99
€ 4.99
Hardcover. This large paper edition of Brother Saul is limited to 500 copies signed by the author. Keywords: Irish Literature
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1927
- Publisher
- The Century Co., New York
- Edition
- Second Printing
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- SKU
- KHS0076003
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 54.99€ 49.50
€ 54.99
€ 49.50
Hardcover. This large paper edition of Brother Saul is limited to 500 copies signed by the author. Keywords: Irish Literature
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- The Century Co., New York
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1927
- Edition
- Second Printing
- SKU
- KHS0076004
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 54.99€ 49.50
€ 54.99
€ 49.50
hardcover. In publisher's cloth. Spine in gilt. Some light rubbing and wear to boards. Published c. 1930
- Format
- Hardback
- Publisher
- Sampson Low, Marston & Co Ltd.
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- SKU
- KST0024474
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 4.99
€ 4.99
hardcover. In publisher's cloth. Very little wear. Spine in gilt. With frontispeice
- Format
- Hardback
- Publisher
- Sampson Low Marston
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- SKU
- KST0024488
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 4.99
€ 4.99
Hardcover. "Limited edition, authors own copy with 3pp holograph letter from the author's widow. Ex Libris. spine sunned." Keywords: Irish Literature - General
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- Sampson Low, Marston, London
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1929
- Edition
- 1st.ed.
- SKU
- KHS0075995
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 262.50
€ 262.50
Hardcover. 8vo. Original cloth . Irish Literature. Donn Byrne at Coolmain Castle Donn Byrne was born Brian Oswald Patrick Donn-Byrne on 20 November 1889. His South Armagh parents were on a business trip to the United States when Donn Byrne was born in New York. The family returned to Ireland soon after the birth. Byrne says of his family: "We were about the only one of the four big Irish families of the gap in the North to still keep our mouths, if not our heads, above water." At fourteen, he met Bulmer Hobson, founder of Irish volunteer movement. Hobson took him to an early meeting of the volunteers (1906), when he was accompanied by Robert Lynd of the London Daily News. Lynd wrote of that meeting, mentioning the singing of a little fair haired boy (Donn-Byrne). Through Hobson, he acquired a taste for Irish history and nationalism that the culture was deeply immersed in at the time. He entered local Irish festivals (Feiseanna) using the name Brian O'Beirne, and he frequently won. He was equally fluent in Irish and English, growing up in an area were Gaelic was still spoken. In 1907 he went to the University of Dublin to study Romance languages. While at the school he published in The National Student, the student magazine. At this time he also met Dorothea (Dolly) Cadogan. After graduation he moved to Paris and Leipzig to continue his studies at the Sorbonne and Leipzig University, with the hope of joining the British Foreign Office as a diplomat. He turned down his PhD. when he learned that he would have to wear evening clothes to his early morning examinations, which no true Irish gentleman would ever do.
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- Sampson Low, Marston, undated, c. 1930, 5th impression,
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1930
- SKU
- KEX0279155
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 15.00
€ 15.00
Hardcover. This large-paper edition of Field Of Honorl is limited to 500 copies signed by The Author's Wife of which 495 are for sale. Keywords: Irish Literature
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- The Century Co
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1929
- Edition
- 1st Edition
- SKU
- KHS0076007
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 54.99€ 49.50
€ 54.99
€ 49.50
Hardcover. 8vo. Original cloth . Irish Literature. Donn Byrne at Coolmain Castle Donn Byrne was born Brian Oswald Patrick Donn-Byrne on 20 November 1889. His South Armagh parents were on a business trip to the United States when Donn Byrne was born in New York. The family returned to Ireland soon after the birth. Byrne says of his family: "We were about the only one of the four big Irish families of the gap in the North to still keep our mouths, if not our heads, above water." At fourteen, he met Bulmer Hobson, founder of Irish volunteer movement. Hobson took him to an early meeting of the volunteers (1906), when he was accompanied by Robert Lynd of the London Daily News. Lynd wrote of that meeting, mentioning the singing of a little fair haired boy (Donn-Byrne). Through Hobson, he acquired a taste for Irish history and nationalism that the culture was deeply immersed in at the time. He entered local Irish festivals (Feiseanna) using the name Brian O'Beirne, and he frequently won. He was equally fluent in Irish and English, growing up in an area were Gaelic was still spoken. In 1907 he went to the University of Dublin to study Romance languages. While at the school he published in The National Student, the student magazine. At this time he also met Dorothea (Dolly) Cadogan. After graduation he moved to Paris and Leipzig to continue his studies at the Sorbonne and Leipzig University, with the hope of joining the British Foreign Office as a diplomat. He turned down his PhD. when he learned that he would have to wear evening clothes to his early morning examinations, which no true Irish gentleman would ever do.
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- Sampson Low, Marston & Co.
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1930
- Edition
- Ninth Impression
- SKU
- KEX0279151
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 15.00
€ 15.00
Hardcover. 8vo. Original cloth . Irish Literature. Donn Byrne at Coolmain Castle Donn Byrne was born Brian Oswald Patrick Donn-Byrne on 20 November 1889. His South Armagh parents were on a business trip to the United States when Donn Byrne was born in New York. The family returned to Ireland soon after the birth. Byrne says of his family: "We were about the only one of the four big Irish families of the gap in the North to still keep our mouths, if not our heads, above water." At fourteen, he met Bulmer Hobson, founder of Irish volunteer movement. Hobson took him to an early meeting of the volunteers (1906), when he was accompanied by Robert Lynd of the London Daily News. Lynd wrote of that meeting, mentioning the singing of a little fair haired boy (Donn-Byrne). Through Hobson, he acquired a taste for Irish history and nationalism that the culture was deeply immersed in at the time. He entered local Irish festivals (Feiseanna) using the name Brian O'Beirne, and he frequently won. He was equally fluent in Irish and English, growing up in an area were Gaelic was still spoken. In 1907 he went to the University of Dublin to study Romance languages. While at the school he published in The National Student, the student magazine. At this time he also met Dorothea (Dolly) Cadogan. After graduation he moved to Paris and Leipzig to continue his studies at the Sorbonne and Leipzig University, with the hope of joining the British Foreign Office as a diplomat. He turned down his PhD. when he learned that he would have to wear evening clothes to his early morning examinations, which no true Irish gentleman would ever do.
- Format
- Hardback
- Publisher
- Sampson Low, Marston & Co
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- SKU
- KEX0279156
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 15.00
€ 15.00
Hardcover. Rebound in a fine binding with red marble boards and grey cloth, with gold leaf text
- Publisher
- SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1931
- Edition
- Reprint
- SKU
- KLN0004456
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 20.00
€ 20.00
Hardcover. 240pp. DJ slightly worn & some edge fozing. Spine sunned but o/w remains a good copy of this first edition with clear text and firm binding
- Condition
- Used, Good
- Publisher
- Sampson, Low, & Marston & Co
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1920
- SKU
- KNW0009711
Hardback
Condition: Used, Good
€ 10.00
€ 10.00
Hardcover. Some light wear, library stamps
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- sampson low
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1924
- SKU
- KLN0004442
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 8.00
€ 8.00
Hardcover. 8vo. Original cloth . Irish Literature. Donn Byrne at Coolmain Castle Donn Byrne was born Brian Oswald Patrick Donn-Byrne on 20 November 1889. His South Armagh parents were on a business trip to the United States when Donn Byrne was born in New York. The family returned to Ireland soon after the birth. Byrne says of his family: "We were about the only one of the four big Irish families of the gap in the North to still keep our mouths, if not our heads, above water." At fourteen, he met Bulmer Hobson, founder of Irish volunteer movement. Hobson took him to an early meeting of the volunteers (1906), when he was accompanied by Robert Lynd of the London Daily News. Lynd wrote of that meeting, mentioning the singing of a little fair haired boy (Donn-Byrne). Through Hobson, he acquired a taste for Irish history and nationalism that the culture was deeply immersed in at the time. He entered local Irish festivals (Feiseanna) using the name Brian O'Beirne, and he frequently won. He was equally fluent in Irish and English, growing up in an area were Gaelic was still spoken. In 1907 he went to the University of Dublin to study Romance languages. While at the school he published in The National Student, the student magazine. At this time he also met Dorothea (Dolly) Cadogan. After graduation he moved to Paris and Leipzig to continue his studies at the Sorbonne and Leipzig University, with the hope of joining the British Foreign Office as a diplomat. He turned down his PhD. when he learned that he would have to wear evening clothes to his early morning examinations, which no true Irish gentleman would ever do.
- Format
- Hardback
- Publisher
- Sampson Low
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- SKU
- KEX0279147
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 15.00
€ 15.00
hardcover. Some bumping and shelfwear. Spine in gilt and is sunned
- Format
- Hardback
- Publisher
- Sampson Low, Marston & Co Ltd.
- Condition
- Used, Good
- SKU
- KST0024490
Hardback
Condition: Used, Good
€ 4.99
€ 4.99
Hardcover. 8vo. Original cloth . Irish Literature. Donn Byrne at Coolmain Castle Donn Byrne was born Brian Oswald Patrick Donn-Byrne on 20 November 1889. His South Armagh parents were on a business trip to the United States when Donn Byrne was born in New York. The family returned to Ireland soon after the birth. Byrne says of his family: "We were about the only one of the four big Irish families of the gap in the North to still keep our mouths, if not our heads, above water." At fourteen, he met Bulmer Hobson, founder of Irish volunteer movement. Hobson took him to an early meeting of the volunteers (1906), when he was accompanied by Robert Lynd of the London Daily News. Lynd wrote of that meeting, mentioning the singing of a little fair haired boy (Donn-Byrne). Through Hobson, he acquired a taste for Irish history and nationalism that the culture was deeply immersed in at the time. He entered local Irish festivals (Feiseanna) using the name Brian O'Beirne, and he frequently won. He was equally fluent in Irish and English, growing up in an area were Gaelic was still spoken. In 1907 he went to the University of Dublin to study Romance languages. While at the school he published in The National Student, the student magazine. At this time he also met Dorothea (Dolly) Cadogan. After graduation he moved to Paris and Leipzig to continue his studies at the Sorbonne and Leipzig University, with the hope of joining the British Foreign Office as a diplomat. He turned down his PhD. when he learned that he would have to wear evening clothes to his early morning examinations, which no true Irish gentleman would ever do.
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- The Century Co.
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1922
- SKU
- KEX0279161
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 4.99
€ 4.99
Hardcover. "Three hundred and sixty five copies of this limited edition have been printed, this is copy 154. Bound in green cloth, gilt top. In slipcase." Keywords: Irish Literature
- Condition
- Used, Very Good
- Publisher
- Little, Brown & Co
- Format
- Hardback
- Publication date
- 1928
- Edition
- 1st Edition
- SKU
- KHS0076006
Hardback
Condition: Used, Very Good
€ 54.99€ 49.50
€ 54.99
€ 49.50