Joseph Cottle and the romantics: the life of a Bristol publisher
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Bristol
Redcliffe Press
2008
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXVII, 356 S. cm |
ISBN: | 1904537804 9781904537809 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137992310226944 |
---|---|
adam_text | Contents
and Summary
Chapter
ι
:
Family and Early Years Page
ι
Decline of the Cottles from medieval times; Joseph Cottle s father
an unsuccessful tailor with eight children; their education; Bristol
before
1790;
Cottle influenced by the eccentric genius John
Henderson; early acquaintance with Hannah More and Charles
Wesley s daughter and Hurricane Gilbert; early poems; his
father s bankruptcy; he becomes a bookseller and publisher; he
writes against foreign and domestic slavery; his services to the
memory of Richard Savage and to Mrs Yearsley, the milkwoman
poetess; an accident permanently cripples him aet.24.
Chapter
2:
Southey, Coleridge, and Pantisocracy Page
27
Pantisocracy reaches Bristol; he meets Lovell, Southey, Burnett,
Coleridge; resemblance of the last to Henderson; he makes lucrative
offers to Coleridge and Southey, arranges lectures for them, and
takes them to
Tintem;
he finds Coleridge an awkward author to
publish for; Pantisocracy breaks up; his own poems published.
Chapter
3:
Wordsworth: Weddings and Holidays Page
43
He meets Wordsworth, and makes him offers; Coleridge marries,
Cottle helping furnish the honeymoon cottage; Southey marries,
Cottle paying for the wedding-ring; the Cottles receive Mrs
Southey on Southey s departure for Portugal; the Bristol Library,
its rules and amenities; his handsome publication of Joan of Arc;
Coleridge becomes tiresome; Cottle takes him to Bath to preach;
Mrs Coleridge writes him a poem; he publishes poems by
Coleridge and Lamb; his memorable holiday in the Malvern Hills;
Wordsworth s great tribute to him.
xv
JOSEPH COTTLE AND THE ROMANTICS
Chapter
4:
Lamb: The Bliss of the Dawn Page
62
Southey returns; Lamb enters Cottle s sphere; Cottle helps
Chatterton s sister and Burns s widow; Hurricane Gilbert returns;
empty reconciliation of Coleridge and Southey; his sister Mary
opens a prosperous school; Southey cheers him from London;
Coleridge goes on procrastinating, quarrels with the Librarian
Catcott, and breaks a promise to Amos Cottle; he publishes Fox s
Achmed;
Coleridge confides in him about Dorothy Wordsworth;
he spends a great day with Coleridge, Lloyd, and Poole, at Stowey;
Kosciusko in Bristol; Cottle holidays at Southey s in
Christchurch; Amos translates the Icelandic
Edda;
Cottle suffers
severe eye-trouble; his dealings with Coleridge and Wordsworth;
he gives Coleridge a notebook.
Chapter
5:
Annus
Mirabilis:
Davy Page
87
He publishes his own Malvem
НШѕ;
worry over Coleridge; his moves
to a poorer shop; the two poets refuse his offer for their tragedies; he
tactlessly publishes Lloyd s Edmund Oliver; he stays with the poets at
Alfoxton, returning with The Ancient Mariner; possible
identifica-
tion
of Wordsworth s The Mad Mother; the Wordsworths come to
Bristol with Lyrical
Baílaos;
the two poets depart for Germany; he
publishes Lyrical Ballads
-
the mysteries attendant upon this;
Southey all the time his principal friend; Humphry Davy comes to
Bristol, and Cottle works and relaxes with him.
Chapter
6:
The Break-up Page
108
Amos graduates B.A. (Cantab.); the Cottles write for the Annual
Anthohgy; Wordsworth very irritated with Cottle; he goes
bankrupt, and retires aet.29
-
his Scott-like struggle to repay his
creditors; his friends misinterpret his new status; Wordsworth
invites him to the North; he introduces Davy to Coleridge; he and
Coleridge travel to Sockburn and meet Wordsworth at the
Hutchinsons ; their wanderings
-
he leaves them at Greta Bridge;
mockery of his threatened epic Alfred; dealings with Longman in
London; he passes for some years out of the lives of Wordsworth
and Coleridge; his status as a publisher.
xvi
CONTENTS
AND SUMMARY
Chapter
7:
Paulo
Minora Canamus
Page
124
He settles with his womenfolk in Gloucester Street; his printing
business continues; he contributes to the second Annual
Anthology; an archaeological trip to Westbury; Southey s
continuing kindness; financial trouble with Coleridge; still in
touch with the mischief-making Lloyd; the epic Alfred
(13,500
lines); his father, a sister, and Amos, all die in
1800;
Lamb and
Southey heap mockery on his verses; Amos sneered at in the Anti-
Jacobin; Lamb s uproarious account of the house of mourning; the
Cottles are Baptists; influence of the Reverend Robert Hall;
Cottle begins admirable research on
Chatterton;
he meets Lamb
in London; he writes John the Baptist
-
Southey sneers at it; the
Family Bible; Haslewood the antiquarian helps him with
Chattertoniana.
Chapter
8:
Chatterton:
John Foster and George Cumberland
Page
148
Chatterton s sister is at first ungrateful; the young
de Quincey
has
Cottle in mind; John Foster s pioneer criticism of the Romantics;
Cottle s
Chatterton
project splendidly completed; Alfred,
2nd
edn; his friendship with the amateur scholar George Cumberland;
his health declines; he puts Psalms into metre; his great
depression; his Fall of Cambria
(12,000
lines).
Chapter
9:
De
Quincey: Accidie Sets In Page
161
His sickly, coddled life; he helps in his sister s school, and plays
with carpentry, surgery, and varnish; he meets Coleridge again;
de
Quincey calls, and gives Coleridge
£300
through him; a noble
and admiring letter from Southey; he fails to take Southey s
advice about poetic composition; his sister Sarah s husband
becomes rich; he feels that poesy is withering in him; his eyes
deteriorate; death of his mother; John Foster becomes his closest
friend; he tries to help Coleridge s friend Morgan, and resumes
other charities.
XVII
JOSEPH COTTLE AND THE ROMANTICS
Chapter
io:
Upheavals Page
183
Coleridge is back in Bristol; Cottle discovers his opium-addiction
-
their exchange of wild letters; he is prostrated with a lung
haemorrhage; Coleridge s rudeness about the Misses Cottle;
Southey s violent censure of Coleridge; Cottle s brother Robert
marries; he contributes to Hartley Coleridge s education; his
enormous Messiah
(28
books); Coleridge tries to wheedle, but
fails; Cottle thinks of travel; he urges Southey to greater
orthodoxy; another haemorrhage; he buys a horse and chair ;
Reverend Mr Porter tells him Coleridge is a swindler; he supports
Southey in the Wat Tyler affair; Hartley Coleridge calls.
Chapter
11:
Reconstruction: Byron Page
207
His religious life; his refreshing tour of, and his fair poem on,
Dartmoor; Lamb s treacherous request of a picture; Byron pillories
Cottle and Amos in English Bards and Scotch Reviewers
-
mixed
motives herein; references to Cottle in the Anti-Jacobin and in
Philarète Chasles;
latter s grotesque story of a visit paid to Cottle
by the Italian poet Talassi; Cottle s ferocious attack on Byron; his
quiet life in Bristol; his last meeting with Coleridge; he brings out
a school anthology.
Chapter
12:
Fossils and Antinomians in Plymouth Page
229
His careful geological research at the Oreston Caves; he wars
against Sabbath-breakers and Antinomians; Mrs Hemans beats
him to a prize; correspondence with his publisher Cadell
-
his
uphill fight since bankruptcy; Davy and Southey in touch with
him again; he gets to know the poet Campbell; his four nieces at
Plymouth.
Chapter
13:
Hannah More: Hold Every Thing with a Loose Hand
Page
239
De
Quincey s delightful story of Hannah
More s
snobbishness
with Cottle; polemical religious writings; he is unable to holiday
in the Lakes; his eldest niece dies
-
his memorial poem to her; his
sister Mary refuses a gentleman worth
£100,000;
they acquire a
XVIII
CONTENTS
AND SUMMARY
country house; his commitment to religious subjects and to his
friendship with Hall and Foster; the Serampore missionaries; he is
reconciled with Hannah More; his sister Ann marries, aet.48, an
old man of wealth, toughness, and piety; Cottle begs Wordsworth
to address a poem to him
-
Dorothy s reply; a piece of Bunyan
research; Wordsworth s refusal; Malvern Hills, 4th edn; Ann
Cottle s husband builds Zion Chapel; Cottle sustains a church sec¬
retaryship; Robert Hall dies; Cottle s gift to the Bristol Institution.
Chapter
14:
Bedminster: Quarrel with Poole Page
265
Cottle moves out to Bedminster; comfort and prosperity;
Coleridge dies; Mrs Southey s madness; further religious tracts; his
nieces wealth; he begins to collect materials for a memoir of
Coleridge, to the growing alarm of Poole, Gillman, Green, and
the Coleridges; Southey on the whole encourages him; his furious
postal quarrel with Gillman and Poole; the Coleridges threaten a
suit; he refuses to receive Poole; Crabb Robinson calls and
becomes friendly.
Chapter
15:
Crabb Robinson: Landor: Recollections Page
287
Crabb Robinson finds Cottle uncertain; Hartley Coleridge s
mockery of Cottle, and Mary Wordsworth s anxiety; Southey
comes with his son Cuthbert; Landor comes into Cottle s circle;
the Early Recollections; correspondence with Wordsworth and
Southey; Dorothy Wordsworth s madness; The Quarterly makes a
savage onslaught on the Recollections
—
individual opinions are no
kinder; Hudson Gurney s remarks on it in his copy; the badness of
the book; Southey s madness.
Chapter
16:
Wealth: Somerset Assizes Page
303
Cottle moves to a great mansion overlooking Bristol; Wordsworth
finds him not at home; he is prosecuted for libel, but all goes fairly
well; his brother Robert founds a sect in Putney called the
Cottleites ; Cottle helps towards
a Chatterton
memorial; his
printer is prosecuted for libel
—
a farthing damages, but crippling
costs; prolonged religious correspondence with Foster.
xix
JOSEPH COTTLE AND THE ROMANTICS
Chapter
17:
Miss Mitford: A Southey Memorial Page
313
Friendship with Mrs Southey II; Mary Russell Mitford visits him;
Foster dies; he inaugurates a Southey memorial, but subscriptions
disappoint.
Chapter
18:
Varnish: Gloucestershire Assizes Page
326
Descriptions of Cottle at chapel, aet.
75;
kindly letter from
Wordsworth; Cottle sends him The Weary Pilgrim and detailed
advice on how to varnish paintings; the Bunyan research
completed; he is mulcted of
£1,000
at Gloucestershire Assizes; he
boldly publishes Reminiscences; Wordsworth catches a Bath train
instead of calling at Firfield; the Cottles visit Weston-super-Mare;
Dora Wordsworth dies; he sends Wordsworth pleasant letters,
with a new poem called The Wizard; his good health, cheerfulness,
and rules for longevity; scattered opinions of him by Crabb
Robinson; death of his last friend, Wordsworth; he cheers the
widow with a tract against the papists.
Chapter
19:
It is the setting sun with us Page
339
Alfred, 4th edn; he sends the Times reviewer his last poem; he helps
Christopher Wordsworth to write a memoir; The Quarterly again
savages him; close description of him by his grand-niece; Arnold
Thomas s memories of Firfield; Cottle makes a last literary pronounce¬
ment
-
on
Chatterton;
he dies in
1853,
aet.83; Ann dies in
1855,
Robert in
1858,
and his widow goes mad and claims he was Messiah
-
threats of a Cottle church ; subsequent views on Joseph Cottle.
Afterword by Adam Rounce Page
349
Arthur Basil Cottle: A Brief Biography
by Martin Crossley Evans Page
354
XX
|
adam_txt |
Contents
and Summary
Chapter
ι
:
Family and Early Years Page
ι
Decline of the Cottles from medieval times; Joseph Cottle's father
an unsuccessful tailor with eight children; their education; Bristol
before
1790;
Cottle influenced by the eccentric genius John
Henderson; early acquaintance with Hannah More and Charles
Wesley's daughter and 'Hurricane' Gilbert; early poems; his
father's bankruptcy; he becomes a bookseller and publisher; he
writes against foreign and domestic slavery; his services to the
memory of Richard Savage and to Mrs Yearsley, the milkwoman
poetess; an accident permanently cripples him aet.24.
Chapter
2:
Southey, Coleridge, and Pantisocracy Page
27
Pantisocracy reaches Bristol; he meets Lovell, Southey, Burnett,
Coleridge; resemblance of the last to Henderson; he makes lucrative
offers to Coleridge and Southey, arranges lectures for them, and
takes them to
Tintem;
he finds Coleridge an awkward author to
publish for; Pantisocracy breaks up; his own poems published.
Chapter
3:
Wordsworth: Weddings and Holidays Page
43
He meets Wordsworth, and makes him offers; Coleridge marries,
Cottle helping furnish the honeymoon cottage; Southey marries,
Cottle paying for the wedding-ring; the Cottles receive Mrs
Southey on Southey's departure for Portugal; the Bristol Library,
its rules and amenities; his handsome publication of Joan of Arc;
Coleridge becomes tiresome; Cottle takes him to Bath to preach;
Mrs Coleridge writes him a poem; he publishes poems by
Coleridge and Lamb; his memorable holiday in the Malvern Hills;
Wordsworth's great tribute to him.
xv
JOSEPH COTTLE AND THE ROMANTICS
Chapter
4:
Lamb: The Bliss of the Dawn Page
62
Southey returns; Lamb enters Cottle's sphere; Cottle helps
Chatterton's sister and Burns's widow; 'Hurricane' Gilbert returns;
empty reconciliation of Coleridge and Southey; his sister Mary
opens a prosperous school; Southey cheers him from London;
Coleridge goes on procrastinating, quarrels with the Librarian
Catcott, and breaks a promise to Amos Cottle; he publishes Fox's
Achmed;
Coleridge confides in him about Dorothy Wordsworth;
he spends a great day with Coleridge, Lloyd, and Poole, at Stowey;
Kosciusko in Bristol; Cottle holidays at Southey's in
Christchurch; Amos translates the Icelandic
Edda;
Cottle suffers
severe eye-trouble; his dealings with Coleridge and Wordsworth;
he gives Coleridge a notebook.
Chapter
5:
Annus
Mirabilis:
Davy Page
87
He publishes his own Malvem
НШѕ;
worry over Coleridge; his moves
to a poorer shop; the two poets refuse his offer for their tragedies; he
tactlessly publishes Lloyd's Edmund Oliver; he stays with the poets at
Alfoxton, returning with The Ancient Mariner; possible
identifica-
tion
of Wordsworth's The Mad Mother; the Wordsworths come to
Bristol with Lyrical
Baílaos;
the two poets depart for Germany; he
publishes Lyrical Ballads
-
the mysteries attendant upon this;
Southey all the time his principal friend; Humphry Davy comes to
Bristol, and Cottle works and relaxes with him.
Chapter
6:
The Break-up Page
108
Amos graduates B.A. (Cantab.); the Cottles write for the Annual
Anthohgy; Wordsworth very irritated with Cottle; he goes
bankrupt, and retires aet.29
-
his Scott-like struggle to repay his
creditors; his friends misinterpret his new status; Wordsworth
invites him to the North; he introduces Davy to Coleridge; he and
Coleridge travel to Sockburn and meet Wordsworth at the
Hutchinsons'; their wanderings
-
he leaves them at Greta Bridge;
mockery of his threatened epic Alfred; dealings with Longman in
London; he passes for some years out of the lives of Wordsworth
and Coleridge; his status as a publisher.
xvi
CONTENTS
AND SUMMARY
Chapter
7:
Paulo
Minora Canamus
Page
124
He settles with his womenfolk in Gloucester Street; his printing
business continues; he contributes to the second Annual
Anthology; an archaeological trip to Westbury; Southey's
continuing kindness; financial trouble with Coleridge; still in
touch with the mischief-making Lloyd; the epic Alfred
(13,500
lines); his father, a sister, and Amos, all die in
1800;
Lamb and
Southey heap mockery on his verses; Amos sneered at in the Anti-
Jacobin; Lamb's uproarious account of the house of mourning; the
Cottles are Baptists; influence of the Reverend Robert Hall;
Cottle begins admirable research on
Chatterton;
he meets Lamb
in London; he writes John the Baptist
-
Southey sneers at it; the
Family Bible; Haslewood the antiquarian helps him with
Chattertoniana.
Chapter
8:
Chatterton:
John Foster and George Cumberland
Page
148
Chatterton's sister is at first ungrateful; the young
de Quincey
has
Cottle in mind; John Foster's pioneer criticism of the Romantics;
Cottle's
Chatterton
project splendidly completed; Alfred,
2nd
edn; his friendship with the amateur scholar George Cumberland;
his health declines; he puts Psalms into metre; his great
depression; his Fall of Cambria
(12,000
lines).
Chapter
9:
De
Quincey: Accidie Sets In Page
161
His sickly, coddled life; he helps in his sister's school, and plays
with carpentry, surgery, and varnish; he meets Coleridge again;
de
Quincey calls, and gives Coleridge
£300
through him; a noble
and admiring letter from Southey; he fails to take Southey's
advice about poetic composition; his sister Sarah's husband
becomes rich; he feels that poesy is withering in him; his eyes
deteriorate; death of his mother; John Foster becomes his closest
friend; he tries to help Coleridge's friend Morgan, and resumes
other charities.
XVII
JOSEPH COTTLE AND THE ROMANTICS
Chapter
io:
Upheavals Page
183
Coleridge is back in Bristol; Cottle discovers his opium-addiction
-
their exchange of wild letters; he is prostrated with a lung
haemorrhage; Coleridge's rudeness about the Misses Cottle;
Southey's violent censure of Coleridge; Cottle's brother Robert
marries; he contributes to Hartley Coleridge's education; his
enormous Messiah
(28
books); Coleridge tries to wheedle, but
fails; Cottle thinks of travel; he urges Southey to greater
orthodoxy; another haemorrhage; he buys a horse and 'chair';
Reverend Mr Porter tells him Coleridge is a swindler; he supports
Southey in the Wat Tyler affair; Hartley Coleridge calls.
Chapter
11:
Reconstruction: Byron Page
207
His religious life; his refreshing tour of, and his fair poem on,
Dartmoor; Lamb's treacherous request of a picture; Byron pillories
Cottle and Amos in English Bards and Scotch Reviewers
-
mixed
motives herein; references to Cottle in the Anti-Jacobin and in
Philarète Chasles;
latter's grotesque story of a visit paid to Cottle
by the Italian poet Talassi; Cottle's ferocious attack on Byron; his
quiet life in Bristol; his last meeting with Coleridge; he brings out
a school anthology.
Chapter
12:
Fossils and Antinomians in Plymouth Page
229
His careful geological research at the Oreston Caves; he wars
against Sabbath-breakers and Antinomians; Mrs Hemans beats
him to a prize; correspondence with his publisher Cadell
-
his
uphill fight since bankruptcy; Davy and Southey in touch with
him again; he gets to know the poet Campbell; his four nieces at
Plymouth.
Chapter
13:
Hannah More: 'Hold Every Thing with a Loose Hand'
Page
239
De
Quincey's delightful story of Hannah
More's
snobbishness
with Cottle; polemical religious writings; he is unable to holiday
in the Lakes; his eldest niece dies
-
his memorial poem to her; his
sister Mary refuses a gentleman worth
£100,000;
they acquire a
XVIII
CONTENTS
AND SUMMARY
country house; his commitment to religious subjects and to his
friendship with Hall and Foster; the Serampore missionaries; he is
reconciled with Hannah More; his sister Ann marries, aet.48, an
old man of wealth, toughness, and piety; Cottle begs Wordsworth
to address a poem to him
-
Dorothy's reply; a piece of Bunyan
research; Wordsworth's refusal; Malvern Hills, 4th edn; Ann
Cottle's husband builds Zion Chapel; Cottle sustains a church sec¬
retaryship; Robert Hall dies; Cottle's gift to the Bristol Institution.
Chapter
14:
Bedminster: Quarrel with Poole Page
265
Cottle moves out to Bedminster; comfort and prosperity;
Coleridge dies; Mrs Southey's madness; further religious tracts; his
nieces' wealth; he begins to collect materials for a memoir of
Coleridge, to the growing alarm of Poole, Gillman, Green, and
the Coleridges; Southey on the whole encourages him; his furious
postal quarrel with Gillman and Poole; the Coleridges threaten a
suit; he refuses to receive Poole; Crabb Robinson calls and
becomes friendly.
Chapter
15:
Crabb Robinson: Landor: Recollections Page
287
Crabb Robinson finds Cottle uncertain; Hartley Coleridge's
mockery of Cottle, and Mary Wordsworth's anxiety; Southey
comes with his son Cuthbert; Landor comes into Cottle's circle;
the Early Recollections; correspondence with Wordsworth and
Southey; Dorothy Wordsworth's madness; The Quarterly makes a
savage onslaught on the Recollections
—
individual opinions are no
kinder; Hudson Gurney's remarks on it in his copy; the badness of
the book; Southey's madness.
Chapter
16:
Wealth: Somerset Assizes Page
303
Cottle moves to a great mansion overlooking Bristol; Wordsworth
finds him not at home; he is prosecuted for libel, but all goes fairly
well; his brother Robert founds a sect in Putney called the
'Cottleites'; Cottle helps towards
a Chatterton
memorial; his
printer is prosecuted for libel
—
a farthing damages, but crippling
costs; prolonged religious correspondence with Foster.
xix
JOSEPH COTTLE AND THE ROMANTICS
Chapter
17:
Miss Mitford: A Southey Memorial Page
313
Friendship with Mrs Southey II; Mary Russell Mitford visits him;
Foster dies; he inaugurates a Southey memorial, but subscriptions
disappoint.
Chapter
18:
Varnish: Gloucestershire Assizes Page
326
Descriptions of Cottle at chapel, aet.
75;
kindly letter from
Wordsworth; Cottle sends him The Weary Pilgrim and detailed
advice on how to varnish paintings; the Bunyan research
completed; he is mulcted of
£1,000
at Gloucestershire Assizes; he
boldly publishes Reminiscences; Wordsworth catches a Bath train
instead of calling at Firfield; the Cottles visit Weston-super-Mare;
Dora Wordsworth dies; he sends Wordsworth pleasant letters,
with a new poem called The Wizard; his good health, cheerfulness,
and rules for longevity; scattered opinions of him by Crabb
Robinson; death of his last friend, Wordsworth; he cheers the
widow with a tract against the papists.
Chapter
19:
'It is the setting sun with us' Page
339
Alfred, 4th edn; he sends the Times reviewer his last poem; he helps
Christopher Wordsworth to write a memoir; The Quarterly again
savages him; close description of him by his grand-niece; Arnold
Thomas's memories of Firfield; Cottle makes a last literary pronounce¬
ment
-
on
Chatterton;
he dies in
1853,
aet.83; Ann dies in
1855,
Robert in
1858,
and his widow goes mad and claims he was Messiah
-
threats of a 'Cottle church'; subsequent views on Joseph Cottle.
Afterword by Adam Rounce Page
349
Arthur Basil Cottle: A Brief Biography
by Martin Crossley Evans Page
354
XX |
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dewey-raw | 070.5092 22 22 |
dewey-search | 070.5092 22 22 |
dewey-sort | 270.5092 222 222 |
dewey-tens | 070 - Documentary, educational, news media; journalism |
discipline | Allgemeines |
discipline_str_mv | Allgemeines |
edition | 1. publ. |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4006804-3 Biografie gnd-content |
genre_facet | Biografie |
geographic | Großbritannien |
geographic_facet | Großbritannien |
id | DE-604.BV035051984 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T21:56:55Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:21:06Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 1904537804 9781904537809 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016720634 |
oclc_num | 300027192 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | XXVII, 356 S. cm |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Redcliffe Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Cottle, Basil 1917-1994 Verfasser (DE-588)140481680 aut Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher Basil Cottle 1. publ. Bristol Redcliffe Press 2008 XXVII, 356 S. cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Cottle, Joseph / 1770-1853 / Biography Cottle, Joseph <1770-1853> Biography Cottle, Joseph 1770-1853 (DE-588)132737515 gnd rswk-swf Publishers and publishing / Great Britain / Biography Publishers and publishing Great Britain Biography Großbritannien (DE-588)4006804-3 Biografie gnd-content Cottle, Joseph 1770-1853 (DE-588)132737515 p DE-604 Digitalisierung BSB Muenchen application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016720634&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Cottle, Basil 1917-1994 Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher Cottle, Joseph / 1770-1853 / Biography Cottle, Joseph <1770-1853> Biography Cottle, Joseph 1770-1853 (DE-588)132737515 gnd Publishers and publishing / Great Britain / Biography Publishers and publishing Great Britain Biography |
subject_GND | (DE-588)132737515 (DE-588)4006804-3 |
title | Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher |
title_auth | Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher |
title_exact_search | Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher |
title_exact_search_txtP | Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher |
title_full | Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher Basil Cottle |
title_fullStr | Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher Basil Cottle |
title_full_unstemmed | Joseph Cottle and the romantics the life of a Bristol publisher Basil Cottle |
title_short | Joseph Cottle and the romantics |
title_sort | joseph cottle and the romantics the life of a bristol publisher |
title_sub | the life of a Bristol publisher |
topic | Cottle, Joseph / 1770-1853 / Biography Cottle, Joseph <1770-1853> Biography Cottle, Joseph 1770-1853 (DE-588)132737515 gnd Publishers and publishing / Great Britain / Biography Publishers and publishing Great Britain Biography |
topic_facet | Cottle, Joseph / 1770-1853 / Biography Cottle, Joseph <1770-1853> Biography Cottle, Joseph 1770-1853 Publishers and publishing / Great Britain / Biography Publishers and publishing Great Britain Biography Großbritannien Biografie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016720634&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT cottlebasil josephcottleandtheromanticsthelifeofabristolpublisher |