Marching Ink LLC 2018. Paperback. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Marching Ink LLC paperback
Marching Ink LLC 2022. Paperback. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Marching Ink LLC paperback
Marching Ink LLC 2015. Paperback. Good. Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More Spend Less.Dust jacket quality is not guaranteed. Marching Ink LLC paperback
New York: Gould and Banks 1820. Second American Edition. Full Leather. Very Good binding. The Second American Edition of Samuel March Phillips' Treatise on the Law of Evidence with notes by the editors on relevant American cases and their rulings. The work became a standard text for the Law of Evidence. Discrete partial reback by a conservator. Toning and foxing to the textblock. Contemporary nameplate on the front pastedown. Full leather with red leather label on the spine and lettering stamped in gilt. Minor loss to the top of the spine. Very Good. Very Good binding. Gould and Banks unknown
All three from Whitehall. 18 and 22 July 1837 and 10 February 1838. The three items in good condition on lightly-aged paper. The first two both on black-bordered paper are each 1p. 4to; the third is 1p. folio. In the three letters Teulon's address is given as Dean Street Southwark. The first two appear to be in Phillipps's hand but the matter is uncertain. Phillipps writes on behalf of the Home Secretary Lord John Russell to whom he acted as private secretary. In the first letter he informs Teulon that he is 'too late' both words underlined to present 'the Address of the Borough of Southwark' at the levee to be held the following day that Russell is 'not aware when another Levee will be bidden' but that he will 'if the Address is sent to him have great pleasure in taking the earliest Opportunity of laying it before the Queen'. The second letter concerns the notification of the next levee in the London Gazette. In the final letter Phillipps states that 'the directions relating to Levees issue from The Lord Chamberlain's office To whom His Lordship begs to refer you'. All three from Whitehall. 18 and 22 July 1837, and 10 February 1838. unknown