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RESTORATION PARLIAMENT. Manuscript notebook, about 250pp oblong small 8vo, plus a few blanks, calf bound, clasp, spine rebacked. Contains notes on proceedings in Parliament, February 1662/3 to July 1663 and September 1666 to January 1666/7. In various hands. The notes would appear to be a summary written up daily by a reporter. "(8 May 1663) Sir Tho Tomkins tendered a Bill for creating a Lighthouse near St George Channell in Severne....upon a complaint of Trinity House of several losses of vessells there for want of it". "(4 July 1663) Mr Print moves that His Majt may be humbly desired to grant a day of humiliation for this unseasonable weather". "(25 September 1666) After a great debate ordered yet a Committee to be appointed to enquire into ye Cause of ye late fire". "(27 September1666) Sir Robert Aitkins report from ye Committee which was to recommend proposals for the Rebuilding of ye Citty of London". Generally in sound condition.
COVERDALE (MILES). Three leaves (Fols 1X, X and XII) from Goostly Psalmes, about 1535, being the earliest printed hymnbook with music translated from text and tunes from Germany. Goostly Psalmes was ordered to be burnt in 1546 as a prohibited book. Until the discovery of these three leaves in 1981 only one complete copy (in Queen's College Oxford) and two leaves (in the Bodleian Library) were known to exist. Like the Bodleian leaves, the newly discovered leaves had been used in binding. On discovery they were contained, loosely inserted, in a volume of printed fragments. The discovery was written up Robin A Leaver in Jahrbuchfurliturgik und Hymnologie, 1982. An off print of his article is included with this lot together with the catalogue of the English Hymns and Hymnbooks exhibition at the Bodleian 1981. Folios ix and xii are conjoined with a section of folio xii torn away at centre, slightly affecting a few words, otherwise generally in sound condition. A unique opportunity to acquire leaves from a seminal book both of the Reformation and of the History of Hymnology. (folder)
A VICTORIAN STAFFORDSHIRE PRATTWARE POT LID "BEAR, LION AND COCK" after Jesse Austin's original drawing, 7.8cm, (3.1in) diameter * Literature: See Clarke, Harold George, The Pictorial Pot Lid Book, Courier Press, 1970, pp.44-45, where illustrated as no 19. The print appears to be a satirical comment on the Crimean War of 1854-6, with the bear of Russia muzzled, the lion of England holding its chain and a club, and the cockerel of France standing over the bear.
Sir William Russell Flint, (1880-1969) "A QUESTION OF COLOUR", A SIGNED LIMITED EDITION PRINT published in 1961 by Frost & Reed, unnumbered (but one of 751 copies produced), signed in pencil lower right, blind stamp lower left, image size 45cm x 61cm, (17.7in x 24in), in wash-lined card mount, framed under glass
AN ANONYMOUS REGENCY HAND-COLOURED ENGRAVED SATIRICAL PRINT - " A SPIRITED Debate upon POTEEN shewing its advantage over ye legal Irish Whiskey!! in the House of Commons 22 May 1816", the M.P's speech recorded in a "bubble": "...I am also very fond of it myself. I never go to bed without taking the full of a Quart Noggin!!... In short it is the most wholesome drink imaginable and the finest Diuretic in the world....", published by T. Sidebotham, No 96 Strand June 1816, plate impression size 24.5cm x 35cm, (9.6in x 13.8in), in wash-lined card mount and modern gilt frame under glass
George Cruikshank, (1792-1878) "INCONVENIENCES OF A CROWDED DRAWING ROOM", A HAND-COLOURED ENGRAVED SATIRICAL PRINT with caricatures of figures at a social event, with pink, green and yellow wash, yellow border, 24cm x 34.5cm, (9.4in x 13.6in), including border, in wash-lined card mount and gilt frame under glass

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