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Lot 69

NO RESERVE London.- Shepherd (Thomas Hosmer) London and its Environs in the Nineteenth Century, first edition, engraved title and 80 plates, lacking text pp.71-116, 1829; Metropolitan Improvements; or London in the Nineteenth Century, additional engraved title and 80 plates, title, plate and engraved title detached and loosely inserted, lacking majority of text, faint water-staining, 1829, previous owner's ink inscriptions, original labels pasted to front pastedowns, occasional spotting, later cloth, rubbed, chipping and small loss to spines, 4to; sold not subject to return (2)

Lot 7

NO RESERVE Byron (Robert) First Russia Then Tibet, first edition, colour frontispiece, plates, Contents and List of Illustrations leaves slightly torn and creased at upper edge, original green cloth, a little water-stained, 1933; The Road to Oxiana, second edition, plates, map endpapers, original cloth, spine gilt, dust-jacket, price-slipped, a little rubbed and frayed at edges, 1950; and 2 others on Byron, 8vo (4)

Lot 76

Fishing.- Salter (T. F.) The Angler's Guide ... to which is added, a Treatise on Trolling, sixth edition, engraved portrait frontispiece, 8 woodcut plates, illustrations, some full-page, folding map of the River Lea, short marginal tear, faint spotting to first and last few leaves, previous owner's ink inscriptions, near contemporary crushed morocco, gilt, upper joint neatly strengthened, slight bumping to corners and extremities, 8vo, for Sherwood and Co, 1825.

Lot 78

Tea.- Short (Thomas) Discourses on Tea, Sugar, Milk, Made-Wines, Spirits, Punch, Tobacco, &c., with plain and useful rules for Gouty People, first edition, initial and final advertising ff., light soiling to title, occasional light foxing, very minor worming to final few ff., contemporary calf, a little rubbed, [Gabler G36340; Maclean p.131; Simon BG 1382], 8vo, for T. Longman and A. Millar, 1750.*** 'This work holds its own place in the eighteenth-century literature of beverages' (Simon).

Lot 8

NO RESERVE Carruthers (Douglas) Mongolia. A Record of Travel and Exploration in North-West Mongolia and Dzungaria, 2 vol., second edition, maps, 4 colour and folding, photographic plates, some folding, light foxing, ex-library copy with numbers to verso of titles and label removed from front endpapers, original pictorial blue cloth blocked in white, unobtrusive library numbers at foot, 1914 § Lattimore (Owen) The Desert Road to Turkestan, first edition, plates, map endpapers, original cloth, 1928; Nomads and Commissars: Mongolia Revisited, first edition, illustrations, original yellow cloth, dust-jacket (price-clipped), New York, 1962, all a little rubbed, the first with slightly faded spines; and 2 others on Mongolia and Genghis Khan, 8vo (6)

Lot 80

Birds.- Bewick (Thomas) A History of British Birds, 2 parts bound as 1 vol., one or two ink notes and pencil markings, Newcastle, by Edward Walker, for T. Bewick, 1809; A Supplement to the History of British Birds, 2 parts bound as 1 vol., first edition, faded ink number to title verso, Newcastle, by Edward Walker, for T. Bewick, 1821, bound before, Addenda to the History of British Birds, without separate title as issued, [1822], spotting, occasional soiling, contemporary drab boards, rebacked, facsimile printed labels, [Tattersfield TB 1.18; TB 1.23; TB 1.26] 8vo (2).

Lot 83

NO RESERVE Britten (James) European Ferns, first edition, chromolithograph plates, occasional light spotting, endpapers lightly foxed, bookplate to pastedown, original decorative cloth, gilt, extremities a little rubbed, Cassel, Petter, Galpin & co., [1880] § Thomson (David) Handy Book of the Flower-Garden, folding plates, original blindstamped cloth, gilt, spine lightly bumped, 1868, both bright, crisp copies; and 19 others, gardening and botany etc., v.s. (21)

Lot 88

Photosynthesis.- Saussure (Théodore de) Recherches Chimiques sur la Végétation, first edition, 1 folding engraved plates, 16 folding tables, small marginal tear (p.175), scattered faint spotting, later half-morocco by Morley Bros., slight bumping to corners, 8vo, Paris, 1804.*** An important work on plant physiology, giving one for the first summary's of the fundamental process of photosynthesis.

Lot 92

Euler (Leonhard) Letters of Euler to a German princess, on different subjects in physics and philosophy, translated by Henry Hunter, 2 vol., first edition in English, 20 engraved plates, lacking half-titles and directions to binder f., vol.1 contents misbound among preliminaries, some foxing to plates, occasional spotting / light staining elsewhere, contemporary half calf, spines gilt and lacking labels, joints splitting, but holding firm, corners worn, rubbed, [cf. PMM 196], 8vo, printed for the translator, and for H. Murray, 1795.*** Euler addresses a series of letters to the Princess of Anhalt-Dessau on advanced concepts of astronomy and physics, including electricity, magnetism and optics. The work 'had an immense success and profoundly influenced contemporary philosophy' (PMM).

Lot 95

NO RESERVE McGregor-Robertson (J.) The Household Physician, 2 vol., new edition, title in red & black, plates, some in colour, endpapers browned, original calf-backed boards, a little covers and extremities a little rubbed, 1907 § Searle (Henry) A Treatise on the Tonic System of Treating Affections of The Stomach and Brain, some light foxing, heavier to first few ff., abrasion to pastedown where bookplate removed, original cloth, marked and faded, 1843; and 11 others, science, medicine, psychology etc., v.s. (14)

Lot 97

NO RESERVE Planck (Max) Introduction to Theoretical Physics, 5 vol., first English edition, illustrations, original cloth, a little bumped to spine ends, vol.III & V with dust-jackets, a little fraying and chipping to edges, else a clean set, 8vo, 1932.

Lot 212

A DICK FRANCIS FIRST EDITION TITLED 'TO THE HILT', together with a boxed collection of paperback cowboy novels

Lot 469

A Heljan 00 gauge diesel locomotive group, to include limited edition No. 4698 class 47/7 locomotive named Windsor Castle, together with a No. 4670 Class 47 diesel loco No. 47815 (First Great Western livery has been removed, otherwise appears complete)

Lot 2270

Twelve various boxed as issued London Transport Museum Exclusive First Editions (EFE) limited edition gift sets to include Beatties limited edition gift set No.1, a London Country limited edition bus set 13, together with various other examples, all housed in original boxes, some boxes with outer packaging

Lot 2364

50+ various carded and plastic cased Hot Wheels, Jada, Matchbox, and similar, modern release diecasts, to include a Big Time Muscle 1965 Shelby Cobra, a 2004 First Edition Hot 100 Race Car, a Hot Wheels Redlines 8 crate saloon, and others

Lot 663

A collection of nine A.A. Milne books including first editions of "Now We Are Six" & "The House At Pooh Corner". Also includes "Winnie the Pooh" sixth edition etc

Lot 237

1956 EUROPEAN CUP FINAL Real Madrid v Stade de Reims played 13/6/1956 at Parc des Princes, Paris. Rare official Real Madrid monthly club revista dated July 1956 which extensively reviews the first ever European Cup Final. This is a special number edition (32-pages) dedicated entirely to the Final. Includes many pictures, reports and full team line-ups. Generally good

Lot 246

1958 FIFA WORLD CUP SWEDEN A 262-page report published in Brazil in July 1958 by ''VIDA DO CRACK'' (Special Edition) Includes colour covers titled ''COPA DO MUNDO Suecia 58''' and includes extensive history of the previous FIFA World Cup's 1930 to 1954, World Cup 1958 qualification details and extensive match by match reports and pictures from the World Cup in Sweden which Brazil won for the very first time, scarce. Generally good

Lot 255

1960 INTERCONTINENTAL CUP FINAL Real Madrid v Penarol (2nd Leg) played 4/9/1960 at the Bernabeu, Madrid. Official Real Madrid monthly club revista dated September 1960 (36-page Extra Edition) which extensively reviews the Final including many pictures, reports and full team line-ups. This was a Extra-ordinary numbered edition dedicated entirely to the first Intercontinental Cup. Light vertical fold. Generally good

Lot 110

HORNBY NICK.  Contemporary American Fiction. Orig. dark cloth in d.w., nice cond. Vision Press, 1st edition of the author`s first book, 1992.

Lot 185

GILPIN WILLIAM.  Observations on the Western Parts of England. Aquatint plates. Green morocco gilt, some edge rubbing. 1808; also the first edition of the same in poor bdg., 1798 & 7 others topographical by Gilpin & others, mixed & poor cond., some a.f.  (9).

Lot 63

Two frames of World Cup Rugby pin badges; the first being a count down to the 2003 opening ceremony with several other 2003 World Cup Rugby badges, 42 in total. The other frame being limited edition Rugby World Cup 2003 World In Union, Participating Union Commemorative Pin Set no. 0003/2500, 20 pins. Together with 2 empty bottles from 1990 Tournoi Des 5 Nations Vin de Pays de la cite de Carcassonne, decorated with figures playing rugby and match dates. 

Lot 569

[ART] Laperriere, Charles Baile de, editor. The New English Art Club Exhibitors 1886-2001, four volumes, Hilmarton Manor Press, Calne, 2002, boards, dustjackets; Dorment, Richard. British Painting in the Philadelphia Museum of Art, from the Seventeenth through the Nineteenth Century, Philadelphia Museum of Art / Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1986, first British edition, crimson cloth, dustjacket, illustrations throughout, quarto; and six other works, (11).

Lot 570

[ART] Paynter, Hilary. Full Circle, Wood Engravings, first edition, Woodend Publishing, 2010, stiff card covers, illustrations throughout, SIGNED BY THE ARTIST, further inscribed 'To Ann, Happy Christmas - love from Hilary & Julian', quarto, with a Christmas card signed by the artist; together with Newbolt, Sir Francis. The History of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers & Engravers 1880-1930, The Print Collectors' Club Publication No.9, London, 1930, navy blue cloth gilt, top edges gilt, plate illustrations, large octavo; and three other works, (5). Provenance: Rachel Ann Le Bas, N.E.A.C., R.E. (1923-2020).

Lot 573

[CLASSIC LITERATURE] Eliot, T.S. The Dry Salvages, first edition, Faber & Faber, London, 1941, stiff paper covers (non price-clipped), octavo; together with Brooke, Rupert. Democracy and the Arts, first edition, Hart-Davis, London, 1946, original green cloth, portrait frontispiece, octavo; Austen, Jane. Volume the First, printed from the Manuscript in the Bodleian Library, first edition, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1933, original cloth-backed boards, octavo; and Wells, H.G. The History of Mr Polly, first edition, Nelson, London, 1910, original green cloth, colour frontispiece, ten-page publisher's list, octavo, (4). Condition Report : Eliot: generally good, with only very slight fading and toning to covers nearest spine; Brooke: good; Austen: good, with only light, even browning to spine; Wells: loss to white blocking of spine title; foxed, particularly to fore edges and end papers. Condition reports are offered as a guide only and we highly recommend inspecting (where possible) any lot to satisfy yourself as to its condition.

Lot 577

[MODERN FIRST EDITIONS] Waugh, Evelyn. Scott-King's Modern Europe, first edition, Chapman & Hall, London, 1947, navy blue cloth, dustjacket (non price-clipped), octavo; together with Waugh, Evelyn. The Loved One. An Anglo-American Tragedy, Chapman & Hall, London, no date, blue cloth, octavo; Waugh, Evelyn. A Tourist in Africa, first edition, Chapman & Hall, London, 1960, blue boards, dustjacket (non price-clipped), frontispiece and further plate illustrations (as called for), octavo; Waugh, Evelyn. When the Going was Good, first edition, Duckworth, London, 1946, yellow cloth, colour portrait frontispiece, folding map, octavo; Waugh, Evelyn. A Little Learning, the First Volume of an Autobiography, first edition, Chapman & Hall, London, 1964, grey cloth, dustjacket (non price-clipped), portrait frontispiece and further plate illustrations (as called for), octavo; and Waugh, Evelyn. Ronald Knox, first edition, Chapman & Hall, London, 1959, blue cloth, dustjacket (non price-clipped), frontispiece and further plate illustrations (as called for), octavo, (6). Condition Report : Scott-King: jacket rubbed and torn, with loss at spine ends and corners, ink ownership inscription to front free endpaper; Loved One: lacking jacket; Tourist: jacket with browned edges and tape-repaired tear at head of spine; When the Going: lacking dustjacket; Knox: jacket faded over spine. Condition reports are offered as a guide only and we highly recommend inspecting (where possible) any lot to satisfy yourself as to its condition.

Lot 580

[TRANSPORT] Pomeroy, Laurence, and Oliver, George, illustrator. Historic Racing Cars 1907-60, first edition, Evelyn, London, 1963, boards, dustjacket, illustrations throughout, oblong folio; together with Oliver, George. Early Motor-Cars, Second Series, The Vintage Years, 1919-1930, first edition, Evelyn, London, 1961, boards, dustjacket, illustrations throughout by the author, oblong folio; nine additional motor car prints after George Oliver, all unframed; ten Tilleys (Sussex) Ltd promotional cards, each with artwork after George Oliver; and another book. Condition Report : Historic Cars: jacket torn and creased, with loss, and taped to pastedowns; Early Motor-Cars: jacket nicked and torn. Condition reports are offered as a guide only and we highly recommend inspecting (where possible) any lot to satisfy yourself as to its condition.

Lot 583

[MISCELLANEOUS] Thirty-nine assorted works, including Graves, Robert. Lawrence and the Arabs, first edition, Cape, London, 1927, tan cloth, portrait frontispiece from a bust by Eric Kennington, further plate illustrations, octavo, (box).

Lot 1351

Waterloo: History of the War in France and Belgium in 1815, containing comprehensive details of the Battles of Quatre Bras, Ligny and Wavre, with numerous line drawings of Battle Medallions and Portraits; First Edition 1844, by Captain W. Siborne, London Publisher, T.& W. Boone, New Bond St.; 2 Volumes in original red cloth binding; spine loose to one volume, but present, otherwise clean copies with some slight foxing

Lot 1352

Small Varied Book Collection comprising Savoy Cocktail Book, 1930, Peek-a-Boo-Polly, children's book, 1930s, Auto Go-Cart, children's book by Florence Upton, Blackie's Childrens Annual,1930s and Story of O (First British Edition SBN 700 4000 1) by Pauline Reage, reprint (5)

Lot 1391

Star Wars Rare Luke Skywalker Mark Hamill Autographed Signed Starlog First Edition UK Magazine 1980 This is something rare & special, it is a must for any Star Wars fan. It is a first edition 1980 UK Starlog Magazine featuring a cover story on Mark Hamill who plays Luke Skywalker. It was signed by Hamill at a private Lucasfilm charity event in 1995.

Lot 1393

Indiana Jones, Jaws, ET Rare Steven Spielberg Autographed Signed UK Times Magazing First Edition 1994. This is something rare & special, it is a must for any film fan. It is a first edition January 1994 London Times Magazine featuring acclaimed director Steven Spielberg. It was signed by Spielberg around the time it was published at a private charity event to help set up The Shoah Foundation.

Lot 1397

Robocop Rare Sci fi Autographed Signed Director & Composer First Edition 1988 Promo Magazine Advert This is something amazing and so rare, it is a must for any film or music fan. It is a first edition Hollywood Reporter Academy Award FYC advert 1988 for the classic movie Robocop. It was signed between 1988 and 2006 at a Hollywood Reporter charity event and BAFTA LA event by the films star Peter Weller, the films director Paul Verhoeven and the late great composer Basil Poledouris. This would look stunning framed..

Lot 1146

The Motoring Century 1897-1997, The Story of The Royal Automobile Club, Boxed First edition book. With original dust jacket and complete with book mark. In as new condition. Corners to blue box lid are torn.

Lot 51

ABRAHAM ORTELIUS (1527 - 1598)Hibernia, 1579Coloured map, 36 x 48cm FramedPublished 1579, Latin Edition. The Theeatrum was the first collection of maps to be bound together in a uniform format and accompanied y a descriptive text.

Lot 56

REV. J LINDSEY A New and Correct Chart of the Harbour of Cork Engraving, 46 x 54.5cm From 'Great British Coasting Pilot' by Greenville Collins, first published in 1693. The last atlas was published in 1764. The chart was added to the 1760 edition. Engraved by J. Mynde

Lot 127

A Wilkinson's Fairbairn Sykes Second Pattern Fighting Knife, with 17cm hand forged blackened steel blade, the steel crossguard stamped /I\ B2, with knurled brass grip, the tang nut bears clamp marks, with a brass mounted leather scabbard with elastic ''silent'' strap; a Book - Shooting to Live With the One-Hand Gun by Captain William Ewart Fairbairn and Captain Eric Anthony Sykes, first edition, published 1942, with dedication ''Compliments and good wishes of one of the authors. EAS'', green cloth, lacks dust jacket (2). 1 - Some pitting and slight bend to tip of blade, silent strap has lost its elasticity. 2 - some fading to binding, with areas of foxing.

Lot 148

Three first edition collection presidential Ingots, including James Madison, Martin Van Buren, and William Harrison, weighing 325 grams each. Total weight 975 grams.

Lot 279

The Bridgewater Treatises by Sir Thomas Bell, Volumes 2 & 3 First Edition 1837

Lot 490

[BYRON] J[ACOB] (G[IELS]) - EVERY MAN HIS OWN LAWYER OR A SUMMARY OF THE LAWS OF ENGLAND IN A NEW AND INSTRUCTIVE METHOD, FIRST  EDITION WITH 1P ADVERT FOR BOOKS PRINTED FOR H HAZARD AND S BIRT.... AND C CORBETT BEFORE TITLE, ENDPAPERS AND PASTEDOWNS SIGNED MULTIPLE TIMES, PARTIAL INSCRIPTIONS AND DATES, ARITHMETICAL CALCULATIONS (INCLUDING JOHN BYRON'S BOOK  1737.. KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS... "MANY MEN, MANY MINDS AND MANY OPINYONS" SCORED THROUGH), CONTEMPORARY CALF WORN, COVER DETACHED, LONDON 1736Provenance: It is here proposed that John Byron may be identified with Vice Admiral John Byron otherwise known as "Foul Weather Jack" Byron (1723-1786) grandfather of the poet.  In 1737/38 Byron was completing his education at Westminster School and about to enter the Royal Navy.  One of the notations reads "John Byron of May Court".  May's Court in the City of Westminster still exists was presumably where Byron lodged

Lot 494

HUGHES, TED - THE HAWK IN THE RAIN, FIRST EDITION, HALF TITLE, CLOTH, DUST JACKET, ALL CORNERS CLIPPED, PRICE 10S 6D NETT REMAINING, ERASED INSCRIPTION FROM FFE, POSSIBLY FROM HUGHES, LONDON 1957

Lot 495

HUGHES, TED - WOLFWATCHING, FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY SIGNED ON THE FFE "FOR ANDREW & SONIA 'WHEN THE WOLF GROWS OLD / THE CROW RIDES HIM WHEN THE CROW GROWS OLD / THE WOLF EATS HIM' (FROM 'THE WISDOM OF BRAN' CUT IN OGHAM ON A MILL-STACK IN MIDGEHOLE), BE WELL, TED 9TH OCTOBER 1989", HALF TITLE, ORIGINAL BOARDS, UNCLIPPED DUST JACKET

Lot 496

GOLDING, WILLIAM - PINCHER MARTIN, FIRST EDITION, PRESENTATION COPY SIGNED ON THE FFE "FOR ANDREW FROM BILL GOLDING", HALF TITLE, CLOTH, UNCLIPPED DUST JACKET, 1956

Lot 497

HEANEY, SEAMUS AND TED HUGHES, JOINT EDITORS - THE SCHOOL BAG, FIRST EDITION, NUMBER 110 FROM THE 200 COPIES SIGNED BY THE EDITORS FOR PRESENTATION BY FABER AND FABER AT THE GALA EVENING FOR THE ARVON FOUNDATION, 2 MARCH 1997, HALF TITLE, ORIGINAL RED CLOTH, 1997

Lot 524

THE WORKS OF LORD BYRON, FIRST EDITION, 3 VOLS, CONTEMPORARY CALF, BOARDS DETACHED, SPINES INCOMPLETE, 1819 AND A 19TH CENTURY COOKERY BOOK, INCOMPLETE (4)

Lot 1007

A FIRST EDITION HARDBACK 'HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE' (PRINTING ERRORS ON PAGES 503, 579 AND 594)

Lot 1007A

A FIRST EDITION PAPERBACK 'HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN' (WITH PRINTING ERRORS ON PAGES 36,38,40,92,147,198)

Lot 203

A HARDBACK FIRST EDITION 'TALES OF FIVE TOWNS' BY ARNOLD BENNETT

Lot 214

A HARDBACK FIRST EDITION BOOK 'HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX' AND A PAPERBACK 'HARRY POTTER AND THE PHILOSOPHER'S STONE'

Lot 364

An interesting Great War group of five awarded to Captain M. W. Hilton-Simpson, the noted African traveller and ethnologist who served with the Royal Army Service Corps during the war 1914-15 Star (Lieut: M. W. Hilton-Simpson. A.S.C.); British War and Victory Medals (Capt. M. W. Hilton-Simpson.); France, Third Republic, Legion of Honour, Chevalier’s breast badge, silver, silver-gilt and enamels; Belgium, Royal Order of the Lion, Chevalier’s breast badge, silver, silver-gilt and enamels, good very fine (5) £500-£600 --- Melville William Hilton-Simpson was born in 1881, oldest child of Rev. William Hilton and Emma Ellen Soames; surname of Simpson added in 1888. He was educated at Wellington College and Exeter College, Oxford, B.Sc. Travelled the Barbary States and Sahara, 1903-06; accompanied Mr Emile Torday on an ethnological expedition to the Kasai Basin, Belgian Congo, to collect for the Department of Ethnography, British Museum, and first traversed the country of the Bakongo and Bashilele, 1907-09; from 1912, excluding the period of the war, has, with his wife, been engaged in a detailed ethnological study of Berber hill tribes in Southern Algeria, among whom they have spent seven winters to date. Chevalier of the Legion of Honour, 1927; Chevalier of the Royal Order of the Lion, 1930; Corresponding Member of the Royal Belgian Geographical Society, F.R.G.S., F.Z.S., F.R.A.I.; Rivers Medallist, 1932; member of the Geographical Societies of Paris, America, and Algiers, and of other scientific bodies; served in European War on Western Front; retired with rank of Captain. Publications: Algiers and Beyond; Land and People of the Kasai; Among the Hill-Folk of Algeria; Arab Medicine and Surgery; numerous papers for the journals of various societies, mainly on geographical and ethnological subjects. He died on 17 March 1938. Sold with a first edition (1911) of Land and Peoples of the Kasai, inscribed by the author ‘To E. L. Gowlland in memory of auld lang syne, Nov. 9th 1911’.

Lot 476

The Queen’s South Africa Medal awarded to ‘painter, etcher, raconteur and rifle-shot’, Mortimer Menpes, who accompanied the City of London Imperial Volunteers to the front during the Boer War as war artist for Black & White illustrated weekly magazine Queen’s South Africa 1899-1902, no clasp, (Mr. M. Menpes “Black & White.”) very fine £1,400-£1,800 --- Mortimer Luddington Menpes was born in 1855 at Port Adelaide, South Australia, the son of property developer James Menpes and was educated at John L. Young’s Adelaide Educational Institution, although his formal art training began at the School of Art in London in 1878 after his family had moved back to England in 1875 and settled in Chelsea. He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1880, and, over the following 20 years, 35 of his paintings and etchings were shown at the Academy. He met James McNeil Whistler on a sketching tour of Brittany in 1880 and became Whistler’s pupil, learning the etching techniques that were to become evident in much of his later work. In 1886 he stood as godfather to Oscar Wilde’s son and the following year, a visit to Japan led to his first one-man exhibition at Dowdeswell’s Gallery in London. In 1900, following the outbreak of war in the Transvaal, Menpes sailed to South Africa as a war artist for the weekly illustrated magazine Black & White, in which, on 3 February 1900, the following appeared: ‘Accompanying the City of London Imperial Volunteers to the front is an artist whose name is known the whole world over, because he is first of all an artist, and secondly a reporter of events. This is Mr. Mortimer Menpes, who is entitled to tag after his name a list of honours and titles of which few artists can boast. Mr. Menpes is the inventor of a process of colour etching, in which, to the sharpness and definition attained by the tools of the etcher, he has added the softness and brilliance of all the rich colours that may be laid on the painter’s palette. Mr Menpes will be able to send us from the front portraits of all the principal Generals and notabilities of the war.’ Menpes’ sketches from the campaign were subsequently transcribed by his daughter Dorothy Menpes and published by Charles Black of Soho Square in 1901 under the title ‘War Impressions, being a record in colour by Mortimer Menpes’. After the war Menpes travelled widely and and many of his illustrations were published in books again accompanied by text written by Dorothy. He painted in oil and watercolour as well as being a prolific printmaker, producing over 700 etchings and drypoints during his career to great acclaim. A definitive catalog raisonné of his printed works was published in 2012 which also included an extensive biography and his exhibition history. He died at Pangbourne in 1938. ‘Menpes, Mortimer, F.R.G.S.; painter, etcher, raconteur, and rifle-shot; inartistically born in Australia; war artist for Black and White in South Africa, 1900. Educ.: nominally at a grammar school in Port Adelaide, but really on a life scheme of his own. His career as a painter began when he was one year old; he is still a painter. He had held more one-man exhibitions in London than any other living painter: viz Japan, India, Mexico, Burmah, Cashmere, France, Spain, Morocco, Egypt, Venice, Beautiful Women, Beautiful Children, The War in South Africa, Venice, exhibitions of Black and White, and of Etchings in colour, thereby reviving a lost art. Publications: a whole series of etchings at different periods; Essays (one called the Actualists, a skit on the Impressionists); War Impressions, 1901; Japan 1901; World Pictures, 1902; World’s Children, 1903; The Durbar, 1903; Venice, 1904; Whistler as I knew Him, 1904; Brittany, 1905; Rembrandt, 1905; India, 1905; Thames, 1906; Sir Henry Irving, 1906; Portrait Biographies, Lord Roberts and Lord Kitchener. In the preparation of World Pictures he did the world in record time, being unsurpassed even by Jules Verne. Founder of the Menpes Press; Founder of the Menpes Great Masters, which are reproduced under his direction; Founder and Managing Director of the Menpes Fruit Farms, Pangboume.’ (Who’s Who, 1932) Sold together with a copy of Black & White magazine (cover loose), dated 3 February 1900, containing the above quoted reference to Menpes and his portrait picture; copy of Black & White magazine, dated 5 May 1900, cover loose; a quantity of copies of Menpes’ illustrations and sketches appearing in Black & White magazine during 1900; a letter from Menpes to a Mr Head, written from the Vicarage, Gorelstone in 1902, regarding a sold painting; other copied research and the following 8 hardback books: Deluxe Edition (No 86 of 350 copies and signed by Mortimer Menpes) of War Impressions, being a record in colour by Mortimer Menpes transcribed by Dorothy Menpes published by Adam & Charles Black Soho Square, London 1901, very good condition; another, standard 1901 edition, binding loose; Japan a record in colour by Mortimer Menpes transcribed by Dorothy Menpes published by Adam & Charles Black , Soho Square, London 1901, binding loose; World Pictures by Mortimer Menpes text by Dorothy Menpes published by A. & C. Black Soho Square London 1902; World’s Children by Mortimer Menpes text by Dorothy Menpes, published by Adam and Charles Black, London, 1903, 1st edition, Westbourne School Sheffield 1908 prize label inside front cover - awarded to Dorothy A. Nash, cover of spine weak; India by Mortimer Menpes text by Flora Annie Steel published by Charles Black Soho Square London, 1912 edition, ex public library, spine sun faded; Paris by Mortimer Menpes text by Dorothy Menpes published by Adam and Charles Black 1909, with partially torn dust jacket, inscribed inside front cover ‘with love and good wishes from all at Netherley, Xmas 1909’ Venice by Lonsdale and Laura Ragg illustrated by Mortimer Menpes, published by A. & C. Black Ltd. 4,5 & 6 Soho Square, London, 1916.

Lot 125

A fine Second War ‘Escaper’s M.C. group of six awarded to Captain C. N. Cross, Worcestershire Regiment, who was captured and taken Prisoner of War at Rigel Ridge, Libya, on 14 June 1942. After three previous unsuccessful attempts, he successfully escaped captivity in Italy and proceeded to make a 450 mile journey through German occupied territory Military Cross, G.VI.R. reverse officially dated ‘1944’, and additionally engraved ‘Italy Capt. Charles N. Cross, 1. Worc. R.’; 1939-45 Star; Africa Star; Italy Star; Defence and War Medals 1939-45, mounted as worn; together with the recipient’s related miniature awards (last two plain discs only), these similarly mounted as worn, contact marks, therefore nearly very fine (6) £1,400-£1,800 --- Provenance: Glendinings, March 1995; Dix Noonan Webb, December 2004. M.C. London Gazette 9 December 1943. The original recommendation states: ‘This officer was captured at Rigel Ridge, Libya, on 14 June 1942. He was transferred to Italy and was imprisoned in Campo 21 at Chieti from 4 August 1942 to 4 August 1943. During this time he was involved in three escape schemes. On 4 August 1943, he was moved to Campo 19 at Bologna, whence he escaped on 12 September 1943, three days after the occupation of the camp by the Germans. With four other prisoners, Lieutenant Cross hid in an uncompleted tunnel which had been begun on 24 August 1943. He was the second officer to leave the tunnel and was able to climb out of the camp unobserved. In bare feet he followed the railway from Bologna to Castel S. Pietro where he obtained civilian clothes, food and 300 lire from English-speaking Italians. He then walked to Imoli and caught a train to Termoli where the train was taken over by the Germans. He evaded them and made his way from Termoli to Bari, receiving a good deal of help en route from Italians. At Bari he was able to contact British paratroops. In view of this officer’s enterprise and determination to rejoin the Allied Forces, I strongly recommend that he be awarded the Military Cross.’ Charles Napier Cross was born in Edmonton, Llandaff, Cardiff, in April 1913. Prior to the Second War he was employed as a Director of a company in Bridgend, and played for Cardiff Rugby Club, as well as being a former captain of Glamorgan Wanderers. Cross was commissioned Second Lieutenant in the Worcestershire Regiment, in April 1941. He served with C Company, 1st Battalion, Worcestershire Regiment in North Africa, and was present when the Battalion fought in a gallant defensive action against the 21st Panzer Division at Rigel Ridge, south-west of Tobruk, 14 June 1942. Cross was part of a small number of men left to cover the withdrawal of the main force, and was eventually taken prisoner of war. The story of Charles Napier Cross’ remarkable 450-mile journey through German-occupied Italy, is reported at great length in his MI9 Debrief, and was retold in a wartime feature that appeared in the Western Mail & South Wales News, on 11 December 1943, from which the following extract has been taken: ‘ ... Six British officers continued their tunnelling operations, and decided to make a new passage under the cookhouse. They knew the officers were going to be moved, and their idea was to stay in the hole, for days if necessary, and come out after the camp had moved. Then came their first shock. Five of them got into the hole and waited for 15 hours. Coming out to reconnoitre they found that instead of the Germans having left the camp they had moved the British officers and taken the camp over as a barracks. Then there was a dash for freedom, Lieutenant Cross was second of the five to escape over a 12 ft. wall surmounted by another 4 ft. of wire. Bare-footed he went over another barrier of barbed wire, ran into the vineyards and began his great trek. After walking some miles with swollen legs and blistered feet he called at a villa and asked for shoes or boots. The occupants gave him boots and civilian clothes, and speaking Italian he was able to pass as an Italian civilian. After walking another 10 miles, he came between the railway and the road that ran to a town and jumped on a train in a siding. With a handkerchief over his head to the complete the illusion that he was an Italian, he travelled for 100 miles as a passenger. At the end of this journey the Germans searched passengers for arms, but his nationality escaped detection, and he made for open country. Occasionally, he got lifts in a mule cart; more often he walked, passing from village to village until at last he decided to make for Naples. A peasant warned him that it was impossible to get over the hills so he turned back to a town on the Adriatic coast. He had little sleep, rising at about one a.m. and travelling through the night and day until 10 p.m. when he had a couple of hours’ sleep and was off again. For food he helped himself from the vineyards. In the villages he bought macaroni and spaghetti and sat at cafe tables with other Italians. Sometimes he was asked too many questions. He escaped from a difficult situation by saying he had been with one of the Bersaglieri regiments, and, pointing to a mark on his face, said he had suffered a wound which made talking difficult. He had little trouble in bluffing the Germans. Sometimes an Italian who guessed his identity would shake hands with him, and, with a sly wink, help him on his way. When some 30 miles from the British lines a group of Italians mistook him for an escaping German and put him in a local gaol. But he managed to get out and shortly afterwards arrived at a town where he met a platoon of British paratroops. Lieutenant Cross, who has owned a business in Bridgend for the past seven years, is a son of the late Mr. Ernest Cross, managing director of Messrs. Cross Brothers, Cardiff, and will be remembered among Cardiff Rugby followers as a former player with Cardiff Rugby Club and a former captain of Glamorgan Wanderers.’ Cross managed to make contact with British Paratroops at Bari, 18 September 1943, and after a debrief at HQ 5 Corps was sent the following day to Brindisi. Whilst at the latter he was interviewed by General Mason-Macfarlane, Chief of the Armistice Commission. Cross was deemed useful and travel orders were raised for him to escort Herr Thisson (former German Consul at Bari) and his wife from Brindisi to Algiers by air (see original documentation included in lot). Having carried out his duty he returned to the UK via Marrakech, and advanced to Temporary Captain in May 1944. After the war Cross resided at 1 Rectory Road, Penarth, Glamorgan, and died in August 1964. Sold with a quantity of original documentation including an Allied Forces H.Q. travel order, with several carbon copies, marked “Secret” and dated 21 September 1943, authorising the movement of ‘Herr Thisson, ex-German Consul at Bari and his wife’ to proceed from Brindisi to Algiers, with ‘Lt. C. N. Cross’ as their ‘prisoner of war guard’, together with an Italian post-marked envelope addressed to Cross at his residence in Glamorgan from the Thissons at Merano; the above quoted newspaper feature from the Western Mail & South Wales News; a letter from a freelance journalist asking the recipient for permission to recount his escape story in an edition of The Soldier magazine, dated 13 August 1959; and three photographs, one of them - that shown - believed to have been taken of the recipient while a P.O.W. in Italy; and copied research.

Lot 1366

Robert Taylor first edition print 'Spitfire' signed by Douglas Bader and Johnnie Johnson, in glazed frame, overall size 67 x 57cm

Lot 1419

'Northamptonshire and the Great War' book by W H Holloway, first edition, and 'The Northamptonshire Regiment 1st Battalion (late 48th Foot) by Lt Colonel R J Chaytor, 1896 (2)

Lot 232

Titanic Windsor Mint limited edition four coin boxed set. P&P Group 2 (£18+VAT for the first lot and £3+VAT for subsequent lots)

Lot 26

Harry Potter first edition, errors on page 99.

Lot 748

Hard-back book, Fifty Years of 'The Dandy' comic, first edition 1987, vgc:

Lot 1027

[Defoe (Daniel)] THE LIFE AND ADVETURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE FIRST EDITION 2 vol.; uniform with; .- SERIOUS REFLECTIONS OF ROBINSON CRUSOE WITH HIS VISION OF THE ANGELIC WORLD... engraved frontispieces, foxed, contemporary patterned calf, 8vo, 1790. (3)

Lot 253

Dickinson (P) (Ed), SOLDIERS' VERSE, first edition, unclipped DJ, illustrated cloth boards, original colour lithographs by William Scott CBE RA, Frederick Muller Ltd, London 1945, with Joad (C.E.M.), THE ADVENTURES OF THE YOUNG SOLDIER IN SEARCH OF THE BETTER WORLD, first edition, unclipped DJ, grey cloth boards, illustrated throughout by Mervyn Peake, Faber And Faber, London 1943 (at fault) (2)

Lot 254

Bunyan (J), THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS, WITH ORIGINAL NOTES BY THOMAS SCOTT, CHAPLAIN TO THE LOCK HOSPITAL, full leather, engraved frontispiece, engraved illustrated title page and further engraved plates throughout, L.B. Seeley, London 1801, with Baring Gould (S), PABO, THE PRIEST, first edition, illustrated card boards, Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York 1889, Bunyan (J), THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS, & OTHER WORKS BY JOHN BUNYAN, WITH AN ORIGINAL MEMOIR BY THE REV GEORGE B. CHEEVER D.D., 3/4 leather, engraved frontispiece, engraved illustrated title page and further engraved plates throughout, fold-out engraving 'Bunyan's Dream' (at fault), William Mackenzie, Glasgow, London And Edinburgh, and THE LITTLE FLOWERS OF SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI, translated by Manning (Rev. H.E.), illustrated card boards, DJ, applied colour lithographic prints throughout, T.N. Foulis, London 1918 (4)

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