English

Criteria:
  • Keywords = English
  • Lots of Things. by (DEAN’S RAG BOOK). [M. M., illustrator]. (DEAN’S RAG BOOK). [M. M., illustrator]. ~ Lots of Things. [London: Dean’s Rag Book Co. Ltd. n.d. ?1932].
    Dean’s Rag Book, number 291. A superbly preserved rag book from Dean and Co, who pioneered the rag book for the youngest children in 1903,… (more)

    Dean’s Rag Book, number 291. A superbly preserved rag book from Dean and Co, who pioneered the rag book for the youngest children in 1903, producing boldly coloured printed calico books designed to be washable and indestructible. The Dean logo show two dogs pulling at a rag book. The pinked edges were designed to minimise fraying, and in this case the copy is unused.

    Lots of Things, in addition to its various vocabulary images, includes the memorable verse:

    ‘A leaf of lettuce, or a bunch
    Of carrots is, to rabbits
    Far nicer than a costly lunch:
    They have such frugal habits.

    Pigs on the other hand are crude
    And greedy, while their feeding
    Is mannerless and even rude;
    It shews their lack of breeding’. WorldCat: Auckland (NZ) and Cotsen (Princeton).

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £400.00
  • Baby’s Book by (DEAN’S RAG BOOK). (DEAN’S RAG BOOK). ~ Baby’s Book [London: Dean’s Rag Book Co. Ltd. n.d.]
    A file copy of Dean’s Rag Book no. 324, full of patriotic imagery - a union jack flying on a sandcastle, a shamrock, rose and… (more)

    A file copy of Dean’s Rag Book no. 324, full of patriotic imagery - a union jack flying on a sandcastle, a shamrock, rose and thistle, a crown and sceptre, a medal, flags, a drum, a toy aeroplane and a soldier. A superbly preserved rag book from Dean and Co, who pioneered the rag book for the youngest children in 1903, producing boldly coloured printed calico books designed to be washable and indestructible. The Dean logo show two dogs pulling at a rag book. The inserted slip lists further numbered titles in 4 series of different sizes, as well as Dean’s rag dolls. The pinked edges were designed to minimise fraying, and in this case the copy is unused. JISC LibraryHub lists a copy at NLS. The Cotsen copy listed by WorldCat at Princeton has the same title but a different series number (228).

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £400.00
  • Dissertation sur l’origine de l'imprimerie en Angleterre, by MIDDLETON, Conyers. D. G. IMBERT, translator. MIDDLETON, Conyers. D. G. IMBERT, translator. ~ Dissertation sur l’origine de l'imprimerie en Angleterre, ‘A Londres, et se trouve à Paris, chez D.C. Couturier, père’. 1775.
    First edition in French of Middleton’s A Dissertation Concerning the Origin of Printing in England (1734–5), which argued vigorously that Caxton had introduced the printing… (more)

    First edition in French of Middleton’s A Dissertation Concerning the Origin of Printing in England (1734–5), which argued vigorously that Caxton had introduced the printing press to England, against the popular notion at the time that William Caxton had been preceded by a printer at Oxford. Added is a short introduction (in French) concerning Middleton. The ‘Londres’ imprint is false, and the book was almost certainly printed in Paris. The typographical headpiece is a delight. Rochedieu, 213.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £400.00
  • Marmaduke Multiply. by (WRITING and DRAWING). TOWNSEND, Fran. L. (WRITING and DRAWING). TOWNSEND, Fran. L. ~ Marmaduke Multiply. [England], Oct. 23 1818
    An intriguing homemade book created by an aspiring young writer, copying extracts from a popular juvenile title, Marmaduke Multiply, published in 1817 and designed to… (more)

    An intriguing homemade book created by an aspiring young writer, copying extracts from a popular juvenile title, Marmaduke Multiply, published in 1817 and designed to teach multiplication with engaging illustrations. In this version, a Francis (or possibly Frances) Taylor has copied extracts from the book using different hands, without much thought to order. Some are captioned ‘with my left hand’, another ‘half with my right hand’ as though he or she were deciding which was the best hand, or simply trying writing and drawing with an unfamiliar hand. Given the general insistence on right hand writing in the period it is an unusual survival, albeit rudimentary, an evidence of active learning activities in the acquisition of early literacy.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £400.00
  • Musical and poetical Relicks of the Welsh Bards: preserved by Tradition, and authentic Manuscripts, from remote Antiquity; never before published. To the Tunes are added Variations for the Harp, Harpsichord, Violin, or Flute. With a choice Collection of the Pennillion, epigrammatic Stanzas, or, native pastoral Sonnets of Wales, with English translations. Likewise a History of the Bards from the earliest Period to the present Time, and an Account of their Music, Poetry, and musical Instruments, with a delineation of the latter... by JONES, Edward. JONES, Edward. ~ Musical and poetical Relicks of the Welsh Bards: preserved by Tradition, and authentic Manuscripts, from remote Antiquity; never before published. To the Tunes are added Variations for the Harp, Harpsichord, Violin, or Flute. With a choice Collection of the Pennillion, epigrammatic Stanzas, or, native pastoral Sonnets of Wales, with English translations. Likewise a History of the Bards from the earliest Period to the present Time, and an Account of their Music, Poetry, and musical Instruments, with a delineation of the latter... London: Printed for the Author, and to be had of him at No. 9, Princes-Street, Hanover-Square, 1784.
    First edition. An extensive survey of the Welsh musical tradition by a celebrated Welsh harpist and antiquary in London. ‘Edward Jones moved to London in… (more)

    First edition. An extensive survey of the Welsh musical tradition by a celebrated Welsh harpist and antiquary in London. ‘Edward Jones moved to London in 1774 or early 1775, under the patronage of the London Welsh circle. The harp was very fashionable in London at the time, and Jones quickly established himself in some of the most eminent circles as a popular performer and teacher of the instrument’ (ODNB). He became harpist to the prince of Wales (later George IV). Musical and poetical Relicks, a rather costly production with an extensive subscriber’s list, contains a major essay on bardic poetry with texts and songs in both Welsh and English. An engraved plate shows the principal instruments of Welsh music, including the harp and lyre, while the second part of the book mainly comprises engraved music for some 60 Welsh tunes, some Jones’s variations, all on two staves and thus suitable also the keyboard.

    ‘Jones’s most important work was in the preservation of traditional Welsh music. He collected and published over 200 traditional melodies, many of which he transcribed from having heard them sung and played at home in north Wales. His concern for the protection of Welsh cultural life is also evident in his strong belief in the eisteddfod as a safeguard of Welsh cultural traditions and the purity of the Welsh language. He invariably attended eisteddfodau on his regular summer visits to Wales, often acting as an adjudicator; and on several occasions he provided and presented prizes for competitions such as singing with the harp and the best collection of penillion’.

    This copy is from the library of the Dukes of Portland, containing the bookplate of William Arthur, sixth duke of Portland (1857-1943), but with an earlier gilt supralibros denoting the presence of the book in the Portland collection at an earlier date. It is quite likely to have formed part of the celebrated subterranean library collections at Welbeck Abbey of the eccentric John Bentinck fifth duke of Portland. BUCEM, p. 559; RISM J 607.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £950.00
  • An Act for settling and securing a certain Annuity on Horatio Nelson Lord Nelson, and the two next persons to whom the Title of Baron Nelson of the Nile, and Burnham Thorpe in the County of Norfolk, shall descend, in Consideration of the eminent service performed by the Said Horatio Nelson Lord Nelson, to His Majesty and the Publick. 17 December 1798. by (NELSON, Horatio, Lord). (NELSON, Horatio, Lord). ~ An Act for settling and securing a certain Annuity on Horatio Nelson Lord Nelson, and the two next persons to whom the Title of Baron Nelson of the Nile, and Burnham Thorpe in the County of Norfolk, shall descend, in Consideration of the eminent service performed by the Said Horatio Nelson Lord Nelson, to His Majesty and the Publick. 17 December 1798. [London: George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, 1798].
    First edition of the Act of Parliament granting Nelson his annuity for his victory at the Battle of the Nile. (more)

    First edition of the Act of Parliament granting Nelson his annuity for his victory at the Battle of the Nile.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £150.00
  • An act to prevent unlawful Combinations of Workmen. 12 July 1799. by (COMBINATION ACT). (COMBINATION ACT). ~ An act to prevent unlawful Combinations of Workmen. 12 July 1799. [London: George Eyre and Andrew Strahan, 1799].
    First edition of the so-called Combination Act, which prohibited trade unions and collective bargaining by British workers. Though separately published with a general title for… (more)

    First edition of the so-called Combination Act, which prohibited trade unions and collective bargaining by British workers. Though separately published with a general title for a complete sitting of Parliament, individual Acts of Parliament were paginated to be bound together in yearly volumes hence the pagination 654-672 here.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £200.00
  • An Act to repeal the Statute made in the first Year of the Reign of King James the First, intituled, An Act against Conjuration, Witchcraft, and dealing with evil and wicked Spirits, except so much thereof as repeals an Act of the fifth Year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, Against Conjurations, Inchantments and Witchcrafts, and to repeal an Act passed in the Parliament of Scotland in the ninth Parliament of Queen Mary, intituled, Anentis Witchcrafts, and for punishing such Persons as pretend to exercise or use any Kind of Witchcraft, Sorcery, Inchantment or Conjuration [drophead title]. by (WITCHCRAFT ACT). (WITCHCRAFT ACT). ~ An Act to repeal the Statute made in the first Year of the Reign of King James the First, intituled, An Act against Conjuration, Witchcraft, and dealing with evil and wicked Spirits, except so much thereof as repeals an Act of the fifth Year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, Against Conjurations, Inchantments and Witchcrafts, and to repeal an Act passed in the Parliament of Scotland in the ninth Parliament of Queen Mary, intituled, Anentis Witchcrafts, and for punishing such Persons as pretend to exercise or use any Kind of Witchcraft, Sorcery, Inchantment or Conjuration [drophead title]. London: John Baskett, [1735].
    First edition of the last Witchcraft Act, repealing the former acts of Elizabeth I and James I (and Mary of Scotland) against witchcraft, and declaring… (more)

    First edition of the last Witchcraft Act, repealing the former acts of Elizabeth I and James I (and Mary of Scotland) against witchcraft, and declaring magic, witchcraft and sorcery fraudulent. The last person to be legally executed for witchcraft was the Scottish woman Janet Horne in 1727, but legal sentiment had by then absorbed Enlightenment thinking and rational explanation of all forms of magic. Punishment by death was replaced in the 1735 act by imprisonment of up to one year only, on the basis that witchcraft could no longer be considered a crime, merely a nuisance.

    In this volume, formerly belonging to the council of the City of Canterbury (Kent), it is interesting to find an old (perhaps early nineteenth-century) paper scrap marking the Witchcraft Act among the many other acts contained in the volume, together with a marginal pencil marking beside the shoulder note ‘Persons pretending to exercise Witchcraft, tell Fortunes, or by crafty Science to discover stolen Goods’.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £400.00
  • Qu’est cela? by (DEAN’S RAG BOOK). [HALL, Evelyn Gladys, ilustrator]. (DEAN’S RAG BOOK). [HALL, Evelyn Gladys, ilustrator]. ~ Qu’est cela? [London: Dean’s Rag Book Co. Ltd. for] Hachette et c[ompagn]ie [1908].
    First edition. A near pristine file copy of this French language example of an early rag book from Dean and Co, who pioneered the rag… (more)

    First edition. A near pristine file copy of this French language example of an early rag book from Dean and Co, who pioneered the rag book for the youngest children in 1903, producing boldly coloured printed calico books designed to be washable and indestructible — the Dean logo shows two dogs pulling at a rag book, and the inserted advert leaf states that children can carry the book in their mouths without danger ( ‘Les couleurs employées dans ces livres sont fortement fixés. Les enfants peuvent les porter à la bouche sans aucun danger. Ces livres peuvent être lavé’). Qu’est cela? is a simple vocabulary book, naming fifty familiar objects including toys (dolls, a cup-and-ball, a paintbox, a toy train, a jack-in-the box, a kite and a rocking horse) as well as a rifle, a sword, a drum and an automobile. No library copies found in WorldCat or JISC LibraryHub.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £400.00
  • Tous les animaux. by (DEAN’S RAG BOOK). (DEAN’S RAG BOOK). ~ Tous les animaux. [London: Dean’s Rag Book Co. Ltd. for] Hachette et c[ompagn]ie [n.d.].
    A file copy from Dean and Co, who pioneered the rag book for the youngest children in 1903, producing boldly coloured printed calico books designed… (more)

    A file copy from Dean and Co, who pioneered the rag book for the youngest children in 1903, producing boldly coloured printed calico books designed to be washable and indestructible — the Dean logo shows two dogs pulling at a rag book. It illustrates twenty-four animals, including the dog on the cover, as well as butterflies, a giraffe, a camel, a parrot, a kangaroo, three monkeys and a turkey, all captioned in French. The pinked edges were designed to minimise fraying, and in this case the copy is unused. No library copies found in WorldCat or JISC LibraryHub.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £550.00
  • Baronage [spine title]. by (ENGLISH HISTORY AND HERALDRY). (ENGLISH HISTORY AND HERALDRY). ~ Baronage [spine title]. [England, early eighteenth century].
    An extensive antiquarian and heraldic register, providing the abbreviated arms of hundreds of English monarchs, nobles and landowners from the medieval era (and in some… (more)

    An extensive antiquarian and heraldic register, providing the abbreviated arms of hundreds of English monarchs, nobles and landowners from the medieval era (and in some cases before) to the reign of Charles I. To judge from the paper and handwriting it was probably compiled in the first thirty years of the eighteenth century by someone with access to a variety of earlier heraldic manuscripts for transcription. It is particularly interesting for including many retrospectively attributed arms to individuals living before the formal establishment of heraldry, such as the early conquerors of Britain and the kings and kingdoms of Anglo-Saxon England. Its two largest sections are the catalogue of arms from the reign of Edward the Confessor to that of Charles I on 69 folios (copied via a version by the seventeenth-century herald, Robert Glover from a book belonging to one Joseph Holland), and the transcript of the so-called ‘Parliamentary Roll’ made c. 1312-14 giving a complete catalogue of arms borne in the reign of Edward I. The so-called ‘Rouen Roll’ transcribed on f. 77 of circa 1410, was traditionally thought to be a catalogue of all those bearing arms present at the Siege of Rouen during the Hundred Years War. The complete contents of the register are:

    1-1v. The fyve Conquests of this Land with the Names & Arms of the Conquerors (Brutus, Julius Caesar, Constantine of Armorica or Vortigern, Hengist, William Duke of Normandy, with their arms).
    1v-3. The Saxons divided this Island into 7 Kingedomes (with the names of their kings and their arms).
    3-72v. [Arms of the Peerage in order of their creation] A Catalogue of the Armes belonging to England with the causes of the alterac[i]on thereof from the Reigne of St. Edward the Confessor to this p[re]sent [1628, the reign of Charles I).
    73-75v. blank
    76-76v. Differences born by the Royal Family.
    77-77v. [The Rouen Roll, c. 1410]. Les nosmes des nobles q[ui] fueront oue [?avec] le Roy Henrye le quint au Siege de Roan...
    78-98. [The Parliamentary Roll, c. 1312-14] Le copie dun ancien liver daunes q[ue] Messier Somerset Heralt avoit du Joseph Holland in couleurs. Conteniant les nosmes & armes des nobles & chivaliers d’Angliterre au temps d’Edward le prim[er] & second Roies d’Angliterre.
    98v-100v. blank
    101-110r. [Roll of andowners of Suffolk, in the time of Edward I, listed by Hundred].

    The volume was later (after 1939) in the collection of the heraldic scholar, Edward Mars Elmhirst (1915-1957), of Worsboroughdale (Yorks). He was a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons, Major in the Territorial Army and was well-known for his researches in heraldry (he was offered a position as herald-extraordinary at the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953). He also wrote a book on Merchants’ marks, published posthumously by the Harleian Society in 1959.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £1,500.00
  • The illustrated Catalogue of the Universal Exhibition published with the Art Journal. by (EXPOSITION UNIVERSELLE, 1867). (EXPOSITION UNIVERSELLE, 1867). ~ The illustrated Catalogue of the Universal Exhibition published with the Art Journal. London and New York: Virtue and Co. [1868].
    First edition of the Art Journal’s retrospective catalogue of the 1867 Exposition, including notice of the prize winners. It is a kaleidoscope of Second Empire… (more)

    First edition of the Art Journal’s retrospective catalogue of the 1867 Exposition, including notice of the prize winners. It is a kaleidoscope of Second Empire decorative and applied arts from all over Europe and beyond. It comprises: a general Introduction by C. Boutell; Glass - Domestic and Decorative by G. Wallis; Lace and Embroidery by Mrs. B. Palliser; Adaptations From the Antique by C. Boutell; Art Materials and Products in Clay, Stone, Marbles, Etc. by D.T. Ansted; Furniture. by J.B. Atkinson; Textile Fabrics by Mrs. B. Palliser; Goldsmith's Work, Silver, and Jewellery by H. Friswell; Porcelain and Pottery by J. Dafforne and Bronzes and Bronze Imitations by G. Wallis.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £200.00
  • [ANTIBES and PARIS. Sketchbook. by [TRUEFITT, George]. [TRUEFITT, George]. ~ [ANTIBES and PARIS. Sketchbook. 1886-1889].
    A sketchbook made by British architect, George Truefitt (1824-1902), first at Antibes and then in Paris, recording architectural details as well as general views and… (more)

    A sketchbook made by British architect, George Truefitt (1824-1902), first at Antibes and then in Paris, recording architectural details as well as general views and other sights of interest. There are some delightful details of Closebrooks, the Antibes villa he had designed for banker and businessman William Brooks Close, together with several metalwork details.

    Truefitt travelled to the 1889 Exposition at the invitation of Brooks and his wife. In this album he made a brief journal of his visit, and preserved 25 excellent sketches. The first is an amusing sketch of ladies lying head-to-head on a shipboard saloon bench, while the others are mainly architectural views including of the Eiffel Tower seen from his hotel room at Maurice’s; architectural details of the chateau at Fontainebleau; some from the Hôtel de Cluny and metalwork details from the Trocadéro as well as a few other small sketches of people. There is an especially good view of the crowded exhibition around the dome of the Trocadéro sketched from his lunch table at Spiers and Pond’s restaurant. The journal and drawings are pasted into a sketchbook which also includes a sketch journal of his earlier visit to Antibes in 1886.

    Truefitt was prolific in his contribution to Victorian British architecture, best known for his work at Tufnell Park in London, for numerous country churches and for his remodelling of the Brooks estate at Glen Tanar in Scotland.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £700.00
  • Picturesque Views of public Edifices in Paris. By Messrs. Segard [sic] and Testard. Aquatinted, in Imitation of the Drawings, by Mr. Rosenberg. by SERGENT-MARCEAU, Antoine-François, & François-Martin TESTARD. SERGENT-MARCEAU, Antoine-François, & François-Martin TESTARD. ~ Picturesque Views of public Edifices in Paris. By Messrs. Segard [sic] and Testard. Aquatinted, in Imitation of the Drawings, by Mr. Rosenberg. London: Printed by J. Moyes … for Gale, Curtis, and Fenner … and Samuel Leigh … 1814.
    First edition in this form; a second edition followed in 1815. It was also issued uncoloured. ‘At least 14, and very probably all of the… (more)

    First edition in this form; a second edition followed in 1815. It was also issued uncoloured. ‘At least 14, and very probably all of the plates, are copies of images published around 1790 in an octavo suite, called Vues pittoresques des principaux édifices de Paris, “by Le Campion, Guyot, Roger, Guillot, Belley, Mlle Guyot, after Testard and Sergent” (see NUC). The last two are identifiable as the Parisian artists and engravers François Martin Testard (active 1790–1819) and Antoine François Sergent-Marceau (1751–1847), with “Segard” on the title-page probably being an error for “Sergent”’ (Library Hub Discover).
    ‘The City of Paris has always been an object of much interest to the Traveller. Recent events, which have filled every mind with astonishment, gratitude, and joy, have rendered the Metropolis of France, now enriched with the choicest spoils of conquest, and the noblest specimens of art, doubly interesting. From every neighbouring kingdom, and especially from the shores of Britain, thousands have eagerly flocked to that Capital, formerly the scene of the most horrible atrocities, now the depository of the most valuable treasures’ (Advertisement).
    Abbey, Travel 104; Tooley, English Books with Coloured Plates 1790 to 1860, 448.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £500.00
  • Anecdotes of the French Revolution of 1830. by CARPENTER, William. CARPENTER, William. ~ Anecdotes of the French Revolution of 1830. London: William Strange, 1830.
    First edition, by the journalist and champion of political reform, William Carpenter (1794–1874). ‘The following little work pretends not to the character of a history;… (more)

    First edition, by the journalist and champion of political reform, William Carpenter (1794–1874). ‘The following little work pretends not to the character of a history; but it will be found to embody, in consecutive order, the leading events of the late glorious revolution in France, derived from the most authentic sources, and interspersed with such remarks and reflections as they naturally call forth’ (Preface).

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £100.00
  • Lease of the Bakehouse and Ground at Richmond Green to Sir Matthew Decker. by (RICHMOND). (RICHMOND). ~ Lease of the Bakehouse and Ground at Richmond Green to Sir Matthew Decker. 4 January, 1731 [enrolled 10 January 1731].
    An original lease granted by George II to Sir Matthew Decker of lands once part of the royal park of Richmond at Richmond Green, formerly… (more)

    An original lease granted by George II to Sir Matthew Decker of lands once part of the royal park of Richmond at Richmond Green, formerly known as the Bakehouse. Sir Charles Hedges (died 1714), Secretary of State to Queen Anne had built a fine house here, which was enlarged by Decker (1679-1749), a wealthy Dutch merchant, who settled in London in 1702, becoming and MP and director of the East India Company. He created a celebrated garden on this land, widely commented on by contemporaries and the site of the first successful cultivation of the pineapple in Britain.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £800.00
  • Containing ruled pages for cash accounts and memoranda for every day in the year. An Almanack... the illustrations of John Leech and John Tenniel. by [KEENE, Flora, owner]. PUNCH’S POCKET BOOK for 1861. [KEENE, Flora, owner]. PUNCH’S POCKET BOOK for 1861. ~ Containing ruled pages for cash accounts and memoranda for every day in the year. An Almanack... the illustrations of John Leech and John Tenniel. London: Bradbury & Evans for Punch, [1860].
    This little pocket book has been densely filled with diary notes by a young girl or young woman, presumably one Flora Keene. She copies out… (more)

    This little pocket book has been densely filled with diary notes by a young girl or young woman, presumably one Flora Keene. She copies out several hymns at the opening, and then completes every day of her diary, with dense and minute notes, now very hard to read, mainly noting family comings and goings. The frontispiece by John Leech entitled ‘Volunteer Movement — Jones & Family go under Canvas’ is a satire on the British volunteer rifle corps, formed in 1859 as a response to public fears of a French invasion. There is also a series of delightful vignettes by Tenniel on Shakespearean quotations.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £300.00
  • Ballads of Revolt … by (CUSTANCE, Olive). FLETCHER, Joseph Smith. (CUSTANCE, Olive). FLETCHER, Joseph Smith. ~ Ballads of Revolt … London and New York: John Lane, The Bodley Head, 1897.
    First edition of an early collection of poetry by Fletcher (1863–1935), perhaps better known for his detective fiction.  This copy inscribed by the English poet… (more)

    First edition of an early collection of poetry by Fletcher (1863–1935), perhaps better known for his detective fiction.  This copy inscribed by the English poet Olive Custance to the American writer and salonnière Natalie Clifford Barney —‘To Natalie … The Poet and Lover … from the “Little Princess”’— on the front flyleaf.   
    ‘An avid reader of Pre-Raphaelite and aesthetic literature’, in the 1890s, Custance (1874–1944) ‘developed somewhat flirtatious relationships with John Lane, Henry Harland, and Richard Le Gallienne—respectively the publisher, editor, and reader of The Yellow Book.  Custance was one of the most prolific women poets published in this notorious journal, with poems appearing in eight of its thirteen volumes …
    ‘Custance’s first poetry volume, Opals, was published in 1897 by The Bodley Head [the same year as Fletcher’s] …  The poems addressed to John Gray were also included in this volume, along with several other love poems directed at ambiguously gendered beloveds.  Such sexual ambiguity was reflected in Custance’s love life during this period.  In the winter of 1900 she received an admiring letter from Natalie Barney, the openly lesbian author and salon hostess.  Custance was invited by Barney to Paris, where she also befriended the symbolist poet Renée Vivien (Barney’s former lover).  Accounts of this ménage are contradictory.  Barney’s autobiography stated that Vivien was jealous of Custance; however, Vivien’s letters and her roman-à-clef A Woman Appeared to Me (1904)—in which Custance appeared as Dagmar—suggest that she and Custance enjoyed a brief love affair during the winter of 1901 
    ‘During this period, in June 1901, Custance wrote a letter of admiration to Lord Alfred Douglas (1870–1945).  The poets began to correspond, using the personas of “Fairy Prince” for Douglas, and “Princess” and “Page” for Custance’ (Oxford DNB), which may account for the inscription here.
     

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £800.00
  • Travels through Arabia and other Countries in the East, performed by M. Niebuhr... Translated by Robert Heron. With Notes by the Translator, and illustrated with Engravings. by NIEBUHR, Carsten. NIEBUHR, Carsten. ~ Travels through Arabia and other Countries in the East, performed by M. Niebuhr... Translated by Robert Heron. With Notes by the Translator, and illustrated with Engravings. Perth: R. Morison Junior, 1799.
    Second edition in English (after the first, Edinburgh and Perth edition of 1792) abridged and translated from Niebuhr’s Reisebeschreibung nach Arabien und andern umliegenden Laendern… (more)

    Second edition in English (after the first, Edinburgh and Perth edition of 1792) abridged and translated from Niebuhr’s Reisebeschreibung nach Arabien und andern umliegenden Laendern (1774) and volume two from Niebuhr’s Beschreibung von Arabien (1772). It remains the only English translation and recounts Niebuhr’s travels in the Middle East, Egypt, Persia, India and Arabia — the first scientific expedition to this area, which was subsidised by the Danish king. The plates depict: An Arab on horseback; Dancing girls in Egypt; Procession at an Egyptian marriage; The way to Mount Sinai; Mount Sinai and the Convent of St. Catherine; Dress of the women in the back parts of Yemen and Scene in Arabia Petrea.

    The translator, Robert Heron (1764-1807) was the son of a Kirkudbright weaver who raised enough money to study at Edinburgh University, supporting himself with teaching and work with local booksellers. Soon after translating Niebuhr ‘His imprudent habits overwhelmed him with debt, and he was thrown into prison by his creditors’ (Oxford DNB). Although he was freed and removed to London, he was once again imprisoned for debt, dying soon after. Howgego, to 1800, N24.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £2,000.00
  • Le Journal de Mlle. D’Arvers nouvelle écrite en Français... ouvrage précédé d’une étude sur la vie & les oeuvres de Toru Dutt par Mlle. Clarisse Bader. by DUTT, Toru. DUTT, Toru. ~ Le Journal de Mlle. D’Arvers nouvelle écrite en Français... ouvrage précédé d’une étude sur la vie & les oeuvres de Toru Dutt par Mlle. Clarisse Bader. Paris: [Plon et compagine for] Didier et c[ompagn]ie, 1879.
    First edition, inscribed by the author’s father to Edmund Gosse of this posthumous novel by Toru Dutt (1856-1877), Indian poet, translator, and novelist. Dutt was… (more)

    First edition, inscribed by the author’s father to Edmund Gosse of this posthumous novel by Toru Dutt (1856-1877), Indian poet, translator, and novelist. Dutt was born in Calcutta and received her early education there, both in Indian and European languages, under the encouragement of her mother and father (the latter a colonial administrator). ‘In 1869, when she was aged thirteen, and at a time when conservative Hindus believed that crossing the ‘black waters’ was blasphemous, the Dutt family travelled by sea to Europe. Toru and her elder sister Aru were the first Bengali girls to dare such a transgression’ (Chandani Lokugé in ODNB). Toru studied French in Nice and Paris, and English in London and Cambridge. On returning to India she continued her reading of French and British Romantics such as Hugo, Wordsworth, Keats, Shelley as well as the Brontës and Elizabeth Barrett Browning. She also began an intensive course of study in Sanskrit, while at the same time adapting her new knowledge to retell legends from the Mahabharata in English, using traditional English poetic forms. She died of consumption in 1877 at the age of just twenty-one, by which time she had written four books, of which only one, A Sheaf Gleaned in French Fields (1876), was published in her lifetime.

    The novel Le Journal de Mademoiselle d’Arvers, was set in Brittany, France, and was published only posthumously. ‘The manuscript, hand-copied by Govin Chunder, was sent to Clarisse Bader, who contributed a foreword, and with whose assistance it was published by Didier in Paris in 1879 and included in the Librarie Académique’. It was an ‘exciting hybrid between the nineteenth-century European gothic romance and the realist genres, and can be read as the creative experiment by a talented novice writer inspired by her reading of European literature’ (Lokugé).

    For Western readers, as both a young woman and as an Indian writing in English, a great deal of the interest in Toru Dutt’s poetry was due to her familiarity with English and French literature. Edmund Gosse was an enthusiastic patron and wrote: ‘it would seem that the marvellous facilities of Toru’s mind still slumbered, when, in her thirteenth year, her father decided to take his daughters to Europe to learn English and French. To the end of her days Toru was a better French than English scholar. She loved France best, she knew its literature best, she wrote its language with more perfect elegance.’ (Ancient Ballads, xii). Worldcat lists copies at BL and University of Manitoba only outside continental Europe.

    (see full details)
    View basket More details Price: £6,000.00