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Verlag: CHIZINE PUBN, 2018
ISBN 10: 1378496280ISBN 13: 9781378496282
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Zustand: New.
Verlag: LIGHTNING SOURCE INC, 2016
ISBN 10: 1354528107ISBN 13: 9781354528105
Anbieter: moluna, Greven, Deutschland
Buch
Gebunden. Zustand: New.
Verlag: Hugh Maxwell, Philadelphia, 1804
Anbieter: Second Story Books, ABAA, Rockville, MD, USA
Hardcover. Quarto, 416 pages. In Fair condition. Half bound in brown leather with brown cloth boards and gilt and blindstamped title on paneled spine. Boards have heavy splitting to joints, front board mostly detached, heavy rubbing and tearing to corners exposing boards, Textblock has light age toning, mild to moderate foxing to pages, stamps on verso of front endpaper, damp staining to forward pages, tearing to bottom corner of some pages. RWO. "The Port Folio" was a political and literary magazine created in 1801 by Joseph Dennie [who wrote under the name Oliver Oldschool] and Asbury Dickins. 1371852. Special Collections.
Verlag: R. G. Berford, Philadelphia, 1844
Anbieter: Charles Agvent, est. 1987, ABAA, ILAB, Fleetwood, PA, USA
Wraps. Cheap Edition. Green printed wraps with 15 double-column text pages. Browning along edges of text, wraps bright and clean. Very Good.
Verlag: Bradford and Inskeep, Philadelphia, and Inskeep and Bradford, New-York, Philadelphia, 1809
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Erstausgabe
Unbound. Zustand: Good. First edition. Octavo. 11pp., engraved frontispiece plate. Disbound stitched pamphlet. Scattered foxing, outer leaves and plate neatly detached, very good. A particularly scarce copy with an engraved plate, not found in the four other known copies. Founded in 1801 and edited by Joseph Dennie, the weekly *Port Folio* quickly became the most important magazine devoted to literature and politics in the United States. Dennie and his distinguished circle of mostly pro-Federalist contributors were prized for their "liveliness, urbanity, and wit," and frequent attacks upon the Republicans. Dennie issued this prospectus to announce that his magazine would be changed from a weekly to a monthly in 1809: "On the first vernal month, a Phoenix Port Folio rises from the ashes of its predecessor." Interestingly, the engraved plate depicts an Aurora, not a Phoenix. *BAL* 4640. *OCLC* locates five copies.
Verlag: Printed for The Editor & Elizabeth Dickens, Philadelphia, 1802
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Erstausgabe
Zustand: Good. Periodicals. Folios. A set of four weekly issues from June, 1802. (Volume 2, Nos. 22-25). Each weekly issue consists of eight pages, disbound but untrimmed as originally published, and professionally sewn into one set of four consecutive issues. Browning and scattered foxing, with two columns (measuring 3" x 7" and 3" x 2.5") clipped from the last leaf of the first issue (pp. 175-176), else good. Contains the first American appearance of a sensational burlesque version of "Little Red Riding Hood" (pages 173-174). First published anonymously in *Tales of Terror* (London, 1801), a collection of ballads satirizing the gothic writings of Matthew Gregory "Monk" Lewis, this account of the nursery tale is notably grimmer than the 1812 Brothers Grimm version. *The Port Folio* was an important Federalist literary magazine founded in Philadelphia in 1801 and edited by Joseph Dennie under the pen name "Oliver Oldschool, Esq." Also included in the June 5th issue are obituary notices for Martha Washington, "widow of the late illustrious general," and Sara Jay, "the amiable and much respected wife of his excellency John Jay.".
Verlag: Printed for The Editor & Elizabeth Dickens, Philadelphia, 1802
Anbieter: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, USA
Erstausgabe
Zustand: Good. Periodical. Folio. A collection of 17 weekly issues of *The Port Folio*, containing a series of six satirical poems directed against Thomas Jefferson, specifically concerning his relations with Sally Hemings. Each weekly issue consists of eight pages, untrimmed as originally published, and professionally sewn into four sets of consecutive issues. [Set one]: July 3 - July 31, Nos. 26-30; [set two]: October 2 - October 30, Nos. 39-43; [set three]: November 6 - November 27, Nos. 44-47; [set four]: December 4 - December 18, Nos. 48-50. Overall browning and scattered foxing, the last two issues from December (nos. 49 and 50) are clipped at the bottom right corner (with minimal loss of text), good. Founded by Joseph Dennie and Asbury Dickens in Philadelphia in January 1801, and edited by Dennie, *The Port Folio* quickly became the most important magazine devoted to literature and politics in the United States. During the period of its greatest influence, from 1802 to 1805, Dennie had organized a distinguished circle of mostly pro-Federalist contributors known for their "liveliness, urbanity, and wit." The Republicans and Jefferson in particular were frequently attacked in its pages. Thus when James T. Callender first published the allegation that Jefferson had fathered several children by his slave Sally Hemings (in the September 1st issue of the *Richmond Recorder*), Dennie was quick to exploit and expand upon the charge in this famous series of satirical poems, including one now known to have been written by John Quincy Adams. A detailed list of the six poems is available.