6f4 (-f4 [blank]); [20], 500, 404, 408, [66 (index)] pp.
$600.00

Early edition, following the first complete printing of 1605 (preceded by a partial printing in 1602), of this sometimes controversial, oft-reprinted treatise on marriage, morality, and sexual sin. Each of the three books has its own separate title-page. Brunet calls this “un ouvrage célèbre, à cause de quelques passages singuliers qui s’y trouvent,”while Englisch notes that “Dieses Werk enthalt alle moglichen Variationen uber die Geschlechtssunde in umstandlichster und eingehendster Behandlung,” and Sommervogel simply states that the work caused its author “quelques chagrins” despite the purity and austerity of his personal life (a Jesuit from the time he was 17 years old, the Cordova-born Sánchez was said by his spiritual director to have “carried his baptismal innocence to the grave,” according to the Catholic Encyclopedia online).
Brunet, V, 115; De Backer-Sommervogel, VII, 532; Englisch, Der erotischen literatur, 145; Palau 294482. Contemporary alum-tawed pigskin, tooled in blind, spine with inked title; binding darkened and scuffed, with clasps now lacking and with leather torn over head and foot of spine (lacking at foot, with underlying vellum showing). Title-page with inked ownership inscriptions dated 1715, later institutional stamp in lower margin, and faint shadows of pencilled notations; front pastedown and one text page also with institutional stamps. Small spots of worming to lower margins of a number of leaves. Pages age-toned, with some instances of marginalia and underlining in early inked hands and occasionally in pencil (a handful of leaves in part III extensively annotated within text); a few spots of foxing, and one leaf with paper flaws partially obscuring a few letters. A big, solid volume.

The
TRYAL of the Seven Bishops
Sancroft, William. The proceedings and tryal in the case
of the Most Reverend Father in God William Lord Archbishop of Canterbury, and the Right
Reverend Fathers in God, William Lord Bishop of St. Asaph, Francis Lord Bishop of Ely, John
Lord Bishop of Chichester, Thomas Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells, Thomas Lord Bishop of
Peterborough, and Jonathan Lord Bishop of Bristol. London: Pr. for J. Nicholson, J. Walthoe, G.
Conyers, J. & D. Sprint, T. Ballard, W. Mears and J. Browne, 1716. 8vo (20 cm, 7.9"). Frontis.,
[6], 376 pp. (pagination 182–89 omitted).
$450.00
Uncommon second edition, following the first of 1689: Transcript
of the 1688 trial of seven bishops of the Church of England, charged with seditious
libel for having petitioned James II to repeal his second Declaration of Indulgence.
This
is one of the landmark cases of English constitutional history,
analyzing the extent of the king's legislative authority; the bishops' eventual
acquittal delivered a fatal blow to James's reign.
Click
the images for enlargement.
The volume opens with a copper-engraved portrait of the seven bishops: Sancroft,
Thomas Ken, John Lake, William Lloyd, Jonathan Trelawny, Francis Turner, and
Thomas White.
ESTC T103539. Contemporary speckled calf, framed and
panelled in blind with blind-tooled corner fleurons and contrasting panel
of plain calf, edges and corners rubbed; recently rebacked with complementary
speckled calf, spine with raised bands. Pages age-toned with some light spotting.
Some corners bumped in use and one leaf a bit crumpled in the press; complete
with the handsome frontispiece. (26524)
A
Pretty
Production
Sangster, Margaret Elizabeth Munson. Talks between times. New York: American Tract Society, (1901). 8vo. Frontis., 151, [1] pp.
$35.00
First edition of these Christian meditations, including
"Yule-tide Musings."
Publisher's cloth, front cover and spine stamped in white and
gilt; extremities and front gilt vignette slightly rubbed, else fresh and
bright. Pages clean. (12603)
Presbyterianism
Is Primitive Which is a GOOD
Thing
Saumaise, Claude. Walonis
Messalini De episcopis et presbyteris contra D[ionysium] Petavium Loiolitam
dissertatio prima. Lugduni Batavorum: Ex officina Ioannis Maire, 1641. 8vo (15.8
cm, 6.25"). AZ8 AaGg8; 476 pp., [1], [1 (blank)]
ff.
$700.00

"Walo Messalinus" is a pseudonym for Claude Saumaise (or Salmasius,
15881653), a Huguenot classicist and theologian probably best noted for
his attacks on the papacy. In this treatise he argues against the Jesuit patrologist
Denis Petau that bishops and presbyters were the same in the early church, and
thus that presbyterian polity was more primitive. The text of this
sole
edition is printed in roman with a goodly amount of Greek, while
the title-page is printed in black and red and ornamented with a woodcut vignette
of a man digging beneath the motto "Fac et spera."
"Do
and hope."
Provenance: Charles Spencer, Third Earl of Sunderland, lot 8432
in the Sunderland Library sale (1882).
On Saumaise, see: New Catholic Encyclopedia, XII,
98889. On Petau, see: New Catholic Encyclopedia, XI, 199200.
Vellum over paste boards. Ex-library with paper labels on spine and pressure-stamps,
yet a copy notably clean, bright, and even crisp; perhaps a half-dozen leaves
sometime exposed to a small spill(?) lightly marking lower outer corner-tips.
All edges speckled red.
(Schism
Act, 1714). Broadside.
Begins: “Reasons humbly offer’d to the Right Honourable the peers
of Great Britain, in Parliament assembled, against the bill to prevent the growth
of schism.... [London, 1714?]. Folio (31.5 cm, 12.4"). [2] pp.
$950.00
Protest against the proposed Schism Act of 1714, which was directed
against dissenters; the act was supported by Queen Anne but repealed in 1718.
The verso of this broadside is printed with the title, “The Protestant
Dissenters reasons against the Bill to prevent the Growth of Schism, &c.”This
is an uncommon item, with
only one U.S. holding
reported by ESTC, OCLC, and NUC Pre-1956.
ESTC N22343. Tipped onto a leaf of 19th-century paper;
now in a Mylar folder. In good untattered condition, with noticeable
(but not print-obscuring) stain in lower center portion.

BUDDHISM in
High Asia & China
Schott, Wilhelm. Uber den Buddhaismus in Hochasien und in China. Berlin: Verlag von Veit & Comp., 1846. Small folio (27 cm; 10.5"). 128 pp. .
$300.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Schott (1807–89) wrote extensively on Asian religions and culture. This work on Buddhism in High Asia and China is the sole book edition, although the text had first appeared in Koeniglich-Preussische Akademie der Wissenschaften (Feb., 1844).
Uncommon. OCLC locates only five copies in the U.S., of which one has been deaccessioned.
Recent boards covered with German-style brown paper specked with black; paper label on front cover. Paper a little cockled on back cover. Old shelving numbers on verso of title-page and a four-digit number inked in lower margin of leaf A1; few dog-ears and one pencilled note. (24768)
Natural Law
Schwarz, Ignaz. Institutiones juris universalis, naturæ et gentium, ad normam moralistarum
nostri temporis.... Augustae: Sumptibus Joannis
Antonii Fesenmayr p.m. haeredum bibliopolarum, typis Antonii Maximiliani Heiss,
1743. Folio (32.2 cm, 12.75"). [5]
ff., 195, [1], 204 pp.
$1850.00
Ignaz Schwarz (16901763) was a Jesuit and a professor of
humanities, philosophy, and history. In this four-part work he discusses the
philosophical foundation of natural law and its basic applications, in the process
discussing matters as diverse as the nature of moral acts; the law of the family;
slavery, employment and service; the nature of property; sovereignty; just war
and the law of war; and treaties and other elements of what is now known as
international law.
Schwarz
critiques Protestant authors, such as Grotius, Puffendorf, Heineccius, and Thomasius,
and other writers on these subjects, pointing out where they agree with and
where they differ from Catholic teaching.
He first published his Institutiones juris in 1741, and, according
to DeBacker-Sommervogel, this is the third of six editions. Present here are
parts 1 and 2 of 4, in which, however, all the matters above listed are discussed. This edition is
printed with the title-page in red and black, a woodcut headpiece and tailpieces,
and a plethora of side- and footnotes.
Provenance: Inked inscription on title-page, "Rodriguez
de Arellano."
DeBacker-Sommervogel, VII, 948. Limp vellum with remnants of ties; spine with inked title. Scattered spots of staining to spine and rear cover. Pp. 4142 of the
first series of pagination has a large chip out of the upper outer corner
with loss of page numbers but no text. Pp. 15556 has a tear in the outer
margin, not touching text. Occasional worming in the outer margins, not touching
text. Scattered age-spotting; a few occasions of light waterstaining in the
outer margins.

The Reformation Through the Reformers' Letters
Schweblin, Heinrich (comp. & ed.). Centuria epistolarum theologicarum ad Johannem Schwebelium. Ante annos LXXV. ecclesiarum illustrissimi ducatus Bipontini praesidem. [Bipontinum]: Typographia Bipontia per Casparum Wittelium, 1597. Small 8vo ( ). [8] ff., 359, [1 (blank)] pp., [31] ff. (without the final blank).
$950.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
As the son of the noted Reformation cleric Johann Schweblin and a forceful cleric in his own right, Heinrich gathered and here published the correspondence his father saved from
such luminaries as Philipp Melanchthon, Martin Bucer, Wolfgang Fabricius Capito, Caspar Hedio, Michael P. Beuther, and Nicolaus Gerbelius.
The correspondence was printed in roman type with some italic, in this Zweibrücken imprint. Heinrich's life of his father, which occupies the first 16 leaves following the main text, is entirely in italic type.
Provenance: Ownership inscription on title-page of “D. Fr. Gothold Dürr 1773.”
Rare outside of Germany: We locate only one copy in a U.S. library.
VD16 S4757. Full dark walnut modern calf old style: Spine with raised bands accented with gilt beading and blind rules, the latter extending onto covers to terminate in trefoils; title in gilt in one spine compartment and date in gilt at base of spine. Blind double fillets framing covers and with blind-tooled devices in the corners of the covers; a center panel on each cover with a cross-hatched diamond pattern in blind. 18th- century ownership note and a few other marks to title-page, with extended old note on front free endpaper opposite. Uniform age-toning, and all edges red. (25822)

Complete Manual of
Schwenckfeld's Theology
Schwenckfeld, Caspar. Confession unnd Erklaerung vom Erkanthnus Christi vnd seiner Goettlichen Herrlicheit. Das Erste [-dritt] Theil. [Ulm: Hans Varnier, 1557]. 4to (20.5 cm; 8.125") [12], CCLXXXVIII [i.e.,291], [1] ff.
$10,000.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
First complete manual of Schwenckfeld's theology, including an elaborate account of his most characteristic doctrine: The Deification of the Humanity of Christ. Technically this is the second or third edition of the Confession, but the first edition (1542) was only part 1 of three intended parts. The two editions of 1557 contain all three parts, the sole difference between them being in the forematter — this edition has 12 leaves of front matter, the other having 24.
The 1542 and 1557 editions are rare in the U.S.: There is a false report of the 1542; the Folger library alone reports ownership of the 1557 edition with 24 preliminary leaves; and we find just two libraries that report owning the edition offered here.
VD16 S4933. Recent calf old style: Round spine, raised bands defined by blind-tooled rules and fillets; blind-tooled center devices in spine compartments; blind-tooled rules from the bands extending onto covers and converging and ending with trefoils. Wax stain in lower outer corner area of leaves rr3, rr4, and ss1. A very nice copy. (25277)
An
Arctic Explorer
Scoresby-Jackson, R. E. The Life of William Scoresby.
London, Edinburgh, & New York: T. Nelson & Sons, 1861. 8vo. Frontis., engr. title-page, ix, [1
(blank)] pp., fold. map, pp. [9]–406 pp., 5 color plates.
$650.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Scoresby-Jackson (bap. 1833, d. 1867) was a physician and geographer and the
nephew of William Scoresby, the famed Arctic explorer. DNB online says of him and this work:
“He remains best-known for his life of his uncle, William Scoresby, published in 1861. It is a
sympathetic account of a man who captured the public imagination for his lonely scientific
endeavours and selfless following of his Christian vocation.”The work is illustrated with a frontispiece portrait, a folding map of the coast of
Greenland and part of the Arctic Circle, and five plates in color (notably “ice blue”) of snow
flakes, ice floes, an atmospheric phenomenon, and two views of different parts of the Greenland
coast.
Sabin 35452 & 78184. Publisher's purple textured
cloth, boards blind embossed and front one with a gilt center device; spine sunned; lettered in
gilt. Top of spine with small loss of cloth and an excellent repair; one plate with a separated
sliver of tissue-guard adhered to it. Ex–social club library: call number on endpaper, very light
rubber- and pressure-stamp on title-page, pressure-stamp on another page, light rubber stamp on
map, no other markings. A good++ copy. (26822)
Scotland.
Laws, statutes. Representation unto his Grace, John duke of Argyle, her Majesties High Commissioner, and the estates of Parliament ... an overture for an act given in by the tacks-men of the paper-manufactorie. [Edinburgh?, ca. 1705]. Folio (25.3 cm, 10"). [1] f.
$350.00

Scarce petition, written by “the Tacks-men of the Paper-Manufactorie,” arguing against a proposal to tax imported paper and foreign Bibles, Psalm books, and “Practical Pieces of Divinity.”
Click the image for an enlargement.
Not in ESTC; not found either via OCLC or NUC. Removed from a nonce volume. Reverse with early inked inscription. Tattered, with lower quarter lost, as well as several words along the chipped and repaired inner margin. An incomplete survivor, but scarce and still of interest.
“Neither
Romance Nor Pure History”
— The Pilgrims &
Their Departure from England
Sears, Edmund H. Pictures of the olden time, as shown
in the fortunes of a family of the Pilgrims. Boston: Crosby, Nichols & Co.; Cincinnati: George S.
Blanchard; London: Sampson Low, Son, & Co., 1857. 12mo (19.8 cm, 7.75"). viii, 342 pp.
$100.00
First edition: Historical novel based on the author's
genealogical researches, with chapters entitled “The Exile,” “The
Adventurer,” and “The Pilgrim.” Sears later in the same year
issued a now-rare private edition of this work which included a spurious pedigree
of Richard Sears, not present here. The
Massachusetts-born Sears was a Unitarian minister and author of the words of
the famous carol, “It Came upon the Midnight Clear.”
Click
the images for enlargements.
Wright, II, 2174; Sabin 78641. Publisher's brown cloth,
covers blind-stamped with star-shaped design, spine with gilt-stamped title
and blind-stamped decoration; binding cocked and rubbed, spine extremities
chipped. Ex–social club library: 19th-century bookplate and call number
on pastedown and fly-leaf, front free endpaper lacking, title-page pressure-stamped.
No other markings. Pages faintly age-toned, otherwise clean. (26565)
Quaker
Preacher, at Home & Abroad
[Scott, Job]. Journal
of the life, travels and gospel labours of that faithful servant and minister
of Christ, Job Scott. New York: Isaac Collins, 1797. 12mo (18.3 cm, 7.25").
xii, [2], 360 pp.
$400.00
First edition of Scott's combined travelogue and account of American
Quaker practice. Scott traveled from his home in Rhode Island to congregations
of Friends throughout the United States as they then existed, before making
an expedition to Europe to attend meetings in England, Wales, and Ireland; evocative
place names are abundant, though travel-detail is limited, his diary being mostly
divided between his own soul-searching and specific accounts of his experiences
at various meetings. Although Scott often records feeling compelled to remain
silent in these meetings, he was a notable speaker, and his writings, although
they became controversial after his death, were highly influential.
Provenance:
Front free endpaper with early inked ownership inscription by Mary and Rebecca
Bude.
ESTC W19882; Evans 32810; Sabin 78287; Howes S228. Contemporary
mottled sheep, spine with gilt-stamped leather title label; worn and abraded
especially over joints and edges, spine leather cracking. Some leaves dog-eared;
spots of foxing to first and last few leaves, with other pages mostly clean.
“Lady Fretful”?
Secker, William. A wedding-ring, fit for the finger. Laid open in a sermon, preached at a wedding in St. Edmond's. Glasgow: Pr. for the booksellers, [1850?]. 12mo. 24 pp.
$67.50

Scottish printing of a popular sermon, here with a woodcut title-page vignette of a man in clerical garb. “[No.] 63" is printed at the foot of the title. On pp. 2324, following the sermon on the Genesis text, is an account of a woman who is never satisfied and sees the worst in everything: “Lady Fretful. A Sketch from Real Life.”
NSTC 2S12043. Removed from a nonce volume. The title-page is cropped close to the border along the top edge and the spine. Very good. (16773)

Counter-Reformation Treatise
Serarius, Nicolaus. Apologiae pro discipulo et magistro, Luthero et diabolo ... Moguntiae: Balthasaris Lippii, 1605. 8vo (15.4 cm, 6.1"). [16], 231, [1] pp.
$500.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Uncommon anti-Lutheran polemic written by Serarius (1555–1609), a Jesuit professor at the universities of Würzburg and Mainz “whose wide-ranging erudition and literary productivity made him one of the most important exegetes of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries” (O'Malley). Here Serarius argues against contemporary theologian Friedrich Baldwin.
OCLC and COPAC locate only two U.S. institutional holdings and five additional copies overseas.
VD17 12:109740N; DeBacker-Sommervogel, VII, 1140. On Serarius, see: O'Malley et al., Jesuits, II, 305. Period-style calf, covers framed in double blind fillets, spine with gilt-stamped leather title-label, gilt-dotted raised bands with blind-tooling extending onto covers, blind-tooled thistle decorations in compartments. Lower (closed) edges institutionally rubber-stamped (no other markings). Pages age-toned, with offsetting and light to moderate spotting. All edges marbled. (26086)

Eyewitness Report of the
Armenian Genocide, Inscribed by the Author
Shahbaz, Yonan H. The rage of Islam: An account of the massacre of Christians by the Turks in Persia ... fourth edition. Philadelphia: The Judson Press, [1929]. 8vo (20 cm, 7.9"). Frontis., xiv, [4], 210 pp.; 1 fold. map., 16 plts.
$135.00
Fourth edition, following the first of 1918, of a harrowing description of the atrocities committed by Turks and Kurds against the Christians at Urmia in 1915. Written by a native Assyrian married to an American woman and trained in America as a Baptist minister, this account of the massacre and the subsequent involvement of Russian troops was intended to inspire “the great Christian powers” to protect Armenians and Assyrians from Muslim persecution.
The 16 plates of illustration are interesting, sometimes moving.
Click the images for enlargements.
Presentation copy: Front free endpaper inscribed “Compliments of the Author. To Dr. Franklin Feb. 19th 1930.”
Starr, Baptist Bibliography, S2241. Publisher's maroon cloth, front cover and spine with gilt-stamped title; insignificant wear to corners and spine extremities, foot of spine with small area of faint discoloration. Title-page institutionally pressure-stamped, dedication page with inked notation along inner margin and rubber-stamped numeral in lower margin. Back pastedown with traces of now-absent bookplate. Sewing starting to loosen. Pages and plates clean. (26041)
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.
Sheil, Richard Lalor. Sketches of the Irish Bar...with memoir and notes by R. Shelton Mackenzie. New York: W.J. Widdleton, 1862. 8vo. (19.2 cm, 7.5"). 2 vols. I: 388 pp. II: 380 pp.
$300.00

Early (and very uncommon) printing of these anecdotes of legal and political life in Ireland, written by an experienced lawyer and moderately successful playwright. The stories originally ran in The New Monthly magazine, and were first printed in book form in New York in 1854; they do not seem to have ever been printed collectively in Ireland. The Rt. Hon. Sheil, a prominent supporter of the Catholic emancipation movement, includes a great deal of information on political events connected to contemporary religious dissent.
Binding: Contemporary half calf with marbled paper–covered sides, spines with blind-stamped decorative devices between raised bands and with gilt-stamped leather title and volume labels. All edges marbled.
Bound as above; fore-edges of the two inside, touching boards as the volumes stand on the shelf, bumped hard at centers (one can’t quite imagine how); otherwise, only very minor wear. Front free endpaper with inked inscription dated 1865. Nice on shelf and in hand.
[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)

By a Bible Scholar & Church Historian
(Later, the Property of
a Scholar Collector)
Simon, Richard. Histoire de l'origine & du progres des revenus ecclesiastiques... par Jerome a Costa. Francfort: Chez Frederic Arnaud [& Londres: Chez Jean de Beaulieu], 1684. 12mo (15.5 cm, 6.1"). [4], 346, [10 (index)] pp.
$600.00

First edition of this pseudonymously published work on the history
of Church finances, written by a controversial French Oratorian priest much
attacked for his published arguments that Moses had not written the whole of
the Pentateuch. Simon, an accomplished Hebrew scholar, was later lauded by the
New Catholic Encyclopedia as the “father of Biblical criticism.”
Click
the interior image for an enlargement.
Provenance: Signature on title-page
of Howard Osgood, a prominent late 19th- and early 20th-century Hebrew scholar
and noted collector.
Goldsmiths'-Kress 2558; Wing (2nd ed.) S3801B. Contemporary
speckled calf, spine gilt extra with gilt-stamped leather title-label, board
edges stamped with gilt roll; corners and spine extremities worn, front joint
cracked and back joint starting, sewing holding. Front pastedown with small
French bookseller's ticket and early inked numeral. Title-page with small
early inked owner's name and with institutional pressure stamp, reverse with
pencilled numerals. Pages clean. (19511)

Around the World “Overland”? — including HAWAII?
Simpson, George, Sir. An overland journey round the world, during the years 1841 and 1842. Philadelphia: Lea & Blanchard, 1847. 8vo (21.3 cm, 8.4"). 273, [3], [17]–230, [2 (blank)] pp.
$325.00
Click the images for enlargements.
First U.S. edition, following the first London of the same year, published under the title Narrative of a Journey Round the World. Simpson, an enterprising businessman and administrator, was Governor-in-Chief of Rupert's Land for the Hudson's Bay Company (and dedicated the present work to the nine directors of that company). In a global trek that took just under 20 months, he voyaged from London to Canada and thence to California, Hawaii, Alaska, and Russia before returning to London. His careful observations include much commentary on the degree of “civilization” among various peoples and the results thereof — often not positive, especially with regards to the impact of missionaries on local culture and morality. Simpson also provides economic and trade analyses, linguistic comparisons, culinary critiques (in particular, his distaste for the garlicky food served in California), and descriptions of local flora and fauna.
Cowan & Cowan, Bibliography of the History of California, 589 (London ed. only); Forbes, Hawaiian National Bibliography, 1671; Hill, Pacific Voyages, 1572; Howgego, Encyclopedia of Exploration, II, S25; Hunnewell, Bibliography of the Hawaiian Islands, 67 (London ed.); Sabin 81344. Publisher's speckled sheep, spine with gilt-stamped leather title-label; leather rubbed and discolored but volume sound. Ex–social club library: 19th-century bookplates and old inked call numbers on endpapers (with no other markings). Endpapers and early/late leaves with waterstaining to lower inner portions; scattered small spots of staining elsewhere. (26391)
A
Catholic School
Prize Copy:
“High Sanctity
Attained in an Indian Wigwam”
Smet, Pierre-Jean de. New Indian sketches. New York:
D. & J. Sadlier & Co., [ca. 1870]. 12mo (16.4 cm, 6.45"). Frontis., [2], [2]–3, [7]–175, [1] pp.
$200.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Early edition: Life of Louise Sighouin, a Catholic convert, followed by an account
of the Cœur d'Alêne tribe, “A vocabulary of the Skalzi, or Koetenay tribe,” and a “Short Indian
catechism, in use among the Flatheads, Kalispels, Pends d'Oreilles, and other Rocky Mountain
Indians.” De Smet, a Jesuit missionary among the Native Americans of North America, was
famed as a peacemaker and intermediary between Indians and whites. He first published the New
Indian Sketches in 1863; this edition is undated but presumably appeared between the dated
printings of 1865 and 1877. The steel-engraved frontispiece depicts the baptism of a young
Indian girl in the wilderness.
Provenance:
Front pastedown with presentation bookplate of a Catholic Sunday School in
Virginia, dated 1880; front free endpaper with recipient's ownership inscription.
Sabin 82267; Pilling, Proof-sheets, 3631; Wagner-Camp 395; Howes D285.
Publisher's green cloth blind-stamped in diapered pattern containing crosses
(not in Krupp), spine with elaborate gilt-stamped title and decorations; binding cocked and
rubbed, sides with spots of discoloration. Front pastedown and free endpaper as above. Back
hinge (inside) reinforced with cloth tape. Pages age-toned, with scattered spotting.
(26581)

COMFORT in the Hospitals & on the Battlefields
Smith, Edward Parmelee. Incidents of the United States Christian Commission. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1869. 8vo (22.6 cm, 8.9"). Add. engr. t.-p., 512 pp.; 8 plts.
$175.00
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Second edition, following the first of the previous year, which had been published without the index here and under the title, Incidents among Shot and Shell: The Only Authentic Work Extant Giving the Many Tragic and Touching Incidents that Came under the Notice of the United States Christian Commission During the Long Years of the Civil War. This is a collection of affecting anecdotes compiled by the Rev. Smith, Field Secretary of the relief organization formed by the Young Men's Christian Association in response to the suffering following the First Battle of Bull Run.
The volume is illustrated with an additional engraved title-page and eight other steel-engraved plates, as well as several in-text engravings of dramatic moments in soldiers' lives.
Sabin 82457. Publisher's dark red/plum cloth, covers blind-stamped, spine with gilt-stamped title; spine sunned, corners and spine extremities moderately rubbed. Ex–social club library; front fly-leaf with inked numerals covered over with paper, rubber-stamps on frontispiece recto, title-page, and several other pages. Paper slightly embrittled; occasional short edge tears. Title-page and five plates with very faintest waterstaining in lower margins, other pages seemingly untouched. (26273)

The Church of England in
China
Smith, George. A narrative of an exploratory visit to each of the consular cities of China, and to the islands of Hong Kong and Chusan, in behalf of the Church Missionary Society, in the years 1844, 1845, 1846. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1847. 12mo (20.4 cm, 8"). xv, [1], 467, [1] pp.; 1 fold. map., 12 plts. (incl. in pagination).
$975.00
Click the images for enlargements.
First U.S. edition of this travelogue, printed in the same year as the London first and
illustrated with 12 wood-engraved plates (some signed by Edward Bookhout) plus an oversized, folding map. Smith (1815–71) was the first Anglican bishop of Victoria, Hong Kong; along with his assessment of Anglican and other missions in China, his account includes observations of daily life as well as comments on infanticide, opium addiction and the opium trade, and the difficulties of evangelizing Chinese women.
Cordier, Bibliotheca Sinica, 2115. Not in Howgego, Encyclopedia of Exploration. Publisher's brown cloth, covers framed in blind, front cover with gilt-stamped ship vignette, spine with gilt-stamped title and arabesque decorations; binding slightly cocked and rubbed, spine sunned and covers with small spots of discoloration. Pencilled ownership inscription to front free endpaper and title-page; pencilled numerals on back pastedown. Foxing. (27047)

Sermons
from
“Silver-Tongued
Smith”
Smith, Henry. The sermons of Master Henry Smith, gathered into one volume. Printed according to his corrected copies in his life time. [& others by the same author, as called for, as below]. London: Pr. by Thomas Harper, by the assignes of Ioan Man, and Benjamin Fisher, 1637. 4to (18.3 cm, 7.2"). 600 (593–600 bound in later in volume). [with, as called for, the same author's] God's arrow against atheists. London: Pr. by J.H. for Edward Brewster & Robert Bird, 1637. [4], 96 (i.e., 98) pp. [with] Three sermons made by Mr. Henry Smith. London: John Smethwick, 1637. 56 pp. [and with] Twelve
sermons, preached by Mr. Henry Smith. With prayers, both for the morning and evening thereunto adjoyned. London: Pr. by John Haviland for George Edwards, 1637. [254] pp.
$750.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Collection of sermons, originally published in 1591, by a prominent Church of England clergyman with Puritan inclinations. Smith (ca.1560–91) was renowned for his oratorical skills and persuasive preaching. His sermons were so popular that when he first delivered them, eager listeners allegedly stood in the alleys surrounding his overcrowded church; subsequent print versions were equally popular, and went through numerous editions, most containing the parts found here (and called for in some editions' tables of contents). ESTC notes that because “different publishers held the copyright of each book, editions were not often printed simultaneously. Therefore, each book is treated as a separate entity”; the DNB adds that “The bibliography of Smith's works is bewildering.”
For brief stretches of text in the first part of the present example, the typesetter appears to have run out of a few letters, necessitating a number of corrections which have been made in an early inked hand.
ESTC S103687; STC (rev.), 22734. ESTC S106857; STC (rev.) 22676. ESTC S104574; STC (rev.) 22747. ESTC S125529; STC (rev.) 22783. On Smith, see: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Later half black sheep in imitation of morocco with red marbled paper–covered boards; moderately rubbed. Ex-library: spine with faded traces of call number and label, front pastedown with institutional bookplate, rubber-stamp on bottom edges of closed book. Pp. 593–757 partially and very neatly paginated in red pen as in continuation of the first portion of the volume; some inked letter corrections as above. Pages age-toned, with intermittent moderate to dark spotting; final portion of volume with a few leaves waterstained. Shouldernotes occasionally shaved and page edges with occasional short tears. First two leaves with outer edges ragged; several with lower margins or outer corners repaired, in one case with loss of about ten words. On the whole, a volume that shows its age but is not giving in to it. (24098)

Aiding Autodidacts
Smith, John. A Hebrew grammar, without points: designed to facilitate the study of the
scriptures of the Old Testament, in the original.... Boston: Pr. by David Carlisle, for John
West, 1803. 8vo. 56 pp.
$295.00

First edition of Smith's grammar, which was "particularly adapted to the use of those
who may not have instructors."
Uncommon. The author taught at Dartmouth.
Rosenbach, Jewish, 131; Shaw & Shoemaker 5067. Not in Singerman Judaica Americana. Contemporary quarter sheep with paper-covered paste boards; heavily worn; joints open and covers almost detached. Early ownership signatures on front and rear pastedowns. Signature torn from upper outer corner of title-page, taking upper parts of three letters. Small Library of Congress duplicate release stamp on verso of title-page.
For more AMERICAN HEBREW
GRAMMARS, click here.
Society
of Friends. To the yearly meeting. Extracts taken from the minnets of our quarterly meeting held at the Oblong by adjournments from ye 1st of the 5 month to 3ed of the same inclusive. 1779. New York: Pr. by Melbert B. Cary,
Jr. at the Sign of the Woolly Whale, 1936. 8vo (20.2 cm, 7.9"). [12] pp.
$20.00
Woolly Whale printing of the minutes from a Dutchess County, New York Quaker meeting, in which the construction of the Millbrook meeting house is discussed.
Long, breathless, run-on sentences make the expected Quaker standards of behavior, in this place and time, quite clear.
Sewn in publisher’s color-flecked paper wrappers. A crisp, clean copy.
The
Woman
Clothed with
the
Sun
The
Prophetess of Exeter
[And
a Book with a GREAT Title!]
Southcott, Joanna;
Underwood, Ann. The second book of wonders, more marvellous than the
first. London: Marchant & Galabin, 1813. 8vo (21 cm, 8.25"). 116 pp.
$750.00
First edition. Southcott, a controversial religious phenomenon in her time — she prophesied in rhyme, believed she was the woman spoken of in Revelation 12:1-6, founded the Southcottian sect, and left behind her a sealed box still to this day the subject of intense speculation — speaks here about heavenly communications she received regarding her marriage, accusations made against her, and her family history. Three other books of wonders followed, printed from 1813 through 1814.
Click the image for an enlargement.
NSTC U33; Wright, Joanna Southcott Collection, 58(1). Later blue paper wrappers. Title-page with small chip to lower margin. Last few leaves darkened, with small burn hole in upper outer portion affecting a few letters. Now housed in a maroon cloth clamshell case with gilt-stamped ivory leather title-label. (25062)
Southey,
Robert. Vindiciæ ecclesiæ anglicanæ. Letters to Charles
Butler, Esq. comprising essays on the Romish religion and vindicating the Book
of the Church. London: John Murray, 1826. 8vo (22.5 cm, 8.8"). xxvi, 526, [2]
pp.
$245.00
Sole edition of this exercise in anti-Catholica, targeting one of the best-known and most active participants in the Catholic Emancipation movement. Southey, then poet laureate, engendered much debate over his Book of the Church, and in the present volume answers Butler’s criticism of that work by depicting notable ecclesiastical events in an unflattering light.
19th-century half tan calf with marbled paper sides, spine with gilt-ruled raised bands, gilt-stamped floral decorations in compartments, and gilt-stamped leather title label; leather rubbed and chipping over joints and extremities, paper chipping over board edges, spine somewhat dulled. Hinges slightly tender, binding overall still sturdy. A few stray pencil marks. All page edges marbled—rather handsome!
Spain. Sovereigns, 1621–1665 (Philip IV). Prematica en que su magestad manda se executen las penas en ella contenidas, contra los que juraren, declarando, que solo queden permitidos los juramentos que se hazen judicialmente, ò para valor de algun contrato; y que en los Consejos de Inquisicion, Ordenes, y otras comunidades de estatuto, a la pregunta de las costumbres se añada la denotadeste vicio. Madrid: Pedro Tazo, 1639. Folio (28.2 cm, 11.1"). A6; 6 ff.
$750.00
Proclamation regarding swearing and blasphemy, with the woodcut arms of Spain on the title-page. Swearing using the Lord’s name is only allowed for legal matters, including appearances in court or before the Inquisition, and the making of contracts. Scarce.
Click the image for an enlargement.
Not in Palau. Removed from a nonce volume. Title-page with shadow of pencilled numeral and faintly inked earlier numeral in upper margin. Pages creased but clean.

The Wickedness of Government
Spittlehouse, John. Certaine queries propounded to the most serious consideration of those persons now in povver. London: Livewell Chapman, 1654. 4to (18 cm, 7.1"). [2], 14 pp.
$950.00
Sole edition. John Spittlehouse was a Fifth Monarchist and determined controversialist who supported Cromwell until concluding that Cromwell was not, in fact, the new Moses. Here the author uses a great many capital letters and Biblical quotations to argue in favor of the dissolution of Parliament and against maintaining a standing army, since the army had taken to apostasy and hypocrisy. (Spittlehouse also wrote The Army Vindicated, in their Late Dissolution of the Parliament; his postscript here notes that his position on the army had changed since the publication of that pamphlet.)
Click the image for an enlargement.
ESTC and OCLC locate only six U.S. institutional holdings of this item.
ESTC R203631; Wing (rev. ed.) S5005. On Spittlehouse, see: Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online. Later plain paper wrappers, spine reinforced with cloth tape. Title-page, first text page, and two other pages institutionally pressure-stamped; first text page with inked annotation in inner margin and numeral in lower margin. Light offsetting and spotting; first and last pages dust-soiled. (25970)
Sprat, Thomas. The history of the Royal-Society of London, for the improving of natural knowledge.... The second edition corrected. London: Pr. for Robert Scot & others, 1702. 4to. (21 cm, 8.25"). [8] ff., 438 pp.; 2 foldout plts.
$675.00
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Thomas Sprat (1635–1713) was bishop of Rochester, dean of Westminster, and a leading Tory and High-Churchman. He was also a wit and man of letters with an interest in natural science, and (in addition to being a member himself) was also friends with many of the founding members of the Royal Society, including Christopher Wren and Ralph Bathurst. He was thus well-placed to write the early history of the oldest scientific society in the British Isles and one of the oldest in Europe—therein especially defending the Society against the attacks of those philosophers who questioned the value of experimental science.
First published in 1667 , this work is here in the second of numerous editions. It includes accounts by members of their scientific work: The two plates illustrate meteorological instruments and the principles of artillery recoil.
ESTC T131282. On the Royal Society, see: Encyclopædia Britannica, 11th ed., XXIII, 791–93. On Sprat, see: The Dictionary of National Biography, LIII, 419–24. Recent quarter red morocco over marbled paper. Beading on spine bands and gilt quatrefoils in compartments; gilt-lettered title, author, and date. A foliate gilt roll at edge of leather on covers. Leaves sometime exposed to moisture and cockled, with shallow chipping and light to moderate soiling. Perforation-stamp on title-page, and rubber-stamps, including one on title-page, of a now-defunct library. All edges speckled red.

How Do I
KNOW I Am Saved?
Spring, Gardiner. Essays on the distinguishing traits of Christian character. New York: Dodge & Sayre (pr. by J. Seymour), 1813. 8vo (20.8 cm, 8.2"). 230 pp.
$100.00
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First edition: Meditation on the Christian virtues and exhortation to true piety rather than hypocritical shows of faith. The Rev. Spring (1785–1873) was for 63 years the pastor of the Brick Church of New York City, but is now best remembered as the originator of the Gardiner Spring Resolutions of 1861, which required Presbyterians to affirm their allegiance to the United States government — a controversial position indeed at the start of the Civil War.
Shaw & Shoemaker 29843. Contemporary mottled sheep, rubbed; spine with lighter compartment where a label has been lost and with partially inked-over shelving number. Lower (closed) edges, front pastedown, and final text page institutionally rubber-stamped. Front pastedown and free endpaper with pencilled inscriptions; front free endpaper with inked gift inscription dated 1863; back pastedown with bookseller's small ticket. Foxed and spotted; a few corners dog-eared and one section with corners bumped. (25887)

The Holy Roman Empire, The Antichrist, The Catholic Church, Luther
Staphylus, Friedrich. Vom letsten und grossen Abfall, so vor der zukunfft des Antichristi geschehen soll. Ingolstatt: Durch Alexander und Samuel Weissenborn, 1565. 4to (20.5 cm; 8"). [8], 175, [1(blank)] ff.
$1250.00
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Staphylus (1513–64) was born only four years before the 95 theses were nailed to the door of the castle church in Wittenberg. As a matter of record he was a protégé of Melanchthon's, as a young scholar — but in 1552 he (re?)converted to Catholicism and became a notable figure not in the Protestant Reformation but in the Catholic one. Perhaps attempting to resolve the religious conflicts in his own life, he strove in print to reunite the battling factions of contemporary German Christianity, basing his arguments for Catholic authority in a typically Protestant reverence for the Bible.
In this work Staphylus essays the relationship between the Holy Roman empire and the Catholic Church, and then turns his attention to the Antichrist and Luther. The two sections are captioned: “Des Hailigen Römischen Reichs vnd Catholischen Glaubens Grund, auff, vnd abnemen -- Dz das Luthertumb der gross Abfal, vnnd des Antichrists Vortrab sey.”
Published posthumously and edited by Daniel Prockel, the work is printed chiefly in fraktur type but with some roman and italic, with side- and shouldernotes. The title-page is in red and black.
Evidence of readership: Marginalia in German or Latin in different hands from different centuries (16th & early 18th) variously on fols. 8r, 12v, 14r, 17r, 22v, 28r, 42r, 48r, 52r–v, 73r.
VD16 S8604. Full modern calf old style: Spine with raised bands, accented with gilt rule on bands and blind rules above and below the bands, rules extending on to boards forming a V and ending with trefoils and with blind chain fillet beyond. Date in gilt at base of spine. Browning, light waterstaining to some margins, the odd spot; solid. (25859)

Silesian
Historical
Anthology
Stenzel, Gustav Adolf Harald. Scriptores rerum Silesiacarum
oder Sammlung schlesischer Geschichtschreiber, namens der schlesischen gesellschaft für
vaterländische cultur. Breslau: Josef Max & Komp., 1835–47. 4to (25.7 cm, 9.9"). 3 vols. I: xx,
(iii)–xvi, 538 pp. II: xv, [1], 505, [1] pp. III: xii, 435, [1] pp.
$1000.00
Click
the interior images for enlargements.
Uncommon first edition: The first three volumes of this important
collection of documents pertaining to the history of Silesia. Stenzel (1792–1854),
a German historian, was for some years the archivist of the Silesian provincial
archives and made excellent use of his position; this work offers a great deal
of seldom-seen and valuable primary source material, including accounts of St.
Hedwig, Duchess of Silesia, and Dorothea Beier, the 15th-century mystic, along
with the Chronica Polonorum and Samuel Benjamin Klose's Darstellung
der inneren Verhältnisse der Stadt Breslau vom Jahre 1458 bis zum Jahre
1526.
Additional volumes continued to be published for many years, under the stewardship
of other editors; Stenzel was responsible for I through V.
Recent black-flecked paper–covered boards, spines with
printed paper title and volume labels. Some upper edges in vol. I and lower
corners in vol. II bumped; all edges stained red except for vol. III, which
has speckled edges. Vol. III (only) with light offsetting/show-through from
print; in fact a clean, nice set. (25346)

Shaker Bible — “Testimonies” as Part Two
Stewart, Philemon. A holy, sacred, and divine roll and book; from the Lord God of Heaven, to the inhabitants of Earth: revealed in the United Society at New Lebanon, County of Columbia, State of New-York, United States of America. Canterbury, N.H.: United Society, 1843. 8vo. vii, 222, [3] pp., [2] ff., 223–403, [3] pp.
$675.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
First edition of this famous book of Shaker revelations, printed and bound by a Shaker institution. As was the case with the Book of Mormon, the Sacred Roll and Book was an attempt to add to the scriptural canon but met much less success. The Shaker Bible begins with a proclamation signed in type by Philemon Stewart, a member of the New Lebanon village, attesting that the text was dictated to him by a “Holy Angel” on 4 May 1842. Interestingly, the angel's introduction contains specific instructions regarding reprinting and dissemination of the book — ministers were “required” to keep a copy in their pulpits and Boards of Foreign Missions were to print translated copies “sufficient to circulate into all foreign nations.”
The second part (pp. 267–403), which contains its own title-page, is a collection of testimonies by “inspired writers,” or Shakers professing their faith in the book's divine source.
“Read and understand all ye in mortal clay,” exhorts the title-page — “Received by the church of this communion, and published in union with the same.”
Provenance: In the library of Colgate Rochester Divinity School; inscription on front free endpaper “To be returned to Amelia G. Mace, Office.”
Sabin 32664, 79708; and 90701.5 for revised collation. Contemporary sheep, recently rebacked in plain calf with gilt-ruled bands and gilt-stamped green leather title-label. Ex-library copy, with rubber-stamp on all paper edges and p. [1]; rubber-stamped five-digit number at base of p. [iii]; inscription on front free endpaper in blue ink (see above); and faint traces of a librarian's penciling at inner margin of p. [iii] and verso of title-page. Small bookseller's ticket at lower outer corner of rear pastedown. Some foxing, especially to endpapers; offsetting from leather affecting title-page and following page, at edges; very good condition. (24495)

Christ's Suffering — Siding with Grotius — Advertisements Present
Stillingfleet, Edward. Six sermons: With a discourse annexed, concerning the true reason of the sufferings of Christ. Wherein Crellius his answer to Grotius is considered. London: Pr. by R. White for Henry Mortlock, 1669. 8vo (18.6 cm, 7.4"). [26], 571, [3] pp.
$400.00
First edition: Sermons by the Dean of St. Paul's, later Bishop of Worcester, along with his detailed response to Crellius's Ad librum Hugonis Grotii quem de satisfactione Christi. Two of the sermons are here reprinted, as noted in the preface; they and “A discourse concerning the true reason of the sufferings of Christ” have separate title-pages.
Click the images for enlargements.
This copy includes the preliminary imprimatur and final advertisement leaf.
ESTC R19950; Wing (rev. ed.) S5669. Contemporary speckled calf, covers with modest blind tooling and spine with gilt-accented raised bands, board edges blind-tooled; binding rubbed and stained, front cover with abrasions, spine with area of discoloration from now-absent shelving label and with leather lost at head. Hinges (inside) cracked, sewing holding. Lower (closed) edges, front pastedown, and lower margin of title-page institutionally rubber-stamped. One leaf with small hole affecting seven letters; two pages with pencilled marginalia and a few with pencilled marks of emphasis. Pages age-toned with occasional light spotting only. (25897)
Stock, Christian. Clavis lingvae sanctae Veteris Testamenti...cvi accedit breve dictionarium Chaldeo-Rabbinicum. Editio quinta.... Ienae: Apud Ioh. Felicem Bielckium, 1744. 8vo (22 cm, 8.625"). Frontis., [3] ff., 1198 pp., [25] ff., 133, [1 (blank)] pp., [1 (blank)] f.
$300.00
Christian Stock (1672–1733) was a Professor at Jena who edited his own edition of the New Testament and was the author of a popular Greek–Latin lexicon of the New Testament, a homiletical lexicon, and this Hebrew lexicon of the Old Testament. It is printed in Hebrew, Arabic, Greek, roman, and italic types, with an engraved portrait of the author as frontispiece. The 25 unnumbered leaves following p. 1198 are an index of the Latin definitions used, and a short “Chaldean” (i.e., Aramaic) dictionary, for those parts of the Old Testament written in that language, is appended at the end.
Contemporary calf, spine gilt and with red leather label. Leather dry and flaking, with loss over corners, joints open but sewing holding, chipping at head and foot of spine, and crack down center of spine: This volume could split. Ownership inscriptions in ink on front pastedown and reverse of frontispiece. Browning from turn-ins onto endpapers and fly-leaves; light to moderate foxing throughout. All edges speckled red.
485
Stunning Views
of
England,
Scotland,
& Wales
EACH
IMAGE Hand-Captioned
Storer, James Sargant. Antiquarian and topographical cabinet, containing a series of elegant views of the most interesting objects of curiosity in Great Britain. London: W. Clarke, J. Carpenter, & H.D. Symonds, 1807–11. 8vo. 10 vols. I: [approx. 112] pp.; 56 plts. II: pp.; 49 plts. III: [approx. 110] pp.; 55 plts. IV: [approx. 92] pp.; 46 plts. V: [approx. 86] pp.; 43 plts. VI: [approx. 106] pp.; 53 plts. VII: [approx. 98] pp.; 49 plts. VIII: [approx. 86] pp.; 43 plts. IX: [approx. 110] pp.; 55 plts. X: [approx. 72], [16 (index)] pp.; 36 plts. (15 plts. lacking of 500).
$2250.00
Click the images for enlargements.
Deluxe printing of the first edition, here in an impressive large-paper set illustrated with 485 copper-engraved plates. The engraved images designed for the duodecimo regular edition are here, in this octavo printing, mounted within printed borders with
hand-inked calligraphic captions. Those images depict such scenic high spots as Dunstaple Priory in Bedfordshire, Roman remains in Brecknockshire, the “great oak” at Silton, a Crusader monument in Winchester Cathedral, Tintern Abbey (of course), and many, many churches and castles; they were engraved by J. Greig, W. Angus, W. & G. Cooke, and J. Storer after drawings by various hands.
Each plate is accompanied by a letterpress description, generally about two pages long.
Binding: Contemporary green morocco, darkened to black; covers framed in gilt with gilt-stamped corner fleurons, spines with gilt-stamped title, board edges with gilt-stamped roll. All edges gilt.
NSTC S4069; Brunet, I, 319, Graesse 503. Bound as above with insignificant shelf wear only, now refurbished and a bit of scuffing; 15 plates lacking of 500. Most plates clean, some foxed (a few heavily); some pages with light offsetting from plates. One page with pencilled annotation detailing an 1823 update in a site's ownership.
A luxurious, in fact in its way spectacular, production. (22855)

Suicer on the
Greek Patristic Sacraments
Suicer, Johann Kaspar. Sacrarum observationum liber singularis: Quo veterum ritus circa poenitentium [sophronismon] paulò accuratius expenduntur; varia incarnationis, circumcisionis, paschatis, baptismi & S. Coenae nomina explicantur.... Tiguri: Impensis Michaelis Schaufelbergeri, 1665. 4to (19.7 cm, 7.8"). [16], 397, [1] pp.
$675.00
First edition of this significant Protestant treatise on baptism, circumcision, and other sacraments as described in the writings of the Greek Fathers. Suicer, a.k.a. Suicerus or Schweitzer (1620–84), was a Swiss Reformed theologian best known for his authoritative Thesaurus Ecclesiasticus. Although that work and Suicer's Symbolum niceno-constantinopolitanum expositum et ex antiquitate ecclesiastica illustratum both wound up on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, the present work did not.
The text here is in Latin with extensive quotations and citations in Greek, printed shouldernotes, and
a 32-page “Supplementum linguae Graecae.” The “Specimen Lexici Hesychiani” is also appended, followed by separate indices for Greek and Latin.
Uncommon: OCLC locates only six U.S. institutional holdings, one of which has since been deaccessioned, and the present locations are not (all) as might be expected.
VD17 12:121802D. Contemporary half red sheep in imitation of morocco with marbled paper–covered sides, rubbed; spine with gilt-stamped author/title and gilt-dotted raised bands, faintly sunned with square of ink now obscuring a shelving number. Front pastedown with institutional bookplates, title-page and first text page pressure-stamped, all edges (closed) rubber-stamped, back pastedown rubber-stamped. A few instances of spotting, pages otherwise almost entirely clean. A good sound copy of this book. (25837)

Fred's Book — Scarce!
Sunbeam, Susie [pseud. of Mrs. Henry S. Mackarness]. The picture alphabet, with stories. Boston: Locke & Bubier, [1856]. 32mo. [2 (blank)], 96, 96, [4 (blank)] pp.; illus.
$100.00
Click the images for enlargements.
First U.S. edition of this Illustrated children's book, the first part being an alphabet book, with stories. The second part is a collection of prayers and didactic verse entitled, “Little Poems for Little Readers.” The charming engraved initials run A to Z, and the full-page engravings are included in the pagination. Spine title: “Learning with Pleasure.”
Binding: Publisher's terra cotta colored cloth, stamped in black on front cover, spine stamped with gilt lettering and decorations. Center of front cover bears a full-color paper on-lay picturing a dancing boy (possibly, Irish?) playing an accordion.
Provenance: In ink, on fly-leaf, “Fred from Aunty Bertha.” In pencil, “Frederic Wade Hitching, father of Elizabeth.”
Scarce, OCLC listing only one copy with this imprint.
Binding slightly cocked/loose, stained, lightly rubbed over joints, and with cloth tearing a bit at head and foot of spine; paper cover onlay with one corner chipped. Lacks front free endpaper. Presentation inscription and note as above. Good+. (7481)

Countering Marprelate
Sutcliffe, Matthew. A treatise of ecclesiasticall discipline: Wherein that confused forme of government, which certeine under false pretence, and title of Reformation, and true discipline, do strive to bring into the Church of England, is examined and confuted. London: [Pr. by Eliot’s Court Press for] George Bishop, 1591. 4to. [10], 166 pp.
$2250.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
“Newly corrected and amended” second edition of this polemic by the dean of Exeter, following a first of earlier the same year but with a 1590 date on the title-page — one suspects there might have been a print-shop “story,” there. The running title reads “The false semblant of counterfeit discipline detected.”
This is one of Sutcliffe's first two publications and the DNB (on-line) writes of them: “[W]ritten under the patronage of the earl of Bath in 1591, [they] treat of ecclesiastical discipline in the wake of the Marprelate controversy, and attack those who would intrude novelty into church polity.”
Uncommon. ESTC locates only five U.S. copies.
ESTC S117981; STC (2nd ed.) 23472. Recent full calf in the 17th-century English style, spine and covers gilt extra. Title-page and one other page with perforation-stamps; first text page with stamped numerals in lower margin. First few pages with early pencilled underlining and marks of emphasis; later pages with a few instances of early inked underlining and marginalia. Upper margins shaved throughout, affecting uppermost edge of title letters, many running titles, and page numbers; clean, with only intermittent light foxing. (19587)
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