ARNOLD (Richard): [CHRONICLE]-continued. BLACK LETTER. Double columns. Small folio. Full brown morocco, tooled in blind and gilt, g. e. by Ramage. [Southwark, P. Treveris, 1521.] £36 This, the second edition of "Arnold's Chronicle," continues the list of Sheriffs, etc., down to 12 Henry VIII. (1521), while the first edition only goes as far as 18 Henry VII. Apparently it is executed with English types and there is little doubt that it came from the press of Peter Treveris, the first printer to set up a press in Southwark. It also includes the ballad of "The Nut-brown Maid," altered materially from that appearing in the first edition of 1503. The last leaf facsimiled from the first edition. 52 ASCHAM (Roger). THE SCHOLEMASTER; or plaine and perfite way of teaching children, to understand, write, and speake, the Latin tong. 53 London, Printed by John Daye, 1571. A REPORT AND DISCOURSE, written by Roger Ascham, of the affaires and state of Germany and the Emperour Charles, his court, duryng certaine yeares while the sayd Roger was there. BLACK LETTER. London, Printed by John Daye, N.D. Small 4to. The two works bound together, original calf. £99s TOXOPHILUS, The Schoole, or partitions of Shooting contayned in two bookes, Written by Roger Ascham And now newly perused. Pleasaunt for all Gentlemen and Yomen of England for their pastime to reade, and profitable for their use to follow both in Warre and peace. BLACK LETTER. Woodcut border to title. Small 4to. Newly bound in full calf gilt, g. e. £18 18s Cited by Douce in his "Illustrations" of King Lear, and by Wright in his editions of "As You Like It" and "King Lear." Consult, too, Drake's "Shakespeare and his Times," Vol. II., p. 181. A portion is reprinted in Capell's "School of Shakespeare." Capell's Catalogue of Shakespeariana," No. 15. 54 ASHMOLE (E.). THE INSTITUTION, LAWS AND Ceremonies of THE MOST Noble Order of THE GARTER. 55 A work furnished with variety of matter relating to Honour and Noblesse. With portrait, double-paged plates, and Coats of Arms. Fine copy bound by Clarke & Bedford in full dark blue morocco extra, full gilt back, g. e. MEMOIRS OF THE LIFE OF THAT LEARNED ANTIQUARY, ELIAS ASHMOLE, Esq.; Drawn up by himself by way of Diary. With an Appendix of original Letters. Publish'd by Charles Burman, Esq. FIRST EDITION. Small 8vo. Original calf. London, Printed for J. Roberts, 1717. Elias Ashmole has been described as "the greatest virtuoso and curioso that ever was known or read of in England before his time." His memoirs are a quaint and curious record, narrating matters of great personal importance to him in the same dry style as the most trivial particulars of his numerous ailments: how he cured himself of an ague by hanging three spiders about his neck, and how on the ever-memorable 14 Feb. 1677 "I took cold in my right ear." 56 ASTELL (Mary). AN ESSAY IN DEFENCE OF The Female Sex. In a Letter to a Lady: Written by a Lady. With engraved frontispiece of THE COMPLEAT BEAU. London, Printed for A. Roper and E. Wilkinson, 1696. On page 47 we read: 66 £6 6s English Books the best helps to Conversation," and on page 48 occurs the following Shakespearean reference: "Where is Love, Honour and Bravery more lively represented than in our Tragedies, who has given us nobler, or juster Pictures of Nature than Mr. Shakespeare?" 57 ASTROLOGY, ASTRONOMY, ALCHEMY, Etc. BION (Nicolas). THE CONSTRUCTION AND PRINCIPAL USES OF MATHE- With 30 large copper-plate engravings. Folio. Contemporary calf gilt. London, 1758. £1 IOS Copy formerly in the possession of Sir George Shuckburgh, the celebrated BISHOP (John). THE MARROW OF ASTROLOGY. Where- in is contained the Natures of the Sines and Planets, etc. To which is prefix'd a Preface in Commendation of the Author and F. (J., M.D.). A NEW LIGHT OF ALCHYMIE: Taken out of the fountaine of Nature, and Manuall Experience: To which is added a Treatise of Sulphur: Written by Micheel Sandivogius: i.e., Anagrammatically, Divi Leschi Genus Amo. Also Nine Books of the Nature of Things, written by Paracelsus. Also a Chymicall Dictionary explaining hard places and words met withall in the writings of Paracelsus, and other obscure ASTROLOGY, ASTRONOMY, ALCHEMY, Etc.-continued. 60 61 62 FERGUSON (James). ASTRONOMY EXPLAINED UPON SIR ISAAC NEWTON'S PRINCIPLES, and made easy to those who have not Studied Mathematics. With 13 engraved folding plates, illustrating astronomical instruments and their use, and astronomical charts, etc. 4to. Contemporary calf. London, 1757. £225 An interesting copy, having formerly belonged to Sir George Shuckburgh, the celebrated Mathematician, with his book-plate and a number of leaves containing his manuscript notes, and Astronomical diagrams (executed when he was a boy of fourteen, at Rugby), some of which are signed and dated. PRESENTATION COPY. GADBURY (John, Student in Physick and Astrology). Small 4to. Bound by Riviere in full mottled calf gilt, g. e. £8 8s Presentation Copy from the Author to John Gibbon, Blue-Mantel at Arms, with inscription by Gadbury on fly-leaf, MS. nativity by him of Gibbon, and numerous Notes, and further a long and most interesting Autograph letter of Gadbury's on Astrological Subjects. HEYDON (Sir Christopher). A DEFENCE OF JUDICIALL Thick small 4to. Original vellum. £335 ASTROLOGY, ASTRONOMY, ALCHEMY, Etc.-continued. 63 64 65 SHUCKBURGH (Sir George). AN ACCOUNT OF THE EQUATORIAL INSTRUMENT. With six folding plates of the instrument and its mechanism, and various tables. 4to. Contemporary russia gilt. (London, 1793.) I IS This instrument was constructed by Jesse Ramsden, and was the largest Equatorial Instrument in existence. STREETE (Thomas). A NEW THEORIE OF THE COELESTIAL MOTIONS. Composed according to the Best Observations and most National Grounds of Art, etc. Small 4to. Old brown morocco. Printed for L. Lloyed at the Castle in Cornhill, 1661. £4 4s This book belonged to John Flamstead, the first Astronomer Royal. It has his signature on title and MS. notes by him on fly-leaves. It was used by Flamstead when 19 years old to calculate eclipses and the planet's places. ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPT. STUKELEY (William). HISTORIA CELESTIS; or, The History of the Heavens, being an explication of the Asterisms of the Celestial Sphere, whence the origin of Idolatry, and first deviation from the Patriarchal, and true Religion. The original manuscript, extending to 130 pp. Illustrated with 24 full-page coloured drawings of the various constellations, by the same hand; and two engraved plates of the heavens, inserted. 4to. Original calf, with Arms on sides. 1742. Stukeley, in an autobiography written (in the third person) for Masters's "History of Bennet College," says of himself: "He has traced the origin of Astronomy from the first ages of the world." Warburton, Bishop of Gloucester, one of Stukeley's oldest acquaintances, describes him as a learned and honest man, but a strange compound of simplicity, drollery, absurdity, ingenuity, superstition, and antiquarianism." |