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English Camões in Green Morocco
(Anglo-Portuguese
Charmer). Camões, Luís
de. Poems, from the Portuguese of Luis de Camoens. London:
J. Carpenter (pr. by C. Whittingham), 1805. 8vo. Frontis., [4], 160 pp.
$250.00

Fourth edition: Sonnets and canzones by the legendary Portuguese poet and playwright, translated into English by Percy Clinton Sydney Smythe, Viscount Strangford, a notable Lusophile who served as a diplomat in Lisbon.
Click the interior image for an enlargement.
Binding: Contemporary dark green straight-grain morocco, spine with gilt-stamped rules, rolls, and devices. Covers framed with a delicately curly gilt-rolled border; the center panels, within, accented by gilt-stamped corner fleurons. A bit of additional filigree in blind appears both within the rules of the gilt border and within the border on each center panel, to nice subtle effect. Gilt inner dentelles. All edges gilt.
NSTC C355. Binding as above, leather rubbed at edges and joints, spine a bit dimmed. Front pastedown with armorial bookplate of John Allan Powell; front fly-leaf with inked inscription dated 1922. A few spots of foxing, pages otherwise clean.
A pretty and very English production for this Portuguese poet. A charming volume. (23077)
Curbing
Contraband
Brazil.
Laws, statutes, etc. 14 November 1757.[drop-title] Eu elrey. Faço
saber aos que este alvará com força de ley virem: Que sendo o
delicto do contrabando hum dos mais perniciosos entre os que infectaõ
os estados.... [Lisbon, 1757]. Folio. 8 pp.
$450.00
Document summary, found below "REY": "Alvará com força
de Ley, porque V. Magestade he servido ampliar os Paragrafos quinto, sexto,
e setimo do Capitulo decimo setimo dos Estatutos da Junta do Commercio destes
Reynos, e seus Dominios, para mais efficazmente se evitarem os contrabandos.
. . . "
Quarter green cloth with marbled paper sides, and red leather
cover label with gilt-stamped title and gilt ruling.

An Illuminating Collection
(Brazilian Commerce).
A collection of 20 alvarás and other royal decrees relating to
Brazilian commerce and administration of the colony. Lisbon and elsewhere,
1754-88.
Folio. Various pagings.
$5000.00
The importance of Brazil to Portugal, brought home in a hard
and dramatic way when the Dutch took over portions of the colony during the
period 1630-54, was further enhanced by
the discovery in the late 17th century of gold, and in the early 18th century
of diamonds, there--in addition to the sugar and wood that had domininated
the colony's earliest lists of exports. This collection of royal decrees (alvarás and
other types) deals with treatment of black slaves, regulation of shipping,
administration of sugar and tobacco monopolies, importing of
wine and vinegar, and the constant and various problems of managing colonial
administrators
and distributing/limiting their perquisites and prerogatives.
In all, an interesting sampling of the types of decrees that the kings and queens
of Portugal issued in order to maintain order and discipline in the ever-increasingly
important colony of
Brazil. The value of the documents sold individually totals $6325.00, and the
collection price
represents a savings of above 20%.
The vast bulk of these decrees are bound in faux morocco
and faux mottled calf; those that are in wrappers or as issued are carefully
noted. All are in very good condition.
For details, please email us.
(Bullfight Program). [drop-title] Programma. Domingo 18 de fevereiro...em a nova bem construida praça no largo de Santo Antonio de Bomjardina.... [Porto: Imprensa Constitucional, 1838]. 4to (20.4 cm, 8"). [2] ff.
$200.00


Program for a bullfight in Porto at the new bull-ring; with a woodcut of a bull above the drop-title.
Rare. No copies traced via the Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal’s online catalogue, nor via NUC Pre-1956, OCLC, and RLIN.
A little light spotting and soiling. Inked numeral on first page.
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)
[Hare,
Francis]. A letter to a member of the October-Club: Shewing, that to yield
Spain to the Duke of Anjou by a peace, wou’d be the ruin of Great Britain.
The second edition, with additions. London: A. Baldwin, 1711. 8vo (20.8 cm, 8.25").
vi, 42 pp.
$800.00
Generally attributed to Francis Hare, Bishop of Chichester, this
anonymously published political analysis expresses concern not only that putting
the Duke of Anjou on the Spanish throne would tilt the balance of power in Europe
too far towards France, but also that such action would greatly damage the livelihoods
of English textile workers, among others dependent on international commerce;
also questioned are
Swift’s
views on the ramifications of trade with Portuguese America.
This is the second, expanded edition.
ESTC T58140; Alden & Landis, European Americana,
711/126; Teerink-Scouten 1034. Blue-green paper wrappers, old style. Title-page
with small numeric stamp, faint traces of other annotations. Small area of
worming in inner margins, touching a very few letters. A few scattered spots,
otherwise clean; edges untrimmed.
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