require('includes/navbar.php') ?>

GENERAL MISCELLANY
Aa-Al
Am-Az
Ba-Bos
Bibles1
Bibles2
Bibles3
Bot-Bz
Ca-Cd
Ce-Cl
Co-Cz
D
E F
G
Ha-Hd
He-Hz
I
J
K
La-Ld Le-Ln
Lo-Lz
Ma-Mb
Mc-Mi Mj-Mz
N-O
Pa-Pe Pf-Pn
Po-Pz Q-Rg Rh-Rz
Sa-Sc
Sd-So
Sp-Sz
Ta-Ti
Tj-U V-Wa
Wb-Z
The
Andes to
ANTARCTICA
78 Plates
/ 5
Maps
Famin, César, et al. L'univers, ou histoire et description de tous les peuples. Amérique méridionale, iles diverses de l'océan et régions circompolaires. Chili, Paraguay, Uruguay, Buenos-Ayres...Patagonie, Terre-du-Feu et Archipel des Malouines...iles diverses des trois océans et régions circompolaires. Paris: Firmin Didot Frères, 1840. 8vo (21.5 cm, 8.4"). [4], 96, 64, 91, [1], 328 pp.; 76 plts., 5 fold. maps, 2 single-f. maps.
$500.00

Five uncommon works on South America, various islands of the Atlantic, and the polar regions, composing part of a lengthy series of geographical studies: Sabin identifies this as vol. XXV of L'univers. The ambitious pieces describe not only the physical geography of the territories covered, but also the religions, customs, costumes, and more of their native peoples. Chili was written by César Famin, Patagonie by Frédéric Lacroix, and Iles diverses by Lacroix and Rory de Saint-Vincent; all are indexed. Three of the oversized, folding maps are by
Thomas Duvotenay, while the other two are signed by Jenotte. Two more single-leaf maps are unattributed. The impressive array of plates depicts dress, dwellings, rituals, scenic vistas, and flora and fauna (including a jaguar, cougar, coati, and tapir for Paraguay, and seaweed and jellyfish for the islands).
Palau 86546; Sabin 23767. Contemporary quarter sheep over marbled paper sides, modestly gilt; boards lightly worn, leather more so. Lacking five maps according to Palau, although at least one map is present for each section in this volume; Sabin cites 88 plates total without differentiating between plates and maps. One leaf removed at front and one at back. Lines of waterstaining, generally faint but present throughout; some plates with light spots of foxing, occasionally having offset onto surrounding leaves. Priced reflecting absent leaves. (1797)
For more VOYAGES, TRAVELS, & "EXOTIC"
PLACES, click here.
For
more specifically of ANDEAN interest, click here.
For
more NATURAL HISTORY, click here.
For more ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, click here.
For
Books for the BUSTED
BIBLIOPHILE, click
here.
And for more BOOKS IN FRENCH,
click here.

“Madmen
or Epileptics”
(Anyway, NOT
Bewitched)
Farmer, Hugh. An essay on the demoniacs of the New Testament. London: G. Robinson, 1775. 8vo (21.6 cm, 8.5"). [16], 416 pp.
$300.00

First edition of this treatise on demonic possession, arguing that “the disorders imputed to supernatural possessions, proceed from natural causes, not from the agency of any evil spirits” (p. 2). Despite the heated debate that sprang up over the Rev. Farmer's conclusions, the cogency of his argument and clarity of his writing were widely acclaimed among his contemporaries.
Click the interior image for an enlargement.
Provenance: Signature of Philip Harwood on half-title.
ESTC T68112; Lowndes 780; Allibone 578. Recent quarter calf and marbled paper–covered sides, spine with gilt-stamped leather title-label and blind-tooled compartment decorations. Half-title with early inked ownership inscription. Half-title, title-page, and last page institutionally pressure-stamped, title-page with inked numeral in lower margin. Pages slightly age-toned, otherwise clean. (25088)
For 18TH-CENTURY BOOKS, click here.
For MEDICINE, click here.
For RELIGION, click here.
For OCCULT matters, click here.
For Books with SPECIAL
PROVENANCE, click here.
NOT
a “Collector's Copy” But
FUN!
to Have
in This Early Form
Faulkner, William. Requiem for a nun. New York:
Random House, [copyright 1951]. 8vo. [6], 286 pp.
$40.00
First edition, second printing; top page edges stained gray as issued, M. McKnight
Kauffer listed on front dust jacket flap.
Cloth with a few light spots, spine extremities faintly worn,
dust jacket with slightly ragged edges and some spine fading. (2113)
For
our shelves of inexpensive GENERAL
READING, click
here.
For more “GIFTABLES” mostly $150
& UNDER, click here.
Favarger. L’ecriture en vingt-cinq leçons ... deuxième edition. Paris: Chez l’auteur et chez Louis Colas, 1835. 8vo (24 cm, 9.4"). Frontis., 164 pp. (lacking plates).
[SOLD]
Uncommon second edition: The Favarger method of calligraphy, preceded by a brief history of handwriting. The first edition, printed under the title L’écriture anglaise enseignée en 25 leçons, appeared circa 1830; both editions were published with a set of engraved plates demonstrating the techniques, those plates not being present here.
Rare. The first edition is vanishingly scarce, and this second only slightly less so; searches of various institutional databases locate only one U.S. and two overseas holdings of the second edition.
Contemporary half morocco with paper-covered sides, spine with gilt-stamped title; leather lost from corners and head of spine, binding a bit rubbed and scuffed. Front pastedown with private collector’s bookplate; front pastedown and free endpaper institutionally rubber-stamped. Light to moderate foxing throughout; plates of demonstration lacking, philosophical text (still interesting) all/only present, along with the frontispiece portrait of a young and serious-looking Favarger.

Fawcett's Hymns — First Edition
Fawcett, John. Hymns: Adapted to the circumstances of public worship, and private devotion. Leeds: Pr. by G. Wright & Son for the author, 1782. 12mo. 279, [9] pp.
$900.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Uncommon first edition of these hymns written by a Baptist theologian, including the still-popular “Blest be the tie that binds.” Words only, without music; handsomely typeset with modest ornamentation.
Signed binding: Front free endpaper stamped “Bound by R.W. Smith.”
ESTC T92186. 19th-century half morocco with marbled paper-covered sides, spine with gilt-stamped title; refurbished. Title-page with old institutional pressure-stamp; rear free endpaper with paper adhesion and tear as from removal of old “due” slip. All edges gilt. A few scattered light spots, occasional pencilled marginalia, pages otherwise clean. A nice copy. (19510)
For more 18TH-CENTURY BOOKS, click here.
For more HYMNALS,  click here.
For more RELIGION, click here.

Sheriff's Sales, Foreign Intelligence, a Wet Nurse & Other Ads
The Federal Gazette and Philadelphia Evening Post, Wednesday, 18th February, 1789. Philadelphia: Andrew Brown, 1789. 4to (28.4 cm, 11.2"). [4] pp.
$300.00
Click the image for an enlargement.
No. CXXI of this daily newspaper, of interest not only for its
general content but for the numerous advertisements, which include a proposal
for the first American printing of a Catholic Bible (Carey's “Doway Translation”),
a notice of a runaway apprentice boy (18 years old), and the hopeful posting
of “A young married Woman, with a good breast of milk” who would
like to take a child to nurse.
Also reported/canvassed are hot religious disputes at the University of Pennsylvania and “Carlisle” (Dickinson), with reference to (literal) iconoclasm at Cambridge colleges under the Protectorate ; a double execution in New-York; and minutes of the General Assembly (including a petition from residents of Germantown protesting “enormous” taxes, “an act to prevent the importation of convicts within this common wealth,” and several items having to do with insolvent debtors.
Unbound, as issued; edges tattered, pages creased, age-toned and foxed, with tears along one fold and scattered small holes, with loss of a few letters or words not affecting general sense. Two pages with large, early inked notations over text. (24658)
For more PRE-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For CATHOLICA, click here.
For BIBLES, TESTAMENTS, &
BIBLE SCHOLARSHIP,
click here.
For RELIGION GENERALLY, click here.
For CHILDREN / EDUCATION, click here.
For COMMERCE / TRADE /
FINANCE / ECONOMICS, click here.
For more of WOMEN's interest, click here.
For more of PHILADELPHIA
interest, click here.
Outside! the Canon A Shoemaker's Verses
Fellows, John. Grace triumphant, a sacred poem, in nine dialogues; wherein the utmost power of nature, reason, virtue, and the liberty of the human will, to administer comfort to the awakened sinner, are impartially weighed and considered. . . . A new edition, embellished with a portrait of the author. London: Pr. for Alexander Hogg, [ca. 1770]. 12mo. Frontis. port., 120 [i.e., 96] pp.
$475.00
Click the interior image for an enlargement.
A rare work by a minor English hymn-writer. Very little is known about John Fellows (d. 1785). Described as “a poor shoemaker,” in 1780, he became a Baptist while taking up residence in Birmingham. (Apparently, he had been a Calvinist Methodist for most of his life; see Hatfield.) His oeuvre consists mostly of hymns and religious poetry, this being his first published work (first edition, 1770). He was additionally the author of works entitled “The New History of the Bible in Verse,” “Popish Cruelty Displayed,”
“Hymns in a Variety of Metres,” and “Hymns on Believers' Baptism.”
Nicely printed, this is illustrated with an engraved frontispiece portrait of John Fellows, with the titles of some of his other works (see above) appearing beneath it; preliminary pages (8 pp.) consist of a dedication to the Rev. Mr. John Ryland of Northampton, and a preface. Stated at foot of title-page: “Price One Shilling and Six-Pence.”
Rare: ESTC locates only two copies in the U.S., and this is one of them, now deaccessioned; and OCLC adds only the copy at Yale.
ESTC N39616; on Fellows, see: Edwin F. Hatfield's The Poets of the Church (New York, 1884), & Josiah Miller's Singers and Songs of the Church (London, 1869). Recent quarter calf and marbled paper over boards; gilt-stamped leather spine labels, gilt-ruled raised bands, gilt rule where leather meets paper of covers. Title-page chipped at upper right corner, one leaf a little ragged at outer edge, another leaf repaired at outer margin. Pages overall clean, but with some random spotting and slight age-toning, including to title-page and frontispiece; light offsetting to title-page from facing plate. Ex-library with “no. 5" marked in blue crayon at the top of title-page; faintest traces of library call number on the verso; no other markings. Final three pages (pp. 94–96) mispaginated 118, 119, and 120. Handsome. (24459)
For 18TH-CENTURY BOOKS, click here.
For LITERATURE, click here.
For HYMNALS,  click here.
For RELIGION, click here.
Adventures of Telemachus in
Six Languages
Fénelon, François de Salignac de La Mothe-. Télémaque polyglotte, contenant les six langues européennes les plus usitées: Le français, l'anglais, l'allemand, l'italien, l'espagnol et le portugais. Paris: Baudry (Imprimerie de Casimir), 1837. Long 8vo (24.3 cm, 9.5"). Frontis., [4], 380 ff.
[SOLD]
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Uncommon first edition thus of Fénelon's classically inspired attack on the French monarchy, with a frontispiece portrait of the author signed in the plate by Geoffroy. The text is printed in three columns per page, inside decorative borders, with all six languages running parallel on double-page spreads.
Brunet, II, 1217; Graesse 565. Contemporary quarter tan textured cloth with marbled paper–covered sides, spine with printed paper label; rubbed with cloth chipped and pulled at spine head, label darkened, front hinge tender and front free endpaper lacking. Half-title, title-page, and first text page with private collector's decorative rubber-stamp; one leaf with short tear from upper margin, not touching text and a few corners dog-eared. Light to moderate foxing, most notably to frontispiece and title-page.
An interesting production! (24899)
For more LITERATURE, click here.
For more TRANSLATIONS, click here.
For more BOOKS IN FRENCH, click here.
For more BOOKS IN GERMAN, click here.
For more BOOKS IN ITALIAN, click here.
For more PORTUGAL / PORTUGUESE, click here.
This book also appears in the HISPANIC
MISCELLANY click here.
Ferguson, N.L. The young ladies’ oasis: Or, gems of prose and poetry. Lowell: Nathaniel L. Dayton, 1851. 12mo (18.2 cm, 7.1"). Frontis., 256 pp.
[SOLD]
Stated third edition of this gift book for girls, featuring a number of pieces by women authors: The contents page attributes various works to “Amelia,” Mrs. Anna Saltus, Miss E.A.U., Mrs. Child, Clara Manchester, Clara Cushman, Hannah M. Bryant, Mrs. M. Arthur, Fanny Forrester, Mrs. J. Thayer, Emily C. Judson, Mrs. Hemans, “A Pretty Woman,” and “Effie May,” in addition to some names of indeterminate gender.
The collection, which was later printed under the title Oasis; or Golden Leaves of Friendship, opens with a hand-colored floral frontispiece; the title-page gives the editor’s name as “Fergurson.” The front free endpaper bears an early inked gift inscription, and a coupon printed in 1854 for 100 expressions of “sincere homage & never failing devotion of an affectionate heart” is laid in, although the space for the recipient’s name has been left blank.
Faxon 857 & 58 (for first & second eds.). Publisher’s brown cloth, covers and spine gilt-stamped with arabesque and foliate motifs; corners and spine extremities lightly rubbed, gilt (attractively) oxidized in some portions. All edges gilt. Front free endpaper with early inked gift inscription. Pages faintly age-toned, two pages with offsetting from now-absent item.

A Must for
Visitors to AMAZONIA
Figueira, Luis. Arte da grammatica da lingua do Brasil. Lisboa: Na Officina Patriarcal, 1795. Small 4to (20.5 cm; 8"). [2] ff., 103, [1 (blank)] pp.
$1875.00
Figueira (1573–1643), a Jesuit missionary in the Pará and Marañón regions of the Amazon, saw his grammar of the Tupí Guaraní language of the Brazilian natives published for the first time in 1621, with subsequent editions all being posthumous (1681, 1687, 1754, and 1795). This fifth edition (incorrectly labelled “quarta impressaõ” on the title-page) was edited by José Mariano da Conceição Velloso (1742–1811). The 1754 edition seems to have been suppressed in the wake of the 1759 expulsion of the Jesuits from Portugal and its empire.
Click the images for enlargements.
Sabin 24313; DeBacker-Sommervogel, III, 721; Viñaza 389; Valle Cabral 6; Rodrigues 1002; Ayrosa 202, Borba de Moraes (rev. ed.), I, 409. Publisher's “wallpaper” wrappers.
Fine, crisp copy. (26520)
For
18TH-CENTURY BOOKS, click here.
For
PORTUGAL / PORTUGUESE, click
here.
For more of NATIVE AMERICAN interest, click here.
For
SOUTH AMERICANA, click here.
For
JESUITANA, click here.
For DICTIONARIES/GRAMMARS, ETC., click here.
Finzi, Solomon ben Eliakim. [two lines in Hebrew, then] Sive clavis gemarica .... Helmstadii: Georg. Wolfgangi Hammi, 1697. 4to (21 cm, 8.25"). (a)4(b)4(c)1A–H4I2; [18], 68 pp.
$650.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Scarce first edition thus, translated by Christoph Heinrich Rittmeier: Talmudic commentary, with text printed in parallel columns of Hebrew and Latin. Finzi’s Mafteach ha-Gemara was printed in the original Hebrew in Venice in 1622; the author was sometimes, as he is here, referred to as Eliakim Panzi or variants thereof.
Searches of OCLC, RLIN, and NUC Pre-1956 locate only three U.S. holdings.
VD17 23:237187N; Zedner, Hebrew Printed Books in the Library of the British Museum, 716. Recent marbled paper–covered boards, front cover with gilt-stamped leather author/title-label (“Panzi”). Pages age-toned, with mild offsetting.
First Baptist Church (Philadelphia, PA). An address from the Baptist Church, in Philadelphia, to their sister churches of the same denomination, throughout the confederated states of North America. Drawn up by a committee of the Church, appointed for said purpose. Philadelphia : Pr. by Robert Aitken, 1781. 8vo (19 cm, 7.4"). 16 pp.
$800.00
Controversy that arose in the First Baptist Church of Philadelphia concerning the universalist principles of its pastor Elhanan Winchester (1751–1797).
Click either image for an enlargement.
Provenance: Signature of Jos. Walter on wrapper.
A scarce publication.
Evans 17310; Hildeburn 4072. 19th-century half brown sheep over marbled paper with gilt-lettered spine, original plain blue wrapper bound in; binding rubbed with front joint just starting. Ex-library copy with inked call number on front cover, bookplate on front pastedown, pencilled call number on verso of second front flyleaf, pressure-stamps, and rubber-stamps (including front wrapper and title-page, “Locked Section”). Title- and following
leaf chipped in lower outer corner, repaired with paper; light foxing and spots of soiling, only. Inked ownership inscription as above, on front wrapper.

The #%@! Frenchman Was EVERYWHERE!
Fletcher, John. An appeal to matter of fact and common sense. Or a rational demonstration of man's corrupt and lost estate. Philadelphia: Melchior Steiner, 1783. 12mo. 271, [1] pp.
$200.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Early American, Philadelphia edition of this Methodist treatise on original sin.
Evidence of readership: Occasional pencilled marginalia, including “Great chapter,” “Know,” and, in one case,
the comment, “Voltaire again!”
There is a large signature at the back which we do not quite make out, but it is dated July 14th, 1789.
ESTC W11665; Evans 17930. Contemporary sheep, spine with raised bands and binding slightly sprung; leather cracking over spine and lost in small areas at corners, edges, and spine foot to insect damage or abrasion. Front free endpaper lacking; back free endpaper with inked inscription dated 1789. Pages browned and stained, with minute insect damage to blank areas (only) of first few leaves and with marginalia as above. (14942)
For more PRE-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For more of PHILADELPHIA
interest, click here.
For more RELIGION, click here.
Fleury, Claude. Moeurs des Israélites et des Chrétiens ... nouvelle édition. Lyon: J. Ayné, 1808. 12mo (17.5 cm, 6.9"). [6], 397, [3] pp.
$150.00
Uncommon edition of a pair of treatises on Jewish and Christian customs of antiquity, originally published as two companion works in 1681 and 1682. Fleury, a lawyer turned theologian who tutored the sons of Louis XIV, is best known for his highly successful and oft-reprinted Histoire ecclésiastique; Brunet notes that the present items are “deux excellents ouvrages.”
Brunet, II, 1291 (for an 1810 ed. only, not citing this ed.). Contemporary speckled calf, spine gilt extra with gilt-stamped leather title-label; front joint entirely open with leather chipped along base of joint, spine leather and gilt rubbed in spots, corners bumped, small dent to outer edges. Front pastedown with private collector’s bookplate; front pastedown and free endpaper with institutional rubber stamp (no other markings). Pages faintly age-toned, else clean.
A Little Boy with
Heaven on His Mind
The flower gathered, or the history of Henry Packman Smith. London: The Religious Tract Society, [1838–39?]. 32mo. 64 pp.
$250.00
Edifying tale of a pious young boy who, before his death at the
age of seven, enthusiastically accepted Jesus as his Saviour. This is the uncommon
unabridged version; the story is more often seen in shortened form as part of
a later collection published by the American Tract Society. The publication
date given here was suggested by a mention of the item in the 1838 Baptist
Magazine.
Binding:
Contemporary blue calf framed in gilt rolls with gilt-stamped corner fleurons,
spine with gilt-stamped title and floral decorations, turn-ins with gilt dentelles,
front cover gilt-stamped “C. Anderson.” All edges gilt.
Portrait: In addition
to the personalized binding, this copy has the skillfully executed silhouette
of a boy in a cap glued to the back of its title-page, opposite the contents.
Is
this Charles Anderson?
Provenance:
Charles Anderson.
NSTC 2S26587. Binding as above, corners and spine extremities
very slightly rubbed. Title-page with early inked inscription of Charles Anderson
in upper margin. A beautiful little volume. (22728)
For CHILDREN / EDUCATION, click here.
For FINE, ATTRACTIVE, & INTERESTING
BINDINGS, click here .
For more Books with SPECIAL
PROVENANCE, click here.
For more RELIGION, click here.

“Domestic Life on Shipboard”
Foley, Fanny [pseud.]. Romance of the ocean: A narrative of the voyage of the Wildfire to California. Illustrated with stories, anecdotes, etc. Philadelphia: Lindsay & Blakiston, 1850. 12mo (17.9 cm, 7"). [4], [ix]–218, [2 (adv.)] pp.
$250.00
Click the images for enlargements.
First edition: A charming, giddy (for the most part) maritime romance
set on a trip from New York to California, written from the perspective of a
lighthearted would-be adventurer. This is the genuine first edition, not
a reprint.
Sabin 24947; Wright, I, 965. Publisher's speckled sheep, spine
with gilt-stamped leather title-label; rubbed, spine label with small scuffs,
some leaves pulling away from sewing. Ex–social club library: 19th-century
bookplate, pressure-stamp on title-page, no other markings. Waterstaining
(appropriately?) to inner margins of first few leaves, with lower inner margins
of those leaves nicked; spotting and staining variously. (26375)
For more POST-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For
more LITERATURE, click here.
For more of WOMEN's interest, click here.
For Real *&* Imaginary VOYAGES, TRAVELS,
& books on “EXOTIC” PLACES, click here.

One of Only 20 Sets — Splendidly Bound
La Fontaine, Jean
Louis. La Fontaine....
A Paris: de l'imprimerie de Crapelet, Chez Lefèvre, libraire, 1814. 8vo. 6 vols.
$6750.00
The special edition containing the plates in two states: a preliminary state ("à l'eau-forte") and another just before the lettering was added. Limited to 20 sets (this set #9). Produced for Antoine August Renouard, the great bibliographer and bibliophile of the late 18th and early 19th century, with 24 etched plates engraved by de Ghende after designs by Jean-Michel Moreau ("le jeune"). Ray notes, in his general remarks on Moreau's work of this period, that "bibliophiles of the time vied for the books which he illustrated, and . . . they went to the expense of having them bound by Simier and Thouvenin." (88).
This set carries the bookplate of French collector Louis Mercier.



Binding: Full crimson morocco, round spines with five raised bands (unsigned, and of a later date than the text). Spine gilt extra, two spine compartments reserved for gilt-lettered author, volume number, and contents (i.e., "Fables," "Contes"). Covers with gilt fillet
borders; wide gilt inner dentelles; marbled endpapers. All edges very brightly gilt.
Luscious.



Brunet, III, 748; Gordon N. Ray, The Art of the French Illustrated Book 17001914. Bound as above, in excellent condition, and with wide margins, some foxing.
A fine set of a scarce and beautiful edition.
For more SETS, click here.
For more ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, click here.
For more FINE BINDINGS, click here.
For more BOOKS IN FRENCH, click here.

SIGNED by the Author — Gerald Ford
Ford, Gerald. A time to heal: the autobiography of Gerald R. Ford. Norwalk, Conn.: Easton Press, ©1987. 8vo. [8], 454 pp.
$495.00
This copy is SIGNED by President Gerald Ford. From Easton Press's “Library of the Presidents” series, this offering includes the introductory pamphlet by Henry Kissinger.
Stepping into the presidency amidst scandal, war, and a poor economy, Gerald Ford was presented with some very difficult leadership challenges. On the one hand, he was the right man at the right time: His honesty and reassurance restored the confidence in the presidency that been lost during the Watergate scandal, and his negotiation of the Helsinki Agreement contributed to the end of the Cold War. However, Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon eroded much of the trust he had built early in his term. This fateful decision, together with the fall of Saigon and his inability to “whip inflation,” were the main factors that cost him reelection. This memoir speaks to his role in navigating the challenges of his time with the same honesty and straightforwardness that characterized his tenure as president.
Full red leather, covers lavishly gilt-stamped with a pattern of elephants, spine with raised bands, gilt title, author's name, and gilt elephants within “compartments.” Endpapers bear a version of the image of the obverse side of the Great Seal of the United States. Silk ribbon placemarker. All edges gilt. Fine condition. (23605)
For POST-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For FINE, ATTRACTIVE, & INTERESTING
BINDINGS, click here .
For more BIOGRAPHIES, mostly 20th-Century
“General Reading” & Inexpensive, click here.
For “GIFTABLES” mostly $150
& UNDER, click here.

How
to be a
Good
& Well-Liked
Little Girl
or Boy
Forrester, Francis [pseud. of Daniel Wise]. My Uncle Toby's
library. Boston: Brown & Taggard, 1862. 8 vols. (of 12). 8vo (15.5 cm, 6.2"). Each volume containing a frontispiece and either 64 or 62 pp.
$900.00
A sparkling, as new set. “My Uncle Toby's Library” was the first children's series published by Wise (1813–98), an English-born Methodist Episcopal pastor, author, and editor who emigrated to New England in 1833. Originally published in 1853–54, this series comprises twelve illustrated didactic tales, eight of which are uniformly bound here as a charming and attractive set. The titles present are: Arthur Elleslie; or, the Brave Boy; Minnie Brown; or, the Gentle Girl; Ralph Rattler; or, the Mischief-Maker; Aunt Amy; or, How Minnie Brown Learned to Be a Sunbeam; Fretful Lillia; or, the Girl Who Was Compared to a Stingnettle; Minnie's Picnic; or, a Day in the Woods; Cousin Nelly; or, the Visitor; and Minnie's Playroom; or, How to Practise Calisthenics. The last-named volume involves Minnie and her friends learning various exercises (with dumbbells and other equipment) under the watchful eye of instructor Miss Pinkney, and is illustrated with woodcuts of the movements.
Sternick 496.4 (describing binding as red). Publisher's blind-stamped green textured cloth, spines gilt extra; bindings fresh and clean. Eight vols. of 12 present. Each volume with inked ownership inscription dated 1863 on front free endpaper. Pages slightly age-toned with occasional faint offsetting from illustrations, generally clean. A beautiful set, virtually as new. (24423)
For POST-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For CHILDREN / EDUCATION, click here.
For more CONDUCT Books, click here.
For more books in handsome
PUBLISHER'S CLOTH, click here.
For ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, click here.
For LITERATURE, click here.
Or for MEDICINE, click here.

On the Loss of a
“Tender, Just, & Gracious” Queen
Forster, William. A joyous and peaceable state of mind, the happy fruit and effect of afflictions. In a sermon preach’d on the sad occasion of the death of Her late Majesty Queen Anne, of blessed memory, in the parish church of St. Clement Danes, August the 8th, 1714. London: Pr. for D. Browne & W. Mear, 1794. 8vo (21.3 cm, 8.4"). [4], 19, [1 (blank)] pp.
$90.00
First edition of this sermon on Hebrews XII:11. The author (some sources give his name as William Foster) was rector of St. Clement Danes and chaplain to John Cecil, Earl of Exeter.
The title-page here, with its black-bordered and -accented text, is is a nice example of modest “mourning typography.”
Uncommon: OCLC and ESTC locate only two U.S. institutional holdings.
ESTC T119686 . Disbound; sewing mostly perished, leaves separating. Edges slightly ragged and light soiling to margins. (26247)
For more 18TH-CENTURY BOOKS, click here.
For more RELIGION, click here.
For more ENGLISH POLITICS, click here.
For more of WOMEN's interest, click here.
Forsyth, William. A treatise on the culture and management of fruit trees.... To which are added an introduction and notes, adapting the rules of the treatise to the climates and seasons of the United States of America. By William Cobbett. Albany: D. & S. Whiting, 1803. 8vo (21.5 cm, 8.5"). 280 pp. (pp. [v], vi bound in after p. viii); 13 plts.
$575.00
William Forsyth (1737–1804) was superintendent of the royal garden of St. James and Kensington, where he was so successful in his work on trees that Parliament voted him thanks and a monetary reward. His Treatise was first published in 1802 in both Britain and America and saw a number of editions. In it he discusses a wide variety of fruit trees, how to care for them, and the various uses to which they may be put; the 13 plates illustrate the various trees under discussion. Its American publication is significant for occurring at the time that scientific agriculture and the nursery business were just beginning in this country, and it includes a preface on growing fruit trees in the United States by the Anglo-American political writer and agriculturist William Cobbett (1762–1835). This third American edition has the same text and plates as the Philadelphia 1802 edition, but new here is an 8-page letter (pp. 273–80) from Peter W. Yates, dated Albany, 1803.
NSTC C26475; Shaw & Shoemaker 4218; Gaines, Cobbett, 62c. On Forsyth, see: Dictionary of National Biography, XX, 35. On Cobbett, see: Dictionary of National Biography, XI, 142–45; Appleton, I, 669. Recent quarter walnut brown calf over marbled paper; spine with two red leather labels, gilt-lettered with a single fillet above and below; remainder of spine divided into compartments by blind rules, with gilt-stamped date at base. Pages and plates lightly age-toned, a little cockled, and lightly soiled throughout with some shallow chipping, light foxing, and waterstaining. Rubber-stamps from a now-defunct library, including one on title-page. Pencilled ownership inscription on title-page. A nicer book than the faults-list makes it sound like, to read or work with.

New York's Gubernatorial Election 1820 — The Issue of Slavery
“Forty Thousands”. Broadside. Begins, “To the 40 gentlemen who have addressed the independent federal electors of the state of New-York.” New York state: no publisher/printer, [1820]. Folio (34 cm, 12.75"). [1] f. (verso blank).
$975.00
A wall posting of the faction of the Democratic-Republican party that supported the incumbent DeWitt Clinton for Governor of New York in the 1820 elections against Vice-President Daniel D. Tompkins, the candidate of the Tammany-Virginia wing of the party. This document serves as a reply to the address, signed on 14 April 1820 by a group of 40 men of the Federalist party, the so-called “high-minded Federalists,” who opposed and berated Clinton. It attacks the character of Mr. Tompkins and accuses the opposing faction of recruiting Federalist support, creating party disunion, and selling out New York's interests to those of the slave-holding states.
Nearly half of the text deals with the slavery issue. Ends as follows, “We shall not vote for Mr. Tompkins. This is the voice, not merely of forty, but of FORTY THOUSANDS.” A window into a turbulent period in New York politics
Rare. Not located via OCLC.
Not in Shoemaker. As issued, with some later folds; edges a little irregular. Lightly foxed. (24634)
For more PRE-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For more BROADSIDES, click here.
For other ABOLITION items, click here.
Foster, Abiel. Mr. Abiel Foster’s motion for an amendment to the Constitution of the United States. 4th February, 1800. Committed to a committee of the whole House on the state of the Union. Published by order of the House of Representatives. [Philadelphia]: Published by order of the House of Representatives, [1800]. 8vo (22 cm, 8.6"). [4] pp.
$385.00
Motion to amend that part of the Constitution dealing with the election of president and vice-president. The effort resulted in the twelfth amendment, ratified on 25 Sept. 1804.
Click the image for an enlargement.
Evans 38786; ESTC W026281. Folded as issued, edges untrimmed and slightly darkened. Second leaf with corners creased.

Memoirs of
the Minister of Police
Fouché, Joseph. The memoirs of Joseph Fouché, Duke of Otranto, minister of the general police of France. London: Charles Knight (William Clowes, pr.), 1825. 8vo. Frontis. port., viii, 357, [3], 329, [1] pp.
$235.00
Click the image for an enlargement.
First English edition of the memoirs of France's notorious chief police officer during the French Revolution and Napoleonic Era. As Minister of Police under the Directory, Joseph Fouché (1759 or 1763–1820) was instrumental in reorganizing and centralizing the police system in France and was kept on by Napoleon until he fell out of favor in 1802. However, his network of intelligence gathering proved invaluable to Napoleon, who reinstated him in 1804 (until 1810) and again during the Hundred Days. The authenticity of these memoirs is no longer in doubt and they provide some insight into the political intrigues of the period. It's also an extremely self-serving work — he writes on p. 2 that he never wielded his “mysterious and terrible power” except to “calm the passions, disunite factions, and prevent conspiracies.” Illustrated with a frontispiece portrait of the author. Two volumes bound in one.
NSTC 2F12262, 2J13268, & 2B13609. Green cloth over boards, gilt rules and lettering to spine; cloth worn away at spine extremities and corners and splitting over front joint; preliminary pages (including frontispiece) and pp. 1–2 separated from binding. Private ownership signature at top edge of title-pages; a (different) private owner's pressure- and rubber-stamps; institutional bookplate. Off-setting to six pages from old newspaper articles or leaves laid in; old newspaper article (a review of a much later biography of Fouché) still inserted; Inner margin of pp. 327–8 repaired, not affecting text. Spotting and staining of various sorts and a few dog-ears; not a swell copy but a perfectly serviceable one. (14222)
For more BIOGRAPHIES, mostly 20th-Century
“General Reading” & Inexpensive, click here.
For NAPOLEANA, click here.
For more of MILITARY/NAVAL
interest, click here.
For EUROPEAN LAW, click here.

“Pagan
& Popish
Persecution”
Foxe, John. Abridgment of the Book of Martyrs; or a history of the lives, sufferings and triumphant deaths of many of the primitive as well as Protestant martyrs; from the commencement of Christianity to the latest periods of pagan and Popish persecution ... Troy, NY: Tuttle & Belcher (stereotyped by Francis F. Ripley), 1839. 12mo. 432 pp.; 6 plts.
[SOLD]
“Now compiled by an American editor,” this is a reprinting of Tuttle's 1835 edition. The volume is illustrated with a frontispiece and five other plates depicting various tortures; two scenes each to each plate.
Click the images for enlargements.
Not in American Imprints (1839). Contemporary speckled sheep, rebacked and rehinged some time ago with library brown tape; binding much worn and abraded, spine cloth with window cut to show original gilt-stamped title (covered with cellophane tape). Spine with institution's call number; front pastedown, first and last text pages, and all edges of closed book rubber-stamped. Pages foxed. (20025)

Watercolors Abound
France, Anatole. At the sign of the Queen Pédauque. Chicago: Printed for the members of The Limited Editions Club by The Lakeside Press, 1933. Tall 4to. Frontis., [5], v–xii, 174, [2] pp., [3 (blank)] ff.; 19 plts.
$95.00

This is number 1469 of 1500 in the Limited Editions Club edition of Anatole France's conte philosophique. Signed by the illustrator, Sylvain Sauvage, who created the book's 20 full-page and two smaller-sized water-colors, the work is here translated from the French by "Mrs. Wilfrid Jackson," and carries both an introduction by Ernest Boyd and a prefatory note by the author. Designer William A. Kittredge chose a monotype centaur font printed in red and black inks, and embellished the title-page with red, blue, yellow, and black inks.
Click the interior image for an enlargement.
The binding is full blue linen stamped in gold on the spine and front cover, with additional ornamentation to both covers in deep pink. Top edges are gilt, others deckle; one leaf is left unopened.
Limited Editions Club, Bibliography of the Fine Books Published by The Limited Editions Club, 1929–1985, 49. Binding as above; spine sunned and with thumbnail sized dark patch at head and foot. Some cracking along the top edges and spine of the
slipcase, which is still sturdy; spine of case sunned, paper label a little soiled. Pages clean; no ownership markings or labels. A very good, clean copy. (22313)
For more LIMITED EDITIONS CLUB books, click here.
For more ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, click here.
For more LITERATURE, click here.
For more TRANSLATIONS, click here.
For more “GIFTABLES” mostly $150
& UNDER, click here.

Surprising Content — Capuchins in Tibet
Surprising Frontispiece — Uncalled for, Signed, & Au Sanguine
Francisco, de Ajofrín, fray. Carta familiar de un sacerdote, respuesta a un colegial amigo suyo, en que le dà cuenta de la admirable conquista espiritual del vasto imperio del gran Thibèt, y la mission que los padres Capuchinos tienen alli, con sus singulares progressos hasta el present. Dase tambien una noticia succinta de la fundacion de esta penitente seraphica familia; de los santos que la ilustran, cardenales, arzobispos; de su observancia, y austeridad, missiones que tiene en todo orbe, provincias, conventos, y religiosos en que se halla propagada, con orras noticias historico-eclesiasticas. Mexico: En la imprenta de la Bibliotheca Mexicana , 1765. Small 4to. Frontis., [2] ff., 48 pp.
$6500.00
Click the images for enlargements.
A remarkable book, demonstrating how small the world had already become in the 18th century. Mexico in 1765 seems an unlikely place for a discussion of Tibetan missions, but here is an elaborate report on the Capuchin missions in Tibet, published half way around the world in Mexico. It is possible that these reports came across the Pacific, or equally, that they came via Europe. In any case, a most exotic combination of topic and imprint.
A special issue copy: Present here is an uncalled-for frontispiece. It is of four Capuchin martyrs, is signed by the artist Navarro, is engraved on copper, and is printed au sanguine -- the color reserved for only the most special copies of 18th-century books. This frontispiece is not called for by Medina
and is not present in any of the copies reported as held in the U.S.
Medina, Mexico, 4991; Palau 45600; Sabin 11098; Maggs, Bibliotheca Asiatica, 611. Full antique calf, spine gilt, leather label. Slight worming to late leaves, repaired with tape in an inoffensive fashion. Quite a good copy. (12725)
For more 18TH-CENTURY BOOKS, click here.
MEXICO is one of our great specialties.
For our MEXICANA, click here.
For more CATHOLICA, click here.
For ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, click here.
This
book also appears in the HISPANIC
MISCELLANY click here.

A Popular Edition from a
Surreptitious Manuscript Copy
Franklin, Benjamin. The works of the late Dr. Benjamin Franklin; consisting of his Life, written by himself. Together with essays, humorous, moral, and literary, chiefly in the manner of the Spectator. Philadelphia: Wm. W. Woodward, 1801. 12mo (16.7 cm, 6.6"). Frontis., 321, [11] pp.
$700.00 
Early American edition of the “unofficial” but extremely
popular Life, re-translated into English from the French publication
and released despite William Temple Franklin's attempts to suppress any version
other than his own. This example comprises two volumes in one, opening with
an engraved portrait of Franklin signed by Tanner and
featuring
an addition “not in any other Edition,” according to the title-page:
“An Examination, before the British House of Lords, respecting the Stamp-Act.”
At the back are a six-page list of subscribers and four pages of advertisements
for Woodward publications.
Click
the interior image for an enlargement.
Sabin 25602; Shaw & Shoemaker 515. On Temple Franklin and
early editions, see: Green & Stallybrass, Franklin,151–60.
Contemporary treed sheep, spine with gilt-stamped leather title-label;
spine extremities a little chipped, front cover a little sprung, hinges (inside)
reinforced. Frontispiece and title-page tattered and now mounted, with outer
margin of first preface page repaired; a number of corners bumped or dog-eared,
with a few in one section at some point delicately rodent(?)-nibbled. Subscribers'
list trimmed closely, affecting two names only; pages age-toned with intermittent
foxing. In fact, though certainly not “excellent” quite
“satisfactory.” (25357)
For more PRE-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For more BIOGRAPHIES, mostly 20th-Century
“General Reading” & Inexpensive, click here.
For more ENGLISH POLITICS, click here.
For more TRANSLATIONS, click here.
For more of PHILADELPHIA
interest, click here.
Last
18th-Century American Edition of His WORKS
Franklin, Benjamin. Works of the late Dr. Benjamin Franklin: Consisting of his life, written by himself, together with essays, humourous, moral and literary; chiefly in the manner of the Spectator. Huntingdon, PA: Pr. for the proprietor by John R. Parrington, 1800. 12mo. 2 vols. in 1. Frontis., 156, 119, [1] pp.
$400.00
Click the image for an enlargement.
Early edition of this popular collection of assorted pieces by Franklin, originally published in 1790. Vol. I begins with Franklin's autobiography, with a continuation written by Dr. Stuber, and ends with “Extracts from the last will and testament of Dr. Franklin” on pp. 146–56. Vol. II contains “The Essays.” The engraved frontispiece opposite the title-page of vol. I, a portrait of Franklin in a fur cap, was done by J. Bannerman.
Evans 37442; Sabin 25602; ESTC W17376. Contemporary speckled sheep, spine with gilt-stamped leather title-label; joints fully open and holding by cords, leather peeled up from board edges, gilt dimmed on spine label. Front fly-leaves with faint pencilled and inked inscriptions; back fly-leaves with inked ownership inscriptions, one dated 1801. Pages age-toned, last few waterstained; one leaf torn with loss of several words from one line. A “survivor” copy, priced accordingly. (22636)
For PRE-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For more of PHILADELPHIA
interest, click here.
For 18TH-CENTURY BOOKS, click here.
Franklin Fire Insurance Company of Philadelphia. Act of incorporation and
by-laws of the Franklin Fire Insurance Company of Philadelphia. [Philadelphia: No publisher or printer, 1829]. 12mo (20.7 cm, 8.1"). 12 pp.
$325.00
By the terms of this document, shareholders had to be U.S. citizens, directors were barred from borrowing funds from the corporation, and no more than $10,000 of annual income could come from any real estate holdings owned by the company.
Click the image for an enlargement.
Sabin 61675; not in Shoemaker. Original plain blue-green wrappers, chipping over spine, front wrapper with inked title and numeral. Sewing going, with signatures loose in wrappers. Title-page with three-digit stamped number and with pencilled notation in upper margin.
A very scarce publication.
Frazer, Mrs. The practice of cookery, pastry, and confectionary; in three parts...the fifth edition, improved and enlarged. Edinburgh: Peter Hill (pr. by Alex. Smellie), 1806. 12mo (18.3 cm, 7.2"). [8], 304 pp.; 2 plts.
$575.00
Click the two leftmost images, above, for enlargements.
Early 19th-century edition of a popular Scottish cookbook, originally printed in 1791. The inspiration for this work came from Cookery and Pastry by Susanna Maciver, whom Mrs. Frazer had worked with and eventually succeeded as head of a culinary school for women in Edinburgh. The liquid quantities are given in both Scottish and English measures, with a note that the “butter weight . . . is rated at twenty-two ounces to the pound.” The first plate shows a sample table layout featuring fish, brown soup, boiled fowls, haricot of mutton, ducks ragoo’d, preserved apples, and almond pudding; the second plate illustrates how to truss hares, chickens, pheasants, turkeys, and other game for roasting and boiling.
Bitting 166–67; Cagle, A Matter of Taste, 691 (for fourth ed.). Contemporary mottled sheep, recently rebacked in complementary fashion, preserving the original gilt-stamped leather spine label; sides and edges worn, with abrasions. Title-page with stray small ink markings; half-title and title-page with outer edges darkened. A few leaves with spots of light staining; two lower corners torn away, and a number of others dog-eared. Pages mostly clean — this is overall an attractive copy.

Fremont's Third Expedition
Frémont, John Charles. Geographical memoir upon upper
California, in illustration of his map of Oregon and California. Washington: Printed by Tippin & Streeper, 1849. 8vo (23.5 cm; 9.25"). 40 pp.
$165.00
Click the image to the right for an enlargement.
John Charles Frémont (1813–90) was born in Savanannah, Georgia, a strong and activist opponent of slavery, a born explorer, and strong-headed and -willed. His service in California during the Mexican War, for the Union during the Civil War, etc., in many ways shows why he was tapped to be a presidential candidate; but it was certainly his role as an explorer that captured the imagination and the hearts of many Americans.
Here Frémont presents to the U.S. Senate his formal report on his third expedition to the West. The map referred to in the title was
issued separately under title “Map of Oregon and Upper California. . . 1848" and is not present; hence the affordable price here.
The original edition, not a reprint. A government publication: [U.S.] 30th Cong., 2d sess. House. Misc. [doc.] 5.
Sabin 25837; Howes F366; Wagner-Camp-Becker, Plains and Rockies, 150:2. Recent marbled paper–covered boards with leather label on front cover. Occasional light foxing. (24883)
For POST-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For more of CALIFORNIA interest, click here.
For VOYAGES, TRAVELS, & books on
“EXOTIC” PLACES, click here.
(French Laborers). Manuscript on paper, in French. “L’an mille huit cent Sept. le vingt Juilliette....” Paris, 1800. Folio (37 cm, 14.5"), 28 pp.
$250.00
Manuscript assessment of architectural and construction work planned or performed for “Madamme Hauchet du Charnoy” [sic] by Victor Delamarre, mason, and Pierre Gautier, carpenter, including estimated charges. Items cited include “un autre batimant . . . servant de bergerie,” “les grandes portes de bois chenies,” “un pavillion a deux étage entre la grande porte et la petite porte,” and “le mures du jardin” (all phrases given as written — [sic]).
Click the image to the left
for an enlargement.
Sewn. Some edges ragged; worming to upper margins of last few leaves, touching two letters.
Freystadt, M. Philosophia cabbalistica et pantheismus. Regimontii Prussorum: Borntraeger (pr. by Conradus Paschke), 1832. 8vo (19.8 cm, 7.75"). xv, [1], 143, [1] pp.
$350.00
Uncommon sole edition of Freystadt’s essay on Kabbalah and on pantheistic thought, printed in Latin and Hebrew with sprinklings of Arabic and Greek. Steineschneider cites this as Freystadt’s “dissert. inaug.”
Steineschneider, Catalogus Librorum Hebraeorum, 5085. Contemporary paste paper–covered boards, spine with hand-inked title label; binding rubbed and abraded, spine with stamped shelving number. All edges stained red. Front pastedown with 19th-century private collector’s bookplate.
Friderici, Johannes Balthasar. Cryptographia, oder, Geheime schrifft-münd-und würckliche Correspondentz , welche lehrmässig vorstellet eine hoch-schätzbare Kunst verborgene Schrifften zu machen und auffzulösen. Hamburg Gedruckt bey Georg Rebenlein, in Verlegung des Autoris, 1685. 4to (20 cm; 8"). π4 (-π4) A–Z4 Aa–Mm4; [3] ff., 280 pp., 5 (of 6) plates; without the engraved title or the fold. plt.
$1675.00
Click any image where the hand appears on
mouse-over, for an enlargement.
Secrets and sensitive information have since time long lost been
transmitted via ciphers and cryptography. Friderici’s classic work on
the topic, first published in 1684, here in the second of approximately four
editions, surveys the topic in depth, describing cryptographic devices in letters,
signs, gestures, sounds (including
music), and signals; and he also writes on the preparation
of invisible ink and other means of hiding or making messages “invisible”
to all but the intended reader.
The text is set in black letter and the title-page in the same but printed in black and red. The in-text illustrations are letter-set and woodcut, while the
plates are etchings by Friedlein, signed in the plate.
A fascinating volume of intelligence arcana.
VD17 23:299552E; RISM B VI 1, S. 333. Recent full nut-brown calf, tooled in blind in the 18th-century style; red spine labels. Lacks the engraved added title-page and the folding plate, only; title-page backed and several leaves with minor restoration to fore-edges or corners. One red stamp of a library, faint, over the text on one page; signs of same once on title-page. Overall a good+ copy of a now scarce book.

Chirognomy for the Curious: Practical Palmistry
Frith, Henry, & Edward Heron-Allen. The language of the hand being a concise exposition of the principles and practice of the art of reading the hand by which the past, the present, and the future may be explained and foretold. Philadelphia: David McKay, [1899]. 8vo (17 cm, 6.75"). Frontis., 8, [11]–159, [1] pp.; illus.
[SOLD]
Click the image for an enlargement.
Entertainingly written introduction to palm-reading, originally published in 1883 under the title Chiromancy or the Science of Palmistry. The volume is illustrated by Dora Noyes with
19 figures depicting different types of hands.
Binding: Publisher's limp dark blue-green cloth, front cover and spine with black-stamped title, front cover with yellow-stamped palm diagram.
Cloth slightly wrinkled over front cover, corners and spine extremities showing minor rubbing. Pages clean. (26696)
For more POST-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For OCCULT matters, click here.
For more ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, click here.
For more books in handsome
PUBLISHER'S CLOTH, click here.
For more “GIFTABLES” mostly $150
& UNDER, click here.

Fancy Work
Illustrated
Frost, Sarah Annie. The ladies' guide to needle work, embroidery, etc. New York: Henry T. Williams, © 1877. 8vo (21.3 cm, 8.4"). 158, [12 (adv.)] pp.; illus.
[SOLD]
Click the images for enlargements.
First edition: “Being a complete guide to all kinds of ladies' fancy work, with full descriptions of all the various stitches and materials, and a large number of illustrations for each variety of work.” The illustrations are indeed present in quite a large number, and beautifully represent the wide range of techniques and projects described.
Binding: Publisher's red cloth, front cover with elaborate black-stamped frame and gilt-stamped title.
Bound as above with extremities rubbed, spine sunned, spine and back cover with spattered staining; front hinge (inside) tender yet holding. Front fly-leaf with inked gift inscription dated 1955 and with considerably older, rubber-stamped owner's name lined through. Pages clean.
Advertisement leaves at end, fascinating. (26620)
For more POST-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For more CLOTHING & FASHION, click here.
For more books in handsome
PUBLISHER'S CLOTH, click here.
For more ILLUSTRATED BOOKS, click here.
For more of WOMEN's interest, click here.
For more “GIFTABLES” mostly $150
& UNDER, click here.
Furdoonjee,
Nowrozjee (i.e., Naurozji Faridunji).
On the civil administration of the Bombay Presidency...published in England at the request of the Bombay Association. London: John Chapman, 1853. 8vo. vii, [1], 88 pp.
$400.00


First edition, with an introduction by John Chapman, of this response to a number of publications regarding the East India Company’s operations. The author is highly critical of the process of selection of civil servants, the inadequacy of the civil and criminal courts, and the exclusion of natives from positions for which they were proven to be qualified, among other topics. A list of covenanted positions and their salaries is provided, in contrast with the list of salaried positions held by natives.
A search of RLIN, OCLC, NSTC, and NUC Pre-1956 shows only four U.S. holdings of this pamphlet.
NSTC 2N1853. Recent moiré cloth–covered boards. Title-page with small inked numerals in upper outer corner. One leaf with short edge tear just touching text.
PLACE
AN ORDER | E-MAIL
US | PRB&M HOME