ROSS, Alexander. Virgilii evangelisantis Christiados libri XIII. In quibus omnia quæ de Domino nostro Iesu Christo in utroque Testamento, vel dicta vel prædicta sunt, altisona divina Maronis tuba suavissime decantantur… London: Richard Thrale, 1638.
8vo (140 × 90 mm.), pp [xviii] (including engraved title but without the printed title, cancelled in this copy), 312. Emblematic engraved title by William Marshal depicting Virgil in the guise of an angel with trumpet. Prelims a little creased at extremities. Contemporary limp vellum, gilt, panelled sides with Tudor rose emblems surmounted by a crown to centres, spine in compartments with sun tools, also gilt. Slightly soiled (the lower cover more so) and cockled, wants ties, cords of upper hinge broken, but the textblock secure in binding. Numerous early annotations to blanks at opening. Later armorial bookplate. An interesting copy.
A cento in Virgilian verse giving the principal Biblical events from the death of Abel to the ascension of Christ, mainly concerning the life of Christ and the prophecies of his Messiahship, the text extensively revised and enlarged from the author’s Virgilius evangelisans, sive, Historia Domini & Salvatoris Nostri Jesu Christi (1633). Ross was born in Aberdeen but spent much of his later life in England, being vicar of Carisbrooke in the Isle of Wight from 1634 to his death twenty years later. He was a voluminous and well-regarded writer, and is best known for his translation of the Koran (from the French), the first version in English. This is an interesting copy, its binding bearing Tudor rose devices on the covers, a relatively late example of what was in any case a rare emblem among bookbinding tools. Our copy is without the printed title, like the copy (Universty of Minnesota) reproduced for Early English Books Online. It retains a neat stub, suggesting deliberate cancellation rather than loss. The book is known for the variances in its makeup, notably in the final leaves. In our copy there are stubs of 2 cancelled leaves before the final leaf (a cancel) the text ending correctly p. 312 and the imprimatur of William Bray dated 1637.
STC 24827.
£825.00
(equal to approx. US$1304.89* or €1022.55* for 19 May 2012)
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