Skip to content

Secure Checkout

Website Secured with 256-bit TLS Encryption
Subtotal: $13,901.00
Shipping: $82.50
$0.00
Donation Amount: $0.00
Total: $13,983.50
2 - 6 days
3 - 14 days

All fields are required unless marked optional.

Add Shipping Note
  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • Paypal
  • Apple Pay
  • Google Pay

Verified and Secured. Guaranteed.

Website Secured with 256-bit TLS Encryption
Please select your payment method from the following list:
Click the button to checkout with PayPal.
You will be charged $13,983.50 when completing this purchase.

Cart Totals

Subtotal: $13,901.00
Shipping: $82.50
: $0.00
Donation Amount: $0.00
Total: $13,983.50

You are about to purchase:

Henry Clay Writes Pres. Taylor Hoping He “may be able to preserve to our country the blessings of peace.""

Henry Clay Writes Pres. Taylor Hoping He “may be able to preserve to our country the blessings of peace."" by Henry Clay

3 to 5 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $25.00
Details
$11,500.00
( US$)
Seller: The Raab Collection
Title
Henry Clay Writes Pres. Taylor Hoping He “may be able to preserve to our country the blessings of peace.""
Author
Henry Clay
Seller
The Raab Collection (United States)
Description
06/06/1849. The annexation of Texas in 1845 caused the controversy over slavery to heat up, but the Mexican War intervened to deflect attention. When the war ended in early 1848, vast lands in the West were acquired from Mexico, and the question of whether slavery would be allowed in these territories  quickly reignited the flames of sectionalism. In 1849, the discovery of gold led to a land rush in California, and the territory filled quickly with people. With partisans on both sides angrily stirring the pot and fears rising that the country might be split asunder, it was apparent that the matter of slavery had become urgent.Europe appears to be in a state of great and general disorder. A war embracing the larger part of it seems to be almost inevitable. England and France can hardly look upon the Russian interference in the affairs of Austria and Hungary with indifference. I sincerely hope that you may be able to preserve to our country the blessings of peace.The United States was not then the sole nation in turmoil. In 1848, a series of political upheavals spread throughout the European continent. Described by some historians as a wave of revolutions, the period of unrest began in France but then propelled itself onward. It lasted well into 1849, ending in August with the defeat of Hungarian insurgents.Henry Clay was three times the Whig candidate for president, and three times he was defeated, the final one being in 1844. He expected to run again in 1848, but many Whigs feared he could not win. Instead, Zachary Taylor, a Mexican War hero, won the Whig nomination, depriving Clay of the prize. As a candidate, Taylor had sidestepped the entire slavery controversy, but now that he was President he began developing what was seen as a pro-Northern solution. One of the leaders in Congress with whom he would have to deal on this and other subjects was Clay, who straddled the fence between the North and South and would not agree with his approach. Thus, Taylor and Clay were two men who saw themselves as political opponents, and many wondered what the relationship would be between the party’s long-time spokesman and its new sitting President, and whether they could work together. This would have national as well as party consequences, considering the issues facing the country. Their relationship was made all the more complicated by men seeking advantage from Tayor by trying to drive wedges between and Clay.Shortly after Taylor was inaugurated President in March 1849, Clay began getting reports that Taylor had ill will towards him and was speaking against him personally. On April 30, 1849, he received a letter from a friend Thomas Stevenson, saying that the reports were true but that he felt that experienced Washington hands would restrain Taylor from any overt actions against Clay. He stated that one Buckner H. Payne had related that this latter supposition was so, that Taylor was now speaking well of Clay. Stevenson added that peace between the two leaders was necessary for the country.On May 12, to test the waters Clay wrote Taylor directly, asking if he might appoint Clay’s son James to a diplomatic post. On May 28, the President responded by saying he was displeased with Payne having reported his conversation, but that he had only positive feelings about Clay, and that “it would afford me great pleasure to comply with your wishes” and appoint James Brown Clay as U.S. Ambassador to Portugal. The following is Clay’s response to Tayor, in which he makes short work of Payne, thanks the President for his friendly manner and for appointing his son, references that “strenuous exertions” were being made to alienate the two leaders, mentions the crises in Europe, and thinking of conflict there, ends by expressing his hope that Taylor can preserve peace in the United States.Autograph Letter signed, Ashland, June 6, 1849, to President Taylor. ""I received your obliging letter of the 28th Ult., and on behalf of my son as well as myself I beg leave to tender an expression of our grateful thanks and great obligations for the prompt and friendly manner in which you have been pleased to accede to our wishes that he might be employed in the public service on a foreign mission.  The time indicated by you for his departure on suits him very well as he could not have conveniently left home in a shorter period.  He will immediately commence his arrangements for going abroad and will be prepared in due season to obey the orders of Government.""I had known Col. Payne (referred to in our last letter) in Kentucky, and had some business in which he conducted himself with integrity; but not living in the same neighborhood, I rarely saw him, and there was no very good intimacy between us. Last winter, when he approached me in New Orleans, I understood him to be a particular friend of yours. Standing in amiable relations as I supposed, to us both, and being about to go to Washington, I conversed freely with him on public affairs. He wanted me to recommend him for the office of Collector of that city, which I declined to do for several reasons; among others, that I had adopted as a general rule not to interfere in mere local appointments in other and distant states from that of my residence. I must confess that I was surprised that Mr. Payne should be an applicant for that office, and still more at the confidence with which he purposed to anticipate success. In the course of the conversation between us I probably remarked to him that I did not know that a recommendation from me, if I could give him one, would benefit him; for that, whilst my own feelings towards the President and his administration were entirely amicable, and that I should go to Washington with an anxious desire to find himself conscientiously able to support it, I did not know how far strenuous exertions, which had been made to alienate us might have succeeded. He asked if he might mention the purport of that conversion to you on his arrival at Washington; and I replied that I had not the least objection. He did not return to Kentucky, as you supposed, but on his reaching New Orleans he wrote to me, communicating an account of his visit to Washington, and of the friendly purport of his conversation with you about me. I ought to add that Mr. Payne is a member of an extensive and generally respectable connection in this state; but that one of his near relations has recently spoken of him to me in rather unfavorable terms. Personally I know nothing to his disadvantage.  ""Europe appears to be in a state of great and general disorder.  A war embracing the larger part of it seems to be almost inevitable. England and France can hardly look upon the Russian interference in the affairs of Austria and Hungary with indifference. I sincerely hope that you may be able to preserve to our country the blessings of peace.""  He signs the letter “with the highest respect, faithfully your friend...” The letter is not in the “Henry Clay Papers” and appears to be unknown and unpublished.Clay's son James went to Lisbon. Later he served in the House of Representatives from 1857-59. The tattler Payne did not receive the appointment as Collector he craved, and for which he inappropriately manipulated conversations of both Clay and Taylor. After the Civil War, he ignominiously wrote a book claiming that Negroes were not the same species as whites.President Taylor soon developed a policy favoring the immediate admission of California and New Mexico as free states, avoiding the entire territorial process. Many in the South were unwilling to consider this, and Clay opposed the statehood solution in isolation, preferring instead to fashion some kind of game-changing compromise. In January 1850, Clay introduced the Compromise of 1850. Taylor opposed it, but it would pass after his death when Clay supporter Millard Fillmore ascended to the presidency.
Elements of Chemistry

Elements of Chemistry by Webster, John

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: FREE
Details
$800.00
( US$)
Seller: Dale Steffey Books, ABAA
Title
Elements of Chemistry
Author
Webster, John
Seller
Dale Steffey Books, ABAA (United States)
Condition
Very Good
Description
London : Published by [Taunton: J. Poole, Printer.] Printed for the author, and sold by Messrs. Johnson and Co. St. Paul's Church-yard; and Messrs. Crosby and Co. Paternoster-Row, 1811. Book. Very Good. Hardcover. 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" tall. SCARCE. In original paper covered boards with 20th c. cloth and label reback, Very Good, front and rear end papers with 1" x 2" sections neatly cut from top corners, the boards well worn, number 6 in ink front paste down, a few pages noted with early scholarly marginal pencil notation. xx, 21-245, [1] pages. OCLC locates 15 institutions with a copy, uncommon in commerce. .
SALT-WATER BALLADS

SALT-WATER BALLADS by Masefield, John

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $16.50
Details
$325.00
( US$)
Seller: Sumner & Stillman
Title
SALT-WATER BALLADS
Author
Masefield, John
Seller
Sumner & Stillman (United States)
Description
1902. London: Grant Richards, 1902. Original blue cloth. First Edition of Masefield's first book, which consisted of only 500 copies. Encouraged by Yeats and with the title chosen by the publisher, Masefield quit his bank job and decided to try his hand at nautical verse and (later) prose. The title unfortunately led to comparisons with Kipling and his "Barrack-Room Ballads" (whose verse Masefield "hated") -- especially as both poets used the vernacular in their ballads. In Masefield's opening poem "he proclaimed that he had no intention of glorifying heroism or imperialism; his concern was with the outcasts, the despised, the despairing" [Babington Smith]. (Incidentally the publisher went bankrupt just two years later -- though most of the copies were by then sold.) Sadly, though Masefield would live 65 more years, SALT-WATER BALLADS is regarded by most as his best work; it includes his best-known poem, "Sea-Fever" (which in subsequent printings, inserts the word "go" into the famous opening couplet "I must down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky..."). This copy is about as fine as this book gets (light foxing on a few leaves); atypically, the spine of this copy is not discolored. Simmons 1; Wight 1; Handley-Taylor p. 27. Housed in a simple clamshell case.
THE TORY LOVER

THE TORY LOVER by Jewett, Sarah Orne

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $2.00
Details
$225.00
( US$)
Seller: Sumner & Stillman
Title
THE TORY LOVER
Author
Jewett, Sarah Orne
Seller
Sumner & Stillman (United States)
Description
1901. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1901. Original green cloth decorated in gilt. First Edition of this historical romance sited around and about Hamilton House, the author's home in South Berwick, Maine. It concerns "a young American officer during the Revolution and his conflicting duty to his king and to his native land" [OCAL]. There were five printings dated 1901, but only the first (as here) has all three points: "Published September, 1901" on the copyright page, 34 lines of text on page 154, and "Lackinge, my love..." on page 278. It is in fine condition (the front free endpaper bears a Christmas 1901 inscription to Maine resident William R. Stevens, and opposite is his wife Emma's bookplate). Blanck 10914.
No image available

Pewter Tobacco Jar with Punch and Toby Relief

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $4.50
Details
$500.00
( US$)
Seller: White Fox Rare Books and Antiques
Title
Pewter Tobacco Jar with Punch and Toby Relief
Seller
White Fox Rare Books and Antiques (United States)
Description
England, 1880. N.d., mid to late 19th Century. The relief shows three scenes -- one of Toby trying to douse the smoke coming from Punch's pipe as he is reclining and relaxing; and Toby wielding a drumsticks Toby seeks to pacify him; and finally, a small representation of the puppet theatre. There is also a small18 cm tall, from bottom to top of finial on lid. 10 cm in diameter. Quite hefty, with thick side walls, and the relief, substantial -- about one cm in thickness, which for a cup this size, adds the maximum of three dimensionality we could imagine, the figures essentially sculpted on three of their four sides. The weight also tells -- it is about 2 lbs, 10 ounces, or 1.2 KG.
La Mona

La Mona by Pascoe, Juan

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $8.00
Details
$450.00
( US$)
Seller: Thorn Books
Title
La Mona
Author
Pascoe, Juan
Seller
Thorn Books (United States)
Condition
Fine
Description
Tacámbaro, MIchoacán: Taller Martín Pescador, 2022. Limited edition. Hardcover. Fine. 156, (4) pp. Engraved vignette on the title page. Color photograph of Adriana Cao Romero tipped onto page (7). Light brown cloth spine, dark brown paper over boards, printed paper labels. One of 100 copies of which this is number 41, A fine copy. This is a complete revision and expansion of the original printings of the previous digital edition of 2002 and the offset edition of 2003. A fine edition printed by hand. The now definitive history of Grupo Mono Blanco, and examines many coplas in detail. In Spanish. .
Ladies' indispensable assistant. Being a companion for the sister, mother, and wife. Containing more information for the price than any other work upon the subject. ... best directions for the behavior and etiquette of ladies and gentlemem, ladies' toliette table, directions for managing canary birds, also, safe directions for the management of children; ... a great variety of valuable recipes, forming a complete system of family medicine. Thus enabling each person to become his or her own physician: to which is added one of the best systems of cookery ever published; many of these recipes are entirely new and should be in the possession of every person in the land

Ladies' indispensable assistant. Being a companion for the sister, mother, and wife. Containing more information for the price than any other work upon the subject. ... best directions for the behavior and etiquette of ladies and gentlemem, ladies' toliette table, directions for managing canary birds, also, safe directions for the management of children; ... a great variety of valuable recipes, forming a complete system of family medicine. Thus enabling each person to become his or her own physician: to which is added one of the best systems of cookery ever published; many of these recipes are entirely new and should be in the possession of every person in the land

3 to 6 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $12.00
Details
$46.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Rulon-Miller Books
Title
Ladies' indispensable assistant. Being a companion for the sister, mother, and wife. Containing more information for the price than any other work upon the subject. ... best directions for the behavior and etiquette of ladies and gentlemem, ladies' toliette table, directions for managing canary birds, also, safe directions for the management of children; ... a great variety of valuable recipes, forming a complete system of family medicine. Thus enabling each person to become his or her own physician: to which is added one of the best systems of cookery ever published; many of these recipes are entirely new and should be in the possession of every person in the land
Seller
Rulon-Miller Books (United States)
Description
New York: Published at 128 Nassau-Street, 1853. 8vo, pp. [10], 7-72, 7-48, 121-138; original blind-stamped brown cloth; gilt ornament on upper cover; spine cloth missing; extremities rubbed and worn; spine perished; light foxing; otherwise good and sound. Apparently, a composite volume of three different texts from past publications. A large portion of the text is comprised of instructions for homeopathic remedies, as well as an index describing the medicinal properties of various items found in nature.
Solomon and Marcolf:  Vernacular Traditions.
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Solomon and Marcolf: Vernacular Traditions. by ZIOLKOWKSI, Jan M. (editor).

7 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $7.00
Details
$40.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Grendel Books, ABAA/ILAB
Title
Solomon and Marcolf: Vernacular Traditions.
Author
ZIOLKOWKSI, Jan M. (editor).
Seller
Grendel Books, ABAA/ILAB (United States)
ISBN
9780674271876
Condition
Fine in Fine dust jacket
Description
Cambridge:: Harvard University Press,. Fine in Fine dust jacket. 2022. Hardcover. 0674271874 . First edition. Fine in a fine dust jacket. .
Spring Mobilization Committee to end the war in Vietnam

Spring Mobilization Committee to end the war in Vietnam by Keating, Edward M.

4 to 14 days for delivery
Standard Shipping: $7.50
Details
$15.00
( EU VAT US$0)
Seller: Bolerium Books Inc., ABAA/ILAB
Title
Spring Mobilization Committee to end the war in Vietnam
Author
Keating, Edward M.
Seller
Bolerium Books Inc., ABAA/ILAB (United States)
Description
San Francisco: Spring Mobilization Committee, 1967. 8.5x11 inch letter with a sponsorship card stapled to the corner; in very good condition. Sponsors include Bob Avakian, Bettina Aptheker, Eldridge Cleaver, and more.