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18TH-CENTURY BOOKS
Aa-Al Am-Az Ba-Beq Ber-Bo Bibles Bp-Bz
Ca-Cb Cc-Coq Cor-Cz Da-Di Dj-Dz
Ea-England English-Ez F Ga-Gp Gr-Gz Ha-Hb
Hc-Hz I-K La-Lel Lem-Log Loh-Lz Maa-Mar
Mas-Mz N-O Pa-Pi Pj-Pz Q-R Sa-Sch
Sci-Se Sf-Sol Som-Sz Ta-Th Ti-U Va-Wil Wim-Z
ONE OF A NUMBER
OF
18TH-CENTURY PRINTINGS
OF
INDIVIDUAL
SHAKESPEARE
PLAYS
Shakespeare, William. All's well, that ends well. A comedy. As it is acted at the Theatres-Royal in Drury-Lane and Covent-Garden.... London: Pr. for J. Harrison, 1778. 8vo. 17, [1] pp. (lacks the plate).
$125.00
ESTC (electronic, accessed April 2000) T21272. Modern wrappers; sewing loosening in first signature. Without the plate. Back leaf chipped at fore-edge and with one tiny hole near bottom edge. Light soiling to title-page; some age-toning to margins.
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more such SHAKESPEARE
— click here.
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Shebbeare, John. An answer to the queries, contained in a letter to Dr. Shebbeare, printed in the Public Ledger, August 10th. Together with animadversions on two speeches in defence of the printers of a paper, subscribed a South Briton. London: Pr. for S. Hooper & T. Davies, [1774]. 8vo (21 cm; 8.5"). 179, [1 (blank)] pp.
$675.00

Lots going on here. For the Americanists, there is discussion of the Quebec bill and taxation of the American colonies. For historians of English politics there is review of parliamentary and newspaper “comparison . . . between the public and private virtues of their present Majesties, and those of King William and Queen Mary. The merits, also, of Roman Catholics, and of Dissenters from the Church of England, respecting allegiance and liberty, and their claims to national protection, are fairly stated, from their past and present transactions.”
First edition, with two others appearing shortly thereafter.
Adams, American Controversy, 74-73a. Sabin 80040. Recent boards with marbled paper covering. Paper spine label. Title-page with small 19th-century library stamp and call number in neat ink; page backed.
A very nice copy.
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley. A comparative statement of the two bills, for the better government of the British possessions in India, brought into Parliament by Mr. Fox and Mr. Pitt...second edition. London: J. Debrett, 1788. 4to (28.5 cm, 11.25"). 39, [1 (blank)] pp.
$800.00

Second edition. Sheridan entered Parliament in 1780, crowning
his previous career as a successful playwright and theatre manager with a long
and distinguished record of public service. He originally read the main portion
of this statement before the House of Commons as part of the debate, after
noticing that the gentlemen discussing the two bills in question appeared not
to have paid “any very minute degree of attention” (p. 6) to the
details of either one.
Single-click
lefthand image,
for an enlargement.
The texts of both bills are present here, along with Sheridan’s analysis
of how each would address “the question of right between the public and
the [East India] Company” (p. 39).
ESTC T30944;
Goldsmiths’-Kress no. 13610. Recent marbled paper–covered boards,
front cover with gilt-stamped leather title label and spine with gilt-stamped
leather author label. Half-title and several other pages stamped by a now-defunct
institution. Pages with edges untrimmed and a few small spots of staining;
mostly, clean.
[Sherlock, Thomas]. Some considerations upon pluralities, non-residence, and salaries of curates. London: Pr. by J. Roberts, 1737. 8vo. (19.3 cm, 7.625"). [1] f., iii, [1 (blank)], 26 pp.
$400.00


Thomas Sherlock (1678-1761), master of St. Catherine’s Hall, Cambridge, and bishop of London, was noted for the persuasive power of his writing and preaching. Here he argues for the judicious use of matters now deemed in churches to be an abuse of the pastoral office, namely pluralities (holding more than one benefice at a time), and non-residence in the parish where one holds a benefice, arguing also for fair salaries for the curates who fulfill the function of the incumbent during his absence or incapacity.
ESTC T53315; Goldsmiths' Kress 7503. On Sherlock, see: The Dictionary of National Biography, LII, 93–95. Recent wrappers. Light to moderate soiling and staining, mostly on front and last leaves. Small chip from lower outer corner of title-leaf. Inked price (6d) on title-page.

German Universalist Pr. by
Saur
Siegvolck, Georg Paul. Das von Jesu Christo dem Richter der Lebendigen und der Todten, aller Creatur zu predigen befohlene ewige Evangelium, von der durch Ihn erfundenen ewigen Erlösung, wodurch alles, was da heisset, Teufel, Sünde, Hölle und Tod, ganz und gar vernichtiget.... Germantown: Christoph Saur, 1769. 8vo (16.7 cm, 6.5"). [9], 175 pp.
$800.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Uncommon American printing of this treatise on redemption by German mystic Siegvolck (a.k.a. Georg Klein-Nicolai), originally published in 1700 and credited with having inspired Winchester's doctrine of restorationism. “Siegvolck pioneered in the exegetical studies with which Universalists attempted to show that 'eternal' punishment, as the biblical writers understood it, would someday end” (Holifield, Theology in America, 221).
This is the second U.S. edition of the original German text, following Saur's printing of the previous year; Saur had previously published an English translation, The Everlasting Gospel, in 1753. Neither the present example nor the 1768 printing are widely held institutionally outside of Pennsylvania.
ESTC W21009; Evans 11304; Sabin 80878; Hildeburn, Pennsylvania, 2484; Arndt & Eck, German Language Printing in the U.S., 368. Period-style mottled calf, covers framed in blind double and triple fillets, spine with raised bands ruled in blind; entirely plain without spine labels. Title-page with repaired tear; upper outer corner and portion from middle to outer part of page lost and replaced some time ago, with loss to up to half of nine lines. (25486)
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For Books for the BUSTED
BIBLIOPHILE, click here.
This book also appears in the GENERAL
MISCELLANY click here.
(Simon
“The Fox” Fraser).
Lovat (Scotland). Tenants. Broadside.
Begins: “Petition for the Laird of Kilravock and others the vassals of Lovat....”[Edinburgh,
ca. 1702]. Folio. [1] p.
$975.00
The tenants of the Lovat estate petition for a delay in producing
the writs and securities of their holdings, as the protracted dispute between
the Lovat family and the infamous Capt. Simon Fraser of Beaufort (who attempted
a forced marriage to the family’s heiress, young Amelia Fraser, before
successfully kidnapping and wedding her mother, the dowager Lady Amelia Murray)
has left them in a sorry state regarding the payment of creditors. Not only
does this broadside touch on the common perspective of a great contemporary
scandal, but it is of interest for its scarcity as well.
No holdings are listed
by OCLC, RLIN, ESTC, or NUC Pre-1956.
Not in ESTC. On Fraser, see: Dictionary of National Biography,
XX, 216–22. Excellent clean condition, with two small sewing holes
at inner margin, one very small spot of foxing, and ink traces from printing
process to outer edge. Tipped onto a leaf of 19th-century paper; now
in a Mylar folder.
Classic
History of
MEXICO — FIRST
Edition in
ENGLISH
(A TALL
FOLIO) (A Reader's
Copy)
Solís, Antonio de. The history of the
conquest of Mexico by the Spaniards. Done into English...by Thomas Townsend.
London: Pr. for T. Woodward, & J. Hooke, 1724. Tall folio. [9] ff., 163,
[1 (blank)], 252, 152 pp.
$600.00
Many editions of Solís's eminently readable history have
come down the pike since the first appeared in Madrid in 1684. The present one
is the first edition in English. Solís was an official court historian
and as such had access not only to published sources but also to archival sources
not previously used. Despite writing while the Baroque era flourished in Spain,
his prose is remarkably unornamented or convoluted. This clarity of style when
combined with the stirring and near-mythic events of the conquest of Mexico
has accounted for the hundreds of editions that have come down to us.
Sabin 86487; Medina, Biblioteca hispano-americana, 1773n;
Palau 318693; European Americana 724/165. Recent quarter calf, antique
style: Round spine with raised bands accented with gilt rules and beading;
gilt center devices; marbled paper sides. Ex-library copy with stamps. First
few leaves crumpled in lower margins; last dozen leaves foxed, sometimes heavily.
Lacks
all plates and maps except one map—yet pleasing to the reader.
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Books for the BUSTED
BIBLIOPHILE, click
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