here - Bernard Quaritch Ltd
Transcription
here - Bernard Quaritch Ltd
New Acquisitions August · MMXVI 1. [ANON]. Scarron aparu à Madame de Maintenon, et les reproches qu’il lui fait, sur ses amours avec Louis le Grand. Cologne, Jean Le Blanc, 1694. 12mo, pp. 136, [2], with an engraved frontispiece; title printed in red and black; short tear to one leaf just touching a couple of words, title a little toned; a very good copy in modern morocco, spine lettered in gilt, edges speckled red. £400 Bernard Quaritch First and only edition of this engaging satire. Paul Scarron was the first husband of Françoise d’Aubigné, Marquise de Maintenon, who went on to marry illicitly Louis XIV after Scarron’s death. The present work visualises Scarron’s appearance from beyond the grave to his widow to rail against her torrid liaison (later, her morganatic marriage) with the king of France. The frontispiece shows a seated Françoise finely dressed, rosary in hand, perusing a book, whilst in the background is Scarron, pale and weeping in robes of ghostly white. BM STC Fr. 399; Brunet, V, 186. THE PORT ROYAL LOGIC 2. [ARNAULD, Antoine; Pierre NICOLE.] La logique ou l’art de penser, contenant, outre les regles communes, plusieurs observations nouvelles propres à former le iugement. Paris, Jean Guignart, Charles Savreaux, Jean de Launay, 1662. 12mo, pp. 473, [7, table of contents, errata, privilege]; light toning, light dampstaining to upper outer corners at beginning, small burn hole to pp. 429-434 repaired and lost words supplied in manuscript; otherwise a very good copy in contemporary calf, spine gilt in compartments, sprinkled edges; joints and extremities a little worn; inscription ‘Emile Calais 1852’ on rear endpaper. £3000 Scarce first edition of the work known as the Port Royal Logic. The authors were leaders of the Port Royal movement, and the book displays the distinctive tone of earnest piety for which the movement became famous. La Logique was the most famous logic text of the seventeenth century and set the form of manuals of logic for the next two hundred years. In particular, its division of the subject into the theory of conception, of judgment, of reasoning and of method established a psychologistic approach which dominated the field until the time of Frege. A handbook on method rather than a study of formal logic in the strict sense, La Logique was strongly and consciously Cartesian: a development from Descartes’ Regulae rather than Aristotle’s Prior Analytics. It nevertheless made important technical advances, most notably its distinction between the comprehension and extension of a term (a development of the medieval distinction between significatio and suppositio and a forerunner of Hamilton’s distinction between intension and extension); its quasimathematical treatment of the rules of distribution, conversion and syllogistic; and its formulation of the deduction theorem. BM STC French 1601-1700 p. 333; Risse I p.153. THOMISM, SIBYLS, AND VIRGIL REPACKAGED 3. BARBIERI, Filippo; Faltonia PROBA. Quattuor hic compressa opuscula. Discordantie sanctorum doctorum Hieronymi Augustini. Sibyllarum de Christo vaticinia cum appropriatis singularum figuris. Varia Judeorum [et] gentilium de Christo testimonia. Centones Probe Falconie de utriusq[ue] testamenti hystoriis ex carminibus Virgilii selecti. Venice, Bernardinus Benalius, [c. 1520]. Two parts, small 4to, ff. [28]; gothic and roman letter, large and small historiated woodcut initials, some white on black, with a series of 12 full-page woodcuts of the Sibyls with borders, contemporary correction slip pasted to B3r correcting ‘Sibilla delphica’ to ‘Sibilla libica’, the Centones with its own title-page and signatures; neat paper repair to two small holes in lower outer blank corner of first leaf, discreet repairs to lower inner corners of leaves C2-4 and D4, neat repair to tear from fore-edge to centre of D2 (touching woodcut), small repair to fore-edge of E2, neat repairs to small cut running through lower margins of quires a-c (touching but not obscuring some letters), small tear to upper margin of D4, a few small marks to E1r, very small worm hole in upper margins of a2-4; otherwise an excellent copy in modern red morocco, gilt-lettered spine, gilt dentelles, gilt edges; early ownership inscriptions of Giulio di Marco and Nicolai Perrone to first leaf. £7500 The handsome first Venetian edition of this intriguing miscellany, probably intended for scholastic use and first printed in Rome in the early 1480s, with charming woodcut initials and illustrations. Previously considered an incunable, ISTC now dates this edition to around 1520. The collection opens with one of the most important works of the eminent Dominican theologian, philosopher and historian Filippo Barbieri (c. 1426-87). A native of Syracuse, Barbieri became inquisitor general in Sicily, Sardinia and Malta and travelled widely in Italy, Spain and further afield, winning the admiration of Matthias Corvinus among many others. The Discordantiae is, like his other theological works, a strong defence of the Thomist school and of the knowledge and truth to be found in Aquinas’s thought. The Sibyllarum that follows deals with prophecies of the coming of Christ and is illustrated with a striking set of twelve full-page woodcuts of the Persian, Libyan, Delphic, Cimmerian, Samian, Cumaean, Hellespontine, Phrygian, European, Tiburtine, Agrippan, and Erythraean Sibyls, surrounded by four-piece borders. The compendium ends with the most famous work of Faltonia Proba, the fourth-century Roman poetess. Composed after her conversion to Christianity, the Cento Vergilianus de laudibus Christi is a cento of verses from Virgil pieced together to relate stories from the Old and New Testaments, particularly the life of Christ: a testament to Virgil’s influence within the Christian tradition. BMC (It) p. 348; Essling 2316; Goff B121; ISTC ib00121000; Sander 775. Rare: ISTC records only one copy in the UK, at the British Library, and four in the US. SHAKESPEARE, TWAIN AND DICKENS FOR RUSSIAN CHILDREN 4. CALVERT, Lilian, editor. English Books for Russian Readers with a Guide to Pronunciation and Vocabulary // Angliiskiia knizhki dlia russkikh chitatelei … Seriia I, No. l-4; Seriia II, No. 1-2; Seriia III, No., 1-2 and 4 … [Printed: Vyborg, Tip. Estra Finliand.] Petrograd, N. P. Karbasnikov, 1916-17. Nine parts, 8vo, each with text in English followed by an English-Russian vocabulary; some wear and toning but generally in very good condition, stapled as issued in the original printed wrappers of yellow, green, grey or orange stiff paper. £1250 An attractive group of very rare simple English readers for Russian students, assembled by a teacher at the Peskovskaya Gymnasium in St Petersburg, renamed Petrograd in 1914. Each volume contains a vocabulary list at the end. The books in series I and II also include a general pronunciation guide to English at the font of each work. Three series were produced, of increasing difficulty, running to 15 titles in total – we offer here four fairy-tales and five pieces of short fiction. They were printed in Vyborg in Finland, then part of Russia but which became independent after the 1917 Russian Revolution, presumably curtailing further publications by Calvert; Vyborg did not return to Russian control until after WWII. I.1 Beauty and the Beast, pp. 20. 3rd edition, revised. I.2 Jack the Giant-Killer, pp. 24. 2nd edition, revised. I.3 Cinderella, pp. 24. 2nd edition, revised. I.4 Sleeping Beauty, pp. 24. 2nd edition, revised. II.1 Andrew Lang, The History of Whittington, pp. 32. 2nd edition, revised. II.2 Florence Montgomery, The Little Brother-in-Charge, pp. 36. 2nd edition, revised. III.1 Mark Twain, A Dog’s Tale, pp. 42. III.2 Shakespeare/Lamb, The Tempest, pp. 40. 2nd edition, revised. III.4 Charles Dickens, The Story of Richard Doubledick, pp. 50. Not in COPAC. OCLC lists all except Jack the Giant-Killer, but with no locations. We have previously handled a single copy of The Tempest, now at the Folger, and there is a copy of Twain’s A Dog’s Tale at the Russian State Library. FIRST TRANSLATION OF EPICURUS INTO ENGLISH 5. EPICURUS. CHARLETON, Walter, translator. Epicurus’s Morals, collected partly out of his own Greek Text, in Diogenes Laertius, and partly out of the Rhapsodies of Marcus Antoninus, Plutarch, Cicero, & Seneca. And faithfully Englished. London, Printed for H. Herringman … 1670. 8vo, pp. [38], 201, [1], wanting the frontispiece; title-page slightly soiled and with a small hole (no loss), else a good copy in eighteenth-century red morocco, gilt; from the library of Bent Juel-Jensen; bookplate of Robert S. Pirie. £300 Second edition (first 1656) of the first English translation of Epicurus, an author condemned in this period for his pernicious pagan morality. The translator, and author of the long prefatory ‘Apologie’, was the royal physician Walter Charleton, whose friends included Thomas Hobbes. There are some opinions that Charleton is not prepared to defend: ‘That the Souls of Men are mortall ... That Selfe-homicide is an Act of Heroick Fortitude in case of intollerable ... Calamity. These, I confesse, are Positions to be wholly condemned and abominated’. But ‘we may hence collect what [the pagans’] true meaning was, when they said ... the Soul is a particle of Divine breath ... Secondly, we may hence learn the sense of Empedocles ... that this present life is a banishment of the soul ... Thirdly, we may hence know how to understand the true sense of Plato’s opinion, that all learning is only Reminiscence’. In the Restoration Charleton became the president of the Royal College of Physicians and Fellow of the Royal Society. He is probably best remembered for his attractive book on Stonehenge (Chorea gigantum, 1663). Wing E 3156. 6. [EVERS, Samuel.] A Journal, kept on a Journey from Bassora to Bagdad; over the little Desert, to Aleppe, Cyprus, Rhodes, Zante, Corfu; and Otranto, in Italy, in the Year 1779. By a Gentleman, late an Officer in Service of the Honourable East India Company: containing an Account of the Progress of Caravans over the Desert of Arabia; Mode and Expences of Quarantine; Description of the Soil, Manners and Customs of the various Countries on this extensive Route, &c. &c. Horsham [in Sussex]: Printed by Arthur Lee; and sold by J. F. and C. Rivington … 1784. 8vo, pp. [viii], xi, [i], 155, [1], with a subscribers’ list; some small offset inkstains to title-page, else a very good copy in nineteenth-century half calf and marbled boards; small booklabel with the crest of the Hall family, ownership inscription ‘G. Hall’. £12,000 First and only edition, very scarce. Evers’s Journal, published anonymously for a list of 134 mostly local subscribers, is an account of his return journey from India via the overland route in 1779, in the company of three other English travellers and a Frenchman. The party travelled first up the Tigris, then cross-country on mules and asses to Baghdad, and thence by caravan to Aleppo and the Mediterranean. Writing from a diary kept at the time, Evers provides ‘observations of customs, town life, encounters with local governors and Sheikhs, constant wranglings over money and the progress of the current armed conflict between the Turks, with their Arab army, and the Persians in the region of Basra’ (Ghani). The first book printed in Horsham, in Sussex, A Journal is still sometimes erroneously attributed to Charles Eversfield, who is in fact named among the 134 local subscribers. Authorship can now be definitely attributed to Samuel Evers, who, upon his return to England in 1780 fell into severe debt and was forced to take up a position as solicitor’s clerk to Thomas Charles Medwin in Horsham. After his suicide in 1787 (the result, apparently, of thwarted love), a local obituary notice named him as the author of the Journal (see a series of articles by Brian Slyfield in The Horsham Society Newsletter). ESTC shows copies at the BL (four), NLS, Royal Irish Academy, V&A; Harvard, Huntington, Library Company of Philadelphia (imperfect), and Sasketchewan. Despite its scarcity, two copies have appeared recently at auction, the Brooke-Hitching copy in September 2014, and the Mohamed and Margaret Makiya copy in April 2016, both £12,500. Ghani p. 125; Wilson p. 112. Not in Atabey or Blackmer. [item 6] REVOLUTIONARY CLERIC 7. FAUCHET, Claude. De la religion nationale. Paris, chez Bailly, Desenne, Lottin, Cussac, le portier de la communauté de S.-Roch, 1789. 8vo, pp. [iv], 300; engraved vignette on title and head-piece on p. 1, tail-pieces; a few very small marks, light creasing to lower outer corners of pp. 207-224, otherwise an excellent, crisp and clean copy in contemporary tree calf, gilt spine with red letteringpieces (gilt initial P at foot of spine), striking blue endpapers; some loss of leather at outer edge of lower board, a few small worm holes to joints, edges and corners a little worn, but a very attractive volume. £550 First edition of one of the most important works of the Revolutionary clergyman Abbé Fauchet (1744-93), published on the eve of the French Revolution, demanding greater ecclesiastical discipline and reform in the relationship between Church and State. Fauchet served as Louis XVI’s preacher, only to be dismissed for the philosophic and critical tone of his sermons. He later became one of the leaders of the attack on the Bastille and one of the most popular libertarian speakers in Revolutionary Paris. His opposition to the Terror eventually led him to the guillotine, accused of having encouraged Charlotte Corday to assassinate Marat. In his De la religion nationale Fauchet recommended the selection of bishops by lay electors, denounced the holding of multiple benefices, called for reforms in seminary teaching, argued for a celibate priesthood and for the abolition of birthright and nobility, and defended absolute liberty of the press and book trade. COPAC records only four copies (British Library, Oxford, Cambridge, and Leeds). 8. [FOKKE, Jan.] Histoire van den Amsterdamschen schouwburg. Amsterdam, G. Warnars and P. den Hengst, 1772. 4to, pp. [viii], 80, [12], with engraved frontispiece and 4 double-page plates, title-page with large vignette and engraved memorial leaf with large vignette, plates after Simon Fokke and Meer the younger; a very good copy with wide margins, the double-page plates occasionally with a little light soiling in the margins; contemporary half calf and speckled boards, richly gilt spine with red label. £300 First edition of the history of the Amsterdam theatre together with an eyewitness account of its destruction by fire. The Amsterdam Schouwburg, inaugurated in 1638, was the first permanent theatre in Amsterdam. Initially the theatre saw 90 productions per year, during the 18th century it became more and more a place for opera. In May 1772, during a performance of Monsigny’s Déserteur, a fire swept through the building, destroying it completely and killing eighteen people. Fokke’s dramatic illustrations capture the outbreak of fire on the stage behind the scenes, the burning of the whole building illuminating the night sky with curious onlookers thronging the streets and bridges, and an internal view of the gutted theatre. Simon Fokke (1712-84), brother of the author Jan Fokke, was an actor as well as a stage designer. He had designed the set for the opera Demostenes at the Shouwburg. ‘SCALA GRIMALDELLI’: HARRISON D. HORBLIT’S COPY 9. [GEOMETRY.] FELICIANO, Francesco. Libro di arithmetica et geometria speculativa et praticale. Venice, Francesco Bindoni and Maffeo Pasini, 1536. 4to, ff. [80]; woodcut frame with foliage and grotesques and a woodcut image of the ‘Scala grimaldelli’ (ladder and key) to the title-page, many typographical and woodcut diagrams in the outer margins; a few minor repairs and the odd mark, but a very good copy in later stiff vellum; several contemporary manuscript annotations in the margins; from the library of Harrison David Horblit, his exlibris on the front pastedown. £2200 Second edition (first 1527), Horblit’s copy. This wonderfully printed handbook contains much commercial arithmetic, a feature which guaranteed its success as a practical tool for merchants, surveyors, engineers and many other occupations for over two centuries; but it also afforded the most approachable exposition of roots, the rule of false position, some algebra, and practical geometry. Teachers of mathematics drew a great deal from Feliciano’s ‘Scala’. ‘Feliciano’s second work was highly esteemed as a textbook for schools . . . . More complete than the Treviso book, more modern than Borghi, more condensed than Paciuolo, few books had greater influence on the subsequent teaching of elementary mathematics’ (Smith p.148). The suggestive ‘subtitle’ of Scala grimaldelli which inspires the little emblematic vignette is thus explained by the author: ‘on account of its soaring upwards and of its clarifying obscure things my little book is called scala grimaldelli, because the ladder (scala) takes us high up, and the key (grimaldello) opens up locked-away secrets’. 16 CNCE 18698; Smith, Rara arithmetica p.148; cf. Riccardi ii, 21. Scarce outside Italy. A NEW GEOMETRY TEXTBOOK FOR A NEW EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM 10. [GEOMETRY.] [SOAVE, Francesco.] Elementi di geometria teorico-pratica ad uso delle scuole normali della Lombardia austriaca. Milan, Giuseppe Galeazzi, Giovanni Battista Bianchi and Cesare Orena, 1790. 8vo, pp. [viii], 100; [17] engraved plates bound at rear; a beautiful, clean copy bound in contemporary mottled half calf over marbled boards, flat spine decorated in gilt, red lettering piece. £450 An extremely rare survival of a Euclidean geometry textbook used in the ‘scuole normali’, primary schools for all 6-12 year olds in every main town of Lombardy under Austrian rule; it includes three main chapters, on lines, planes and solids, with the theories accompanied by the relevant theorems, practical applications and engraved diagrams. The textbook is the result of the educational reforms carried out by Maria Theresa in 1774, which introduced compulsory schooling for children in all the Habsburg dominions, funded by the State and offered to everyone, regardless of social origin or wealth. Somascan Father Francesco Soave (1743–1806) was given responsibility for modernising the educational system in Lombardy according to Maria Theresa’s reforms. This included providing suitable new textbooks, of which this is an example in remarkably fine condition. OCLC records only one copy outside Italy, in the Sistema Bibliotecario Ticinese (Switzerland); no copies on COPAC. CORPUS CHRISTI AT AIX-EN-PROVENCE 11. [GRÉGOIRE, Gaspard.] Explication des cérémonies de la Fête-Dieu d’Aix en Provence, ornée de figures du Lieutenant de Prince d’Amour; du Roi et Bâtonniers de la Bazoche; de l’Abbé de la Ville; et des Jeux des Diables, des Razcassetos, des Apôtres, de la Reine de Saba, des Tirassons, des Chevaux-frux, etc. etc. etc. Et des airs notés, consacrés à cette fête. Aix-en-Provence, Esprit David, 1777. 8vo, pp. [ii], 220, with a portrait frontispiece and 13 folding plates (including one of music); a very good, large, unwashed copy in 19th-century maroon morocco, gilt inner dentelles, gilt edges, by H. Duru; rubbed, rebacked preserving original spine. £300 First edition of this detailed account of the popular religious celebrations held at Aix-en-Provence to mark the feast of Corpus Christi. The festivities, remarkable for their mixture of the sacred and profane, were established (or at least largely given their form) by René of Anjou around 1462. Each year they were preceded, on Pentecost Monday and on Trinity Sunday, by the election of various figures who were to play a crucial role in the organisation of the revelries: a ‘Lieutenant de Prince’ from amongst the townspeople or law students, a ‘Lieutenant de l’Abbé de la Ville’ from amongst the artisans, and a ‘Roi de Bazoche’. On Corpus Christi itself a series of set pieces or ‘jeux’ were staged: ‘les Jeux des Diables’, in which Herod is tormented by demons with long sticks; ‘les Jeux des Razcassetos’, representing four lepers, one of whom wears an old wig which is brushed and combed by the other three; ‘les Jeux des Tirassons’, dramatising the Massacre of the Innocents; ‘les Jeux des ChevauxFrux’, a sort of tourney with underskirt-horses, and so on. Gaspard Grégoire (1715–1795) was a prominent silk merchant of Aix whose son Gaspard junior perfected the art of creating a picture woven in velvet. The Grégoires no doubt played a leading role in the Corpus Christi festivities and probably supplied cloth for the costumes. The distinctive plates in this volume were engraved by Gaspard fils after drawings by his brother Paul. Barbier II 378; Cohen-De Ricci 367; Lipperheide Sl 20; Ruggieri 614; WatanabeO’Kelly 2224. A CLAIRVAUX COURSE OF LAW 12. HUGUES DE CLAIRVAUX. [Clairvaux, 1779]. ‘Tractatus de justitiae precepto’. Manuscript on paper, small quarto, pp. [ii], 444 (a few errors in numbering), [10, blank]; neatly written in brown ink in a single cursive hand throughout, up to 29 lines per page; small loss to lower outer corner of first leaf and a few marks from old adhesive (not touching text), some words trimmed at fore-edge margins (sense recoverable), small holes to pp. 93-96, 316-317, and 444 touching a few letters, a few ink marks; very well preserved in 18thcentury mottled calf, spine gilt in compartments with lettering-piece, marbled endpapers, red edges; some small abrasions to covers, a little wear to extremities. £650 An attractive, apparently unpublished, legal manuscript, composed, according to a note on the first page, by ‘Hugues p[re]tre De Clairvaux’, its completion dated in the colophon to 30 July 1779, arranged as a series of questions, propositions, objections, and solutions. After initial discussion around the nature and kinds of law and justice, the text turns to the subject of theft (‘furtum’), including consideration of the gravity of robbery as a crime and the question of compensation. The author then examines issues of defamation and slander, and causing harm or death to oneself or others, before a detailed consideration of questions of restitution and recompense, including in instances of violation and adultery. By way of authorities, the writer refers to the Bible, to the Church Fathers (including Augustine and Cyprian), to Justinian, and to canon law. Hugues would appear to have been a member of the great Cistercian Abbey of Clairvaux, founded in 1115 by St Bernard, and one wonders what became of him and his legal learning post-French Revolution, after the Abbey’s closure in 1790. 13. [HYMNS.] Expositio himnorum cu[m] notabili co[m]me[n]to q[uo]d semp[er] implicat hystorias cu[m] optimis allegatio[n]ib[us] sacre scripture illo[rum] sancto[rum] vel sancta[rum] de q[ui]b[us] tales hymni deca[n]tant[ur]: ex q[ui]b[us] p[ossu]nt facile de eisdem sanctis colligi sermo[n]es p[er]optimi: subiu[n]ctis quoru[n]da[m] vocabulor[um] expositio[n]ib[us]. [Colophon:] Basel, Michael Furter, 1504. 8vo, ff. 70, [1] (without the final blank leaf), gothic letter, with a large woodcut of the Christ Child surrounded by the four symbols of the Evangelists bearing scrolls on title, full-page woodcut of the Crucifixion on verso of title; some minor foxing and dampstaining, a few wormholes, short repaired tear in final leaf affecting a few letters, names of Evangelists added in manuscript to empty scrolls of title woodcut; stab-sewn, disbound. £650 Scarce edition of this popular hymn commentary (also known as the Aurea expositio) ascribed to one ‘Hilarius’ and probably dating from the twelfth century. The Expositio hymnorum was ‘the standard hymnal for German-speaking countries in the later years of the fifteenth century and the first decade of the sixteenth . . . . Subsequent editors influenced by recognisably humanist concerns still use “Hilarius” as the basis of their editions. There was obviously a good sale for hymn-books and for our allegorising commentary, but whether primarily among clerics or among lay-people for devotional use, it is impossible to say. One clue about their public is provided by the title-page of some of the German editions of the Expositio hymnorum which advertise its usefulness to preachers wishing to use the appropriate hymns as a source for sermons for saints’ days, and indeed parts of the commentary are couched in a style of address already suitable for a homily’ (Ann Moss, ‘Latin liturgical hymns and their early printing history, 1470–1520’, in Humanistica Lovaniensia, vol. 36, 1987, pp. 112–137 at pp. 117–118). The present edition is sometimes encountered bound after Textus sequentiarum cum expositione lucida ac facili and was probably issued with it, as it was in Heinrich Quentell’s 1494 edition. Adams L1123; VD16 H 6510 and T 653 (as second part of Textus sequentiarum, although both are independent works). COPAC records copies at the British Library and Cambridge only. OCLC records three copies in the US (Boston College, Brigham Young and Illinois). THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF A SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY ACCOUNT OF TRAVELS THROUGHOUT ASIA 14. LACOMBE, Jean de, sieur de Quercy. A Compendium of the East, being an Account of Voyages to the Grand Indies . . . Now Published for the First Time [from the Bordeaux Manuscript of 1681] in an English Translation by Stephanie & Denis Clark. Edited, with an Introduction and Notes, by Ashley Gibson. London, The Golden Cockerel Press, 1937. Folio in 8s (315 x 192mm), pp. 209, [1 (colophon)]; one double-page collotype facsimile of the original manuscript and 5 double-page plates, one wood-engraved illustration in the text; original black-cloth backed, batik-cloth boards, spine lettered in gilt and with press device in gilt at the foot of the spine, top edges trimmed, others uncut, map endpapers after a contemporary atlas; corners very lightly rubbed and bumped, otherwise a very good copy. £600 First edition, no. 167 of 300 copies. A Compendium of the East is based upon the manuscript titled Compendiare du Levant, which was written in 1681 and relates de Lacombe’s travels between 1668 and 1676, which took him through the Dutch East Indies and the Middle and Far East to Java, Sumatra, Malaysia, Thailand, China, Japan, India and Sri Lanka, and Persia and Arabia. The manuscript subsequently passed (probably in the early nineteenth century) into the collection of baron Charles Athanase Walckenaer (1771-1852), the distinguished French bibliophile and scholar, and in 1937 it was acquired in Paris by an acquaintance of Ashley Gibson, who in turn acquired it a few days later. Following the completion of a translation into English by Stephanie and Denis Clark, and further research into the manuscript, the text, and the author, the narrative was published for the first time in this edition, under the title A Compendium of the East. Described by Pertolote as ‘entrancing in the contrast of de Lacombe’s arrogant gasconnades with the naïve manifestation of his primitive explorer’s superstitious terror of the unknown’, the work is of interest for the range of countries and cultures described by the author, and the text is prefaced by a lengthy introduction by Gibson, and supplemented by a glossary of placenames, an extensive, annotated bibliography, and a comprehensive index. The work is illustrated with map endpapers, a facsimile of two pages of the original manuscript, and five double-page plates reproducing contemporary views of the cities described, which were taken from Wouter Schouten's Ost-Indische Reyse (Amsterdam, 1676). Pertelote 130. CLASSICAL PHILOLOGIST AT WORK 15. [LENORMANT, Charles. PLATO.] Commentaire sur le Cratyle de Platon. [France, 1854]. Manuscript on paper, 4to, pp. 451 + 50 (composed of a few quires stitched together and tipped in), written in Greek and French in brown ink, the first portion arranged in two columns with Plato’s text on one side and glossae in Greek on the other; numerous instances of corrections and interlinear or marginal additions; in excellent condition, bound in French dark green morocco, sides panelled in blind, panelled spine lettered in gilt; one or two surface scratches. £1550 The preparatory manuscript of the French classicist and archaeologist Charles Lenormant’s important commentary on Plato’s Cratylus, an innovative monograph which sought to unveil the Platonic dialogue as the fullest expression of Socrates’ and Plato’s criticism of the Greek system of religious beliefs. Lenormant’s commentary was read by the author at the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres during 1854; several years later, in 1861, it was posthumously published in Athens (copies of the publication are very rare institutionally, according to OCLC only currently held by two Italian libraries and the British Library), the author having died there whilst on an archaeological expedition in 1859. The published version, however, does not include the voluminous amount of glossae and notes that surround the Greek text in our manuscript, or the scholarly references which accompany the commentary. ‘SCALA DI PARADISO’, BY LUCREZIA BORGIA’S CONFESSOR 16. MELI, Antonio. Libro de vita contemplativa, lectione, meditatione, oratione, contemplatione, scala dil paradiso intitulato, cum adaptatione mistica dellhistorie divine, [et] expositione de suoi misterii, [et] excellentissimi sacramenti, compilato per il reverendo patre frate Antonio da Crema, eremitano di S. Augustino. Brescia, Giovanni Antonio Bresciano, 28 June 1527. 4to, ff. [xxii], 434, [12]; woodcut engraving of stairway and border to title-page, full-page engraving of St Augustine to title verso, many other engravings (repeating), initials and borders throughout the text; small tear to inner upper margin of title leaf touching the border, small piece cut from lower blank margin (with old paper repair), two tiny wormholes to upper margins of first four leaves, a little dampstaining to inner margins at the beginning and to the outer margin of 103, small wormhole from f. 237 to the end (touching some letters), a few small marks and paper flaws, else a very good copy in modern calf, parts of old spine laid down; 19th-century monogram bookplate (VLG) to front pastedown and matching small blue stamps to recto and verso of first leaf, with another circular black stamp to the lower margin of the verso. £4500 Rare first edition, richly illustrated with over a hundred woodcuts, of Meli’s most famous work, a spiritual guide describing the ascent of the ‘scala di paradiso’ from earth to heaven through four fundamental steps illustrated in the title woodcut. A native of Crema, Meli (c. 1462-1528) was an Augustinian theologian who rose to become vicar general of his congregation and confessor to Lucrezia Borgia, Duchess of Ferrara. The Libro was composed expressly for use by Lucrezia and her maids-in-waiting, and she directed that it be written in Italian to reach a wider audience. It appears to have circulated in manuscript during her lifetime, only being published eight years after her death. The first part of the Libro deals with the happiness and dignity of the first man, his subsequent fall, and how God made a ladder to enable him to reach heaven. In the second part, Meli discusses the four steps of this ladder, comprising reading, meditation, prayer, and contemplation, and the third and final part explains the obstacles encountered in ascending the ladder. Meli makes the rewards of success clear: those who reach the final step rise above themselves to embrace the divine and discover knowledge and truth. Meli’s Libro was inspired by the ‘Scala claustralium’ (ladder for monks) of Guigues Le Chartreux, and, in addition to the Bible, the author frequently cites the works of St Augustine as the source of his doctrine. He was evidently also familiar with the works of St Bernard, Hugh of St Victor, and Jean Gerson. Some of the charming woodcuts are derived from those found in the Malermi Bible of 1490 and in the Deche di Tito Livio of 1493. BL STC Italian, p. 432; Brunet III, 1587; EDIT 16 46866; Sander 4489; USTC 841964. COPAC records a single copy, at the British Library. OCLC locates copies at the University of Toronto and UCLA only. ‘MILL’S MASTERPIECE’, WITH NOTABLE AMERICAN PROVENANCE 17. MILL, James. Elements of political economy . . . Third edition, revised and corrected. London, Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1826. 8vo, pp. viii, 304; closed tear in blank upper margins of pp. 277-278; a very good, uncut copy; original blue boards, new tan paper spine with printed label; edges of boards chipped in places; some marginal pencil markings, inscriptions of ‘M. Carey’ on front free endpaper and ‘M. Carey Lea Sep 1844’ at head of title (see below). £850 Third and final edition of what Palgrave terms ‘Mill’s masterpiece’, first published in 1821, once in the possession of the American publisher and economist Mathew Carey (1760-1839) and of his grandson Mathew Carey Lea (1823-1897), the noted chemist. Mill’s motivation for writing the Elements was ‘to compose a schoolbook of Political Economy; to detach the essential principles of the science from all extraneous topics, to state the propositions clearly and in their logical order, and to subjoin its demonstration to each’. According to John Stuart Mill, the work sums up the instructions given to him by his father in the course of their daily walks. The Elements is particularly valuable as a summary of contemporary received theories. It was translated into French in 1823 and a second, revised edition came out in 1824. ‘Several of the alterations in the third edition were founded on criticisms made by J. S. Mill and his friends’ (Palgrave). Provenance: Mathew Carey was born in Dublin, worked for Benjamin Franklin and Lafayette in Paris, and moved to Philadelphia in 1784. He became ‘the leading book publisher in America in the formative years of that industry’ and ‘must be reckoned as one of the founders of the nationalist school of American economic thought’ (American National Biography). His grandson Mathew Carey Lea was a noted chemist: ‘During the last quarter of the nineteenth century [his] studies were universally regarded as the most important contributions to the relatively new physicochemical field’ (ibid.). Einaudi 3894; Goldsmiths’ 24799; Kress C.1729. 18. PEREZ DE HITA, Ginés (Isaac Jansz. BIJL, translator). Historie van Granada, van de borgherlijcke oorlogen, ende andere, die in het Granadijnsche coninckrijcke geschiet sijn, van de Mooren tegens de Christenen, tot dat de stadt ghewonnen wert van den koninck Don Fernando de vijfde. Met een discours van de incomste der Mooren in Spaengien (ende hare geschiedenissen) met haren uytgang. Amsterdam, Jan Evertsz. Cloppenburch, 1615. 8vo, pp. 504, woodcut grotesque on title; some light browning, but a very good copy in contemporary vellum with remains of ties; slightly soiled, short split in spine; from the library at Coker Court, with bookplate. £1800 First edition in Dutch of the first part of Perez de Hita’s major historical novel Historia de los bandos de los Zegríes y Abencerrajes, better known as the Guerras civiles de Granada (first part published Saragossa, 1595; a second part published in 1619). The first part of Pérez de Hita’s novel is ‘a remarkable work of fiction on a basis of history but interspersed with frontier and Moorish ballads already circulating out of context and ending with the fall of Granada in 1492. It inspired dozens of imitations, including Washington Irving’s Chronicle of the conquest of Granada (1829), and many by French writers’ (Ward p. 457). It is followed here by a history, in Dutch verse, of the invasion of Spain by the Moors (pp. 449–504). Not in Palau or Simoni. Not in the British Library. OCLC records just four copies (Göttingen, Herzog August Bibliothek, Leiden and Utrecht). 19. SILVESTRE DE SACY, Antoine Isaac. Al Tuhfa Al-Sinniya fi ‘ilm al-arabiyya. Grammaire arabe de l’usage des élèves de l’école spéciale des langues orientales vivantes; avec figures. Paris, Imprimerie Impériale, 1810. 2 vols., large 8vo (228 x 154 mm.) pp. [1], xxvi, 434, [2] (advertisements); x, 473, [1], with 8 folding plates illustrating varieties of Arabic script, some with added colour by hand, and 10 folding letterpress tables; a little light foxing but a very handsome and large copy bound in contemporary pale polished calf by Bozerian jeune signed at foot of spine, covers with gilt borders, flat spine richly gilt in a seme of stars, two black gilt lettered labels, gilt edges; upper joint of vol. I cracked and upper cover becoming loose; printed label of the bookseller and publisher Benjamin Duprat pasted on inside front cover of vol. I. £500 First edition, a milestone in Arabic scholarship. Sacy (1785-1838) was the ‘founder of modern Orientalism’ (Robert Irwin) and the first president of the French Société Asiatique. In 1795 Paris saw the establishment of the first school devoted to the teaching of oriental languages, founded for both political and commercial reasons. From its outset, Sacy was designated chair of Arabic, and was required to devise a comprehensive descriptitve grammer in French to facilitate his work there and Grammaire arabe was the fruit of fifteen years of research. His sources include early European writers such as Sionita, Martellotto and Metoscita as well as the Arabic Ajurumia which appeared with the Latin translations of Obizini and Erpenius. Throughout his career Sacy remained a prolific writer and is perhaps best known for his literary anthology Chrestomathie arabe. Schnurrer 154. 20. [SOUTH SEA COMPANY.] Five documents relating to the South Sea Company – transferrals of stock and/or instructions for the payment of dividends. April 1720 – July 1737. Comprising: SEYMOUR, Algernon, Earl of Hertford. Secretarial warrant to John Grigsby, accountant general, empowering John Mulcaster to accept in Seymour’s stead £400 of South Sea stock transferred to him by James Round, attorney to John Kirrell. Signed at the foot ‘Hartford’, 7 April 1720. Creased where folded. KING, John, third Baron Kingston?. Secretarial warrant to Charles Lockyer, accountant, instructing him to ‘pay my Dividend’ on £95 12 19d of stock due ‘at Xmas last’ to Henry Hoare. Signed at the foot ‘J. Kingston’. Note on verso ‘Pay by Humphreys / Henry Hoare’. 14 Nov 1721. Laid down. KING, John, third Baron Kingston?. Secretarial warrant to Charles Lockyer, accountant, instructing him to ‘pay . . . my Dividend’ on £3420 1s 9d of stock due ‘at Midsomer last’ to Henry Hoare. Signed at the foot ‘Kingston’. 20 July 1722. Laid down. SEYMOUR, Charles, Duke of Somerset. Secretarial warrant to Charles Lockyer, accountant, instructing him to ‘Pay to [the MP?] Thomas Elder Six P. Cent Principal Money’ on his stock of £2710 9s 2d, ‘being all the Stock standing in my name, in the Books of the South Sea Company, on the 24th day of June last’. Signed at the foot ‘Somerset’. 10 March 1730/1. HERVEY, John, Lord Hervey. Secretarial warrant to John Gyles, Clerk of the transfers, instructing him to pay all the dividends due now and henceforth ‘upon all the South Sea Stock that I now have or shall have’ to Christopher Arnold [his banker]. Signed at the foot ‘Hervey’. 19 July 1737? Laid down. Together £500 The South Sea Company had been launched in 1711 ‘partly as a Tory rival to the Whiggish bank and East India Company, but mainly with the aim of transforming the unfunded [government] debt into its stock’ (Oxford DNB). In 1720, after a further round of debt-conversion, the company began to talk-up its stock with rumours of extravagant returns. The stock price rose from £128 in January to £1000 by early August, which triggered rapid selling and therefore rapid losses, the price falling again to £150 by the end of September. Many investors, including Isaac Newton, lost heavily, but some, such as Lord Hervey above, made a fortune by the timely sale of stock. Evidently he retained some stock, or repurchased after the crash. FIRST EDITION OF AN ILLUSTRATED JOURNAL KEPT BY THE LAST SURVIVING MEMBER OF THE CHALLENGER EXPEDITION 21. [SQUIRREL BINDER, attributed to, for CHARLES I.] BARTLETT, J., photographer. Carte de visite photograph of a fine binding. Chipping Norton, late nineteenth century. Albumen print, 3⅛ x 2¼ inches (7.8 x 5.6 cm) on a carte de visite, 4⅛x 2½ inches (10.6 x 6.3 cm), with photographer’s printed credit on verso ‘J. Bartlett, photographer. Oddington, Chipping Norton’; very fine condition. £300 A well-preserved carte de visite photograph of a fine binding linked to either Charles I or II, attributed to the Squirrel Binder. The Oxfordshire address of the photographer’s studio suggests that this could have been a prize volume belonging to a local bibliophile. The field of tooled thistles and fleurs-de-lis around the arms of a Stuart monarch and the initials ‘CR’ would suggest that this book was bound for Charles I, although this in itself cannot be taken as definitive evidence of royal ownership. The corner-pieces can be identified as those used for several other bindings, as can the smaller thistle and fleur-de-lis tools and the border roll, although the royal arms with supporters and initials vary from these. These bindings are attributed to the Squirrel Binder, active in London until c. 1640 and known to have bound for Charles I. The photographer J. Bartlett appears to have been active in Oddington at least during the early 1880s, otherwise there is little information on this studio. The name does not appear in the Oxfordshire History Centre’s detailed List of Oxfordshire photographers. A L. W. Bartlett (a relative?) was meanwhile active as both photographer and taxidermist at two addresses in nearby Banbury between 1881 and 1911. 22. SWIRE, Herbert. The Voyage of the Challenger. A Personal Narrative of the Historic Circumnavigation of the Globe in the Years 1872-1876 by Navigating SubLieutenant Herbert Swire, R.N. Illustrated with Reproductions from Paintings and Drawings in his Journals. Foreword by Major Roger Swire . . . Introduction by G. Herbert Fowler. London, Golden Cockerel Press, 1938. Two volumes, folio in 8s (314 x 193mm), pp. I: 192; II: 168, [2 (colophon, verso blank)], [2, blank]; colour-printed frontispieces and 8 colour-printed plates after Herbert Swire, all retaining tissue guards, line-engraved illustrations, diagrams and plans in the text, after Swire, some full-page; occasional, very light spotting; original white buckrambacked blue cloth boards, spines lettered in gilt and decorated with designs after Lettice Sandford, map of the world showing the Challenger’s route on vol. I front endpapers, top edges trimmed, others uncut, blue cloth slipcase; extremities very lightly rubbed, slipcase slightly rubbed, nonetheless a very good set with unusually fresh, unmarked spines, in the original slipcase. £950 First edition, no. 288 of 300 sets. Undertaken at the instigation of Charles Wyville Thomson and his close collaborator William Benjamin Carpenter, the Challenger expedition was intended to be a full-scale scientific survey of the world’s oceans. The Admiralty provided a 226-foot long steam-assisted screw corvette under the command of Captain George Strong Nares, and the Challenger sailed from Portsmouth on 21 December 1872 and returned to Spithead on 24 May 1876: in the course of the expedition ‘she had spent 713 days at sea and had covered 68,890 nautical miles through all the major oceans except the Indian. A total of 362 official “stations” had been occupied, more or less equally spaced along her track, obtaining soundings and samples of the bottom sediment, and taking serial measurements of the temperature and collecting water samples between the surface and the bottom. But above all the expedition collected biological specimens; mid-water nets were used to about 3000m deep, and bottom dredges and trawls were fished successfully twenty-five times at depths greater than about 4.5 km, the deepest from 5.7 km on the edge of the Japan trench in the western Pacific. In recognition of the expedition’s achievements, acknowledged as marking the beginning of the modern science of oceanography, Thomson was knighted and received a royal medal on the ship’s return’ (ODNB, s.n. Thomson). This journal was written by Navigating Sub-Lieutenant Herbert Swire (?1851-1934) for his mother and sisters, and ‘he kept the Journals chiefly as a handy way of telling them of his travels and used to send them home as opportunity offered’ (I, p. [7]). In 1930 – nearly sixty years after they were written – Swire edited his Challenger journals and painted the watercolour of the ship which is reproduced as the frontispiece to volume I. With Swire’s death in 1934 the last surviving member of the expedition passed, and his family decided to publish his account, which is prefaced by an introduction by the zoologist, oceanographer, and sometime Assistant Professor of Zoology at University College, London, G. Herbert Fowler (who notes that Swire possessed ‘a shrewd power of observation and description, and of sympathetic understanding of primitive people, rather remarkable in one so young’) and a foreword by the author’s son Roger Swire, who outlines the history of the journals. The journal concludes with a ‘Postscript to the Challenger Journal’ written by the author in 1930 (II, pp. 167-[168]), which records incidents unremarked in the original text. Interestingly, as his son notes, Herbert Swire omitted one particularly interesting and flattering episode from his journal, which is recounted by R. M. Corfield in his The Silent Landscape: the Scientific Voyage of HMS Challenger (London, 2004): ‘On March 23, 1875, 13 days after leaving Nares Harbour, soundings indicated a depth of 4,475 fathoms or about 27,000 feet. This staggering abyss, now known to be almost 7 miles deep, was by far the deepest part of the seafloor that Challenger encountered. To honor both the occasion and the popular young sub-lieutenant, the Scientifics [as the scientific staff of the expedition were known] named it Swire Deep (although sadly, after they had returned to Britain, the name was later changed to Challenger Deep)’ (p. 204). The volume is remarkable for the high standards of its production, and the Golden Cockerel Press were understandably proud of it, commenting in Pertolote that, ‘in our “sea series”, this was the most formidable undertaking on which we had embarked . . . . The owners of [Herbert Swire’s] journal stipulated that Lt. Swire’s illustrations must be reproduced as an integral part of the whole: to this we agreed though it meant departing from our tradition by reproducing amateur illustrations in penand-ink and in colour. The only satisfactory way of reproducing the coloured sketches was to have them specially painted by hand . . . . While we are unlikely to repeat such an experiment in illustration, we have had the satisfaction of knowing that we fulfilled our function by publishing this book in a style impossible for a commercial firm . . . . We consider Lettice Sandford’s design for the spine the most attractive thing of its kind we have produced’. Hill 1664; NMM I 183; Pertelote 134; Spence 1179. ANTI-SLAVERY CAMPAIGNER 23. WOOLMAN, John. Serious considerations on various subjects of importance. By John Woolman, of Mount Holly, in the Jerseys, North America, deceased; with some of his dying expressions. London, Mary Hinde, 1773. 12mo, pp. [vi], 137, [1, publisher’s advertisement], each part with its own title-page included in pagination; a very good copy in contemporary plain calf; small chip to head of spine and two small holes at foot, corners slightly bumped, a few marks; printed slip, completed in manuscript, giving rules of the library of the Society of Friends at Wigton loosely inserted. £650 First edition (quire B beginning on p. 7) of this collection of works by John Woolman (1720-1772), the Quaker minister and antislavery campaigner, comprising his ‘Considerations on the true harmony of mankind, and how it is to be maintained’, ‘An epistle to the quarterly and monthly meetings of Friends’, ‘Remarks on sundry subjects’, and ‘Some expressions . . . in his last illness’. A Dublin reprint was issued in the same year. Woolman’s crusade against slavery began when he was asked, and refused, to write a bill of sale for a black slave, and his campaign took him thousands of miles through America and England, where he died at York. His impassioned speech at Philadelphia in 1758 prompted Quakers to begin freeing their slaves – the first large body to do so in America. Woolman also championed the cause of Native Americans. This copy contains a printed slip laying out the six rules of the library of the Society of Friends at Wigton in Cumbria, which was also open to Quaker members in Bolton and Kirkbride. ESTC T13151; Sabin 105207. Quaritch Publications Recent Catalogues and Lists Recent Lists: Recent Catalogues: 2016/17 The Armchair Traveller: Women Travellers 2016/16 Death 2016/15 Continental Books 2016/14 Bristol Bookfair: Highlights 2016/13 60 Books on Economics 1434 Medieval and Renaissance MSS 1433 English Books and Manuscripts 1432 Continental Books 1431 Travel & Exploration, Natural History