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Four: Private W. J. Magee, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, later Wiltshire Regiment British War and Victory Medals (5420 Pte. W. J. Magee. Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.); Territorial Force War Medal 1914-19 (1728 Pte. W. J. Magee. Wilts. R.); Territorial Efficiency Medal, G.V.R. (5564674 Pte. W. J. Magee. 4 - Wilts. R.) minor edge bruising, nearly very fine (4) £180-£220 --- William James Magee served in both the 2nd/1st (Buckinghamshire) Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, and the 4th Battalion, Wiltshire Regiment. He was awarded the Territorial Efficiency Medal in Army Orders of February 1924. He appears on the T.F.W.M. Roll for the Wiltshire Regiment where the rank of Drummer has been deleted and replaced by Private. Sold together with an all brass Wiltshire Regiment cap badge, and a blackened brass Buckinghamshire Battalion cap badge.
Pair: Colour Sergeant E. J. L. Wallis, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (6133 Corpl: E. Wallis. Oxford: Lt Infy:); British War Medal 1914-20 (6133 C. Sjt. E. J. L. Wallis. Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.) minor edge bruising, good very fine (2) £100-£140 --- Edward J. L. Wallis attested for the Oxfordshire Light Infantry on 28 October 1899 and, after service attached to the Indian Volunteers in 1912, retired as a sergeant-major with 21 years service. He joined the Corps of Corps of Commissionaires, with whom he was employed at the time of his death in Waltham Green, London, on 8 July 1939. Sold together with a copied photographic image.
Five: Private S. Wharton, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, later Hampshire Regiment Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 4 clasps, Relief of Kimberley, Paardeberg, Driefontein, Transvaal (5395 Pte. S. Wharton. 1/Oxfd. L.I.) engraved naming; King’s South Africa 1899-1902, 2 clasps, South Africa 1901, South Africa 1902 (5395 Pte. S. Wharton. Oxford: L.I.), suspension post repaired and loose; 1914-15 Star (16343 Pte. S. Wharton. Hamps: R.); British War and Victory Medals (16343 Pte. S. Wharton. Hamps. R.) nearly very fine (5) £180-£220 --- Sidney Wharton was born in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, in 1879 and enlisted into the Oxfordshire Light Infantry on 18 February 1897. He went to South Africa on 11 December 1899 and returned home on 5 October 1902. After transferring to the reserve on 17 February 1909, he re-enlisted on 21 September 1914 and transferred to the 3rd Battalion, Hampshire Regiment, on 28 May 1915. He served during the Great War on the Western Front from 2 June 1915 and received a bullet wound on 12 July 1915. He died in High Wycombe on 26 February 1945. Sold with copied service record.
Three: Lieutenant C. A. Barran, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, who was severely wounded at Givenchy in April 1916, and subsequently served with the Royal Flying Corps 1914-15 Star (Lieut. C. A. Barran. Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.); British War and Victory Medals (Lieut. C. A. Barran) light polishing, very fine (3) £120-£160 --- Colin Adair Barran was born at Totnes, Devon, on 21 October 1895. He was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry on 23 January 1914, and was promoted Lieutenant on 17 May 1915. He served with the 5th Battalion during the Great War on the Western Front from 19 May 1915 and was severely wounded by gun shot to the leg at Givenchy in April 1916. Deemed permanently unfit for General Service he was posted to the Royal Flying Corps on 20 November 1916, to be assistant to Officer in Charge of Records, with the rank of Acting Captain. He ceased duties with the Royal Flying Corps on 14 February 1918 and retired from the Army on account of ill health caused by wounds on 30 July 1918, retaining the rank of Captain. He died at Minehead, Somerset in 1964.
Pair: Sergeant J. Smith, 52nd (Oxfordshire) Light Infantry Indian Mutiny 1857-59, 1 clasp, Delhi (Serjt. J, Smith, 52nd L.I.); Army L.S. & G.C., V.R., 3rd issue, small letter reverse (1147. Serjt. J. Smith. 52nd Regt.) good very fine (2) £300-£400 --- James Smith is recorded in the British Army Worldwide Index for 1841, as a Private serving in the Depot, 52nd Regiment at Athlone, and in 1851 he is a Corporal, and is based at Limerick. He appears on the 52nd Regiment medal roll for the Indian Mutiny Medal, with clasp for Delhi.
Pair: Private G. A. Parmiter, Oxford Light Infantry, later Canadian Army Service Corps Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 2 clasps, Relief of Kimberley, Orange Free State (5426 Corl. G. A. Parmiter, Oxford Lt. Inft.); British War Medal 1914-20 (2590842 Pte. G. A. Parmiter. C.A.S.C.) very fine (2) £120-£160 --- George Alfred Parmiter was born on 23 October 1878, at Lambeth, Surrey. He served for six years with the Oxford Light Infantry, enlisting at London on 28 April 1897, declaring prior service with the Medical Staff Corps (Militia). He was promoted Lance Corporal on 20 July 1898; Corporal on 4 October 1899; and Sergeant on 1 June 1901. He served in South Africa during the Boer War and was wounded at Klip Drift on 16 February 1900. He was discharged medically unfit on 12 September 1901. Parmiter later migrated to Canada and enlisted for service in the Great War at Toronto on 6 September 1917. He proceeded to England on 4 March 1918, and did not land in France until 17 November 1918, hence the British War Medal is his sole medal entitlement for his Great War Service. He was demobilised on 30 March 1919, at Toronto.
A good Second War 1943 D.F.M. group of six awarded to Sterling rear gunner Sergeant, later Master Gunner, D. Collins, 149 (East India) Squadron, Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve, for his gallantry during an attack by a night-fighter whilst on a raid to Berlin, 1 September 1943 Distinguished Flying Medal, G.VI.R. (1581322. F/Sgt. D. Collins. R.A,F.); 1939-45 Star; Air Crew Europe Star; War Medal 1939-45; General Service 1918-62, 1 clasp, Malaya, E.II.R. (M. Gnr. D. Collins. (1581322). R.A.F.); Royal Air Force L.S. & G.C., E.II.R., 2nd issue (W/O. D. Collins. (1581322). R.A.F.) mounted as worn, light contact marks, very fine, the rank of Master Gunner on the GSM rare (6) £1,400-£1,800 --- D.F.M. London Gazette 11 February 1944 (jointly recommended for the D.F.M. with Sergeant D. J. D. King): ‘Flight Sergeant Collins as rear gunner and Sergeant King as mid-upper gunner have together completed many operational sorties against some of the most heavily defended enemy targets such as Berlin, Hamburg, Cologne, the Ruhr and others in the Rhine Valley. On one occasion, these two gunners volunteered to fly with a strange and uncertain crew in order to maintain maximum squadron effort. The target was Berlin. During the bombing run, an enemy night fighter, identified as a Ju. 88, attacked inflicting damage to their aircraft but with cool co-operation, the mid-upper gunner directed the defensive action whilst the rear gunner opened fire. The attack was successfully defeated and the enemy aircraft was claimed as damaged. As a team, these two gunners are unimpeachable, their keenness for battle and determined devotion to duty being of a quality demanded only by the highest standard of Bomber Command. Their reluctance to be withdrawn from operations is most evident. I recommend most strongly that they be awarded the Distinguished Flying Medal, a recognition they assuredly deserve.’ Dennis Collins served during the Second War as a Flight Sergeant, and rear gunner, with 149 (East India) Squadron (Sterlings), Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve. He flew in numerous operations with King, and with Sergeant C. Saunders as their regular pilot. On the above trip to Berlin, 1 September 1943, their pilot for the raid was Pilot Officer R. Gill. Their Sterling suffered damage whilst taking evasive action from the enemy night-fighter.
Pair: Second Lieutenant L. H. St. G. Farrer, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, who was wounded on the Ypres Salient, and died of wounds on 25 October 1915 British War and Victory Medals (2. Lieut. L. H. St. G. Farrer) very fine (2) £80-£120 --- Lyonel Henry St George Farrer was born in Kensington, London about 1885, he was the son of Captain Frederick Farrer, late Madras Army. He was educated at Harrow and Hertford College, Oxford, and having served in the O.T.C. at Oxford University he enlisted as a Private in the 18th (Public Schools) Battalion, Royal Fusiliers. He was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry in November 1914, and served with the 5th Battalion during the Great War on the Western Front from October 1915, taking part in the severe fighting on the Ypres Salient. He died of wounds on 25 October 1915, aged 36, at No. 7 Stationary Hospital, and is buried at Boulogne Eastern Cemetery, France. Sold together with a photographic image of the recipient.
Pair: Acting Sergeant H. Thompson, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry British War and Victory Medals (26817 A-Sjt. H. Thompson. Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.) very fine Pair: Private W. R. Costin, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry British War and Victory Medals (30807 Pte. W. R. Costin. Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.) nearly extremely fine Pair: Private E. Scarrott, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry British War and Victory Medals (19373 Pte. E. Scarrott. Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.); together with a British Legion lapel badge, edge wear and loss to service number on BWM, therefore good fine (6) £60-£80
Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, 5 clasps, Cape Colony, Tugela Heights, Orange Free State, Relief of Ladysmith, Transvaal (1161 Col Sejt. C. Mace, Somerset: Lt. Inft.) unit partially officially corrected, nearly very fine £140-£180 --- C. Mace attested for the Somerset Light Infantry, and served with them in South Africa during the Boer War, being Mentioned in Lord Robert’s Despatch (London Gazette 10 September 1901).
Waterloo 1815 (Corporal James Cook, 1st or Royal Dragoons.) fitted with fitted with replacement steel clip and later ring suspension, dark toned, fine or better £3,000-£3,600 --- Provenance: Dixon’s Gazette, Autumn 2008. James Cook was born in the Parish of Winterbourne, Berkshire, and attested for the 1st Dragoons at Marlborough, Wiltshire, on 16 February 1818, aged 18, a labourer by trade. He served in the Peninsula and at Waterloo, being promoted to Corporal shortly afterwards on 25 June 1815. He was discharged from the 1st Dragoons on 15 February 1818, but re-enlisted into te 3rd Light Dragoons on 8 October 1818, serving in this regiment until his final discharge on 31 March 1831, ‘at his own request with a modified Pension of ten pence per diem which he wishes to receive at Bath.’ His discharge papers state that he served ‘Five years in Spain & Portugal in the 1st Royal Dragoons during the War, and at Waterloo. Afterwards one year in France in the 3rd Lt. Dragoons with the Army of Occupation.’ James Cook is entitled to the M.G.S. medal for Fuentes D’Onor, Vittoria and Toulouse, 1st Dragoons Order of Merit (Balmer R31), and William IV L.S. & G.C. medal awarded in 1832 when he was serving in the 3rd Light Dragoons. Balmer incorrectly attributes another 1st Dragoons regimental medal to this man, awarded by Colonel Clifton to ‘Sergt Cook at Cork 17th Novr. 1827’. This cannot be the same man because James Cook left the 1st Dragoons for the 3rd Light Dragoons in 1818, never rose above the rank of Corporal in his former regiment, and served as a Private throughout his later service in the 3rd L.D. Sold with copied discharge papers and other research.
A German Second World War SS Enlisted Man’s Model 1933 Dagger. A nice condition double stamped blade, which retains virtually all its original cross grain finishing, marked RZM 941/38SS plus its Eickhorn trademark. Minor light surface rusting marks to the lower edge, which we believe could be removed, the remainder of the blade crisp and bright. The grip fittings have lost the majority of their plating indicating this is a late pattern dagger. The ebony wood grip is very nearly perfect with a couple of light abrasions. High quality national eagle with an SS runic symbol above, which has lost its silvering to both its runes and its twin circles. The top closure nut it would appear has been opened with a pair of pliers and has grip marks to the circular section of the nut. The dagger is in its black painted scabbard, the paint virtually all intact with original age lines coming through from the steel below, the scabbard fittings both of the late type, plated, with plating lifting to the upper scabbard mount and very minor lifting to the edges of the lower scabbard mount with minor indentations to the base, very good condition £800-£1,200 --- Provenance: This dagger has been offered for auction with the following lot (see Lot 597), which is absolutely identical and we firmly believe both to have been collected in Germany at the end of the Second World War from the same location. Note: This is an age restricted lot: the successful buyer will be required to either collect in person, or arrange specialist shipping.
A Great War ‘Battle of the Aisne’ M.M. and ‘2nd Battle of the Somme’ Second Award Bar group of four awarded to Sergeant T. P. Nicholson, Durham Light Infantry Military Medal, G.V.R., with Second Award Bar (300168 L. Cpl. T. Nicholson. 1/8 Durh: L.I.); 1914-15 Star 2076 Pte. T. Nicholson. Durh: L.I.); British War and Victory Medals (2076 Sjt. T. Nicholson. Durh. L.I.) some light contact pitting, otherwise very fine and better (4) £800-£1,000 --- M.M. London Gazette 21 October 1918. One of seven awards to the 1/8th Battalion in the March Offensive at the Battle of the Aisne, 27 May-6 June 1918. M.M. Second Award Bar London Gazette 20 August 1919. Awarded for service with the 15th Battalion D.L.I. during the 2nd Battle of the Somme, 23 August 1918. Thomas Pringle Nicholson was born at Haswell, county Durham, on 14 July 1894. A coal miner by trade, he attested for the Durham Light Infantry on 1 April 1913, aged 18 years 9 months. He served initially with the 8th Battalion during the Great War on the Western Front from 20 April 1915, and later transferred to the 15th Battalion, being awarded the Military Medal with the first unit, and the Second Award Bar with the latter Battalion. He was discharged in the rank of Sergeant on 11 January 1919, with gun shot wound in neck and right thigh and shell gas poisoning, and died at Durham during the first quarter of 1971. Sold with copied research.
Four: Corporal A. W. Bumford, 2nd/4th Battalion, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, who was taken Prisoner of War in March 1918 British War and Victory Medals (6702 Cpl. A. W. Bumford. Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.); Territorial Force War Medal 1914-19 (6702 Cpl. A. W. Bumford. Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.); Territorial Efficiency Medal, G.V.R. (202810 Cpl. A. W. Bumford. 4 - Oxf. & Bucks. L.I.) very fine and better (4) £240-£280 --- Albert W. Bumford was born on 1 September 1893, and resided at Barry, South Wales. He attested for the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry and served with the 2nd/4th Battalion during the Great War on the Western Front, and was taken Prisoner of War on 22 March 1918.
A 19th Century Staffordshire pottery Toby jug as "Toby Philpott with jug of ale on his left knee, a pipe in his right hand with spotty face, in blue tinged pale jacket and black hat", with cover, 25 cm high CONDITION REPORTS Hat / cover damaged and repaired. Rim of hat with several areas of repair showing up clearly under UV light. There is a large crack along the seam of his jacket on the left hand side and areas of damage to the glaze to the base and shoes. Some glaze / colouring missing to the hat rim despite repairs. See images for further detail.
Four boxes of various glassware to include four various decanters, pair of pedestal sweetmeat dishes, silver rimmed fruit bowl, three various jugs, tumblers, etc CONDITION REPORTS Decanter 1 - early 19th Century with wrythen cut decoration and vacant oval medalliion to the front. Unfortunately the stopper has a break and repair to the upper knop. There is dark marking around the base of the neck where it meets the main mallet part of the body which may be a manufacturing fault or later dirt deposits - unknown. Overall condition - some minor scuffing to the base pineapple cutting throughout. See images for detail.Decanter 2 - mallet shaped cut glass with stopper - early to mid 20th Century - appears in good conditionDecanter 3 - mallet shaped pineapple cut with stopper - appears to be circa 1900 / early 20th Century in the Georgian style - condition appears goodDecanter 4 (conical) - appears to be early 20th Century though very light / thin glass - overall condition good
A 19th Century Staffordshire pottery Toby jug as "Toby Philpott seated with a jug of ale on his left knee, sponge decorated with treacle glaze on a pale jacket with blue and yellow trim and matt brown hat", 24.5 cm high CONDITION REPORTS The hat has a very matt feel and appears very bright under UV light suggesting repair. There is also an area of repair to the left side of his right foot and to his left ankle. There are several cracks throughout and chip to the handle. See images for further detail.
A Belle Epoque style diamond brooch/pendant of square form, 10 g, centre stone appox. 1.5 carat, the outer stones approx. 0.2 carat and 0.15 carat with crescent and border of smaller stones CONDITION REPORTS The central stone is approx 7mm diameter and 4mm depth, with no visable inclusions with either a loop or naked eye, but there is a small chip next to one claw visable with loop. Stone is white with no hint of yellow when looked at on a white ground. All stones have some light surface scratching excluding the main stone have various internal flaws when viewed with a loop. Not qualified gemologist, can't comment more. The mounts have some light knocks etc. Otherwise wear and tear conducive with age and use - see images for more details
A genuine Cow hide motorcycle jacket with painted decoration depicting Led Zep IV hooded figure, stars and stripes horse, Eddie type figure inscribed "Before You See the Light You Must Die" and to the back "We're One But We Are Not The Same Not All Those Who Wonder Are Lost.....", together with an Echtes Leder leather motorcycle jacket with hand-painted decoration to the back depicting various IRON MAIDEN motifs, Eddie, etc and inscribed "Take a Look in the Pool and What do you See? In the Depths Their Faces.....", etc
A pair of brass and glazed mirror back wall lights in the 19th Century manner together with a painted tin wall light, a pair of ecclesiastical style giltwood candle stands and a floral decorated pottery candle stand as a lamp,a painted wall light of lozenge form and a box of four various chamber sticks and a pair of cast brass curtain ties
Abbott (George). Views of the Forts of Bhurtpoore & Weire, 1st edition, London: Engelmann, Graf, Coindet & Co. for J.M. Richardson, 1827, lithograph title, dedication (to General Combermere), letterpress explanatory leaf, subscribers list and 11 uncoloured lithograph plates on india paper by Lynch, MacKenzie, Templeton, Harding and Gauet after Abbott, occasional light marginal tears, soiling and stains, disbound, oblong folio, sheet size 33.2 x 48 cmQty: (1)Footnote: Uncommon. Not in Abbey Travel. The views are of the Forts of Bhurtpore (modern day Bharatpur), capital of the Kingdom of Jat, and Weire after the siege of the fortress by British troops, commanded by Lord Combermere in 1825-26.
Lighthouses. Laurie (R. H. publisher), A Chart exhibiting the Lighthouses and Light Vessels on the Coasts of Great Britain & Ireland and also those on the Coast of Europe situated between Lat 47º and 59º and Long 6º W to 17º E, published by...., the order of the Honble. Corporation of Trinity House and ordered by the House of Commons to be Printed, 1st August 1845, engraved folding map with contemporary outline colouring, calligraphic title cartouche, three inset maps of Liverpool Bay, The Firths of Forth and Tay [and] The Mouth of the Thames, slight offsetting, short closed tears where old folds cross, ink library stamps on the verso, 725 x 1025 mmQty: (1)Footnote: Scarce. Published as part of a Select Committee report of Lighthouses. We can find no record of this map appearing as a separate publication and no copies are listed in Copac.
Albums. A group of 5 albums, containing approximately 390 engravings and etchings, mainly 18th century, laid down on paper, including approximately 80 by George Cruikshank (taken from Bentley's Miscellany, Rookwood, and other publications), other artists include: Wheatley, Peters, Smirke, Hamilton, Stothard, R. Corbould, Burney, Phiz, Angelica Kauffman, Richard Westall, and others, engravers include: Bartolozzi, Heath, Walker, Skelton, A. Smith, etc., a few with contemporary or near-contemporary hand-colouring, including 'Paul Pry Among the Bankers', published Ingrey & Madeley, c.1835, most of the engravings taken from various publications including: Bell's British Theatre (various dates); The Novelist's Magazine, published by Harrison and Co. (various dates); The Seasons by James Thomson (various editions); Cooke's Pocket Edition ... Select British Poets (various parts); Parson's Select British Classics, 1794, and others, one album with 2 small full-length portrait sketches (one watercolour, one pen & ink) by an unknown artist, one depicting George Cruikshank, the other Mrs Keeley as Jack Sheppard, plus a collection of loose leaves containing another 105 engravings (window-mounted with blank versos visible), taken from Abrégé de l'histoire universelle, en figures, published Duflos, Paris, 1785, occasional generally light spotting, toning and dust-soiling, mixed bindings, 4 joints cracked, variable wear, 4to and folioQty: (6)
Kane (Elisha Kent). Arctic Explorations: The Second Grinnell Expedition in search of Sir John Franklin, 1853, '54, '55, 2 volumes, 2nd edition, Philadelphia & London, 1857, portraitr frontispieces, additional engraved titles, 18 plates, 2 folding maps (one detached), single page map, p.75 in volume I with long closed tear, some spotting and light soiling, cut signature of Henry Grinnell pasted to volume I additional title verso, volume I endpapers replaced, original blue cloth, rebacked with original spines relaid, small split to volume I lower joint, a little rubbed and stained, 8vo, together with Speke (John Hanning). Journal of Discovery of the Source of the Nile, 2 volumes, 2nd edition, Edinburgh & London: William Blackwood, 1864, large folding map, wood-engraved plates and illustrations, volume II lacking title, a little light spotting and toning, modern half calf gilt, 8vo, plus Byron (Robert). The Road to Oxiana, 1st edition, London: Macmillan & Co., 1937, half title,16 half-tone plates, 5 maps, advertisement leaf, modern blue half morocco gilt, 8voQty: (5)
Landon (Perceval). Lhasa, an account of the country and people of Central Tibet..., 2 volumes, 1st edition, London: Hurst and Blackett, 1905, numerous monochrome illustrations, bookplates to the front pastedowns, front endpaper & colour folding map to volume 1 detached, guttering cracked, some light toning & spotting throughout, top edges gilt, publishers original uniform gilt decorated red cloth, boards & sines slightly faded & rubbed, 8vo, together with; Nansen (Fridtjof), "Farthest North"..., 2 volumes, London: George Newnes, 1898, colour folding map to the rear of volume 1, numerous monochrome illustrations, some minor toning, publishers original uniform gilt decorated & illustrated green cloth, minor rubbing to boards & spines, 8vo, plus Hooker (Joseph Dalton), Himalayan Journals; or, notes of a naturalist, 2 volumes, London: John Murray, 1854, black & white illustrations, period inscriptions to both half-titles, later presentation bookplates to the front endpapers, some spotting & light toning, gutters cracked, publishers original gilt decorated embossed plum cloth, boards rubbed & slightly marked, spines faded & rubbed with loss, 8vo, and 6 further volumes of late 19th & early 20th-century mountaineering & travel reference, including Scrambles Amongst The Alps In The Years 1860-69, by Edward Whymper, 4th edition, London: John Murray, 1893, 8vo, Peaks, Passes, and Glaciers, edited by John Ball, 5th edition, London: Longman, Green, Longman, & Roberts, 1860, 8vo, Among the Kara-Korum Glaciers in 1925, by Jenny Visser-Hooft, 1sted edition, London: Edward Arnold, 1926, 8voQty: (12)
Adams (Thomas). A divine herball together with a forrest of thornes. In five sermons, London: printed by George Purslowe for John Budge, 1616, without first & last blanks, upper outer owners of final nine leaves torn, some fraying and dust-soiling, 19th century half morocco, small slim 4to, together with: Theology, A briefe discourse of the Scriptures: declaring the severall stories, lives, and deaths, of the fathers, from the creation of Adam, unto the death of Joseph..., London: W. White, 1614, title torn & trimmed to upper & lower outer blank corners, dust-soiling and light damp staining, contemporary limp vellum, slim 4to, Smith (Samuel), The Great Assize, or, Day of jubilee: delivered in foure sermons upon the 20 chapter of the Revel. ver. 12, 13, 14, 15. Whereunto are annexed two sermons upon the 1. chapt. of the Canticles. verse 6, 7. The eighth impression, corrected, amended, and much enlarged, London: printed by N. and J. Okes, and are to be sold Francis Grove, and Thomas Lambert, 1636, final leaf torn to lower outer corner, dust-soiling and damp staining throughout, contemporary morocco, remnants of woven ties, worn, 8vo, plus other 17th century antiquarian, including few defectiveQty: (8)
Aesop. The Fables of Aesop Paraphras'd in Verse: Adorn'd with Sculpture, London: Thomas Roycroft, 1668, bound with Aesopics: Or a Second Collection of Fables,1668, titles printed in red & black, lacking frontispieces, Fables with 78 engraved plates (of 81), Aesopics with 60 engraved plates (of 68), these being the earliest state without captions, preliminaries of Fables (including title & first 5 plates) with loss affecting text & image, a couple of plates with closed marginal tears (repaired) affecting image, a handful of leaves with faint watermark, Aesopics with heavy damp-staining to a couple of leaves, some leaves with marginal repairs, spotting & light dust-soiling to both volumes, modern red half morocco over marbled boards, titles in gilt, folioQty: (2)Footnote: Wing A697 & A698. Sold with all faults, not subject to return. One of the finest illustrated books of the 17th-century, Hollar's plates being some of his best.

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