"a boke for Englondes sake"
GOWER, John.
De Confessione Amantis.
London: Thomas Berthelet, 1532.
Folio (292 × 185 mm.) in sixes, ff. [viii], 191 (includes several misfoliations), bound without final blank leaf. Title within woodcut border with winged head and gryphon's feet (McKerrow & Ferguson 26), black letter text with legends in roman letter, double column. Title cut to border and mounted (the printed epigram to verso left visible), f. 147 extended at margins and thus probably supplied from a shorter copy, final leaf mounted at inner margins, a few small worm-holes and old waterstaining at opening, tears with marginal loss to aa7 and T6 each with old repairs, a few other minor tears and repairs. Various contemporary inscriptions in Greek and Latin (the former apparently the first owner "Gulielmo Sothebaio" dated 1532 and the latter being extracts from Martial) to title and occasionally elsewhere. Early nineteenth-century (c. 1810) full blue straight-grain morocco gilt, gilt arms of George Granville Leveson-Gower, Marquis of Stafford to both covers, within double-ruled gilt and blind-tooled scroll borders with pointillé cornerpieces, panelled spine decorated in gilt and blind, lettered direct, wide turn-ins tooled in gilt and blind, blue silk marker. Engraved armorial bookplate. A very good, unwashed copy in a handsome Regency binding with an important English provenance.
Second edition of Gower's great Middle English poem, completed about 1390 and dedicated to Richard II. Gower is chiefly remembered as a friend of Geoffrey Chaucer and his Confessio Amantis is frequently cited as the origin of William Shakespeare's play Pericles (who's story is taken from book 8 of the Confessio) but he should be accepted in his own right as one of the great pioneers of English literature.The plan of the Confessio was doubtless borrowed from the Roman de la Rose, and consists of a dialogue first between the poet, in the character of a lover, and Venus, and afterwards between the poet, in the character of a penitent, and Genius, whom Venus assigns to him as a confessor. In the conversation between the penitent and the confessor the seven deadly sins are discussed and illustrated from Gower's encyclopaedic knowledge of Ovid, Josephus, Vincent de Beauvais, Statius, the Gesta Romanorum, the Bible, and other sources. In the eighth book, having described the duty of a king and prayed for England, the poet bids farewell to earthly love. The work is a profound meditation on human love and morality and in Gower's own words in the Prologue it was "a boke for Englondes sake".The work survives in numerous early manuscripts (attesting to its immediate popularity) and was first printed by Caxton in 1474. Thomas Berthelet's edition of 1532 is considered textually superior to Caxton. Pforzheimer notes that the "edition was printed from a manuscript, resembling MS. Bodley 294, but inferior in correctness, collated with Caxton's edition from which several passages lacking in the manuscript were supplied. In the prefatory note 'To the reader' Berthelet included the alternative form of the introductory lines Prologue 24-92, also from Caxton's edition, so that on the whole this edition is textually an improvement over the earlier one. It is also a good example of workmanlike printing much above the average English work of the period" (Pforzheimer). The third edition of 1554 is merely a paginary reprint of the present.The early ownership inscription of William Sotheby is dated 1532. This copy is handsomely bound in the style of Mackinley for the Earl of Stafford, among the richest men in England at the opening of the nineteenth-century. The Earl was himself a latter-day member of the Gower family (he claimed descent in the male line from Sir Alan Gower of Stittenham, supposedly sheriff of York at the time of the conquest). Several antiquaries had previously suggested that the poet's origins lay in the same place, so this would have been a fitting acquisition for the Earl.
Grolier, Langland to Wither, 115; Pforzheimer 421; STC 12143.
£15000.00
US$29818.44*
* Given as a guide only. Based on an exchange rate of £1 = US$1.987896 for the day 5 July 2008 but liable to fluctuate.
5 July 2008
