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Lot 66

A miscellaneous collection of 18th- & 19th-century books to include Peter Schlemihl: From the German of Lamotte Fouque, second edition, London: Geo. B. Whittaker, 1824, illustrated with eight etched plates by George Cruikshank (including frontispiece), octavo, half-calf; Kisses: A Poetical Translation of the Basia of Joannes Secundus Nicolaius, London: Printed by John Crowder for J. Bew, 1790, engraved frontispiece and vignette title, octavo, worn calf; Catullus Tibullus et Propertius, by C. Gallo, Paris: J. Barbou, 1754, octavo, worn calf; Thirty-Eight Plates, with Explanations; Intended to Illustrate Linnaeus's System of Vegetables, by Thomas Martyn, London: J. White, 1799, illustrated with 31 [of 38] hand-coloured botanical plates, octavo, defective binding; A Report of all the Cases Determined by Sir John Holt, Savoy: E. & R. Nutt, 1738, folio, worn calf, together with three damaged books by A. A. Milne (Winnie-the-Pooh, first edition, 1926; Now We Are Six, first edition, 1927; When We Were Very Young, third edition, 1924), and three others, condition varied, sold with all faults (11)

Lot 245

Queen Charlotte (1744-1818). Autograph Letter Signed. A collection of correspondence to private secretary Sir Herbert Taylor, comprising: ALS, Brighton, 29 February 1816, seeking advice on offering the Prince of Coburg one of the Houses at Weymouth, 'where He prefers to go to a more retired place than Bath', on one side of foolscap; ALS, Windsor, 3 March 1817, concerning 'two Letters for the Kg of the Netherlands & His Son, the latter sighning Himself only William Prince of Orange' [William II], one side of foolscap; ALS, 9 January 1813, forwarding the gift of a snuff box to be given to Mr Stevenson, 'as a small acknowledgement for the Trouble I occasion Him for Frogmore', one side of foolscap; ALS, 10 March 1816, conveying thanks 'for the Interest you take in the Improvement of Dear Frogmore', two sides of foolscap; ALS, 28 June 1816, regarding a letter from the Duke of Cumberland which is not 'civil', and leaving it to Taylor's judgement, 'either be silent or write again as you think proper', three sides of foolscap; ALS, Windsor, 25 March 1815, explaining that she never received a letter on the subject of being a sponsor to the son of Prince Frederick of Hesse-Kassel, but is flattered and states, 'I shall ever Interest myself in the Welfare & Prosperity of the House of Hesse', one side of foolscap; ALS, 20 June 1814, regarding the King of Prussia and the visit of Prince Charles, one side of foolscap. Recorded in The Taylor Papers, by Lieut.-Gen. Sir Herbert Taylor, arranged by Ernest Taylor [Longmans, 1913]. Collection housed in archival wallets (7)Provenance: By descent of Lieutenant-General Sir Herbert Taylor GCB GCH (1775-1839), the first Private Secretary to the Sovereign of the United Kingdom, serving King George III, Queen Charlotte, King George IV, King William IV, Prince Fredrick, Duke of York and Albany, and additionally serving as aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria

Lot 249

Queen Charlotte (1744-1818). George IV (1762-1830). Important collection of correspondence between Queen Charlotte and her son the Prince Regent [later George IV], much of it concerning the conduct of the Prince Regent's sisters during the illness of George III. The lengthiest letter by Queen Charlotte is on seven sides of foolscap with delicate silk ties, Frogmore, 2 December 1812, and is full of emotion, 'I am anxious to profit of the opportunity afforded me to be explicit upon so painful a subject as that of your sisters...Can there be, I appeal to your own feeling a more painful a more horrible situation than the one your Mother labours under?...I said nothing at the time, but felt most amazingly offended, and cannot suppress it any longer...[Mary] assured me she could not longer lead the life she had led...Elizabeth by defending her own conduct, struck in a most violent manner upon a book saying she would take an oath...I did say after that violence I should not be surprised at her giving me next a box of the ear. This gave her a hysterick fit...You have now my whole confession...The Dukes of York and Cambridge's impertinent behaviour to me on a former occasion I can never forget...I promise you I will keep peace...That you may never feel what I feel now is the sincerest wish of, My dearest Son, your ever affectionate Mother Charlotte'. A letter sent the following day, Windsor, 3 December 1812, gives thanks to the Prince Regent for his affectionate response. Four other letters by Queen Charlotte, 1812-13, relate to the death of the Duchess of Brunswick [Augusta] and an invitation for Princess Charlotte to visit Windsor. There are five letters from the Prince Regent to Queen Charlotte (11 Sep 1812; 3 Dec 1812; 6 Dec 1812; 11 Dec 1812; 22 May 1814), some addressing her concerns regarding the conduct of his sisters, 'I most affectionately request that you will tranquilize your mind until an opportunity occurs of full explanation on all that has passed. I am particularly grieved at the feelings of Dissatisfaction which you have manifested towards my sisters, whose General Conduct has been so truly proper...With regard to the conduct of my Ministers, As the interests of the Royal Family must be always connected in a Degree with those of the Publick, I think that there are Circumstances, under which, it is their Duty to submit their Advice, even upon Family Affairs.' One of the letters from the Prince Regent informs his mother of 'the Additional Fresh and Glorious News' that a French army has surrendered to the Russians, while also mentioning his own 'Attack of the Gout'. One of the Prince Regent's letters is a draft designed for Queen Charlotte to use herself when corresponding with the Princess of Wales. A total of 12 letters. Where there is some variation in style, it is presumed to be in a secretarial hand. Recorded in The Taylor Papers, by Lieut.-Gen. Sir Herbert Taylor, arranged by Ernest Taylor [Longmans, 1913]. Collection housed in archival wallets (12)Provenance: By descent of Lieutenant-General Sir Herbert Taylor GCB GCH (1775-1839), the first Private Secretary to the Sovereign of the United Kingdom, serving King George III, Queen Charlotte, King George IV, King William IV, Prince Fredrick, Duke of York and Albany, and additionally serving as aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria

Lot 124

Vonnegut, Kurt. The Sirens of Titan, first UK edition, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1962. Octavo, publisher's red cloth lettered in gilt, unclipped vibrant yellow Gollancz SF dust-jacket, housed in protective mylar covers. An excellent, well-preserved example, slight shelf-lean, a few tiny chips to extremities of jacket, slight discolouration & very faint spotting to spine of jacket, otherwise near-fine. Scarce

Lot 125

Milne, A. A. Winnie-the-Pooh, first edition, illustrated by E. H. Shepard, London: Methuen, 1926. Octavo, publisher's green cloth, illustrated endpapers, some handling marks, head of spine worn, brown spot on title near spine

Lot 241

Queen Charlotte (1744-1818). Sir Herbert Taylor (1775-1839). A contemporary copy of Queen Charlotte’s last will & testament, written by Herbert Taylor for the Prince Regent in order to clarify the position of the queen’s household in the event of her death, Windsor, 31 August 1818, on 12 sides of three folio leaves folded; a contemp. copy of a letter from Herbert Taylor to the Prince Regent, Windsor, 23 December 1818, paper bearing John Hall 1815 watermark, on seven sides of two folio leaves folded; a contemp. copy of Herbert Taylor’s letter to the Duke of York during Queen Charlotte’s illness, Kew, 1 November 1818, on two sides of one folio leaf folded; a manuscript memorandum of ‘Pictures in the Queen’s Palace being Private Property’, listing works by van Dyck, Rubens and others. Together with a page of notes regarding the queen’s passing and funeral [copied by Ernest Taylor from the original], the collection housed in an archival walletProvenance: By descent of Lieutenant-General Sir Herbert Taylor GCB GCH (1775-1839), the first Private Secretary to the Sovereign of the United Kingdom, serving King George III, Queen Charlotte, King George IV, King William IV, Prince Fredrick, Duke of York and Albany, and additionally serving as aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria

Lot 93

A miscellaneous collection of books to include The Feathered Tribes of the British Islands, by Robert Mudie, third edition in two volumes, illustrated with beautifully hand-coloured plates, London: Henry G. Bohn, 1841, octavo, publisher's pebble cloth lettered in gilt, spine lifting on first volume; Jack the Giant Killer, by Richard Doyle, London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1842, quarto, publisher's illustrated cloth, internally bright, binding worn; Robin Hood: A Collection of All The Ancient Poems, Songs and Ballads Now Extant, by Joseph Ritson, limited edition numbered 135/300, illustrations after Thomas Bewick plus nine etchings after A. H. Tourrier, London: John C. Nimmo, 1885, half parchment & cloth boards, head of spine worn; Master Humphrey’s Clock, by Charles Dickens, in three volumes, illustrated by G. Cattermole and H. K. Browne, original cloth, worn; Bradshaw’s Railway Map of Great Britain & Ireland, sectional & linen-backed, c. 1895, and others, condition varied, sold with all faults (10)

Lot 260

Royal Family. Autograph Letters Signed. An important collection of correspondence, comprising two ALS from Princess Charlotte of Wales (1796-1817), only child of George, Prince of Wales [later George IV] and his wife, Caroline of Brunswick, the first letter sent from Warwick House, 6 June 1815, to 'Dearest Frederick' [Duke of York], the second addressed to private secretary Sir Herbert Taylor, [c. 1814]; six ALS from Princess Augusta Sophia to Herbert Taylor, dates ranging from 1817 to 1830; five ALS from Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland [later King of Hanover], 1829 to 1830; eight ALS from Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, 1814 to 1837; one ALS from Maria Fitzherbert [to Sir Herbert Taylor], offering congratulations on the 'result of the tryal' [acquittal of the Duke of York following the Mary Anne Clarke scandal]; one ALS from Princess Augusta of Great Britain, Duchess of Brunswick, 1 November 1794, written in French and addressed to 'Mon cher frere' [George III according to note verso by Ernest Taylor]; one ALS by Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, Claremont, 5 December 1829, inviting Sir Herbert Taylor to go shooting; three ALS from Princess Frederica Charlotte of Prussia, Duchess of York and Albany, Oatlands, 1818 to 1820, written in French [to Sir Herbert Taylor]; one ALS from Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh, to Herbert Taylor on the occasion of his birthday, [c. 1810]; one ALS from Princess Sophia of Gloucester, Bagshot Park, 16 September 1829, and three ALS from Landgravine Auguste of Hesse-Homburg to Herbert Taylor, 20-23 September 1836. Collection housed in archival wallets (32)Provenance: By descent of Lieutenant-General Sir Herbert Taylor GCB GCH (1775-1839), the first Private Secretary to the Sovereign of the United Kingdom, serving King George III, Queen Charlotte, King George IV, King William IV, Prince Fredrick, Duke of York and Albany, and additionally serving as aide-de-camp to Queen Victoria

Lot 75

Livingstone, David. Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa, first edition, London: John Murray, 1857. Octavo, publisher's embossed cloth lettered in gilt, complete with all illustrations, plates & maps, as called for. ix, 687pp., 4pp. publisher's advertisements dated 1 November 1857, 8pp. other advertisements. The book includes a quantity of loosely-inserted newspaper clippings, 1869-72, reporting on the disappearance, safety, and death of Livingstone, with one article stating that he has been murdered, and another claiming he 'has been killed and burnt by the natives'. There is also a letter dated 1864 regarding an order of wool, recipient unknown, which has presumably been used as a bookmark with notes referring to the text, and a later inscription on ffep stating that the book was 'rescued from an unoccupied house in Helgoland, via a requisitioned German warship'. Contents generally good, but the text-block detached from its worn cloth binding, the map in rear wallet is very well-preserved, sold as found with all faults

Lot 135

[The Football Association]. 'The Inaugural Match Played by the Members of the Association in Battersea Park.' An account of the first ever match played by members of the Football Association at Battersea Park, 2 January 1864 [pre-dating what is currently recorded as being the first match played under Football Association rules on 9 January 1864], including a list of the XIII rules, and a printed diagram of the pitch. 'A game of football was played in Battersea Park on Saturday, January 2nd, at which I should have liked to have seen all the readers of the "Boys' Journal" present. This, however, not being possible, I shall endeavour to provide them with the best substitute I can by describing the capital game upon the true principles of football, which I saw played there. The players were the members of the Association founded for establishing football rules; and therefore, the game played was regulated by the laws which were printed in my last article [p.53 in this book]...This was the inaugural match, played by the rules of the Association...The following diagram represents the ground and position of the players at the commencement, and at different stages of the game. It also makes clear the intricate points in the play. Any boy who studies it carefully will perfectly understand football, and, indeed, be fit for a captain among his fellows.' Describing and listing the XIII rules, the author makes clear the split from rugby, 'The original rules IX and X have been, I am very glad to say, omitted, because they were opposed to the true principles of football. How should it be natural or right to seize the ball and carry it, and to wilfully go up to a playfellow and kick at his legs with either the toe or the heel of such boots as are worn in winter?' The Boys' Journal: A Magazine of Literature, Science, Adventure, and Amusement, Vol. II, London: Henry Vickers, [1863-64], bearing owner inscription of 'William Hotham, York 1863', and a small ownership plate for the same. Octavo, publisher's gilt pictorial cloth, pp. [vi], 448 [plus Agency and Correspondence sections], illustrated with numerous wood-engravings, internally very well-preserved, clean & bright, covers discoloured & worn. The football sections appear on pp. 51-54 & 144-146

Lot 104

Forde, Emanuel. Parsimus. The Renowmed [sic] Prince of Bohemia. His Most Famous, delectable and pleasant Historie. Containing His Noble Battailes Fought Against the Persians, His Love to Laurana, The Kings Daughter of Thessally and His Strange Adventures in the Desolate Island, two parts in one, London: Thomas Creed [or Creede], 1604-05. Small quarto, full vellum with repairs & old vellum re-laid, pp. 224 [part one], 254 [part two], the second part with some damaged leaves and slight loss to top edges, part two ends abruptly with the final word “Parsimus” [a later edition of 1649 has 287pp. in the second part, but we’re unable to locate this 1604-05 edition to ascertain if anything is lacking], thus sold as found with all faults. Thomas Creede was an Elizabethan and Jacobean London printer, publishing works in c. 1593 to 1617 from Thames Street and The Eagle and Child in Exchange Street, London. Considered the best printer of his time, he was the printer of five first editions of Shakespeare, as well as Greene’s “Groat’s Worth of Wit”. This title and edition of this “Court” romance isn’t listed in the printer’s bibliography. The 1598 first and a 1608 edition are both held in parts by the British Library, but no copies with this date were located at time of cataloguing

Lot 98

A cherry bakelite necklace, A cherry bakelite necklace, the uniform spherical beads with a spring clasp, length 42cm, gross weight 56.9g.Overall condition good to fairA couple of beads chipped - one first along fronm clasp, majority of beads with hackly drill holes, otherwise light scuffs and scratches in keeping with age and wearTwo beads closest to clasp replacementsWould benefit from restringing Approx. dimensions of smallest bead 12.8 x 11.8mm, thread hole approx. 3.8mmApprox. dimensions of largest bead 14.7 x 14.5mm, thread hole approx. 1.8mmGross weight 56.9g.

Lot 330

Forensic Medicine.- The Hertford Letter: containing Several Brief Observations on a late Printed Tryal Concerning the Murder of Mrs. Sarah Stout, first edition, browned, [Wing D75], Printed, and Sold by the Booksellers of London and Westminster, 1699; bound with A Reply to the Hertford Letter..., penultimate leaf shaved at foot with loss of catchword to recto and last line of text to verso, browned, [Wing R1074], Printed for, and sold by M. Fabian...and J. Nutt, 1699, together 2 works in 1, modern cloth, upper cover creased, 4to⁂ An early work on forensic medicine, the trial hinging on whether the woman was already dead when she entered the water. Numerous expert witnesses were called to testify concerning death from drowning, including for the defence Sir Hans Sloane, Dr. Samuel garth and the surgeon William Cowper. There is a reference on p.12 of the first work to slaves who have died being thrown overboard "without any weight to their feet, and these Float immediately." The trial started with damning circumstantial evidence against Spencer Cowper but he was ultimately acquitted.Provenance: Thomas Foley of Great Witley Court, Worcester (armorial bookplate to verso of first title).

Lot 312

Caesar (Gaius Julius) The Commentaries..., of his Wars in Gallia; and the Civil Wars Betwixt him and Pompey... also the Art of our Modern Training by Clement Edmonds, engraved frontispiece and 14 plates, several folding, letterpress title in red and black, light damp-staining throughout, frontispiece neatly backed with tissue on recto and with some restoration to margins, some chipping to upper margin of title and first few ff., modern calf, [Wing C201], folio, Edward Jones for Mathew Gillyflower, 1695.⁂ A scarce edition.

Lot 231

Shadwell (Thomas) The History of Timon of Athens, the Man-Hater, first edition, margins of title trimmed, preliminaries with water-staining at head, foxed, lightly browned, 19th century half calf, rather worn, upper cover detached, [Wing S2846; Pforzheimer 917], small 4to, Printed by J[ohn] M[acock] for Henry Herringman, 1678.⁂ In this setting the licensing date on the title reads "1678/7" and leaf A4v is blank. Another setting has licensing date "1677/8" and leaf A4v bears 'Persons names'.

Lot 36

MIlitary.- Dallington (Sir Robert) Aphorismes ciuill and militarie: amplified with authorities, and exemplified with historie, out of the first quarterne of Fr. Guicciardine, 2 parts in 1, first edition, titles with woodcut printer's device, first title first word is xylographic and with engraved portrait of dedicatee Prince Charles verso, woodcut head-pieces and decorative initials, with initial but lacking final blank, ink ownership inscription to head of title, contemporary calf, gilt, neatly and sympathetically rebacked, rubbed, corners repaired, [STC 6197], folio, [R. Field] for Edward Blount, 1613.⁂ In 1609 Dallington presented Prince Henry with a manuscript Aphorismes civill and militarie, comprising pieces selected from the Italian historian Guicciardini. Following the prince's death in 1612 Dallington reworked these, which were published in 1613 with a new dedication to Prince Charles, later King Charles I.

Lot 85

Medicine.- Edwards (Edward) The Cure of all sorts of Fevers, both generall, and particular, with their Definition, Kindes, Differences, Causes, Signes, Prognostication, and Manner of Cure, first edition, woodcut device on title, woodcut decorations, final imprimatur leaf present, some fore-margins trimmed close with occasional loss of text, modern mottled half calf over marbled boards, [STC 7512], 4to, Printed by Thomas Harper, and are to be sold by William Sheeres, 1638.⁂ The main text is set out in tabular form rather than prose. The preface condemns the quacks "an inundant deluge of over-whelming make-shifts or smoothing sychophants, fit to be unmasked, and repressed, worthy punishment, being a rabble of idle droans...practising Physick and Chyrurgerie, making it a sanctuarie of idlenesse to the dishonour of God, and great hurt to the people..."

Lot 315

Langford (Thomas) Plain and Full Instructions to Raise all sorts of Fruit-Trees that Prosper in England, second edition, 2 engraved plates, 1 with key opposite, 6pp. advertisements, worming to lower margin, plate 2 with small section of outer margin torn away, lightly browned, a few spots, British Museum duplicate stamp to verso of title, Royal Agricultural Society of England bookplate to front pastedown, 20th century half calf, upper cover detached, rubbed, [Henrey 216; Wing L389], 8vo, Printed for Richard Chiswell at the Rose and Crown in St.Paul's Church-Yard, 1696. ⁂ John Evelyn praises this work in a one-page letter printed after the 'To the Reader', in which he states that he knows 'of nothing extant which exceeds it'. The second edition adds for the first time a section headed 'Of Greens and green-houses in general' and 'A Catalogue of Choice Fruits...greens and blossoming shrubs: to be had at Brompton Park, near Kensington'. Includes the making of cider, perry and liquors.

Lot 271

Dryden (John).- Revolter (The). A Trage-Comedy Acted between the Hind and Panther, and Religio Laici, &c., first edition, final blank leaf present, a few leaves with headlines shaved, some foxing, later calf-backed boards, [Wing R1206], 4to, 1687.⁂ One of two variants - the other, presumably earlier, has "Revoltex" in line 2 of the title. The work is an anonymous satire on the work of John Dryden, written in verse and with extracts from his poetry. Scarce at auction.

Lot 8

Calvin (John) Sermons of Master Iohn Calvin, upon the Booke of Iob, ?first edition in English, translated by Arthur Golding, title within woodcut architectural border, woodcut decorative initials, colophon to verso of final text f. with woodcut device, a few instances of early ink marginalia, with a few ink scribbles to foot of 2*6v, 2H6 & 2K7 with portion of fore-margin torn away, touching printed side-note to 2H6, a few very short marginal tears, including to head of title, water-staining, mostly marginal and concentrated at beginning and end, scattered foxing, the odd leaf lightly browned, modern polished calf, rubbed, [STC 4444], folio, by [Henrie Binneman] for Lucas Harison and George Bishop, [1574].⁂ One of two variants published in the same year, with identical imprint.

Lot 155

Evelyn (John, translator) An Essay on the First Book of T. Lucretius Carus. De Rerum Natura. Intepreted and Made English Verse by J. Evelyn, engraved frontispiece by W. Hollar after Mary Evelyn, frontispiece fore-margin shaved (as often according to Keynes), title printed in red and black, title and frontispiece a little soiled and browned, closely shaved at head, affecting the odd headline, ink ownership inscription of Fabian Philipps to head of title, later calf, rebacked, some wear to extremities, new endpapers, [Wing L3446; Keynes 4], 8vo, Gabriel Bedle, and Thomas Collins, 1656.⁂ The first English translation of Lucretius in verse. This copy with the ink ownership inscription of legal author Fabian Philipps (1601-1690).

Lot 14

Tracts.- Wright (Leonard) The Hunting of Antichrist. With a caveat to the contentious, first edition, woodcut device on title, largely printed in black letter, upper edge cropped affecting first line of title and headlines/pagination throughout, A2 torn, leaves at end frayed with some loss of text, [STC 26031], Imprinted by John Wolfe, 1589; bound with History (The) of the Damnable Life, and deserved Death of Dr. John Faustus, title and first leaf supplied in pen and ink facsimile, lacking at least one leaf at end, [?Printed by C. Brown for M. Hotham, 1700]; bound with [Warner (John)] The Devilish Conspiracy, Hellish Treason, Heathenish Condemnation, and Damnable Murder, Committed and executed by the Jewes..., ?first edition, A3 with short tear, water-stained, [Wing W902], 1648 [ie 1649]; bound with Alarme to England (An): or A Warning-Piece to the Inhabitants of Great Britain, 8pp., caption title, soiled, [Wing A828], Printed for W. Ley, 1647; bound with At a meeting in Amounderness, in the County of Lancaster..., 6pp., lacks title, [c.1643], together 5 works in 1, later half calf, rubbed, head of spine torn, 4to⁂ A curious assembly of tracts, mostly of a religious flavour. Wright (fl. 1591) was a religious controversialist who advocated the cause of prelacy in this work, subtitled "A briefe description of the Church of Rome from the time of Antichrist until our present age." The Faust legend was first published in English around 1590 and was so popular that numerous subsequent editions appeared. Warner (1581-1666), bishop of Rochester and chaplain to Charles I, was a staunch adherent of established church and monarchy against puritans and parliamentarians. This sermon was preached and published anonymously within a week of the execution of the king and inveighs against the regicides, treating the king as a personification of Christ. The "Alarme" is a call to repentance. The final pamphlet, apparently not in Wing, describes a meeting to assess the rates for the payment of troops and to appoint commissioners for each of the hundreds in the district round Lancashire.

Lot 184

Cosmetics.- Jeamson (Thomas) Artificiall Embellishments. Or Arts Best Directions How to Preserve Beauty or Procure it, first edition, marginal worming, paper flaw in L3 with loss of one letter, corner of L8 torn away but not quite affecting text block, new endpapers, contemporary calf, rebacked, head of spine worn, rubbed, [Wing J503; Madan III, 2705], 8vo, Oxford, Printed by William Hall, 1665.⁂ ''A manual of cosmetics, interspersed with highfalutin' talk...There is a modicum of scientific practical medicine, and much humbug, such as a recipe to get plump (p.67), namely to take twelve or thirteen 'lizards or neuts', boil them &c., feed a hen with them, then 'kil her and eat her'. All this was written for ladies by a fellow of Wadham, who tried in vain to conceal the authorship, and was much laughed at...'' (Madan). Provenance: Archibald Spark (ink inscription and Latin verse, dated 1666 on front free endpaper); John Lloyd (ink inscription dated 1706 on another front free endpaper); Catherine Lloyd (ink inscription on rear free endpaper).

Lot 133

Sustainability.- T[aylor] (S[ilvanus]) Common-Good: or, the Improvement of Commons, Forrests, and Chases, by Inclosure, first edition, lower corner/edge of last 6ff. repaired with some loss of text, upper edge trimmed with occasional loss to pagination, water-staining, modern cloth-backed boards, [Wing T552; Goldsmiths 1248; Kress 860], 4to, Printed for Francis Tyton, 1652.⁂ With condition issues but nevertheless a rare book with the Rothamsted copy (sold in these rooms in 2018 and then subsequently re-appearing at Bonhams three years later) the only copy at auction for over 50 years. Even 350 years ago the author recognised the dangers of deforestation and argues for a huge programme of planting trees in England.Provenance: Royal Agricultural Society of England (bookplate in memory of Raymond Wheatley-Hubbard).

Lot 122

[Mayne (Jasper)] The Amorous Warre. A Tragi-Comoedy, first edition, lacks final blank, water-staining (heavy on C2) and foxing, slight worming to corner of several leaves, title edges slightly frayed, disbound, [Wing M1463], 4to, 1648.⁂ A 1922 Quaritch catalogue describes this scarce work as "a play of much merit, marred however by licentiousness. It contains an extremely pretty lyric, beginning, "Time is a feather'd Thing," which was noticed by F. T. Palgrave and reprinted by Professor Henry Morley in The King and the Commons (1868)."

Lot 302

Baillet (Adrien) The Life of Monsieur Des Cartes, Containing the History of his Philosophy and Works, first edition in English, translated by S.R., final advertisement leaf, foxed, modern calf, [Wing B451A], 8vo, Printed for R. Simpson, 1693.⁂ Quite rare at auction with only the Macclesfield copy (2008, with another book on Descartes in the lot) and a copy in 1896 (!) listed on RBH.Provenance: Richard Towneley, of Towneley in Lancashire (engraved bookplate on title verso dated 1702)

Lot 144

French (John) The Art of Distillation: or, a Treatise of the Choicest Spagiricall Preparations...to which is added, The London-Distiller, second edition, title in red and black, woodcut illustrations, lacking M4, A3 headline shaved and final leaf with 'Finis' trimmed, a little water-staining and occasional foxing, modern blind-stamped calf, spine slightly faded, [Wing F2170; Duveen, p. 231; Ferguson, I, p. 293; Wellcome III, p. 67; ], 4to, Printed by E. Cotes, for Thomas Williams, 1653.⁂ First published in 1651, includes much on the principals of distillation as well as numerous medical receipts, recipes for raspberry and other flavoured wines and "A new invention for bathers" (essentially a small, personal sauna).

Lot 253

Africa.- Ludolf (Hiob) A New History of Ethiopia, being a Full and Accurate Description of the Kingdom of Abessinia, first English edition, 8 engraved plates, of which 7 folding, one bound upside down, engraved ethtiopic alphabet plate, folding letterpress table, H1 & 2Z2 with short marginal tear, 2Y3 with small hole affecting odd letter, spotting, previous owner's ink marking to title, bookplates, contemporary calf, rebacked retaining original backstrip, [WingL3468], folio, for Samuel Smith, 1682.⁂ Provenance: engraved bookplate of Walter Charles James. Bookplate of Lawrence Strangman, and bookplate of David Crampton Winfield (1929-2013).

Lot 193

First English Poetess.- Philips (Katherine) Poems by the most deservedly Admired Mrs Katherine Philips the Matchless Orinda, first authorised edition, engraved portrait frontispiece, b1 & 3C1 with small marginal loss not affecting text, R2 with short marginal tear, 2E2 with small rust-hole affecting odd letter, 4M1 strengthened at margins, lacking final blank, scattered spotting, occasional marginal ink mark, bookplate with early inscription below, ex-Harvard College Library with usual label, discreet blind-stamp and ink-stamp to title verso, contemporary calf, rebacked, a little rubbed, [Wing P2033], folio, by J. M. for H. Herringman, 1667.⁂ The daughter of a London merchant, Katherine Philips was probably the first English female poet to have her work published. She was best known by her pseudonym 'Orinda.' This is the first authorised edition of this work, following a 1664 pirated edition. This is perhaps the most famous English collection of poems by a woman prior to 1700.

Lot 11

Recusant Printing.- Estella (Diego de) The Contempte of the World, and the vanite thereof, title with large woodcut Jesuit device, woodcut of the nativity to title verso, woodcut of Madonna and Child to final f. verso (a8), woodcut head-pieces and decorative initials, lacking A3, final f. defective with lower portion torn away and consequent chip to woodcut, some staining and spotting, lightly browned, nineteenth century calf, rubbed, [STC 10541], 12mo, [Rouen], [printed at Fr. Parson's press], [1584].⁂ The scarce first edition in English, printed in Rouen, at the press established by exiled Robert Parsons SJ during his sojourn there in the early 1580s.

Lot 33

Medicine.- Pomarius (Petrus) Enchiridion Medicum: containing an Epitome of the Whole Course of Physicke, 2 parts in 1, 'the second impression', some staining, especially towards end, upper edge trimmed occasionally affecting headlines or pagination, modern calf 'antique style', [STC 24578; Wellcome I, 5149], 4to, Printed by N[icholas] O[kes and Thomas Snodham] for John Royston, and William Bladon, 1612.⁂ Uncommon at auction. Snodham printed 2A-2Y; Okes printed the rest (STC). "The examination of a chyrurgion .. by S[tephen]. H[obbes]." has separate dated title-page; "A particular practise of phisicke" (caption title) begins new pagination on 2A1. The first edition appeared in 1609.

Lot 246

Rycaut (Paul) The History of the Turkish Empire, first edition, engraved portrait frontispiece and 3 plates only (of 4), also lacking 2ff. (dedication to the King and 'To the Reader'), title lower edge reinforced, c1 with slight tear just encroaching into text, small rust hole in X3 slightly affecting text, occasional foxing and soiling, later mottled sheep, upper cover scuffed, lower cover worn, rebacked, [Atabey 1074; Wing R2406. Not in Blackmer], Printed by J.M. for John Starkey, 1680; and another by Rycaut, also defective, folio (2)⁂ Provenance: James H. Williams (ink name on title); Colonel H.H. Fane (bookplate); Malin and Constantine Sorsbie (bookplate).

Lot 124

Herbert of Cherbury (Edward, Lord) The Life and Raigne of King Henry the Eighth, first edition, engraved portrait frontispiece, title in red and black, engraved initials and head-pieces, occasional marginal ink annotations in an early hand, E4 with small rust-hole affecting odd letter, 3R1 & 3R2 with small marginal rust-holes, 4D5 with marginal tears, lacking final blank, previous owner's ink signatures to front free endpaper, later half-calf, a little rubbed, [Wing H1504], folio, by E.G. for Thomas Whitaker, 1649.

Lot 262

[Dryden (John) Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison and others, contributors]. Sylvae: or, the Second Part of Poetical Miscellanies, first edition, lacking final errata f. (as often), ink ex-libris inscription "Brent Gration-Maxfield" to front pastedown, contemporary mottled calf, spine repaired at head, spine label renewed, [Wing D2379], 8vo, for Jacob Tonson, 1685.

Lot 101

Adam (Melchior) The Life and Death of Dr. Martin Luther, first English edition, translated by Thomas Hayne, engraved title with vignette, lacking engraved portrait, errata leaf present at end with some ink annotations, title and some other leaves soiled, later calf, rebacked, rubbed, [Wing A505], 4to, Printed by I.L. for John Stafford, 1641.

Lot 187

Wither (George) Ecchoes from the Sixth Trumpet. Reverberated by A Review of Neglected Remembrances, first edition, part 1 [all published], upper edge trimmed close occasionally touching headline and pagination, occasional light foxing, 19th century morocco, a little rubbed, g.e., [Wing W3155; Pforzheimer 1080], 8vo, [London], Imprinted in the Year Chronogrammically expressed in this Seasonable Prayer LorD haVe MerCIe Upon Us, [1666].⁂ Rare at auction, RBH citing the last copy in 1977 and prior to that, in 1939. With a list of Wither's published works on final page. Ink notes on front free endpaper cite a Thorpe catalogue of 1842 "One of the scarcest of Wither's poetical productions". Provenance: Thomas Gaisford (bookplate); Thomas Brooke (bookplate).

Lot 123

Douglas (Lady Eleanor) Strange and Wonderfull Prophesies..., first edition, 4ff., woodcut illustration on title and at end comprising 6 vignettes in total, foxing and water-staining, later half calf, a little rubbed and bumped, [Wing D2014], 4to, Printed for Robert Ibbitson, 1649.⁂ Rare. ESTC locates 10 copies. Only one copy traced at auction, in 1946. Eleanor Touchet, Lady Audley (d.1652), daughter of George, Baron Audley, married Sir John Davies (1569-1626), attorney general for Ireland, in 1609; after his death she married Sir Archibald Douglas. Her first prophecies, published in 1633 in Holland and reissued here in verse form, led to a fine of £3000 and imprisonment for seven years, first in Bedlam and then in the Tower. The last of her works was published in 1652. The reason for her imprisonment is made clear by the side-notes - she prophesied the death of Charles I and the end of the monarchy in England.Provenance: Henry Cunliffe (bookplate).

Lot 308

Marriage by lottery.- The Sure Chance; or, a New Million Adventure, title toned, elsewhere some toning to margins, title and following f. trimmed at top (partial loss of letters and page number), title with portion at lower margin excised, final f. verso soiled, other soiling and toning, later calf by Kerr & Richardson of Glasgow, repair to upper joint, spine worn, 4to, F. Whitlock, 1694.⁂ Rare: not on ESTC. The first English state lottery was invented in 1694, called the "Million Lottery" or "Million Adventure". This particular pamphlet advertises a lottery for "ladies that want husbands, and Younger Brothers that stand in need of Rich Wives". Young gentlemen "well descended, or at least can pretend to be so, and having no outward blemish of body..." and ladies with "like accomplishments" enter with £100. Many players will receive lucrative financial prizes, but all will win either a husband or wife: the advertisement reminds that while other lotteries have "five blanks to a prize", in this particular game, "the very blanks (considering the Wit, Beauty and Homour of the Lady) may prove to be the most desirable...".

Lot 205

Porter (Thomas) The Villain, [second edition], title reinforced at inner margin, foxing, modern cloth, [Wing P2996], 4to, Printed for H. Herringman, 1670.⁂ The first edition of Porter's successful tragedy appeared in 1662 and was first performed at the Duke's Theatre that October. Porter (1636-80) abducted Anne Blount in February 1655 and was briefly imprisoned and the marriage declared null and void, though a subsequent valid marriage produced a son. In March of the same year he killed a man in Covent Garden, probably in a duel, and pleaded guilty to manslaughter, his punishment being branding on the hand. Twelve years later he killed his friend Sir Henry Belasyse in another duel - Samuel Pepys remarking on the "silliness of the quarrel." Porter, also injured, had to leave the country but a court later found the cause of death unknown.

Lot 139

Charleton (Walter) The Darknes of Atheism Dispelled by the Light of Nature. A Physico-Theologicall Treatise, first edition, engraved portrait frontispiece laid down and with marginal defects, final 2 leaves silked and with corners defective causing slight loss of pagination, title soiled, inner margin of first couple of leaves renewed with slight loss to woodcut initial and one word of text on par3, some foxing and staining, modern calf, [Wing C3668], 4to, Printed by J.F. for William Lee, 1652.⁂ Provenance: Kenneth Garth Huston (bookplate).

Lot 12

Shakespeare source book.- Fraunce (Abraham) The Lawiers Logike, exemplifying the praecepts of Logike by the practise of the common Lawe, first edition, title within typographic border, woodcut head-pieces and initials, folding table after 2I2, 2A2 blank, a few ink annotations, some light mostly marginal water-staining, modern calf, [STC 11344], 4to, Imprinted by William How, for Thomas Gubbin, and T. Newman, 1588.⁂ 'From this work Shakespeare is supposed to have acquired some of his legal knowledge'. (Sweet & Maxwell I p. 167 no. 12). One of 3 variants, with different imprints. Fraunce was a poet as well as a lawyer and this work includes quotations from poetry and prose alongside his important use of logic in legal argument.Provenance: Birmingham Law Library (circular ink stamp to title and several other leaves).

Lot 13

Popish Plot.- [D. (G.)] A Briefe Discoverie of Doctor Allens seditious drifts, contrived in a Pamphlet written by him, Concerning the Yeelding up of the towne of Deventer, (in Overrissel) unto the King of Spain, by Sir William Stanley, first edition, large woodcut of St. George slaying the dragon on verso of A1, later limp vellum, [STC 6166], 4to, Imprinted by I.W. for Francis Coldock, 1588.⁂ One of two variants - this with no address in the imprint and with woodcut of St. George (the other variant has a woodcut coat-of-arms). Sir William Stanley served under the Earl of Leicester in the Netherlands during the Wars of Religion. His regiment took the town of Deventer in October 1586 from the Spanish and Stanley was put in charge as governor, then in January 1587 he defected and handed the town back to the Spanish. He became acquainted with William Allen who published a defence of his actions at Deventer, which is the text being repudiated in the present work.

Lot 277

South America.- Vega (Garcilaso de la) "El Inca". The Royal Commentaries of Peru, 2 parts in 1, translated by Paul Rycaut, engraved portrait frontispiece, title in red and black, 10 engraved plates, a few burn-holes in text, last 26ff. with upper corner repaired with some loss of rule, headline and pagination (mostly supplied in pen and ink), occasional foxing and soiling, contemporary calf, rebacked, worn, upper cover detached, head of spine defective, [Wing G216; Sabin 98760], folio, Printed by Miles Flesher, for Christopher Wilkinson, 1688.⁂ One of 4 variants of this edition. ".. [Rycaut] had a very slight knowledge of the Spanish language and he did not scruple to make wild guesses at the meaning of sentences, and to omit whole chapters. Thus he only gives fourteen out of the twenty-six chapters in the first book, and sixteen out of the twenty-six in the second."--C.S. Markham's introd. to the First part of the Royal commentaries, 1869-71, v. 1, p. xvi. (ESTC) .

Lot 233

Mathematics.- Brown (John) The Practical Gauger, Arithmetical and Instrumental, first edition, one folding engraved plate only (of 3), lower edge trimmed slightly affecting date and ruled border on title and a few other catchwords in text, light foxing, 18th century marbled boards, rubbed, [Wing B5042aA], 12mo, Printed by J.D. for John Brown and Rob. Morden, 1678.⁂ Extremely rare with no copy recorded at auction and ESTC citing BL and Bodleian copies only

Lot 94

Shirley (James) The Opportunitie. A Comedy, first edition, later calf, gilt, by W. Pratt, modern morocco-backed cloth slip-case, [STC 22451; Greg 575; Pforzheimer 931], 4to, Printed by Thomas Cotes for Andrew Crooke, and Will. Cooke, 1640.⁂ Lovely copy with distinguished provenance of this five-act verse play which Shirley based on Tirso de Molino's El Castigo del Penseque (1634), changing the ending by leaving the hero loveless, whereas the Spanish version had him lose the Duchess but marry one of her ladies instead. Greg identifies three variants of the imprint, with no priority.Provenance: Robert Hoe (small leather book label); Herschel V. Jones (small leather book label); Harold Greenhill (bookplate).

Lot 288

Perfection of Military Discipline (The) After the Newest Method, As Practised In England and Ireland, first edition, folding engraved frontispiece and one folding plate, a few leaves trimmed close, occasionally touching pagination, contemporary sheep, foot of spine repaired, new spine label, rubbed, [Wing P1532], 8vo, Printed for Nicholas Boddington, 1690.⁂ Rare. ESTC locates 7 copies only. RBH gives the last auction appearance of this edition as 1967.Provenance: Field Marshal Viscount Wolseley (bookplate and ink name to inner margin of title and to head of preface).

Lot 219

Confidence tricksters, swindlers and vagabonds.- [Head (Richard)] Proteus Redivivus, or, The Art of Wheedling, or Insinuation, Obtain'd by General Conversation, and Extracted from the several Humours, Inclinations, and Passions of both Sexes, first edition, light browning, closely shaved at head, touching a few headlines, K8 with lower corner torn away with loss to text, X1 with tear to inner margin, light soiling to title, later 19th century tree calf, upper joint cracked, extremities a little rubbed, [Wing H1272], 8vo, by W. D., 1675.⁂ Head's exposé of fast practices, including those of apothecaries, attorneys and bail bondsmen.

Lot 335

Congreve (William) The Way of the World, A Comedy, first edition, half-title and final leaf a little soiled and repaired, otherwise a good, clean copy, modern calf, joints slightly rubbed, [Wing C5878], 4to, Printed for Jacob Tonson, 1700.⁂ A very good copy of Congreve's magnum opus. "...the unequalled and unapproached masterpiece of English comedy. The one play in our language that may fairly claim a place beside or but just beneath the mightiest work of Moliere..." (Swinburne).

Lot 50

Priestly misdemeanors.- [G. (T.)] The Friers Chronicle: or, the True Legend of Priests and Monkes Lives, first edition, woodcut device on title, woodcut decorations, occasional spotting and light water-stain, disbound, modern cloth chemise, [STC 11510], 4to, Printed for Robert Mylbourne, 1623.⁂ Rare revelation of the amorous intrigues, seductions, robberies, murders, blasphemies etc of priests and monks. The dedication to the Countess of Devonshire is signed "T.G.", who has never been properly identified, with attributions to Thomas Gainsford and Thomas Goad. This is one of two variants, the other with John Budge's name in imprint.

Lot 112

Wortley (Sir Francis) Characters and Elegies, first edition, woodcut device on title, woodcut decorations, lacks errata leaf, later diced russia, rubbed, rebacked, upper cover detached, [Wing W3634], 4to, Printed in the Yeere, 1646.⁂ Wortley (1591-1652), poet and baronet, actively concerned with being an 'ingenious gentleman' and a zealous royalist, was a victim of Cromwell's confiscation. Imprisoned in the Tower of London for many years, he maintained his code of hospitality and charity. He was a friend of contemporary poets, notably Ben Jonson, but died in debt and ruin. He eulogises his royalist friends such as the Earls of Northampton, Viscount Falkland, Sir C. Cavendish, the poet Francis Quarles, the Earl of Chesterfield's sons and Sir W. Wentworth with energetic verse. The Huth copy is apparently the only one known with the errata leaf present. Apart from the Huth copy, which has appeared twice since 1988, the last copy at auction was in 1985.Provenance: Earl of Wharncliffe, descendant of Wortley (bookplate).

Lot 46

Spanish domination.- [Scott (Thomas)] Newes from Pernassus. The Politicall Touchstone, Taken from Mount Pernassus: wheron the Governments of the greatest Monarchies of the World are touched, first edition, water-stain throughout, later half calf, rubbed, upper joint split, [STC 22080; Sabin 78367], 4to, Printed at Helicon [i.e. Holland], 1622.⁂ Strongly anti-Spanish - and therefore anti-Catholic - satire based on Boccalini's fantastical work of political intrigue and literary gossip in contemporary Italy, Pietra del paragone politico. In the setting of the Court of Parnassus where various countries come to be judged, Scott refers to Spain's loss of the "inexhaustible Mynes of Gold and Silver of Peru (p.20), and also warns against the Ottoman Empire and France but is mainly focussed on the Spanish monarchy and Philip II. Rare at auction, the last copy appearing in 1977.Provenance: Richard Gardiner (ink inscription to title). Gardiner (1591-1670) was deputy orator of Oxford at this time (and for the next 20 years), later canon of Christ Church and chaplain to Charles I.

Lot 67

Lithgow (William) Scotlands Welcome to her Native Sonne, and Soveraigne Lord, King Charles, first edition, woodcut decorations, last leaf laid down, upper edge trimmed with loss to some headlines and first line of text on *4v, lacking initial blank, a couple of corners repaired, some foxing, later half morocco, upper cover detached, [STC 15716], 4to, Edinburgh, Printed by John Wreittoun, [1633].⁂ Lithgow (1582-c.1645) was a Scottish traveller and poet. "He visited the Orkney and Shetland islands, Germany, Bohemia, and the Low Countries, arriving in Paris in 1609. The following year he went to Rome and began the first of his major journeys, having traveled by 1613 to Greece, the Middle East, Egypt, Malta, western Europe, and England. Between 1614 and 1618 he visited North Africa and central Europe and in 1619 went to Ireland and Spain (where he was tortured by the Inquisition). He traveled throughout Scotland in 1627-29." (Britannica.com). According to other sources he was known as "lugless Willie" after his brothers cut off his ears having discovered him in a compromising position with a Miss Lockhart.

Lot 77

Written from prison.- Burton (Henry) An Apology of an Appeale. Also An Epistle to the True-Hearted Nobility, first edition, lacks initial blank, D2 and 3 shaved at lower edge but no loss, marginal browning, later plain wrappers, upper cover chipped and detached, lower lacking, [STC 4134], 4to, [Amsterdam, J.F. Stam], 1636.⁂ Burton (1578-1646), a Puritan preacher, was taken into custody, where this work was written, for delivering caustic sermons attacking bishops and the church hierarchy (published secretly as For God, and the King). He was tried at the Star-Chamber along with William Prynne and John Bastwick and together the three were sentenced to the pillory in Westminster, to have their ears cut off by the hangman and to be imprisoned for life in Lancaster Castle without access to friends or family. Such was the severity of the sentence and the brutality of the public ear cropping, the three men became popular with with parliamentarian cause, symbols of Laud's brutality and Charles I's intransigence.Provenance: C.H. Radford (circular blind-stamp ex-libris on upper cover).

Lot 215

Boyle (Robert) The Excellency of Theology, compar'd with Natural Philosophy, first edition, part 1 only (of 2), 5-line errata leaf at end, trimmed close at upper edge with some loss to headlines and pagination, 18th century calf, gilt, upper cover detached, [Wing B3955], 8vo, Printed by T.N. for Henry Herringman, 1674.⁂ Without part 2, with separate title and register, entitled Some occasional thoughts....Provenance: Sir Thomas Miller (bookplate); University College London (ink stamp to title verso and gilt lettering to spine).

Lot 26

Bodin (Jean) The Six Bookes of a Commonwealth, first English edition, title within woodcut border, with initial and final blanks, 3X6 with loss to lower corner, touching text, for Adam Islip, 1606 bound with Barnes (Barnabe) Foure Bookes of Offices: Enabling Private Persons for the speciall service of all good Princes and Policies, first edition, title with woodcut device, with initial but lacking final blank, [by A. Islip] at the charges of George Bishop, T. Adams, and C. Burbie, 1606, together 2 works in 1 vol., some light damp-staining to fore-margins, contemporary calf, gilt arms of the Order of the Garter to covers, spine ends repaired, corners worn, new endpapers, [STC 3193 & 1468], folio.⁂ An excellent pair of works on government. The first described by PMM as "the first modern attempt to create a complete system of political science." The second by Barnes (best-known for his Petrarchan love sonnets) contains verse by Williams Percy and Ford and is rare at auction.

Lot 66

Tragedy of Nero (The), [second edition], initial blank present but final blank lacking, upper corner of I3 torn away (with slight loss to a couple of words) but piece retained in loosely inserted envelope, hole in A3 slightly affecting a few words, ink underlining, light marginal water-staining at beginning, disbound, [STC 18431; Greg II, 410b; Pforzheimer 768], 4to, Printed by Aug. Mathewes, for Thomas Jones, 1633.⁂ Sometimes ascribed to Philip Massinger, first published in 1624. Rarely appears at auction.

Lot 125

Witchcraft.- Homes (Nathanael) Daemonologie, and Theologie, first edition, title within typographic border with printed leaf facing, C2 torn slightly affecting text, some foxing and light browning, [Wing H2562], Printed by Tho. Roycroft, and are to be sold by Jo. Martin, and Jo. Ridley, 1650; bound with God, A rich supply of all Good, first edition, [Wing H2565], Printed by Tho. Roycroft, 1650, together 2 works in 1, later blind-stamped sheep, rubbed, rebacked, 8vo⁂ These 2 works may have been issued together though the second appears much rarer than the first with ESTC citing only 8 locations. In the first the author denounces witchcraft. Only one copy on RBH (and that defective) since 1932.

Lot 244

Filmer (Sir Robert) Patriarcha: or the Natural Power of Kings, first edition, lacks engraved portrait frontispiece and final blank, contemporary sheep, oval inlay to upper cover blind-stamped 'Montgomery Dublin', [Wing F922], 8vo, Printed...by Walter Davis Book-Binder, 1680.⁂ Provenance: Wm. Palliser (ink name at head of title).

Lot 250

Shakespeare (William).- Banks (John) Vertue Betray'd: or, Anna Bullen. A Tragedy, first edition, occasional soiling, very slight worming to some lower corners, modern morocco-backed marbled boards, [Wing B667], 4to, Printed for R. Bentley and M. Magnes, 1682.⁂ Banks' most popular play, a tragedy based on the story of Anne Boleyn. Shakespeare is mentioned in the dedication.Provenance: Elizabeth Pickering (ink name on title).

Lot 237

Bedloe (William) The Excommunicated Prince: or, the False Relique... Being the Popish Plot in a Play, first edition, with initial imprimatur f., occasional light browning, 20th century roan-backed cloth, [Wing B1676], folio, Tho. Parkhurst, D. Newman, Tho. Cockerill and Tho. Simmons, 1679.⁂ Scarce at auction. The crediting of Bedloe as the author appears spurious and is likely, along with the reference to the Popish Plot on the title, an attempt to drum up publicity. Sometimes attributed to Thomas Walter.

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