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Lot 349

Slavery.- St Vincent Island.- Akers (Edmund Fleming, plantation owner, 1757-1821) Mortgage to his brother Aretas Akers II with schedule of 203 enslaved persons and 165 acres of land on Monkton's Land, St Vincent, sold for £15,664-14s-4d; with duty stamps, manuscript on vellum, 6 sheets, slightly yellowed and soiled, 560 x 680 mm., London, 2nd November 1796.⁂ The schedule lists slaves names and, where relevant, occupations, including: carpenters, distillers, coopers, boilers, masons, carters, a fireman and a sick nurse, with names of mothers entered against their children. The present mortgage relates to part of the estate of Aretas Akers (1734-85), a substantial landowner in St Kitts and St Vincent.

Lot 350

Naval.- Peninsular War.- Orders and Letters Received, manuscript fair copies, 88pp., first f. loose, folds, occasional spotting or light staining, contemporary vellum, circular ms. label to covers, soiled, folio, 1808-10.⁂ A fascinating insight into operations of the period, mostly relating to HMS Impetueux under the command of Captain John Lawford. Includes provisions, use of rockets, and reports on victories. Signatories include Lord Gambier (mostly), and Captain Robert Stopford.

Lot 351

19th century autobiography.- Steele (John, of Manchester) [Autobiography including service in the British Army and the assault on Buenos Aires], autograph manuscript, 92pp., first 3ff. and last f. margins repaired, all ff. inner margins on stubs, browned, first and last f. soiled, new endpapers, modern panelled calf, watermarked 1805, sm. 4to, [1806].⁂ An account of the unsuccessful British assault on Buenos Aires in 1806.An account of Steele's life from an early age in Manchester, including running away to Liverpool and joining a Royal Naval vessel (but leaving before it sailed), getting married, marital discord, joins the Lancashire Militia in Essex, rise to the rank of sergeant, and sailed with his regiment to service overseas to South America via the Cape of Good Hope. Describing life on board, "Blacks and greatest part of the Women and Men was Entirely naked except a small rug or cloth... Living... [on] Goats milk and Indian Corn... I have seen them eat Stinking Meat... ." He digresses with the story of an old school girl friend from Manchester, "One night... with a Gentleman... I was so unfortunate as to take from him in jest his pocket book... he ordered me to be sent to prison, and on being Tryed... sentenced Seven Years Transportation... I was put on Board a Ship... we set Sail for Bottony Bay but was Drove upon a Rock... near Folks Town where all... on Board Perished... Except myself and 3 More... ." The regiment sails to South America, landing at Buenos Aires, and the assault, "... at three O Clock in the Morning we was to assemble for the purpose of Storming the town at Day Break with small arms... . We entered the town... meeting with very little Oposition... we was attacked with a Very hot fire... we Suffered with Great loss of Men... we Came to the Grand Cathedral, where we took our Post... with Moment Expectations Of Being Suported with Genl. Whitelock and his Grand Army but he never Came... which Occasioned us to surrender having lost nearly 300 Men Killed and Wounded... ."

Lot 352

British diplomat to Florence in the year of Napoleon's return from exile.- Fane (John, eleventh Earl of Westmorland, as Lord Burghersh, diplomatist and composer, founder of the Royal Academy of Music, 1784-1859).- Correspondence to which Letters, &c., by & to Lord Burghersh have Relation... 1815 to... 1816, manuscript fair copies of diplomatic letters, most in English, a few in French, c. 260pp., later title and 3½pp. list of Contents, dockets on verso of letters, folds, slightly browned, mid nineteenth century half morocco, gilt, slightly rubbed, gilt spine, folio, 29th March 1815 - 28th September 1816.⁂ "Naples Bay September 28th 1815 Sir, I have the honor to inform you of my arrival in the Bay of Naples in consequence of the trust vested in me by the Prince Regent... for the distribution to the British and Sicilian troops... of the produce of the property captured in Genoa and its dependencies. The nature of this commission renders it almost impossible for me to settle the various matters connected with it, excepting upon the spot and in communication with the parties concerned,. Having also had occasion to know the disappointment that these troops have experienced in former cases of prize money, I am particularly that my brave companions in arms should not only receive the just reward of their services, but that they should be convinced that they have been treated with justice and impartiality. It seems imputed to me by the marquis [Circello] that in conjunction with Murat's army, I may conspire to the danger of the state, and His Majesty in consequence forbids my entrance into the kingdom. I am willing to believe that a supposition so monstrous can only have arisen in misconception... ." - William A'Court, first Baron Heytesbury (1779-1860), diplomatist.Copies of letters sent to Lord Burghersh in his capacity as British Minister in Florence in the aftermath of Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo. The correspondents include: Lord William Bentinck, Lord Bathurst, William A'Court, William, first Baron Heytesbury, Lord Castlereagh, Lord Stewart, Lord Clancarty etc.

Lot 354

Oak of Abraham & Poems written in Palestine.- Rogers (Mary Eliza, traveller, author of "Domestic Life in Palestine", 1861, daughter of William Gibbs Rogers, wood carver, 1792-1875, 1827-1910), William Harry Rogers (1825-73), designer and illustrator; George Alfred Rogers (b. 1837), wood carver, brothers of M.E.R. Gleanings from an old desk for Jane Paul with M.E.R's love, autograph manuscript, title and 71pp. excluding blanks, bound in carved oak boards in relief ?from the Oak of Abraham depicting leafy branches within an oval border and acorns in corners on both covers, ?by William Gibbs Rogers, new panelled calf spine, g.e., housed in the original morocco box, slightly rubbed and faded, 8vo, Easter Monday 1862-87.⁂ Mary Eliza Rogers had a wide circle of friends in the artistic and literary society of London, including William Holman Hunt, John Ruskin and Professor Francis Newman (brother of Cardinal Newman).Poems include: "Lines to be placed under Holman Hunt's picture 'The Shadow of the Cross'... George Alfred Rogers"; "It is Christ that died... Written in the Church of Mount Zion, on the occasion of the baptism of a beautiful young Jewess Mary Eliza Rogers September 1855."

Lot 360

Elyot (Sir Thomas) The Boke named the Governour..., black letter, lacking title but supplied from 1553 edition (with woodcut architectural border dated 1534 in the sill, leaf slightly shorter than rest of text), woodcut initials, contemporary and near contemporary ink signatures & inscriptions to head & verso of title, verso of final leaf and leaf of printer's waste bound as front free endpaper, including those of John Alyngton & Thomas Cutter and later Francis Winn dated 1686, marginalia in fine contemporary hand, later manuscript index of corrections bound in at rear, title soiled and with short tear to inner margin, free endpapers supplied from 15th century Latin illuminated manuscript on vellum, old calf, a little worn, rebacked and repaired, [STC 7640; cf. Pforzheimer 254 & PMM 61, first edition], 8vo, [printed by Thomas Marsh], [1557].⁂ Influential work on moral philosophy and concerning the education of those destined to govern. It was first published in 1531 and there were several further editions throughout the 16th century. Despite the title dated 1553 this is actually the 1557 edition bound with the earlier title, evident from the signings of signatures y and z being in lower case.

Lot 364

Refuge (Eustache de) A Treatise of the Court or Instructions for Courtiers, translated by John Reynolds, 2 parts in 1, first edition in English, fine engraved architectural title, woodcut initials and typographic ornaments, with blank leaf & letterpress title to second part and 2 preliminary leaves bound after O6 as usual and text continuing with O7, with errata leaf at end but lacking final blank, light browning to first few leaves but an excellent copy in contemporary vellum, spine titled in manuscript, a little soiled and marked, [Heltzel 494; STC 7367], by A[ugustine] M[atthews] for Will. Lee, 1622; The Accomplish'd Courtier...By H.W., woodcut initials and head-pieces, without 20pp. Index at end (never bound in), title and final leaf a little browned, contemporary sprinkled sheep, rubbed, a little stained, spine and joints worn, covers slightly splayed, [Wing D2682C], for Thomas Dring, 1658, 8vo (2)⁂ Scarce translations of Refuge's Traité de la Cour, first published in 1616, the second item being the second part only. ESTC lists 6 UK copies of the first.

Lot 365

[Shaw (John)] A True Christians Daily Delight: being the Summe of every Chapter of the Old and New Testaments..., translated by Simon Wastel, headings with woodcut borders, lacking final gathering of 3 text leaves and blank (text supplied in manuscript in neat nineteenth century hand), some soiling, unusually bound in nineteenth century calf with lattice containing ornaments tooled in blind, red morocco label, rubbed, [STC 25103], 12mo, by G.Eld and M.Flesher, for Robert Mylbourne, 1623.⁂ First and only edition under this title of Wastel's translation into English of John Shaw's Biblia summula, with chapters summarised in verse, each one with initial letter in alphabetical order to help children memorise the Bible. A second, enlarged edition appeared in 1629 under the title Microbiblion.... Rare; ESTC lists only 3 UK copies (BL and 2 at Oxford) and 4 in America.

Lot 387

La Serre (Jean Puget de) The Secretary in Fashion: or, An Elegant and Compendious way of writing all manners of Letters, translated by John Massinger, sixth edition in English, additional engraved title, contemporary ink signature "Eliz. Amherst junr" to head of title, stain to fore-edge of first few leaves, some spotting, contemporary sprinkled calf with corner-pieces in blind, rubbed, spine ends a little worn, splits to joints, [Wing L462bA], for Peter Parker, 1683 § [Le Faucheur (Michel)] The Art of Speaking in Publick: or an Essay on the Action of an Orator, second English edition, title and final leaf browned, contemporary manuscript notes to rear endpapers, contemporary speckled calf, gilt, rubbed, upper joint split, small chip to head of spine, for N.Cox, 1727, 8vo (2)⁂ The first is the final edition of Massinger's translation (a reissue of the fifth edition with a cancel title) and is rare; ESTC records only a copy at Yale but WorldCat adds one in the British Library, and another in Germany.The second item is a translation of Le Faucher's Traicte de l'Action de l'Orateur published in 1676.

Lot 395

James II, King of England. The Pious Sentiments of the late King James II, of Blessed Memory. Upon Divers Subjects of Piety, only edition, browned, contemporary ink signature to front free endpaper, contemporary sheep, worn, rebacked, 1704 § F[ox] (G[eorge]) Concerning Good-Morrow, and Good-Even; the Worlds Customs..., only separate edition, browned, lacking small portion from lower margin (repaired), later roan-backed boards, rubbed, [Wing F1766], for Thomas Simmons, 1657 § Calamy (Edmund) A Patterne for all, especially Noble and Honourable Persons, to teach them how to die Nobly and Honourably..., first edition, title in first state with age supplied in manuscript, thick black border, browned, some stains, modern calf-backed marbled boards, [Wing C262], for Edward Brewster, 1658 § Sovereign (The): Or a Political Discourse upon the Office and Obligations of the Supreme Magistrate, only edition, lacking initial blank, woodcut initial and typographic ornament, old ink library reference to head of title and number to verso, title and final leaf a little soiled, modern calf ruled in blind with ornaments to corners, spine faded, [Wing S4777], 1680, 4to (4)⁂ The first item is rare; only 5 copies in ESTC (Aberdeen, BL, Cambridge, Oxford, and Cornell in America).

Lot 413

Chaucer (Geoffrey) The Workes, edited by William Thynne, 2 parts in 1, double column, black letter, title to part 2 within woodcut architectural border, woodcuts of the Knight and a squire, woodcut criblé initials, contemporary ink marginalia, lacking all before A4 (including first title), A6-8, 3P1, 3Q1,5&6, some of these provided in attractive contemporary manuscript, 2S1-4 repairs where text excised or in case of the 2S4 torn away, some text supplied in same hand as above, 2R6 upper corner repaired with loss of text, a few tears, last few ff. loose, some water-staining / staining, occasional spotting, lightly browned throughout, contemporary blind-ruled panelled calf, worn, with loss, lower cover detached, [cf. STC 5074; Pforzheimer 175; Grolier 41], small folio, [c.1550]; sold not subject to return. ⁂ One of four variants of the undated fourth collected edition, which was published simultaneously by four London booksellers (William Bonham, Richard Kele, Thomas Petit and Robert Toye). It is the last edition of Thynne's highly regarded version of The Workes. Thynne held a number of offices at the Court of Henry VIII, including chief clerk of the kitchen, who was in charge of all royal banquets.

Lot 419

Bible, English.- The Holy Bible, Conteyning the Old Testament, and the New: Newly translated out of the Originall Tonges;..., Second Folio edition, the 'Great She Bible', black letter, text in double columns, 59 lines, printed within a ruled border with enclosed inner and outer margins for side-notes, roman type for chapter summaries, roman and italic for side-notes, general and New Testament title within ornate woodcut border (McKerrow & Ferguson 231), calendar in red and black, woodcut historiated and decorated initials, headbands and tail-pieces, Speed's Genealogies inserted before Genesis, lacking engraved More-Speed 1611 double-page map of Canaan, lacking 4 ff. of text (2E1, 4A6, 4B1, Z2), general title silked and laid down on paper, A2-3 silked along edges, A4 paper reinforcement to lower edge, B1 paper reinforcement to gutter, 2R1 small marginal manuscript ink annotation, NT 3 ff. lower corner fore-edge defective affecting border no text loss (B1, B3, D5), 3 ff. lower corner fore-edge defective with loss of text (F2, F5, Z3-4), 3 ff. defective with major text loss (C6, P6, Z1), X6, Y1-6, Z3-4, 2A1-6 silked or with paper reinforcement to lower or fore-edge, Z5-6 silked on both sides, Z5 and 2A4 defective with portion supplied in manuscript facsimile, 2A1-2 and 2A5-6 supplied entirely in manuscript facsimile in 18th century hand (2A6 manuscript hand too large; last line Rev 22:12 (of 22:21, lacks final 9 verses)), a few other leaves with very small chips or tears to blank margins, damp-staining, some creasing, endpapers renewed, hinges reinforced with cloth, 18th century mottled calf, stamped in blind, rebacked, upper cover with calf repair to fore-edge, tooled brass corner-pieces and centre-pieces (chipped), lower cover with brass clasp fixtures, [Herbert 319; STC 2224], folio, Robert Barker, 1613-11.⁂ A substantially complete copy of one of the early King James folio Bibles. Second folio edition, also known as the 'Great She Bible', it has Ruth 13:15 as, "she went into the citie". In this copy, the misprint in Matthew 26:36, where the name of "Judas" appears rather than "Jesus", - "then cometh Judas with them unto a place called Gethsemane..." - remains uncorrected (often found with a corrected over-slip laid down over the error).

Lot 424

Bible, English.- The Holy Bible, Containing the Old Testament and the New: Newly Translated out of the Originall Tongues;..., black letter, text in double column, 59 lines, printed within ruled border with enclosed inner and outer margins for side-notes, roman type for chapter summaries, roman and italic for side-notes, general and New Testament titles within ornate woodcut border, calendar in red and black, woodcut initials, headbands and tail-pieces, without John Speed's double-page engraved map and genealogies, lacking final leaf of printed text (7D6), text supplied over two leaves of manuscript facsimile in a later hand, general title loose, trimmed and chipped (some loss to woodcut border), laid down to paper with some glue staining, 3 ff. defective lower corner fore-edge with some loss of text (A4, B1 and 7D5) but many ff. with small amounts of chipping or small tears (predominantly to blank margins), creasing to margins and corners, especially towards rear, damp-staining, spine entirely defective, contents loose, remains of stitching, near contemporary blind-stamped reverse calf, covers detached, lower cover large portions torn away and peeling revealing board, upper cover rubbed, [Herbert 487; STC 2312], Robert Barker...by the Assigns of John Bill, 1634; sold not subject to return. ⁂ Fourth distinct folio edition of the King James' Bible.

Lot 432

Bible (English) The Holy Bible Containing the Old Testament and The New, engraved architectural title, ruled in red, final blank with modern manuscript annotations, lacking initial blank? (pi1?), occasional spotting, by the Assigns of John Bill deceas'd, Henry Hills and Thomas Newcomb, 1682 bound with The Psalms of David in Meeter, title within woodcut border, ruled in red, some marginal browning, Edinburgh, George Swintoun, 1675, together 2 works in 1, lacking endpapers, contemporary red panelled morocco, richly gilt, covers with centre-pieces of acorns, flowers and leaves within a small field of framed dots, in turn within a wide scrolling foliage border with its own triple filet frame richly decorated with flower heads and foliage corner-pieces, all within an outer double filet border, spine in compartments and with central floral- and foliage-filled circular decorations, each dissected by a raised band and flanked by triangular floral side-pieces, all within a border of double filets, spine with central vertical crease and occasional splitting, corners worn, some staining, rubbed, vanishing fore-edge painting depicting a rose and thistle, 8vo (172 x 121mm)⁂ A very early example of a vanishing fore-edge painting. This decorative tradition is accepted as having taken-off in the 1650s, in a London bookbindery. The image here present is typical of early styles in fore-edge painting which were often floral designs, scrolls and possibly biblical scenes; this example depicts a verbal caption encased within a heart, between a rose and thistle, as well as what might be a frond of strawberries to the right, and further flowers to the left. Fore-edge painting reached its zenith in popularity in the late eighteen century. Bible as per Wing B2319B, but with collation A-Zz4 Aaa8 and with New Testament title dated 1675. Psalter as per Wing B2519, but with collation A-F4. Both scarce.

Lot 438

Music.- Purcell (Henry) Orpheus Britannicus. A Collection of all the Choicest Songs for One Two and Three Voices, first edition, engraved portrait frontispiece, title in red and black, wood-engraved music, lacking 'A Table of Songs' leaf with advertisement to verso after a2, some trimming at head and foot, affecting page numbers at head, loss of some signatures and sometimes affecting musical score at foot, occasional light spotting, endpapers renewed, but retaining original front endpaper to which later ink manuscript annotations, nineteenth century half-calf, with mounted morocco label to upper cover, worn, [Wing P4218], folio, J. Heptinstall for Henry Playford, 1698

Lot 439

Music.- Babell (William) Suits of the most Celebrated Lessons Collected and Fitted to the Harpsicord or Spinnet..., first edition, engraved title, engraved 'Table of the Lessons', 76 engraved plates of music (numbered 2-77), manuscript ink annotation to front endpaper verso, title with light uniform browning and offsetting, plate 65 with small marginal tear to lower edge (just touching but not affecting music), some light browning and spotting, endpapers renewed, modern half calf, upper joint splitting at head and foot, rubbed, folio, Walsh and Hare, [1717].⁂ Rare. RISM (Répertoire International des Sources Musicales) lists no copy at the BL, nor is it listed on ESTC. Meanwhile, RBH lists only 4 copies at auction in the last 40 years. This collection, which includes some of Babell's own material, also contains some of the earliest known published arrangements and harpsicord transcriptions of arias by G. F. Handel, for example from his operas Rinaldo (1711) and Teseo (1713). Although Babell (1960-1723) was trained predominantly by his bassoonist father, it is thought to be possible that Handel also contributed to his musical training.

Lot 446

Music.- Graystock or Greystock (John) [Volume of music set to the Psalms], manuscript lyrics and notation, 52pp. excluding blanks, signed numerous times, some ink marks, browned, last f. some worming, loose in original roan, worn, traces of worming, covers broken but holding, 100 x 155mm., 1726-46.⁂ Includes a few lyrics and some music instruction: "... you must mind your time for you had as good sing without tune as without time"; "Into this world we nothing brought"; "Of Chords & Discords"; "Bassus Psalm 23 Beverly tune" etc.

Lot 447

Music.- Skelton (Francis) [Psalms, Hymns and Anthems], manuscript lyrics and notation, c. 370pp. excluding blanks, browned, some marks, hinges weak, original roan, blind-stamped borders, worn, 120 x 200mm., 1813.⁂ Includes: "A Noon Hymn"; "Psm 104th. Last 3 Verses"; "Anthem for Funerals taken from ye Burial Service"; "Vital Spark"; "Harvest Home"; "Funeral by Jas. Leach"; "Millennium... Crabb"; "The Summers Evening Words by Dr [Isaac] Watts" etc.

Lot 448

Music.- Wood (Thomas, composer, of Parsonage Hall, Bures St Mary, Essex, 1892-1950) Suffolk Punch, autograph manuscript score signed, 120pp., a few autograph manuscript notes in ink and pencil, original cloth, gilt spine, folio, 3rd April 1930.⁂ The concert overture Suffolk Punch appeared in 1930.

Lot 451

Presented to a minister of the 'First Church in Boston'.- Watts (Isaac) The Holiness of times, places, and people under the Jewish and Christian dispensations consider'd and compared, first edition, initialled presentation copy from the author to the Rev. Thomas Foxcroft, advertisement f. for books by Watts (with a manuscript addition at end, ?by Watts himself), some contemporary ink underlining and marginal markings, staining (including some ink) and spotting, lightly browned, contemporary calf, gilt, spine in compartments, upper cover detached, spine ends and corners worn, small circular piece from leather of lower cover, rubbed and scuffed, large 12mo, Printed for R. Hett and J. Brackstone, 1738.⁂ Provenance: 'To the Rev'd Mr. Foxcroft - in Boston - IW:'. Rev. Thomas Foxcroft (1697-1769) minister of the First Church in Boston, MA. He was the son of Col. Francis Foxcroft, Warden of King's Chapel and Elizabeth Danforth, daughter of Governor Thomas Danforth. He was educated at Harvard. Presumably his 'Rec'd August.17.1738'; 'Nath. Emmons, A.D. 1777.'. Nathanael Emmons (1745-1840) New England Congregational minister and influential theologian, who was educated at Yale; 'Jacob Ide's'. Jacob Ide (1785-1880) Massachusetts Congregational minister, who was educated at Brown University (ink inscriptions to front free endpaper).

Lot 460

18 century velocipede.- This Ticket Will entitle the Bearer to a Sight of the Automaton; or, Flying Chariot... 13th December, 1793, woodcut velocipede, manuscript insertion "No. 45" [ticket no.], stitched into a pamphlet of blank paper, [not in ESTC], 200 x 145mm., Britannia watermark, 1793; and 6 other related pieces, including: a manuscript copy of a Dublin handbill advertising the velocipede in 1783 and a bill from Ovenden and Bushnell, Bent Timberwheel Manufacturers, probable builders of the velocipede, v.s., v.d. (7 pieces).⁂ The "Flying Chariot" is probably taken from the invention of David Manson (1726-92), Irish schoolmaster, who designed to "amuse his pupils... various machines, one a primitive kind of velocipede." (Oxford DNB). Ovenden and Bushnell, "Bent-Timber Wheel Manufactory, No. 13, Surrey Side Westminster Bridge" were probably the builders.

Lot 466

Southey (Robert).- James (Isaac) Providence Displayed: or, the Remarkable Adventures of Alexander Selkirk...who lived Four Years and Four Months by himself, on the Island of Juan Fernandez..., first edition, Robert Southey's copy with his neat ink signature to foot of title and his trimmed wood-engraved bookplate by Thomas Bewick on half-title, engraved map frontispiece, woodcut illustrations, first and last leaf browned, title soiled at foot, a few small stains, old boards, uncut, rubbed, rebacked in cloth preserving old paper label titled in manuscript in Southey's hand, new endpapers, 8vo, Bristol, Biggs and Cottle, 1800.⁂* Alexander Selkirk was marooned on Juan Fernandez Island, off the coast of Chile, from 1705 to 1709, when he was rescued by Capt. Woodes Rogers. His story inspired Daniel Defoe's novel Robinson Crusoe.ESTC records only 5 UK copies, 2 being in the British Library.

Lot 468

Lamb (Charles [& Mary]) John Woodvil, a Tragedy...to which are added, Fragments of Burton, first edition, a fine copy in handsome later crushed dark blue morocco, by Rivière & Son, covers with triple gilt fillet border, spine gilt in compartments, inner gilt dentelles, t.e.g., others uncut, 1802; The Works, 2 vol., first collected edition, lacking advertisement leaf at end of vol.2, modern blue morocco, by Bayntun of Bath, covers with geometric panel formed by rules in black & gilt and small gilt circles to corners, spine gilt, g.e., spine slightly faded, 1818; and an 1867 Essays of Elia with mounted manuscript note by Charles Lamb, 8vo (4)⁂ The first mentioned is Lamb's first dalliance with prose drama; against the advice of his friends Coleridge & Southey he submitted John Woodvil to the Drury Lane Theatre but the play was deemed unsuitable. The work also includes Mary Lamb's poem 'Helen', marking her first appearance in print, while the second item also contains poems by Mary.

Lot 470

Southey (Robert).- Cottle (Joseph) The Fall of Cambria, a Poem, 2 vol., first edition, Robert Southey's copy with his neat ink inscription "Robert Southey from his friend the Author" to half-title and his trimmed wood-engraved bookplate by Thomas Bewick to verso of titles, half-titles, engraved map frontispiece to vol.1 (offset onto title), occasional spotting, with long newspaper cutting 'A Bristol Bookseller's Recollections' concerning the author and S.T.Coleridge pasted to rear endpapers of both volumes, additional ink inscription "E.A.Taylor June 1843" to half-titles, contemporary Cottonian binding of red leafy-patterned fabric over boards with manuscript paper labels to spines, uncut, a little rubbed, spines faded and a little worn at foot, labels slightly chipped, 12mo, 1808.⁂ Joseph Cottle (1770-1853) was a Bristol bookseller and publisher; he also wrote epic poetry which was ridiculed by Byron. He met Southey and Coleridge in 1794 when they stayed in Bristol preparing to emigrate to America to found a "pantisocratic" community. The project was abandoned but Cottle helped them financially in return for the copyright of poems which he then published.Many of Southey's books were bound in this fashion, executed by his daughters or female friends using coloured cotton prints over the original worn boards. They filled a room in his house which became known as the "Cottonian Library".

Lot 475

Cambridge Garrick Club.- Collection of 35 small playbills of the Cambridge Garrick Club amateur theatre productions at the Theatre, Barnwell, some duplicates, another playbill for the Theatre, Newmarket, also a small amount of associated ephemera relating to the Cambridge Garrick Club in a vol. of newspaper cuttings, all laid down on album ff., some folding, some with manuscript insertions, some slightly browned and marked, contemporary half calf album, rubbed, upper cover detached, lacks spine, sm. 4to, playbills variously 224 x 142mm. & 377 x 155mm., Cambridge Printers, 1834-42.

Lot 544

Chapbooks.- Lumsden & Son, publishers. Gammer Gurton's Garland of Nursery Songs, and Toby Tickle's Collection of Riddles, compiled by Peter Puzzlecap Esq., 26 woodcut vignettes, Glasgow, Lumsden and Son, [water-marked 1812]; Fun upon Fun; or the Humours of a Fair, oval woodcut vignette to title and a few other leaves, 8 engraved plates printed in red, J.Lumsden & Son, [water-marked 1819]; Nurse Dandlem's Little Repository of Great Instruction, 8 engraved plates printed in red, J.Lumsden & Son, [water-marked 1819], all stitched in original wrappers the first pink, titled in manuscript on upper cover, a little rubbed and marked, Glasgow § Cinderilla; or the Glass Slipper, original printed yellow wrappers with woodcut of slipper, York, J.Kendrew, [c.1820] § World Upside Down (The )..., original printed yellow wrappers, York, J.Kendrew, [c.1820] § Pretty and Entertaining History (The) of Tom Thumb, woodcuts, original printed wrappers with woodcut vignettes, Otley, W.Walker, [c.1830], together loose in small red morocco, gilt, slip-case with pull-off top labelled "Photographs" on spine, slightly rubbed, 16mo (6)

Lot 69

Herbert (Sir Thomas) A Relation of Some Yeares Travaile, begunne Anno 1626. Into Afrique and the greater Asia..., first edition, lacking initial blank but with additional engraved pictorial title 'A Description of the Persian Monarchy...' by William Marshall and final colophon leaf, woodcut decorations and initials, engraved maps and illustrations in text, tears to B3, M2, Ee2 & 3 repaired (mostly marginal), later manuscript note to margin of Ff1 by mention of Madoc ap Owen first discovering America, bookplate of D.G.Mackenzie, contemporary calf, rubbed, rebacked, new morocco label, corners repaired, new endpapers, note re repairs by Sangorski & Sutcliffe in 1965 to rear pastedown, [STC 13190; Sabin 31471], folio, by William Stansby and Jacob Bloome, 1634.⁂ Including extensive information on the Persian empire and an illustration of a dodo on p.212. One of two variant imprints.

Lot 76

Kipling (Rudyard) Under the Deodars, first edition, advertisement leaf at beginning and 7pp. at end, a fine copy in contemporary navy crushed morocco, gilt, by Morrell, spine gilt in compartments, inner gilt dentelles, g.e., Allahabad, A.H.Wheeler & Co., [1888] § Yule (Col. Henry) & Arthur Coke Burnell. Hobson-Jobson: being a Glossary of Anglo-Indian Colloquial Words and Phrases, first edition, manuscript slip "With Colonel Yule's Compliments" mounted on front pastedown, original roan-backed cloth, rubbed, rebacked preserving most of original spine, 1886, 8vo (2)⁂ "Hobson-Jobson. A native festal excitement....".

Lot 89

Lobo (Jeronimo) A short Relation of the River Nile, of its Sourse and Current; of its Overflowing the Campagna of Aegypt..., translated by Sir Peter Wyche, first edition in English, with initial imprimatur leaf but not final blank, imprimatur leaf with small holes and torn at inner margin (old repair), title slightly defective at lower outer corner not affecting text, F8 with small repair to lower margin, some light browning, engraved bookplate of John Stackhouse, later calf-backed marbled boards, rubbed, spine ends slightly chipped, [Wing L2733], small 8vo, for John Martyn, 1669.⁂ Account of a Jesuit missionary's travels in Ethiopia from 1625 to 1633; originally written in Portuguese it was translated from the manuscript by Sir Peter Wyche for the Royal Society. It includes descriptions of Lake Tana, the source of the Blue Nile, Arab shipping, Prester John, "the famous Unicorne", and palm trees.

Lot 494

An ancient Islamic handwritten calligraphic manuscript with velum cover. H.19 W.13cm

Lot 75

Fragment of a fresco. Byzantium, 14th century."Saint Peter".Fresco on a whitewashed surface removed from the wall and attached to a wooden support.It shows lack of polychromy.Measurements: 22.5 x 18 cmIn this fragment of a Byzantine fresco, the head of the Apostle St. Peter, crowned with gold leaf, is looking upwards, possibly contemplating a Pantocrator that occupied the central scene. Gold, the colour of the sun and illumination, dominates this mural painting in which the Byzantine artist, in accordance with canonical teachings, combines the pigments by encircling them with a stylised pattern. Each colour carried a particular symbolism, and shadows did not exist in Byzantine painting. By the 12th century, hieraticism had been softened by Western influence, tempered by more classicist lines, but with no naturalistic interest.In Byzantine frescoes in the basilicas of the East, the usual subjects were biblical, as well as depictions of angels and saints, which were arranged in apses and domes. The figure of the Pantocrator surrounded by angels was a prototype inherited from Hagia Sophia. Sometimes apostles and saints took the place of angels. The Christ in Majesty inserted in an ellipse or mandorla, the Virgin enthroned with the child on her lap and flanked by local saints and apostles, symmetrically distributed, were the dominant scenes. The linearity of the line and the vividness of the colours were a constant feature.Byzantine painting developed from early Christian art, its character being established between the time of Justinian I and the 15th century. There is little evidence of pre-9th-century artistic production in the territory of what was the Byzantine Empire due to iconoclasm. Pictorial representation in Byzantine culture and in Eastern Christianity played a particularly important role, as it was considered to be a materialisation of the divinity itself (revelation of the divine or theophany), in some cases even considered to be "made by non-human hands". The main techniques of Byzantine painting were mosaic, tempera on panel (icons), fresco and manuscript illumination. A number of panels with paintings, mosaics and scrolls with miniatures or codices, produced in Constantinople and spread throughout the West during the Middle Ages, are preserved in churches and museums.

Lot 76

Fragment of a fresco. Byzantium, 14th century."Virgin Mary.Fresco on a whitewashed surface removed from the wall and attached to a wooden support.The frame has a break in the upper left corner.Size: 26 x 25.5 cm; 35 x 34.5 cm (frame).In this fragment of Byzantine fresco, the Virgin bows her head with a delicate gesture. It is an attitude that reminds us of motherhood as Byzantine iconographic conventions reproduced it, so that the Christ Child was probably on her lap. The red veil zigzags around the outline of the cloth, drawing a type of fold characteristic of Byzantine painting. The long bridge of the nose, the perfect arches of the eyebrows and the almond-shaped eyes are a canonical stylisation of Byzantine art.In Byzantine frescoes in the basilicas of the East, the usual subjects were biblical, as well as depictions of angels and saints, which were arranged in apses and domes. The figure of the Pantocrator surrounded by angels was a prototype inherited from Hagia Sophia. Sometimes apostles and saints took the place of angels. The Christ in Majesty inserted in an ellipse or mandorla, the Virgin enthroned with the child on her lap and flanked by local saints and apostles, symmetrically distributed, were the dominant scenes. The linearity of the line and the vividness of the colours were a constant feature.Byzantine painting developed from early Christian art, its character being established between the time of Justinian I and the 15th century. There is little evidence of pre-9th-century artistic production in the territory of what was the Byzantine Empire due to iconoclasm. Pictorial representation in Byzantine culture and in Eastern Christianity played a particularly important role, as it was considered to be a materialisation of the divinity itself (revelation of the divine or theophany), in some cases even considered to be "made by non-human hands". The main techniques of Byzantine painting were mosaic, tempera on panel (icons), fresco and manuscript illumination. A number of panels with paintings, mosaics and scrolls with miniatures or codices, produced in Constantinople and spread throughout the West during the Middle Ages, are preserved in churches and museums.

Lot 77

Fragment of a fresco. Byzantium, 14th century."Saint John the Evangelist'.Fresco on a whitewashed surface removed from the wall and attached to a wooden support.The polychromy is missing.Measurements: 22.5 x 22 cm; 30 x 28 cm (frame).In this fragment of a Byzantine fresco, the head of Saint John the Evangelist is slightly tilted and the large green eyes of the young saint shine with an interior look. Gold, the colour of the sun and illumination, dominates this composition of mural origin in which the Byzantine painter, in accordance with canonical teachings, combines the pigments by encircling them with a stylised pattern. Each colour carried a particular symbolism, and shadows did not exist in Byzantine painting. By the 12th century, hieraticism had been softened by Western influence, tempered by more classicist lines, but with no naturalistic interest.In Byzantine frescoes in the basilicas of the East, the usual subjects were biblical, as well as depictions of angels and saints, which were arranged in apses and domes. The figure of the Pantocrator surrounded by angels was a prototype inherited from Hagia Sophia. Sometimes apostles and saints took the place of angels. The Christ in Majesty inserted in an ellipse or mandorla, the Virgin enthroned with the child on her lap and flanked by local saints and apostles, symmetrically distributed, were the dominant scenes. The linearity of the line and the vividness of the colours were a constant feature.Byzantine painting developed from early Christian art, its character being established between the time of Justinian I and the 15th century. There is little evidence of pre-9th-century artistic production in the territory of what was the Byzantine Empire due to iconoclasm. Pictorial representation in Byzantine culture and in Eastern Christianity played a particularly important role, as it was considered to be a materialisation of the divinity itself (revelation of the divine or theophany), in some cases even considered to be "made by non-human hands". The main techniques of Byzantine painting were mosaic, tempera on panel (icons), fresco and manuscript illumination. A number of panels with paintings, mosaics and scrolls with miniatures or codices, produced in Constantinople and spread throughout the West during the Middle Ages, are preserved in churches and museums.

Lot 78

Fragment of a fresco. Byzantium, 14th century."Salvator Mundi'.Fresco on a whitewashed surface removed from the wall and attached to a wooden support.It shows lack of polychromy.Measurements: 20.5 x 20 cm; 29 x 26 cm (frame).In this fragment of Byzantine fresco, the head of a majestic Christ has been represented following the rigorous stylistic precepts of Byzantine painting: stylisation of the features, linear drawing, intense chromatic contrasts, symbolism of the pigments? However, a certain classicist influence can be discerned in the entry of Western solutions into the Byzantine Empire. In the Byzantine frescoes in the basilicas of the East, the usual subjects were biblical, as well as depictions of angels and saints, which were arranged in apses and domes. The figure of the Pantocrator surrounded by angels was a prototype inherited from Hagia Sophia. Sometimes apostles and saints took the place of angels. The Christ in Majesty inserted in an ellipse or mandorla, the Virgin enthroned with the child on her lap and flanked by local saints and apostles, symmetrically distributed, were the dominant scenes. The linearity of the line and the vividness of the colours were a constant feature.Byzantine painting developed from early Christian art, its character being established between the time of Justinian I and the 15th century. There is little evidence of pre-9th-century artistic production in the territory of what was the Byzantine Empire due to iconoclasm. Pictorial representation in Byzantine culture and in Eastern Christianity played a particularly important role, as it was considered to be a materialisation of the divinity itself (revelation of the divine or theophany), in some cases even considered to be "made by non-human hands". The main techniques of Byzantine painting were mosaic, tempera on panel (icons), fresco and manuscript illumination. A number of panels with paintings, mosaics and scrolls with miniatures or codices, produced in Constantinople and spread throughout the West during the Middle Ages, are preserved in churches and museums.

Lot 504

AN 18TH/19TH CENTURY INDIAN MUGHAL MINIATURE, depicting a blue skin god in dance with a female within a landscape setting, painted on manuscript with calligraphy, 24cm x 14cm.

Lot 696

Ledgers containing sinking and boring records for various collieries in Northumberland and Durham, recorded in manuscript and illustrated with hand-drawn plans, folio, early to mid 20th Century.

Lot 744

Rogers (Rev. Charles) The Book of Wallace, 2 vols, 4to, gilt-cloth, printed for The Grampian Club, Edinburgh, 1889; and Tancred of Weems (George) Rulewater and Its People, 8vo, illus., Edinburgh 1907, signed copy with three manuscript letters tipped in.

Lot 789

Cookson (Catherine) My Beloved Son, 8vo, cloth, first edition 1991, signed and dedicated on Author's bookplate; together with a manuscript letter from the Author to Dawn Radman; Cushing (Peter) An Autobiography, 8vo, cloth, illus, first edition 1986, signed by the Author; Kray (Reg and Ron) Our Story, third impression 1988, signed copy; and two other signed books. (5)

Lot 688

Grey (The Hon. & Rev. Francis Richard) (b.1813-d.1890) Voyage of the Abbess of S. Hilda from Whitby to Holy Island (from Marmion canto II 1 & 8), a collection of 13 small grisaille wash drawings illustrating the verses of Sir Walter Scott, with manuscript text and title page, all contained in an oblong folio, gilt-morocco binding, the preliminary page bearing an inscription in pencil "While the Patient Sketch Ever harder" and "Given me by Lady Georgina Grey, 1890".

Lot 3166

MANUSCRIPT. [A hand-written treatise on bastion fortifications. N.p.: circa mid-18th century.] Approximately 52pp., manuscript, 4to (314 x 190mm.) Hand-drawn diagrams and calculation of angles for military fortification in a single, legible hand with numbered leaves, some of the text taken from 'Emerson', 31pp. to the rear on nautical science with sections on parallel and mercator sailing. (Lacking three leaves, occasional soiling, corner creasing, 1 loose leaf.) String-bound (lacking covers).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3145

GODWIN, Francis. [Annales of England: London: A. Islip & W. Stansby, 1630.] First edition, 4to (269 x 175mm.) Title in 19th century manuscript hand, in 3 parts. (Lacking title-page, lacking separate titles to each part, marginal insect-damage from X3-Ee2, browning, some marginal creasing). Near contemporary calf (wear to spine ends, loss to top of spine). Provenance: S. Bowler (ink inscribed to initial blank). [ESTC 11947.] - And a further two volumes (including a typescript of 'Memoranda of a Tour Through Part of France and Flanders in August 1815', 117pp., [circa mid-20th century]) (3).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3147

Bible, In Ge'ez. [A hand-written Ethiopian Coptic Bible in the Ge'ez script. N.p.: circa early-19th century.] 160pp., manuscript, 8vo (212 x 150mm.) 10 quires of 81 vellum leaves with manuscript text in red and black, ink notes to first and last leaves. (Heavily browned, occasional soiling, marginal loss to several leaves, some pencil annotation.) Original wooden boards, string-bound (later string repair to boards), original goatskin case (browned), original goatskin pilgrim's satchel, with cord. - And a further two volumes in the Ge'ez script (another Bible, [mid-19th century], 8vo, and a prayer book [mid-19th century], 8vo) (3).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3029

[THOMAS, Maurice.] Indian Antiquities: or, Dissertations… of Hindostan, compared, throughout, with the Religion, Laws, Government, and Literature, or Persia, Egypt, and Greece. London: for the author, 1794-1796. 6 vols. (of 7, lacking vol. 6 part 2)., 8vo (226 x 140mm.) 28 engraved plates, most folding, list of subscribers', half titles in volumes 1, 3 and 6 part 1. (Occasional marginal damp staining to plates, toning, insect damage to A-A4 of volume 1.) Near contemporary boards, manuscript titling to spines (worn) (6).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3155

MANUSCRIPT. [A hand-written manuscript by the Earl of Panmoure relating to his estate, lineage and the early medieval history of the area. N.p: circa 1780's]. 108pp., manuscript, 4to (291 x 220mm.) Vellum leaves, red-ruled, titled 'The House of Panmoure', written in a neat hand without paragraphs or sectional titles. (Browning, occasional minor soiling.) Contemporary calf, gilt lettering to spine (rubbing to extremities). Note: an account of the history and lineage of the House of Panmoure and the Moule family.Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3043

MANUSCRIPT. - H.G. DOLBEN. [A hand-written book of recipes from Horley Rectory. N.p.: circa 1850.] 116pp., manuscript, 8vo (197 x 158mm.) Numerous recipes, often attributed to individuals, in a single legible hand on numbered leaves. (Toning, occasional spotting.) Contemporary black morocco-backed paper-covered boards (rubbing to extremities, surface wear). Note: includes recipes for mashed calf's head, calf's feet jelly and sheep head soup, plus many puddings.Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3014

ILLUMINATED MANUSCRIPT. Liber Amoris. [n.d. circa 1900.] 13pp., manuscript, small folio (209 x 138mm.) Vellum paper, title in red with a vignette of red and gold, decorative initial with gold lettering, elaborate varicoloured depiction of Jesus with decorative and landscape background and gold lettering, calligraphic manuscript in blue of religious excerpts with gold initials. (Leaves loose, toning.) Contemporary decorative cloth-covered boards (unstitched, slight fading).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3054

CHARLES I. - [John GAUDEN.] Eikon Basilike. The Pourtraicture of His Sacred Majestie in his Solitudes and Sufferings. [London: by Henry Hills], 1649. 12mo (138 x 78mm.) Double-paged engraved frontispiece of Charles I, folding plate 'The Explanation of the Emblem', with separate title for 'A Perfect Copy of the Prayers Used by His Majestie', near contemporary manuscript notes on rear blank. (Lacking portrait plate, browning, minor soiling, hinges reinforced.) Contemporary calf (rebacked, rubbed). Note: the manuscript notes at rear concern authorship: ' [sic] affirmed in print that that this book was wholly compiled by Dr [?] Gauden'. Provenance: Edward Baddeley (stamp to front pastedown). [ESTC R221636.] - And a further seven volumes, six of which relate to Charles II (including Thomas Blount's 'Boscobel: or the Compleat History of His Sacred Majesties Most Miraculous Preservation After the Battle of Worcester' [lacking 2 folding maps], 1662, 8vo) (8).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3125

COOKERY. - Elizabeth RAFFALD. The Experienced English Housekeeper, for the Use and Ease of Ladies, Housekeepers, Cooks, &c. London: for the Booksellers, 1789. New edition, 8vo (204 x 119mm.) 3 engraved folding plates, recipe notes in contemporary manuscript to front and rear blanks, 14pp. index to rear. (Browning, marginal paper-repair to A2, lacking engraved portrait, occasional spotting, a tear with loss to text of Gg2.) Contemporary calf, red morocco lettering piece to the spine (rubbing to extremities). Note: first edition was published in 1769. Provenance: 'Mrs. Leighton' (name inscribed to front pastedown). - And a further three related volumes (including the tenth edition of John Farley's 'The London Art of Cookery, and Housekeeper's Complete Assistant', 1804, 8vo) (4).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3008

SEAWEED. - [An album of specimens from Jersey algae. N.p.: circa 1860.] 84pp., manuscript, 4to (235 x 149mm.) 137 specimens of seaweed and other marine plants mounted recto only on 84 leaves, mounted captions in manuscript and printed detailing the Latin name and classification, poem mounted verso the front-free endpaper. (Browning, occasional creasing and minor soiling.) Contemporary brown half calf over marbled paper-covered boards (fading and rubbing extremities, joints splitting).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3027

COMMONPLACE BOOK. - Anthony HIGHMORE. [A manuscript commonplace book compiled by Anthony Highmore, legal writer. N.p.: circa 1800.] 229pp., manuscript, 8vo (185 x 122mm.) Excerpts in a single legible hand relating to literary, legal and philosophical matters. (Browning, occasional spotting.) Later green paper-covered boards, morocco lettering pieces to the spine (wear to lettering pieces, Highmore's armorial bookplate to the front pastedown). Note: Highmore was an active abolitionist. He also wrote papers on Fox's libel bill, charities, excise and a paper on idiocy and lunacy.Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3042

COOKERY. - [Hannah GLASSE.] The Art of Cookery Made Plain and Easy, Which far exceeds any Thing of the Kind yet published. London: W. Straha, J. and F. Rivington et al., 1770. New edition, 8vo (204 x 122mm.) Facsimile signature of Hannah Glasse at B1, recipes in contemporary manuscript hand verso the title and verso a8. (Lacking leaf U3 and lacking the fold-out 'Order of a Modern Bill of Fare', front blank replaced, some damp-staining and soiling, some marginal tearing, some heavy spotting, lacking rear blank.) Contemporary calf (rebacked with tips strengthened, rubbing). Provenance: Mary Woody (ink inscribed on last leaf); 'School Library' (ink inscribed on front free-endpaper).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3045

MANUSCRIPT. [A presentation gift to an employee of the Southern Division of the London and North Western Railway Company. N.p.:] 1909.Small folio (250 x 193mm.) Varicoloured hand-painted dedication leaf to 'H.A. Walker', hand-written address with elaborate hand-painted border, 25 leaves of names and job-titles of employees in manuscript of the Southern Division of the London and North Western Railway Company. (Mild toning.) Contemporary black morocco bound by Kelly & Sons, company device in gilt on upper cover surrounded by elaborate foliate and floral design with red, green and tan morocco inlays, gilt to spine, elaborate gilt turn-ins, moiré silk endpapers, g.e. (small marks to lower cover).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3056

SMITH, James Edward and James SOWERBY. English Botany; or, Coloured Figures of British Plants, with their Essential Characters, Synonyms, and Places of Growth. London: for the Proprietor, C.E. Sowerby, [1832]-1838. 4 vols. (only, of 12). Second edition, 8vo (218 x 129mm.) Numerous hand-coloured plates, many with common names in manuscript pencil or crayon. (Browning, toning, occasional spotting.) Contemporary blue half morocco over marbled paper-covered boards (rubbing to spines and extremities). Note: volumes 1,2,3 and 5 only (4).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3170

MANUSCRIPT. [A hand-written chronicle of 16th,17th and 18th century English history. N.p.: circa 1830.] 372pp., folio (373 x 235mm.) Written in a single legible hand, 76pp. to rear of rent and tithe charges for landowners in the Lincolnshire area. (Toning.) Contemporary reversed calf, red morocco lettering piece to the spine (rubbing to extremities, scuffed).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3017

MANUSCRIPT. [A hand-written journal of a four and a half month tour of Northern France and Jersey. N.p.:] 1827. Vol. 2 (only). 99pp., manuscript, 8vo (194 x 122mm.) A mostly legible retrospective account of a journey around Montagne, Caen, Granville and a voyage to Jersey, noting architecture, chapels and churches, the characteristics of the French and the English, with a 3pp. index of events to the rear. (Mild toning, occasional spotting.) Contemporary half calf over marbled paper-covered boards (rubbing to all extremities). Note: the unnamed narrator, of no obvious gender, writes with insight- and sometimes high irony- with a literary sensibility attuned to the significance of incidental moments: the risk of 'dislocating' your neck on the rough roads, the fascination of meeting a 'maniac' on his way to the asylum, an ex-soldier who clearly has 'deep and powerful feelings'. There are visits to churches and convents, and La Trappe monastery where the narrator is unimpressed by the vow of silence, and feels 'the chilling influence of these living dead'. There's a keen awareness of the Englishman abroad, someone who behaves with 'jealousy and mistrust' as if 'for the maintenance of his imaginary dignity'. On meeting a West Country farmer and his wife holidaying in France, the narrator relates how appalled the farmer was at the French inability to understand English, or accept orders, and how 'this truly original pair' became their companions 'in our flight from the dullness and disappointment of Granville'.Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3174

SHIPPING. - [A hand-written account book relating to insurance claims made against shipping companies in the year 1932. N.p.: 1932.] Folio (366 x 248mm.) Directory tabs, approximately 420pp. of manuscript notes related to shipping incidents with descriptions, some stamps and mounted paper-work, approximately 270pp. blank to rear. (Occasional tear and paper repair, toning, browning to margins.) Contemporary half morocco (worn). Note: the claims relate to variety of incidents. There is missing cargo, sick crew, injured legs, a broken back, a fatal wound from bumping into an iron stanchion, drums of leaking chloride, plus some local damage to piers and wharves. - And a further volume related to shipping accounts (2).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3002

BIBLE, In English. The Bible Translated according to the Ebrew and Greeke, and Conferred with the best Translations in divers Languages. London: Robert Barker, 1608. 'Geneva' Bible. Black letter, double-column, OT title with wood-engraved border with heart-shaped centre, with Apocrypha, separate NT title dated 1608, with 'Booke of Common Prayer'. (J3 with burn mark, ink stain to P5, minor soiling to Dd3, numerous marginal paper repairs, lacking title to 'Booke of Common Prayer', brief family genealogy in manuscript to E8, front and rear blanks replaced.) [Bound with:] 'Two right profitable and fruitful Concordances'. London: Robert Barker, 1608. (Browning, minor soiling.) [Bound with:] 'Whole Booke of the Psalmes'. London: Company of the Stationers, 1608. (Lacking several leaves at rear, last leaf G6 laid-down, marginal paper repairs.) 4to (219 x 154mm.) Near contemporary blind-stamped calf, later bosses and clasps (rebacked). [Herbert 293.]Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3059

[FIELDING, Henry.] The Tragedy of Tragedies; or the Life and Death of Tom Thumb the Great. London: J. Watts, 1737. Third edition, 8vo (183 x 112mm.) Title in red and black. (Lacking frontispiece and publisher's advertisements, blanks replaced, damp-staining from A2-B3, toning.) Late 19th century red morocco-backed boards, mounted paper label with manuscript titling to upper cover (rubbing to spine). Provenance: John Jobson (bookplate to the front pastedown). - And a further nine miscellaneous volumes, mostly defective (including a 10pp. manuscript of a London watch-makers day book, [circa 1790], 8vo) (10).Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3173

MUSIC. - William KITCHINER. The Loyal and National Songs of England, for One, Two, and Three Voices, Selected from Original Manuscripts and Early Printed Copies. London: Hurst, Robinson and Company, 1823. Folio (376 x 250mm.) Title, lithographic dedication leaf in colour. (Occasional browning, faint spotting, damp-staining to blanks.) Contemporary boards, later paper label to spine, title in manuscript to upper cover (rebacked with cloth tape, rubbing to extremities, minor marks). Provenance: W. Bennett (name inscribed to on dedication leaf). Note: in the introduction Kitchiner makes the point that 'if English ballads are not so highly esteemed as the Scotch, - Irish, - and Welsh, it can only be, because their beauties…are not so much known'.Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

Lot 3063

MANUSCRIPT. A Catalogue of the Books at Worth Park. [West Sussex, Crawley: N.p.:] 1888. 280pp., manuscript, 4to (301 x 226mm.) Title, 'Index' of rooms, hand-written titles in a single legible hand on pre-ruled paper, 13pp. blank to rear. (Toning.) Contemporary red morocco, gilt turn-ins, g.e. (rubbing to extremities). Note: Francis Abraham Montefiore inherited the Worth Park Estate from his father, Joseph Montefiore, in 1880. He re-modelled the house and gardens from designs by the company of James Pulham and Sons, who had also designed elements of the gardens at Buckingham Palace and Sandringham House.Buyer’s Premium 24.5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 5% (including VAT @ 0%) of the hammer price.

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