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Books published by publisher ont> Longmans, Green, and Co. Ltd : London

  • The Princess Nobody Illustrated Edition

    Andrew Lang, Richard Doyle

    eBook (London: Longmans, Green and Co, )
    None
  • Battle Lanterns

    Merritt Parmelee Allen

    Hardcover (Longmans, Green and Co., March 15, 1949)
    Dependable action-packed story of the American Revolution, by a practised hand. The locale is South Carolina, near Charles Town. Battles, skirmishes, treachery are a part of the background, and the horrors of the mistreatment of slaves by pirates is highlighted too. Young Bill, toughened by prison, is the central figure through whose eyes the reader follows the events. Gen. Francis Marion, better known as Swamp Fox, is Bill's idol, under whom he serves- and another important figure is a capable Negro who fights with them for human freedom. Exciting presentation of material that should be good supplementary reading for history.(online review)
  • Jock of the Bushveld

    Percy Fitzpatrick

    Hardcover (Longmans, Green and Co., Jan. 1, 1964)
    hardcover with dust jacket
  • Blow, Bugles, Blow

    Merritt Parmelee Allen, Alan Moyler

    Hardcover (Longmans, Green and Co., March 15, 1956)
    None
  • The Flicker's Feather

    Merritt Parmelee Allen

    Hardcover (Longmans, Green and Co., March 15, 1953)
    None
  • The pageant of Chinese history

    Elizabeth Seeger

    Unknown Binding (Longmans, Green and Co, March 15, 1952)
    None
  • Red Fairy Book

    Andrew (ed.) Lang

    Hardcover (Longmans, Green and Co. Ltd, March 15, 1950)
    None
  • Duff, the Story of a Bear

    William Marshall Rush, Gardell Dano Christensen

    Hardcover (Longmans, Green and Co.,Inc., March 15, 1950)
    None
  • The Violet Fairy Book

    Andrew Lang

    Hardcover (ont> Longmans, Green, and Co. : London, Jan. 1, 1901)
    Shipped from UK, please allow 10 to 21 business days for arrival. 388pp. Beautifully illustrated in b&w and colour by H J Ford, all 8 colour plates present, including frontispiece protected by original tissue guard. Binding tender with multiple cracks to hinge, pages generally clean bar light foxing, a few finger marks and 2 water stains between half title page – 81, and between 300 -388. Neat ink inscription to half title page. Bound in wonderful dark purple cloth covered boards with contrasting gold gilt design to upper and spine, a little marked and worn to extremities with small split to spine, this does not detract from the magical illustration. Gilded to all fore-edges.
  • Behold Your Queen !

    Gladys Malvern

    Hardcover (Longmans, Green and Co., March 15, 1951)
    historical novel of Esther the Jew who became queen in Persia
  • BLOCKADE RUNNER. A TALE OF ADVENTURE ABOARD THE ROBERT E. LEE

    H. J. Heagney, Drawings By J. Gincano

    Hardcover (Longmans, Green and Co. Ltd., March 15, 1939)
    None
  • The Blue Poetry Book

    Various, H. J. FORD, LANCELOT SPEED, ANDREW LANG

    eBook (LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO., Aug. 10, 2014)
    Example in this ebookThe purpose of this Collection is to put before children, and young people, poems which are good in themselves, and especially fitted to live, as Theocritus says, ‘on the lips of the young.’ The Editor has been guided to a great extent, in making his choice, by recollections of what particularly pleased himself in youth. As a rule, the beginner in poetry likes what is called ‘objective’ art—verse with a story in it, the more vigorous the story the better. The old ballads satisfy this taste, and the Editor would gladly have added more of them, but for two reasons. First, there are parents who would see harm, where children see none, in ‘Tamlane’ and ‘Clerk Saunders.’ Next, there was reason to dread that the volume might become entirely too Scottish. It is certainly a curious thing that, in Mr. Palgrave’s Golden Treasury, where some seventy poets are represented, scarcely more than a tenth of the number were born north of Tweed. In this book, however, intended for lads and lassies, the poems by Campbell, by Sir Walter Scott, by Burns, by the Scottish song-writers, and the Scottish minstrels of the ballad, are in an unexpectedly large proportion to the poems by English authors. The Editor believes that this predominance of Northern verse is not due to any exorbitant local patriotism of his own. The singers of the North, for some reason or other, do excel in poems of action and of adventure, or to him they seem to excel. He is acquainted with no modern ballad by a Southern Englishman, setting aside ‘Christabel’ and the ‘Ancient Mariner—’ poems hardly to be called ballads—which equals ‘The Eve of St. John.’ For spirit-stirring martial strains few Englishmen since Drayton have been rivals of Campbell, of Scott, of Burns, of Hogg with his song of ‘Donald McDonald.’ Two names, indeed, might be mentioned here: the names of the late Sir Francis Doyle and of Lord Tennyson. But the scheme of this book excludes a choice from contemporary poets. It is not necessary to dwell on the reasons for this decision. But the Editor believes that some anthologist of the future will find in the poetry of living English authors, or of English authors recently dead, a very considerable garden of that kind of verse which is good both for young and old. To think for a moment of this abundance is to conceive more highly of Victorian poetry. There must still, after all, be youth and mettle in the nation which could produce ‘The Ballad of the Revenge,’ ‘Lucknow,’ ‘The Red Thread of Honour,’ ‘The Loss of the Birkenhead,’ ‘The Forsaken Merman,’ ‘How they brought the Good News from Ghent to Aix,’ ‘The Pied Piper of Hamelin,’ and many a song of Charles Kingley’s, not to mention here the work of still later authors. But we only glean the fields of men long dead.For this reason, then—namely, because certain admirable contemporary poems, like ‘Lucknow’ and ‘The Red Thread of Honour,’ are unavoidably excluded—the poems of action, of war, of adventure, chance to be mainly from Scottish hands. Thus Campbell and Scott may seem to hold a pre-eminence which would not have been so marked had the works of living poets, or of poets recently dead, been available. Yet in any circumstances these authors must have occupied a great deal of the field: Campbell for the vigour which the unfriendly Leyden had to recognise; Scott for that Homeric quality which, since Homer, no man has displayed in the same degree. Extracts from his long poems do not come within the scope of this selection. But, estimated even by his lyrics, Scott seems, to the Editor, to justify his right, now occasionally disdained, to rank among the great poets of his country. He has music, speed, and gaiety, as in ‘The Hunting Song’ or in ‘Nora’s Vow:’To be continue in this ebook..................................................................................