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18TH-CENTURY BOOKS
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Much
on
“The
Great Buzaglo”
[Tickell, Richard]. The project. A poem. Dedicated to Dean Tucker. The fifth edition. London: Pr. for T. Becket, 1779. 4to. [2] ff., 12 pp.
$175.00
Unusual: ESTC
gives listings for fourth and sixth editions, but not for a fifth edition.
The "Buzaglo" referred to in the poem is the eponymous cast-iron stove designed
by London inventor/ironmaster Abraham Buzaglo, which the author of the poem
contends will, once installed, quell party strife in the House of Commons
by warming the uncomfortable chill that provokes and riles the more partisan
members.
Recent marbled paper wrappers. Very light foxing on first three
leaves. Two page numbers shaved.
Timaeus Sophista. ... Lexicon vocum Platonicarum ... editio secunda, multis partibus locupletior. Lugduni Batavorum: Apud Samuelem & Joann. Luchtmans, 1789. 8vo (20.2 cm, 7.9"). xxiv, 296 pp.
$400.00
Single-click any image where the hand appears on
mouse-over, for an enlargement.
Second edition, following the first of 1754: David Ruhnken's revision
of this 4th century A.D. guide to Plato's vocabulary and
usage. Ruhnken was a prominent Greek scholar who served as chair of Latin and
professor of Greek at the University of Wittenberg; Sandys notes that the “
learned notes ” Ruhnken provided for this work “drew the attention
of scholars to the literary interest of Plato.”
Brunet, V, 861; Sandys, II, 457; Schweiger, I, 332. Contemporary paper-covered boards, spine with inked paper label; binding scuffed and rubbed, spine with paper shelving label (inked through), title-label darkened. Front pastedown with 19th-century collector's bookplate, title-page verso with same collector's inked inscription. Light foxing. Final leaf with upper outer corner torn away, with loss of a few letters.
Tissot, Simon André David. Essai sur les maladies des gens du monde. Lausanne: Chez François Grasset & Comp., 1770. 8vo (17.2 cm, 6.75"). xiv, 212, [4] pp.
$500.00
First edition: Guide to maintaining good health, with preliminary chapters on food and drink, exercise, and sleep preceding the discussion of various disorders and diseases suffered by sophisticated, upper-class men and women. The Swiss physician Simon-André (sometimes given as Samuel Auguste) David Tissot published a number of medical works, some being specialized studies and others intended for laypeople; although his treatise on the evils of masturbation was then and may still be his best-known work, almost all of his books went through a number of printings in assorted translations, and the present work is no exception.
Single-click the interior image for an enlargement.
The publisher’s authentifying signature is present on the final leaf, the “Avis des Éditeurs.”
Not in Garrison & Morton. 19th-century quarter cloth with paper-covered sides, spine with inked paper label; spine sunned and with call number label, edges and sides slightly rubbed. Original front pastedown and free endpaper bound in, endpaper with inked presentation inscription dated 1865. Title-page and first page of preface rubber-stamped by a now-defunct institution. Pages clean.

A Tour of
RUSSIA Conducted by a SPECIALIST
Tooke, William. View of the Russian empire, during the reign of Catharine the second, and to the close of the eighteenth century ... the second edition. London: Pr. by A. Strahan & G. Woodfall for T.N. Longman & O. Rees, 1800. 8vo (21.7 cm, 8.5"). 3 vols. I: xxxvi, 630 pp.; 1 fold. map. II: [2], 574 pp. III: [2], 628 pp. (pagination skips 561–64).
$100.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Second edition, following the first of 1799: Extensive overview
of the peoples, customs, laws, religion, natural history, etc. of “the
arctic eagle” (p. v), compiled from primary and secondary sources by a
member of the Imperial Academy of Sciences and of the Free Economical Society
at St. Petersburg. The Rev. Tooke was an “intelligent and observant Russophile”
(DNB) responsible for several original works as well as a number of English
translations (with added substance and critical apparati) of significant works
on that country, including Georgi's Russia, or, A Compleat Historical Account
of All the Nations which Compose that Empire and Castéra's Life
of Catharine II, Empress of Russia.
The state of the Russian military forces is here described at length. The
commerce section includes chapters on viniculture, sericulture, and apiculture,
as well as mining and salt harvesting; at the back of the third volume are
extensive tables of Russian imports and exports, merchant ships arrived and
sailed, duties and taxes, and names of the most active St. Petersburg merchants.
Coins and measures are also examined.
Binding: Contemporary treed
calf, flat spines with gilt tooling of several sorts creating compartments,
each with a large device; gilt-stamped green leather title and volume labels.
ESTC T109837; Allibone 2434. On Tooke, see: Dictionary of
National Biography online. Bound as above, two volumes with front covers
off and all other joints weak; covers showing some gouges and spines some
chips, the set apparently having been exposed not only to normal wear/rubbing
but sometime long past to something (heat? “repairs”?) that darkened
and roughened them irregularly. Ex–social club library: front pastedowns
each with 19th-century bookplate and inked numerals, title-pages pressure-stamped.
Intermittent light foxing and light to moderate offsetting throughout; vol.
III with waterstaining in upper margins. Map lightly foxed but otherwise in
excellent condition. A set of books
still
striking, and priced to permit the next owner to contemplate
repairs. (26366)
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Tull, Jethro. The horse-hoing husbandry: Or, an essay on the principles of tillage and vegetation.... London: Pr. for the author, and sold by G. Strahan, T. Woodward, A. Miller, J. Stagg, and J. Brindley, 1733. Folio (30.2 cm, 11.875"). [4], x, 200 pp.; pp. [201–202]. 6 fold-out plts. [bound with] Tull, Jethro. A supplement to the essay on horse-hoing husbandry.... London: Pr. for and sold by the author, and may be had at Mr. Mills's, London, at John Aitkins's, Esq, in Edinburgh, and at the Bear in Hungerford, Berks., 1736. Folio. pp. [203–205], 206–69; [1] pp.
$1500.00
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Improvements in farming founded on a scientific basis made British agriculture one of the strongest in Europe in the 18th century. Though called to the bar, Jethro Tull (1674–1741) never practiced law, but devoted himself to farming on land that had belonged to his father. From the beginning he set about trying to discover ways of doing things better, including inventing a number of implements, as this work reveals both in text and in image. His work proved very successful—Tull’s “seed drills” revolutionized planting techniques—and it saw a number of editions; it was translated into French, whence it proved influential on the Continent. This volume’s
six beautifully engraved, pleasantly intelligible plates (“W. Thorpe, sculp.) illustrate some of Tull’s inventions, including improved plows and drills for planting seeds.
First printed in London in 1731, Horse-hoing is here (likely) the fourth edition. Bound with it is the first edition of the interesting Supplement issued in 1736, directed largely to answering Tull’s detractors. The first title is fairly widely held, in libraries; the latter, much less so.
Goldsmiths’-Kress 7065; ESTC T81915 and N24607. Contemporary calf with remnants of gilt; dry, flaking, and partially gone to red, with some chips to edges, corners, and spine tips; old repairs to joints. Remnants of bookplate on front pastedown. Old water/mildew damage to lower margins, occasionally making its way a bit into text; several leaves repaired, long since. Plates generally quite clean and always pleasing, with faintest waterstaining to lower portion of plate 6 (only). All edges speckled red.

Folwell's Printing: The Fifth U.S. Congress
United States. Laws, statutes, etc. 1797–99 (5th Cong., 1st–3rd sess.). Acts passed at the first session of the fifth Congress of the United States of America, begun and held at the city of Philadelphia, in the state of Pennsylvania, on Monday the fifteenth of May, in the year MDCCXCVII and of the independence of the United States, the twenty-first. Philadelphia: Richard Folwell, [1797–99]. 8vo (21.3 cm, 8.4"). 240, vii, [1], [241]–561, [1 (blank)], 26, iv, [48 (index)] pp.
$300.00
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Acts of the first, second, and third sessions of the Fifth Congress, printed in the same years as their original appearances — with these Richard Folwell printings being less common than the William Ross editions. Each section has a separate title-page, with the pagination of the first session's acts continued in the second and third. Covered here are the establishment of the Department of the Navy, the creation of the Mississippi Territory, treaties with the Cherokees and with Tripoli, and the Alien and Sedition Acts; the volume closes with a copy of the Constitution as “ratified by the several states.” In passing, one happens upon acts regulating the distillers of “Geneva” (gin) and “the Medical Establishment.”
Reading or browsing, in this volume, is interesting and eye-opening.
Provenance: Old signature, “Hall Harrison,” on title-page.
Evans 32952, 34688, & 36479; ESTC W11750; Sabin 15502, 15503, & 15504. Contemporary treed calf, rebacked with calf, spine with gilt-stamped bands and gilt-stamped leather title and publication labels; leather of boards (but not spine) crackled, chipped/chipping, and discolored from a fire, with rear board most affected and with one corner lost (3/4" up and across from the point, this showing in our extra photograph). Front pastedown with old institutional bookplate; title-page with early inked ownership inscription as above and old institutional rubber-stamp. Offsetting from binding at beginning and end, intermittent mild offsetting and faint spotting generally, a few leaves towards the back browned, with pages otherwise clean; the fire that affected the boards did not reach the interior, here. (25667)
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(U.S. Almanac). The American calendar, or United States register, for the year 1794. London: J. Debrett, 1794. 12mo (16 cm, 6.25"). 187, [1 (blank)] pp.
$650.00


Uncommon British reprint of an American work originally printed in Philadelphia. Although no calendrical information is present, much other material commonly found in almanacs is: lists of government officials by state, population statistics (categorized by free white males and females, slaves, and “other persons”), and duties payable on assorted goods. ESTC T105844. Period-style quarter calf with marbled paper–covered sides, spine with gilt-stamped leather title-label and gilt-ruled raised bands. Title-page and a few others stamped by a now-defunct institution. Some offsetting to margins of first and final leaves, pages otherwise clean.
A nice little Anglo-Americanum, very evocative of its era.

Laws of Oxford
University of Oxford. Parecbolae sive excerpta è corpore statutorum Universitatis Oxoniensis. Accedunt articuli religionis XXXIX. in Ecclesia Anglicana recepti: nec non juramenta fidelitatis & suprematus. Oxoniae: E Theatro Sheldoniano, 1729. 8vo in 4s (15.9 cm, 6.25"). [24], 232 (lacking pp. 227–30) pp.
$350.00
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18th-century edition of this collection of selected statutes of the University of Oxford, originally compiled by Thomas Crossfield of Queen's College and printed in 1638 under the title Statuta selecta è corpore statutorum Universitatis Oxon. The section Statuta Bibliothecae Bodleianae is of special interest to book people, though the notes on disturbing the peace and de nocturna Vagatione cannot but please the Latinate.
That this is a volume of “selections” is trumpeted on the title-page. However, both usefully for the seeker of context and at points confusingly for the actual reader, its table of contents seems to be not for what's present as selected but for the text in full extent — so the table announces, for example, that “Titulus XVII” comprises nine sections and lists these even unto the subsections, though the body of the book itself sets forth sections five and six only.
The title-page offers a handsome vignette of the Theatre, not one of the commonest ones.
ESTC T118673; Madan, Oxford Books, 17. Period-style calf, framed and panelled in blind with blind-tooled corner fleurons and rather elaborate additional decorations in blind; spine with gilt-stamped title and publication information and different blind-tooled decorations. Endpapers a little smudged and title-page mounted, with edges darkened. Early inked ownership inscription in upper margin of first text page mostly torn away, with loss of a few words. Pp. 227–30 lacking, being the last bit of the printing of the Church of England's 39 Articles and the first part of the section, “De Eligendis Publicis Lectoribus.” Pages faintly age-toned, with occasional light spotting; mostly clean. (25553)
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