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The Book-Hunter in London - Historical and Other Studies of Collectors and Collecting
by William Roberts
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Without approaching either in size or interest to that of Mr. Huth, the choice collection of books formed by Mr. Henry Hucks Gibbs, and lodged at his town-house at St. Dunstan's, Regent's Park, is full of attraction to the student of English literature. Early in the present century St. Dunstan's was inhabited by the Lord Steyne of Thackeray's 'Vanity Fair,' and it was here that the orgies took place which resulted in the sensational trial of Nicholas Suisse, the confidant of Lord Hertford. The library at St. Dunstan's is a lofty, well-lighted room of about 28 feet by 20 feet, and the bookcases are made of Thuya wood from Australia, a wood which is exceedingly beautiful when polished. Mr. Gibbs's first book of note was purchased at Bright's sale in 1845, and was St. Augustine's 'De Arte Predicandi,' a volume of twenty-two leaves, and of well-known interest to students of early typography. Of Bibles there are over fifty examples, including Coverdale's, 1535, Matthew's, 1537, Cromwell's, 1539, a very large copy, and Cranmer's, 1540. The fine series of Prayer-Books comprises forty-seven in English, from the time of Edward VI. (1549) to that of Queen Victoria, whilst thirty-five others are in foreign languages. There are nine Primers from the time of Henry VIII. to Elizabeth; and there are no fewer than thirty-one editions of the New Testament. Examples of some of the choicest known Books of Hours and Missals are also in this collection, whilst among the six editions of the 'Imitatio Christi' there is a sixteenth-century manuscript on two hundred and forty-seven folios of paper, written by Francis Montpoudie de Weert, for the use of Bruynix, Priest, Dean of Christianity. Among the incunabula there is a very large copy of the 'Chronicon Nurembergense,' 1495, and two Caxtons: first, the 'Polychronicon' of Ralph Higden, 1482; and, secondly, the 'Golden Legend,' 1483, which latter was successively in the Towneley and the Glendening collections. The other more notable articles include fine copies of the four Folio Shakespeares, first editions of Milton's 'Comus,' 'Lycidas,' 'Eikonoklastes,' 'Paradise Lost,' and 'Paradise Regained,' several Spensers, and very complete sets of the privately-printed books edited by the Rev. A. B. Grosart, Halliwell-Phillipps, H. Huth, E. Arber, and E. W. Ashbee. A very interesting catalogue raisonne of Mr. Gibbs's choice library has been printed, to which the reader is referred for further particulars.



Just as the minds of no two men run in precisely similar grooves, so no two libraries are found to be identical. Many bear a very striking resemblance to one another, but in more than one respect they will be found to differ. The splendid library formed by Mr. R. Copley Christie, the president or past-president of quite a number of learned societies, is altogether unique, so far as this country is concerned, and his library in a garden—truly the summum bonum of human desires!—at Ribsden, near Bagshot, is certainly one of the most remarkable which it has been our privilege to examine. Mr. Christie has not endeavoured to collect everything, but he has no rival in the specialities to which he has devoted his particular attention. He is the author of the only complete monograph on Etienne Dolet, which has been translated into French, and of which M. Goblet, when Minister of Public Instruction, caused 250 copies to be purchased for distribution among the public libraries of France. Of the eighty-four books (many of which are now lost) printed by Dolet, there are three collections worthy of the name, and the relative value of these will be seen when we state that Mr. Christie possesses copies of forty-four, the Bibliotheque Nationale thirty, and the British Museum twenty-five. Mr. Christie's collection of the editions of Horace is probably the finest in existence outside one or two public libraries; he has about 800 volumes, and among these are translations into nearly every European language. He has upwards of 300 Aldines, nearly forty of which are editiones principes. The works of the early French printers generally are objects of special interest; he has, for example, about 400 volumes printed by Sebastian Gryphius, at Lyons, from 1528 to 1556. Mr. Christie's library is also very rich in works of or relating to Pomponatius, Hortensio Landi, Postel, Ramus, J. Sturm, Scioppius, Giulio Camillo, and particularly Giordano Bruno.

A considerable number of the members of the Roxburghe Club come in the category of book-lovers rather than book-collectors. The Earl of Rosebery is understood to possess many valuable books and manuscripts relating to Scottish literature, particularly in reference to Robert Burns; but beyond this he has no fixed rule regarding additions to his library, 'except his course of reading for the moment.' The father of the present Lord Zouche formed a small but valuable library, which is now at Parham Park, Steyning, Sussex; it consists of some rare Syriac, Greek, Coptic, Bulgarian, and other manuscripts, of a Biblical nature, some of which are now on loan to the British Museum. In addition to these, there are a good many early printed books, first editions, and so forth, and also an extensive reference library, to which the present Lord Zouche has made some important additions. The extensive library of the Marquis of Bath, at Longleat, Warminster, has been formed at different times and by different persons; and what the present holder of the title has added has been bought without any method on various subjects in which his Grace happened to take an interest at the time. Sir John Evans's library is for the most part comprised of archaeological, numismatical, and geological publications, with a certain number of old volumes 'which, though of intrinsic interest, cannot be regarded as bibliographical treasures.' Both Sir William Reynell Anson and the Right Hon. A. J. Balfour, M.P., possess good working libraries, but disclaim the possession of what are known as 'collector's' books. The present Marquis of Bute possesses several extensive libraries of books at his various seats, and chiefly composed of works relating to Scottish history, to liturgical, philological, and archaeological subjects. The first Marquis of Bute formed an excellent collection of Spanish, Italian, and French classics, of books of memoirs, and of works relating to the English Reformation. The third Marquis formed another library, chiefly of a historical character, an exceedingly important portion of it being an extensive series of books and pamphlets relating to the Franco-Prussian War and the Commune. The Duke of Buccleuch has also several fine libraries at his various seats, the chief collections being at Dalkeith and Bowhill, Selkirk; his Grace keeps very few books in London. The books at Dalkeith have been catalogued by Mr. A. H. Bullen, who proposes to print some notes on the subject.

The Duke of Devonshire's library at Chatsworth is one of the most varied and extensive in the kingdom. An admirable catalogue of it was printed in four volumes in 1879, and its value as a bibliographical compilation may be estimated by the fact that the only copy which occurred in the market during the past eight years fetched L10. The library has been formed by the taste and learning of several generations of the Cavendish family, from the middle of the sixteenth century to the present day. The rarest book which it contains is the 'Liber Veritatis,' or collection of original designs of Claude Lorraine. The greatest additions were made to the library by William Spencer, sixth Duke, who, indeed, may be called its founder in its present form. This nobleman, on the advice of Tom Payne, offered L20,000 for the purchase of Count McCarthy's celebrated collection. The offer was declined, but the Duke was a purchaser to the extent of L10,000 of the choicer portions of the library of Thomas Dampier, Bishop of Ely, composed, for the most part, of Greek and Latin classics. The Duke bought largely at the Stanley, Horn Tooke, Towneley, Edwards, and Roxburghe sales. The library possesses the unique collection of plays formed by John Philip Kemble, and for which L2,000 were paid in 1821. The chief features of the library comprise a fine series of the editions of the Bible and of Boccaccio; there are also twenty-three works of Caxton, the most extensive in private hands, now that the Althorp collection has, or is about to, become public property. There are two dozen books from the press of Wynkyn de Worde, and no less than 200 editions of Cicero, including a magnificent copy of the editio princeps.

The libraries of two members of the Roxburghe Club have been dispersed by auction during the last few years—the Earl of Crawford's, in 1887 and 1889, to which reference has already been made; and Mr. Thomas Gaisford's, in 1890. The former has still a considerable number of important books, to which he is constantly adding; whilst his eldest son is worthily sustaining the reputation of the family for its love of rare and beautiful books. Mr. Gaisford has also a very large library, but he himself describes the books as of no special interest.

The Marquis of Salisbury possesses, at Hatfield, a fine library, which, like that of the Duke of Devonshire at Chatsworth, is rather the accumulation of centuries than the formation of any particular head of the house. Many of the oldest and rarest books were at one time the properties of either Lord Burghley, Sir Robert Cecil, or of some other distinguished member of the family. We may mention a few of the incunabula: AEneas Silvius, 'Epistolae,' 1496; St. Augustine, 'De Civitate Dei,' 1477; a copy of the magnificently-printed edition of Aulus Gellius, 'Noctes Atticae,' Jenson, 1477, a very rare work; Cicero, 'Ad Atticum,' 1470, also printed by Jenson; an example of the editio princeps Homer, Florence, 1488; Juvenal, 'Satyrae,' 1474; the very rare second edition of Lactantius, 'Opera,' printed at Rome by Sweynheym and Parmartz, 1468; Livy, 'Historiarum Romanorum,' printed by Zarothus, 1480; Pomponius Mela, 'Cosmographia,' 1482; Ruffus, 'Opera,' 1472. Lord Salisbury's library includes several books which once belonged to Roger Ascham, notably a copy of Aristophanes, 'Comodiae,' 1532; Aristotle, 'Opera,' 1531; Peter Martyr, 'Tractatio et Disputatio de Sacramento Eucharistiae,' etc., 1549, one of the only two copies of which we have any record, the other example being in the Lambeth Library; and a large number of tracts of the time of Henry VIII. Of about 200 books which belonged to Sir Robert Cecil, we may mention two editions of Aristotle, 'Ethica,' 1572 and 1575; Baret, 'An Alvearie, or triple Dictionarie,' in English, Latin, and French, 1573; French Bible, 1546; Bodin, 'La Demonomanie des Sorciers,' 1580; Brache, 'Epistolarium Astronomicorum,' 1596; 'Astronomiae Instauratae,' 1602, and 'De Mundi AEtherei,' 1603; two editions of Cicero, 'Rhetorica,' 1552, 1562; Henning's 'Theatrum Genealogicum,' 1598; Galen, 'De Alimentis,' 1570; three editions of 'Natura Brevium,' one of 1566, and two of 1580; Ubaldino, 'Lo Stata Della Tre Corti,' 1594. The books of Lord Burghley include Aristotle, 'Ethica,' 1535; 'Opera,' 1539; 'Politica,' 1543; Ashley, 'Mariner's Mirror,' 1586; Basilius, 'Homiliae,' 1528, and 'Opera,' 1551; Beda, 'Historia Ecclesiastica'; St. Chrysostom, 'Opera,' 1536; Cyrillus, 'Opera,' 1528; Demosthenes, 'Orationes,' 1528. The edition of Dioscorides, 'Opera,' 1529, belonged, respectively, to Lord Burghley and Sir John Cheke.

The library of Mr. John Murray, the eminent publisher, of Albemarle Street, is a small one, but every item is either excessively rare or unique. Its formation was begun by Mr. Murray's grandfather, whilst his father made considerable additions. Naturally, it is very strong in manuscripts and first editions of Byron. It contains, for example, not only the original manuscript of 'The Waltz,' but the several proof-sheets up to a very fine copy of the perfect book. There are also the manuscript of the four cantos of 'Childe Harold' and the various proof corrections. There are also first editions of Goldsmith's 'Traveller,' 'The Deserted Village,' 'The Haunch of Venison,' and 'The Captivity,' with the receipt for the ten guineas which Goldsmith received for it from Dodsley. Mr. Murray possesses the entire manuscript of Sir Walter Scott's 'Abbot.' This was originally minus three leaves. One of these leaves occurred in the market a few years ago, and passed into the possession of an American collector for L17 10s.; a second was secured, also at an auction, for L6 by Mr. Murray, so that the manuscript is only now wanting two leaves. The very interesting commonplace book of Robert Burns was given by Mr. Murray's grandfather to J. G. Lockhart, who left it to his son-in-law, Mr. Hope-Scott, from whom it again passed into the possession of the late Mr. John Murray. The manuscript 'Journal' of Thomas Gray's travels in England, for the most part unpublished, is also in Albemarle Street, as is also the manuscript of Washington Irving's 'Abbotsford and Newstead Abbey.' The first edition of Pope's 'Dunciad,' successively in the possession of Malone, Elwin and Peter Cunningham; Pope's own copy of Sir Richard Blackmore's 'Paraphrase of Job,' 1700, with numerous suggested improved readings in Pope's own handwriting; the Quarterly Review article of Southey on Nelson, with the extensive elaborations from which the printed edition of the book was set up; a fine copy of the First Folio Shakespeare, 1623; a very fine copy of the editio princeps St. Augustine, 'De Civitate Dei,' Rome, 1468; the editio princeps Homer, Florence, 1488; a good copy of the first edition of Shakespeare's 'Midsummer-Night's Dreame,' James Roberts, 1600; a copy of the Prince Consort's 'Speeches,' presented to Mr. John Murray, with an autograph letter from the Queen—these are a few of the many notable books of which Mr. Murray is the fortunate owner. But among the more interesting of the manuscripts are the volumes of notes made at various times and on divers occasions by the late John Murray in his travels in North Germany, France, Switzerland, and South Germany, and from which the celebrated guide-books were printed—practically every word in the first and early editions of these widely-known books was written by the compiler.

New Lodge, Windsor Forest, the residence of Colonel Victor Bates Van de Weyer, contains a collection of books of a unique character, collected at vast trouble and expense by his father, the late M. Sylvain Van de Weyer, one of the founders of the Belgian monarchy, and for many years Ambassador to the Court of St. James's. M. S. Van de Weyer, who was born in 1802, and died in 1874, stood in the front rank of modern bibliophiles, and the magnitude of his collections may be estimated from the fact that, with town and country house full to overflowing, he had 30,000 volumes in the Pantechnicon when it was burnt down. He was an indefatigable and discriminating reader as well as a munificent purchaser. The library is rich in rare editions beautifully bound by men whose names rank first in the art of bibliopegy. There is a wonderful collection of fables, and a most complete library of ana. The presentation copies of books are numerous and interesting, bearing as they do the autographs of individuals famous in politics, literature, and art. The present owner, who succeeded his father as a member of the Roxburghe Club, has had the books in the library catalogued, and the welfare of this noble collection is well thought of.

Both Lord Houghton and Lord Amherst of Hackney possess fine libraries of rare and interesting books. That of the latter includes a Caxton, 'The Laste Siege and Conquest of Jherusalem,' 1481; Henry VIII.'s copy of Erasmus, 'Dialogi,' 1528; the same King's copy of Whytforde's 'The Boke called the Pype or Toune of the Lyfe of Perfection,' 1532; Grolier's copies of Stoplerinus, 'Elucidatio fabricae usuque Astrolabii,' 1524, and of 'Prognosticatio Johannis Liechtenbergers,' 1526; Maioli's copy of 'Clitophonis Narratio Amatoria,' Lyons, 1544; books bound by Nicholas Eve; early English bindings; and many others. Mr. C. I. Elton, Q.C., M.P., has a fine library, of which a catalogue raisonne has been drawn up and printed. Mr. Charles Butler and Mr. Ingram Bywater possess a number of interesting and rare books. Many of the more notable specimens of the bindings in the libraries of the three last-mentioned gentlemen were exhibited at the Burlington Fine Arts Club in 1891, and are described in the catalogue.

Mr. Andrew Lang is not only a distinguished bibliophile, but a prolific writer on the subject of books. He is understood to have an extensive library of an exceedingly miscellaneous character. He has an especial liking for books which bear the traces of former distinguished owners. He himself has pointed out that, 'as a rule, tidy and self-respecting people do not even write their names on their fly-leaves, still less do they scribble marginalia. Collectors love a clean book, but a book scrawled on may have other merits. Thackeray's countless caricatures add a delight to his old school books; the comments of Scott are always to the purpose; but how few books once owned by great authors come into the general market. Where is Dr. Johnson's library, which must bear traces of his buttered toast? Sir Mark Sykes used to record the date and place of purchase, with the price—an excellent habit. The selling value of a book may be lowered even by a written owner's name, but many a book, otherwise worthless, is redeemed by an interesting note. Even the uninteresting notes gradually acquire an antiquarian value, if contemporary with the author. They represent the mind of a dead age, and perhaps the common scribbler is not unaware of this; otherwise he is, indeed, without excuse. For the great owners of the past, certainly, we regret that they were so sparing in marginalia. But this should hardly be considered as an excuse for the petty owners of the present, with "their most observing thumb."' Mr. Lang is the lucky owner of a copy of Stoddart's poem, 'The Death Wake' (1831), that singular romantic or necromantic volume, which wise collectors will purchase when they can. It is of extreme rarity, and the poetry is no less rare, in the French manner of 1830. On this specimen Aytoun has written marginalia. Where the hero's love of arms and dread of death are mentioned, Aytoun has written 'A rum cove for a Hussar,' and he has added designs of skeletons and a sonnet to the 'wormy author.' 'A curse! a curse!' shrieks the poet. 'Certainly, but why and wherefore?' says Aytoun. There is nothing very precious in his banter; still it is diverting to follow in the footsteps of the author of 'Ta Phairshon.' Mr. Lang also possesses John Wilkes' copy of the second edition of 'Theocritus, Bion and Moschus,' in French, with Eisen's plates; he has Leon Gambetta's copy of the 'Journee Chretienne,' Collet's copy of his friend Crashaw's 'Steps to the Temple,' and a copy of Montaigne, with the autograph of Drummond of Hawthornden.



The late Frederick Locker-Lampson, whose lamented death occurred whilst the earlier pages of this book—in which he took much interest—were passing through the press, was an ideal book-collector. He cared only for books which were in the most perfect condition. The unique character of the Rowfant library, its great literary and commercial value, and its wide interest, may be studied at length in its admirable catalogue, which of itself is a valuable work of reference. Mr. Locker, for it is by this name, and as the author of 'London Lyrics,' that he will be best remembered, devoted his attention almost exclusively to English literature, although of late years he had devoted as much attention as his frail health would allow to the formation of a section of rare books in French literature. It would be impossible to describe in this place all the many book rarities at Rowfant; we must be content, therefore, with indicating a few of the more interesting ones: Alexander Pope's own copy of Chapman's translation of Homer, 1611; one of the largest known copies of the First Folio Shakespeare, 1623; an extensive series of the first or early quarto editions of Shakespeare's plays, about fifty in number—including the spurious plays—many of which were at one time in the collections of Steevens, George Daniel, Tite, or Halliwell-Phillipps. The library is rich in other writers of the Elizabethan period—of Nash, Dekker, Greene, Gabriel Harvey. There are also a long series of the first editions of Dryden; the earliest issues of the first complete edition of 'Pilgrim's Progress'; of 'Robinson Crusoe' (the three parts); of 'Gulliver's Travels,' besides about a score of other editiones principes of Swift, Pope, Goldsmith, Fielding, Richardson, Johnson, Gay, Gray, Lamb, Byron, Shelley, Wordsworth, Thackeray, Dickens and many others. The two early printed books of especial interest are the 'De Senectute,' printed by Caxton, 1481, and Barbour's 'Actis and Lyfe of the maist Victorious Conquerour, Robert Bruce, King of Scotland,' printed at Edinburgh by Robert Lepruik in 1571. The room in which the books are kept is virtually a huge safe; it was at one time a small ordinary room, and it has been converted into a fireproof library, with brick walls within brick walls; the floor of concrete, nearly two feet thick, and a huge iron door, complete an ingenious and effective protection against the most destructive of all enemies of books—fire.



The library of Mr. Joseph Knight, the editor of Notes and Queries, more nearly resembles a select and orderly bookseller's premises than a private individual's. It seems almost impossible to believe that the comparatively small house in Camden Square could contain between 12,000 and 13,000 volumes, and yet such is undoubtedly the case. Every room is crowded, and all the sides of the staircases are crowded with books from top to bottom. Mr. Knight's library is essentially a working one, but it is also something more. It is rich in editions of Froissart's 'Chronicles'; in editions of Rabelais—notably the excessively rare one printed by Michel le Noir, 1505; in Elzevir editions it includes a very extensive series; the series of the 'Restif de la Bretonne' includes about 200 volumes, being one of the few complete sets in London. A few of Mr. Knight's greatest rarities have come to him at very cheap rates—e.g., the 'Apologie pour Herodote,' 1566, without any of the cartons, or cancels, upon which the Genevese authorities insisted. This little volume, of which there are very few copies known, cost Mr. Knight 16s., neither buyer nor seller knowing its value at the time of the transfer. Another 'bargain' is the fine copy of Baudelaire, 'Les Fleurs de Mal,' 1857, which was fished out of a fourpenny box in High Street, Marylebone! Mr. Knight's collection of French plays and of works relating to the French stage is, like that of the English dramatists—ancient and modern—exceedingly extensive. He possesses, also, a few good Aldines, a number of Bodonis, and some books of Le Gason.

Mr. Gladstone is, of course, a book-collector, as well as an omnivorous reader. The Grand Old Book-hunter's literary tastes cover almost every conceivable phase of intellectual study. His library contains about 30,000 volumes, to which theology contributes about one-fourth. The works are arranged by Mr. Gladstone himself into divisions and sections. For many years he was an inveterate bookstaller, a practice which of late years has brought with it a certain amount of inconvenience. After attending Mr. H. M. Stanley's wedding, for example, in 1890, Mr. Gladstone went on one of his second-hand book expeditions, this time to Garratt's, in Southampton Row. The right hon. gentleman walked with his customary elasticity, and was followed to the shop by a large crowd of admirers, chiefly consisting of working men, whose enthusiasm was kept in order by three policemen. Outside the bookseller's several hundred people gathered, and they were not disappointed in their wish to see the Grand Old Man, for Mr. Garratt's shop does not boast of a back-door through which fame can escape its penalties. On coming out, Mr. Gladstone, looking, as a working man standing on the kerb expressed it, 'as straight as a new nail,' received quite an ovation, the people waving their hats and cheering vigorously as he drove away in a cab. Mr. Gladstone's marked catalogues are a familiar and a peculiarly welcome feature with second-hand booksellers, who proudly expose them in their windows. A bookseller who exhibited one of these catalogues before the Old Man retired from the Premiership was accosted by a strong Tory with the remark: 'I see you've got a list marked by Gladstone's initials in the window;' and then, whispering fiercely in the bookseller's ear, he added, 'Does he pay you?' We give a facsimile of one of Mr. Menken's catalogues with an order for books from Mr. Gladstone.



Mr. Henry Spencer Ashbee, of Bedford Square, has a small but charming library, nearly every volume being beautifully bound. The books are, for the most part, modern, and chiefly French. There are, for example, Sainte-Beuve's 'Livre d'Amour,' which was suppressed after a few copies were struck off, with the author's own corrections; the Fortsas 'Catalogue,' the cruel joke of M. Renier Chalon; first editions of 'The English Spy,' an exceptionally fine copy; Coryat's 'Crambe, or, his Colwork,' 1611; Roger's 'Poems' and 'Italy'; a number of books illustrated by Chodowiecki, the Cruikshank of Germany; practically all the books published by M. Octave Uzanne and Paul Lacroix in the finest possible states. Mr. Ashbee possesses several extra-illustrated or grangerized books of exceptional interest—the nine volumes of Nichols' 'Literary Anecdotes' are extended to thirty-four, there being upwards of 5,000 additional portraits, views, and so forth. Mr. Ashbee's library comprises several thousand volumes, the binding alone of which must have cost a small fortune.



The libraries of Mr. Thomas J. Wise and Mr. Walter Slater may be bracketed together, partly because they have been formed side by side. They differ in many respects, however. Mr. Wise's is a small but choice collection of books, autographs, and manuscripts of modern writers. He possesses, for the most part, in first editions of the finest quality, practically everything written by Matthew Arnold, William Blake, Robert Browning and Mrs. Browning, Byron, Coleridge, Shelley, George Eliot, Leigh Hunt, Charles Lamb, Landor, Meredith, William Morris, John Ruskin, Swinburne, and Tennyson. Of Shelley, for example, Mr. Wise has a collection of 400 books and pamphlets by or concerning him. There is only one other collection comparable to it, and it is that possessed by Mr. Buxton Forman. Of Byron Mr. Wise has everything, including 'The Waltz,' 'Poems on Various Occasions,' and all the other excessively rare publications of this prolific poet, the only exception, indeed, being 'The Curse of Minerva,' 1812. Mr. Wise's collection of Ruskiniana is practically complete, and includes a number of privately-printed pamphlets issued to a few personal friends. Mr. Walter Slater's books and manuscripts include a unique series of both Dante G. Rossetti and Walter Savage Landor. Of the former, it contains the manuscript of three-fourths of the 'House of Life' series of sonnets, the manuscript of 'St. Agnes,' and the whole of the extant manuscript of 'The King's Tragedy'; these manuscripts usually include not only the 'copy' as it was sent to the printer, but usually the first and second drafts. The series of Landor books and pamphlets is quite complete, from his first book of poems, 'Moral Epistles,' issued in 1795, and the equally excessively rare 'Poems from the Arabic and Persian,' issued at Warwick in 1800, to 'Savonarola,' in Italian, 1860. Mr. Slater has a complete series of the first editions of the curious works of Mrs. Behn.



Mr. Clement K. Shorter, the editor of the Illustrated London News, the Sketch, and several other publications, is a book-collector who, like Mr. Wise and Mr. Slater, has pitched his 'tent' on the northern heights of London. Mr. Shorter has an unusually complete set of the works of Thomas Hardy, George Meredith, Sir Walter Scott, Charlotte Bronte—besides the 'Cottage Poems' of old Mr. Bronte—and Matthew Arnold. Of the last named there are copies of the very limited editions of 'Geist's Grave,' 'St. Brandran,' 'Home Rule for Ireland,' and 'Alaric at Rome.' Mr. Shorter's Ruskin treasures include a volume of the plates of 'Modern Painters,' on India paper, bound up in vellum. There are also several first editions of the earlier works of Carlyle, and William Watson's 'Lachrymae Musarum,' on vellum, with the original manuscript bound up with it. Mr. Shorter has many interesting manuscripts and books by Oliver Wendell Holmes, R. L. Stevenson, and A. C. Swinburne, with autographs or notes by their respective authors. Mr. Richard le Gallienne, the well-known author, has for many years been a confirmed book-hunter, and has come across some rare and interesting finds. Mr. Henry Norman, the traveller and assistant editor of the Daily Chronicle, has a number of choice and rare books, chiefly first editions of American authors—J. Russell Lowell, Longfellow, O. W. Holmes, Emerson, Walt Whitman, and Whittier—nearly all of whom were personal friends of Mr. Norman's. Mr. Norman has gone to the extravagance of two sets of the first editions of Thomas Hardy's books, whilst of George Meredith there is one complete set.



The House of Commons contains several men who have very excellent libraries and excellent judgments of books. Mr. Leonard Courtney has been guilty of bookstalling a good many times in his successful career, and is, perhaps, an exception to the general rule that good political economists usually make poor book-hunters. Mr. Courtney possesses a good many uncommon books, which he has picked up from time to time. Mr. Augustine Birrell, Q.C., the author of 'Obiter Dicta,' and son-in-law of the late Frederick Locker-Lampson, has a good library of from 5,000 to 6,000 books. Among these may be noticed the first edition of Gray's 'Elegy,' picked up at Hodgson's for 3s. 6d.; first edition of Keats' 'Endymion,' purchased off a stall in the Euston Road for 2s. 6d.; first edition of 'Wuthering Heights'; and an extensive series of books relating to or by Dryden, Pope, Swift, and others of that period, as well as a number of presentation copies of books by Matthew Arnold, Browning, and Tennyson, etc. Mr. T. R. Buchanan, M.P., who was for many years librarian of All Souls' College, Oxford, has a small but select library of books which are, for the most part, remarkable on account of the beauty or rarity of their bindings. It is especially strong in fine specimens of early English and Scotch bindings; there are a few examples from De Thou's library, and a few characteristic specimens of Italian and Flemish bindings of the best periods. The books themselves are principally editions of the classics; but the section of Bibles printed in England and Scotland is a full one. There are also many volumes with a personal interest; for example, the copy of Locke's 'Essay concerning the Human Understanding' was once Coleridge's, and contains a note by him to this effect: 'This is, perhaps, the most admirable of Locke's works; read it, Southey,' etc.; and the copy of the 'Libri Carolini,' 1549, was Scaliger's.

Captain R. S. Holford, of Dorchester House, Park Lane, has a choice library of beautiful and rare books, formed by his father, the late H. S. Holford. For many years its chief treasure was the only known first edition of 'Pilgrim's Progress,' 1678, which was valued at L50; during the last few years, however, four other copies have turned up, without, however, lessening the commercial value of the Holford copy, which would probably fetch two or three times the amount at which it was valued thirty years ago. The facsimile of the first edition issued a few years ago was made from Mr. Holford's copy. A few other treasures of Captain Holford's library may be briefly mentioned as follows: A fifteenth-century manuscript of Livy's 'Historia,' on vellum, in a Venetian binding, with the arms of Aragon; Cardinal Hippolyto d'Este's copy of Rhinghier, 'Cento Giuochi Liberali, et d' Ingegno,' Bologna, 1551; Grolier's copy of Pliny, 'Epistolae,' etc., Venice, 1518; of Valerius Maximus, Venice, 1534; and of 'Epitomes des Roys de France,' Lyons, 1546; the Maioli copy of Homer, 'Odyssea,' Paris, 1538; Du Bellay's 'Memoirs,' 1572, with the arms of Henri de Bourbon, Prince de Conde; and the copy of 'Liber Psalmorum Davidis,' 1546, bound by Nicholas Eve for De Thou.



Dr. W. H. Corfield, Mr. C. E. H. Chadwyck-Healey, Q.C., Sir Julian Goldsmid, M.P., Mr. C. F. Murray, Mr. George Salting, Mr. Samuel Sandars, Mr. H. Yates Thompson, Mr. H. Virtue Tebbs, and Mr. T. Foster Shattock, are understood to possess choice libraries of books noted chiefly for the beauty or rarity of their bindings. M. John Gennadius, late Greek Minister at the Court of St. James's, possessed one of the finest libraries formed during recent years. This collection was destined to supplement and ornament the National Library of Greece, founded at Athens by his Excellency's father, on the very morrow of her liberation. Fate, however, ordered otherwise, and these beautiful books were, consequently, dispersed at Sotheby's, from March 28 to April 9, the eleven days' sale of 3,222 lots realizing L5,466. The library of Mr. W. Christie-Miller, of Britwell Court, Maidenhead, is understood to include many choice books, particularly early printed works, but no particulars of it are available.

Holland House Library is one of great historic value and interest. It is fully described by the Princess Marie Liechtenstein, in her monograph on the place. Macaulay has described the appearance of the library in his famous essay on Lord Holland. It is rather a collection formed by a statesman and a literary man than by a bibliophile; there are over 10,000 volumes, many of which are privately printed books, presentation copies; there is a large collection of historical works relating to Italy, Portugal, and France; Spanish literature, a memento of the taste of the third Lord Holland, is well represented; the collection of Elzevirs is very fine, as is also that of the Greek and Latin classics, and the highly curious collection of various copies of Charles James Fox's 'James II.,' which belonged to different celebrities, is housed here.

Mr. C. J. Toovey inherited from his father, the late James Toovey, a fine library of exceptionally choice books; it is rich in monuments of the Early English printers, one of its gems being a fine copy of the 'Boke of St. Albans'; Aldines probably form one of its largest sections, whilst in bindings by the great masters of the French school of bibliopegic art the library has very few equals. Many of these were purchased by the late Mr. Toovey in Paris, long before the present rage for them had commenced, so that, as an investment, they will doubtless yield a handsome profit if they ever come into the market. The series of Walton's 'Angler' includes the first edition, with a presentation inscription by the author; there is also the largest known First Folio edition of Shakespeare, to which reference has already been made.



INDEX.

ADDISON, JOSEPH, 39, 108, 265, 267

Advocates, Library of the College of, 116

Ainsworth, W. Harrison, 83, 288, 289

Alchorne, S., 109

Alcuin, 2, 3, 139

Alde, John, 183

Aldersgate Street, 39

Aldine editions, 129-131, 300, 304

Aldus, 129

Alfred, 3

Allen, Thomas, 31

Almon, J., 250

Althorp Library, the, 50, et seq.

America, book trade with, 189

America, tracts on, 90

Amherst of Hackney, Lord, 309

Anacreon, Stephen edition, 129

Anderson, Adam, 219

Anderson, G. B., 94

Anderson, John, 193

Anglesey, Earl of, 27, 101 note

Angling books, Francis's, 93

Anson, Sir W. R., 305

'Anthologia Graeca' (1494), 130

'Apologie pour Herodote,' 314

Arch, J. and A., 186

Archaica Club, 79

Archer, Sir Anthony, 16

'Aristophanes' (1498), 129

Aristotle (1495-98), 130

Arthur, Thomas, 230

Arundel, Henry, Earl of, 15, 16, 18

Ascham, Roger, 307

Ascham's 'Toxophilus,' 120

Ashbee, Mr. H. S., 315

Ashburnham, Lord, 126, 285

Ashmole, Elias, 18

Askew, Dr. A., 41

Askew Sale, the, 128, et seq.

Asperne, James, 186

Athelstan, 3

'Atticus,' 46

Auctions, book, 98, et seq., 210

Aulus Gellius, 'Noctes,' 307

Aylesford, Earl of, 89, 117

Bacon, Francis, 19

Bacon, Roger, 6

Bagford, John, 30, 31, 204, 268

Bagster, S., 235

Bain, James, 240

Baker, Mr. E. E., 91

Baker, H., 249

Baker, Samuel, 100 note, 102, 103, 223

Baker, Thomas, 34

'Balbi Catholicon,' the, 127, 300

Baldwin and Cradock, 210

Bale, John, 13

Bale's 'Image of Both Churches,' 196

Balfour, Mr. A. J., 305

Ballads, 74

Ballard, T. and E., 103

Ballards of Little Britain, 173

Banks, Dr., 219

Bannatyne Club, the, 62 note

Baptist Library at Bristol, 138

Barbican, the, 176, 177

Barclay's 'Ship of Fools,' 120, 121

Barnard, Sir John, 238

Barnfield's 'Encomion of Lady Pecunia,' 41

'Baroccio,' 69

Barrett, Thomas, 35

Barton, Bernard, 76, 296

Bassett, Thomas, 219

Batemans of Little Britain, 171

Bates, Dr., 39

Bath, Marquis of, 304, 305

Bathoe, Sam., 103

Bathoe, W., 234

Baudelaire, 'Les Fleurs de Mal,' 314

Bauduyn (Piers), stationer, 10

Baylis, Alderman, 223

Baynes, W., 211

Beauclerk, Topham, 55 and note, 111

Beckett-Denison, C., 117

Becket, Thomas, 176 note, 236

Beckford, Peter, 49, 297, 298

Beckford, William, 48-50, 256

Bede, the Venerable, 3

Bedford, Francis, 87

Bedford, John, Duke of, 9, 17

Bedford Missal, the, 9, 109

Bedford Street, Strand, 241

Beet, Thomas, 251

Bell and Sons, George, 244

Benedict Biscop, 2, 3

Bennett, T., 187

Bentham, W., 61

Bentley, Dr. R., 116, 195, 196

Benzon, Mrs., 270

Berkeley, Earl of, 25

Bernard, Dr. Francis, 34, 132

Bernard, Sir Thomas, 71

Berthelet, Thomas, 261

Bibles and New Testaments, 136-140, 212, 261, 262, 285, 291, 302, 306 'Biblia Pauperum,' 272 Coverdale's (1535), 72, 89, 138, 263, 268, 302 Cranmer's (1540 and 1553), 72, 302 Cromwell's (1539), 302 Douay (1663), 120 Eliot's Indian, 119 Fust and Schoeffer (1462), 126, 300 German, 95 Graeca Septuaginta, 192 note Gutenberg (or Mazarin) (1455), 58, 72, 89, 90, 114, 125, 126, 255, 300 Hayes (1674), 21 Matthew's (1537), 72, 302 Tyndale's (1525-1526, 1533), 89, 137, 138 St. Jerome's MS., 140

Bibliomania, the decay of, 69

Bibliomaniac, A, 78

Bibliomaniac, the 'Library' of a, 200

Bibliophile, A, 78

Bibliophobia, 108

Bindley, James, 43, 66, 108, 109

Birrell, Mr. A., 145, 319

Bishopsgate Churchyard, 161

Black-letter books, 136

Black-letter booksellers, the, 236

Black-letter collectors, 'Father' of, 27 note

Black-letter mania, 59

Blackwell's 'Herbal,' 105

Blake, W., 93

Blandford, Marquis of, 61 note, 109, 124

Block book, 89

Bloomfield, R., 154

Boccaccio, the Valdarfer, 52, 61, 93, 123-125

Boccaccio, 'Les Illustres Malheureux,' 50

Bodleian, the, 23, 67

Bodley, Sir T., 22, 283

Boethius, 'Consolation of Philosophy,' 4

Bohn, H. G., 50, 243, 244, 255

Bohn, James, 243

Bohn, J. H., 243, 244

'Boke of St. Albans,' 136, 322

Bolland, Sir W., 61, 69

Bonaparte, Prince L. L., 95, 96, 254

Bonaventure's 'Life of Christ,' 9

Bond Street, 249, et seq.

Book auctions and sales, 98, et seq.

Book-borrowers, 274, et seq.

Book catalogues, some humours of, 293-298

Booker, John, 18

Book-ghouls, 160

Book-hunting, early, 1

Book-marking, Lamb's notion of, 76

Book-pluralists, 46

Books and their prices, 118, et seq.

'Booksellers,' the, a poem, 193

Booksellers' Row. See Holywell Street

Bookstalls and bookstalling, 149-167

Book-thieves, 274, et seq.

Boone, T. and W., 246, 250

Booth, Lionel, 116

Boswell, James, 108, 229

Boucher, Jonathan, 70

Bourne, Zacharius, 100

Bovey, Mrs., 265

Bowles, Rev. J., 220

Bowyer, Jonah, 216

Bowyer, William, 216

Boydell, Alderman, 251

Bozier's Court, 201

Brabourne, Lord, 93, 106

Bradbury and Evans, 116

Brand, Rev. John, 112, 179, 190, 207

Brassey, Mrs., 271

Bremner, David, 241

Bridges, John, 34, 121, 122

Bright, B. H., 108, 143 note, 302

Brindley, J., 249

Bristol, Earl of, 26, 31

British Museum copies of the classics, 128-131, 139, 166

British Museum, 276

Britten, Mr. James, 151

Britton, Thomas, 172, 173

Broadly, John, 109

Brooke, Lord Warwick, 100

Brown, Mr. J., 200

Brown, 'Old,' 157

Bruck, Cudworth, 193

Bruscambille on 'Long Noses,' 152

Bryant, W., 112

Brydges, Sir Egerton, 47, 59

Buccleuch, Duke of, 90, 305

Buchanan, Mr. T. R., 319

Buckley, Samuel, 174

Buckley, W. E., 94

Bull and Auvache, 206

Bumstead, G., 245

Bunyan, John, 183

Bunyan's 'Pilgrim's Progress,' 145, 146, 312, 320, 321

Burbidge, Prebendary E., 18

Burdett-Coutts, Baroness, 141, 142

Burgess, F., 95

Burghley, Lady M., 264

Burghley, Lord, 306

Burlington, Countess of, 265

Burnet, Bishop, 234

Burnet, Rev. Gilbert, 232

Burney, Dr., 238

Burns, R., 281, 304, 308

Burton, Robert, 23

Butcher Row, 223-225

Bute, Marquis of, 305

Butler, Mr. Charles, 310

Butler's 'Hudibras,' 219

Butterworth, Henry, 217 note

Byng, Mr., 144

Byron, Lord, 109, 316

Byron's 'Childe Harold,' 308

Byron's 'English Bards,' 85

Byron's 'Waltz,' 308

Bywater, Mr. Ingram, 310

Cadell, Thomas, 235

Cadell and Davis, 235

Caesar's (Sir Julius) Travelling Library, 22, 23, 110

Caesar's 'Commentaries,' 55

Caldecott, Thomas, 68

Camden, W., 21

Campbell, Mr. Dykes, 106

Canonbury Tower, 72 and note, 73

Carbery, Lord, 31

Caroline, Queen, 268

Casaubon, Dr. M., 25

Cashel, Bishop of, 255

Cassell and Co., 116

Castell, Dr., 100

Catalogues. See Book Catalogues

Cater, W., 193

Caviceo, 'Dialogue,' etc., 93

Cawthorn and Hutt, 208

Caxton, W., 12, 30, 60, 61, 72, 109, 111, 132, 135, 190, 247, 248, 262, 268, 300, 306 'Arthur, King,' 133 'Book called Cathon,' 132, 133 (bis) 'Book of Chivalry,' 136 'Book of Good Manners,' 33 'Chastising of God's Children,' 13, 132 'Christine of Pisa,' 89 Chaucer's 'Canterbury Tales,' 136 'Chronicles of England,' 90, 132, 133 Cicero ('De Senectute'), 'Of Old Age,' 89, 132, 133, 313 'Dictes and Sayings,' 90, 132 'Doctrinal of Sapience,' 132, 133 'Faits d'Armes et de Chevalerie,' 13 'Game and Playe of Chesse,' 90, 132, 133, 135 'Godfrey of Bulloigne,' 13, 33, 132 'Golden Legend,' 13, 93, 133, 271, 303 Gower's 'Confessio Amantis,' 133 Higden's 'Description of Britayne,' 90 Higden's 'Polychronicon,' 89, 303 'Historyes of Troy,' 132 (bis) 'History of Blanchardyn and Eglantine,' 133 'History of Jason,' 132, 133 (bis) 'Life of St. Katherine,' 220, 221 Lydgate's 'Life of our Lady,' 220 'Lives of the Fathers,' 220 'Mirrour of the World,' 90, 95, 133 'Royal Book, or Book for a King,' 90 Russell's 'Propositio,' 134 'Siege and Conquest of Jerusalem,' 309 'Troylus and Creside,' 133 Virgil's 'AEneid,' 13, 133

Caxton Head Catalogues, 204

Caxton, the highest paid for a, 133

Caxtons, the Althorp, 133

Cecil, Sir Robert, 306

Chadwyck-Healey, Mr. E. H., 320

Chained books at Hereford

Chalmers, George, 69, 70

Champernoun, Mr., 57

Chandler, Dr., 289

Chapman, Henry, 235

Charing Cross, 235-246

Charing Cross Road, 258

Charles I.'s Prayer-Book, 87

Charles II., 21

Charlotte, Queen, as a book-hunter, 215

Charnock, Dr. S., 100

Cheapside, 184, 185

Chetham Library, the, 118

Child, Alderman, 56

Chiswell, R., 33, 100, 213

Chodowiecki, 316

Christ Church (Canterbury), Books at, 7, 9

Christ's Hospital, Newgate Street, 8

Christie, James, 100 note, 103, 117, 291

Christie, Manson and Woods, 117

Christie, Mr. R. C., 297, 303

'Chronicon Nurembergense,' 303

Churchill, A. and J., 210

Cicero, 306. See also Caxton

Cicero, 'Ad Atticum,' 307

Circulating Library, the first, 234

Clare Hall, Cambridge, 260

Clare Market, 232

Clarendon, Earl of, 117

Clarke, W., 135, 251

Classics, their market value, 127-131

Claude's 'Liber Veritatis,' 305

Clavell, Robert, 214

Clement's Inn Passage, 225, 226

Clovio, Giulio, 57

Cochrane, J. G., 113, 221

Cock, auctioneer, 103

Cockaine, Sir Aston, 36

Coke, Sir Edward, 25

Colebrook Row, Islington, 76, 77

Coleridge, S. T., 76-78, 289, 320

Collier's 'Ecclesiastical Library,' 16

Collier, John Payne, 74-76, 230

Collins, Mr. Victor, 95, 96

Collins, W., 185

Columbus letter, the, 94

Comerford, James, 86

Compton, 113

Conant, N., 221

Conway, Lord, 24

Conyers, George, 216

Cooke, R. F., 94

Cook, Sir Robert, 25

Cooper, Mr. A. E., 258

Cooper, William, 99, 100

Copinger, Dr., 97

Corfield, Dr. W. H., 320

Corney, Bolton, 71

Cornhill, 184-186

Cosens, F. W., 93

Cosin, Dr., 24, 26

Cotton, Charles, 36

Cotton, Sir Robert, 21, 22, 283

Courtney, Mr. Leonard, 319

Cowper, W., 215

Coxhead, J., 196

Cracherode, C. M., 64-66, 238

Craig, J. T. Gibson, 88, 89

Cranmer, Archbishop, 16, 18

Crawford, Earl of, 88, 89, 126, 306

Crawford, W. H., 93

Crockford's, 226

Crofts, Rev. Thos., 111

Croker, Thomas C., 81, 82

Crossley, James, 287

Crowinshield, Edward, 115

Crowley, Robert, 191

Crozier, of the Little Turnstile, 202, 203

Cruden, Alexander, 185

Cruikshankiana, 90

Cunning bookseller, the, 250

Curll, Edmund, 219

Currer, Miss R., 268-270

Dalrymple, Alex., 56

Dampier, Dean, 238, 306

Daniell, Mr. E., 106

Daniel, G., 72-74, 141-143, 143 note

Daniel's, 'Delia,' 87

Dante, the Landino edition, 93

Darton and Hodge, 116

Darton, W., 196-198

Davies, Tom, 237

Davis, Arthur, 28

Davis, Charles, 187, 197

Davis, Lockyer, 199, 236

Davis, W., 199

Day and Son, 116

Day's circulating library, 208

Debrett, J., 250

De Bury, Richard, 7

Dee, Dr., 18

Defoe, Daniel, 156

Delafaye, Charles, 219

Denbigh, Lord, 31

Denham, Henry, 210

Denis, John, 181

Dent, J., 61, 62, 68, 69

Derby, Lord, 31

Dering, Sir Edward, 115

Derwentwater, Earl of, 292

Devonshire, Dukes of, 61 note, 124, 133, 141, 142, 173, 305, 306

Dibdin, T. F., 57, 61, 63, 64, 109

Dickens, Charles, 83, 86

Digby, Sir Kenelm, 26, 31, 100, 120

Dilke, C. W., 64, 202, 203

Dilly, C. and E., 183, 184

Dimsdale sale, the, 108

Diodorus Siculus (1539), 130

D'Israeli, Isaac, 71

Dobell, Mr. B., 106, 258

Dobson, Mr. Austin, 45

Dodsley, James, 251

Dodsley, R., 251

Dolben, Sir John E., 56

Dolet, Etienne, 304

Dorset, Earl of, 170

Douce, Francis, 67

Drake, Sir Francis, 19

Dramatic library of F. Burgess, 95

Dramatic library of F. Marshall, 93

Drama, works on the, 68, 291, 306

Drayton, M., 84, 158

Droeshout portrait of Shakespeare, 91

Drummond of Hawthornden, 311

Drummond, Miss, 271

Drummond's 'Forth Fasting,' 86

Drury, H. J. T., 70

Dryden, John, 35

Duck Lane, 175, 176

Duck, Stephen, 219

Duerdin, J., 115

Duke Street, Little Britain, 175, 176

Dulwich College Library, 204

Dunmore, John, 213

Dunton, John, 100-102

Dutens, Rev. L., 117

Dyce, Alexander, 47, 83-85, 289

Dyson, H., 35

Eadburga, Abbess, 260

East End, book-hunting in, 155, et seq.

Editiones Principes, 128-131

Edmonds, Sir Clement, 211

Edward I., 3

Edward IV., 10, 33

Edward VI., 13

Edwards, E., 7, 31

Edwards, James, 117, 249

Egbert, 2

Egerton, T. and J., 113, 236

'Eikon Basilike,' 101 note

Elcho, the Dowager Lady, 270

Eliot's Indian Bible, 119

Elizabethan literature, 301

Elizabeth de Burgh, 260

Elizabeth (Princess), of Hesse-Homburg, 270

Elizabeth, Queen, 17, 18, 260, 262-264

Ellis, Mr. F. S., 35, 245, 246, 286, 300, 301

Ellis, Mr. G. I., 106, 246

Elmsley, Peter, 238, 240

Elton, Mr. C. I., 310

Elyot's 'Castell of Helth,' 166

Erasmus' 'Enchiridion Militis Christiani,' 119

Eshton Hall Library, the, 268-270

Essex, Earl of, 264

Eton College Library, 17

Euripides (1503), 129

Evans, R. H., 109, 110

Evans, Sir John, 305

Evans, Thomas, 110, 216

Evelyn, John, 24, 25, 27, 28, 30, 37, 212

Evelyn, Sir, 250

Exeter 'Change, 105, 154, 155

Extra-illustrating, 165

Fabyan's 'Chronicle,' 120

Fagel Collection, 111

Fairfax, Bryan, 56

Farmer, Dr. R., 41, 112

Farnese, Cardinal, 57

Farringdon Road, 158, 159

Fathers, the, 120

Faulder, R., 250

Felton, John, 23, 24

Fenestella, 'De Magistratibus,' 263

Fielding, Henry, 44, 45, 94, 108, 196

'Finds,' some book, 149, 150, 229, 230

Finsbury Square, 178, 179-183

Fire, the great, 212, 213

Flatman's 'Poems,' 85

Fleet Street, 216-223

Fleetwood, Bishop, 17

Fletcher, J. and F., 114

Flexney, W., 194

Folkes, Martin, 108

Fonthill, 49

Foote, Samuel, 163

Ford, K. J., 183

Forster, John, 83-85, 202, 203

'Fortsas Catalogue,' the, 315

Foss, Henry, 239

Foster, Birket, Mr., 94

Fountaine Collection, the, 261

Fox's 'Reign of James II.,' 86

Fox, William, 193

Francis, Francis, 93

Franklin, B., 175, 250

Freebairn's sale, 38, 240

Freeling, Francis, 61

Freeling, Henry, 61

French Revolution, 58, 67

Fresnile, John, 8

Froissart's 'Chronicles,' 314

'Fructus Temporum,' 300

Fuller's 'Church History,' 14

Fuller's 'David's Hainous Sinne,' 151

Funnibus, L., 147

Gainsborough, Earl of, 117

Gaisford, Mr. Thomas, 93, 306

Galwey, Mr. J., 234

Gambetta, Leon, 311

Gardner, H. L., 236

Garnett, Dr. R., 166

Garrick, D., 85

Garth, Samuel, 176

Gataker, Dr. Thos., 100

Genlis, Madame de, 286

Gennadius, M. J., 320-322

George and Sons, E., 187-189

George III., 53, 54, 130, 135, 141

Gibbon, E., 44, 240

Gibbs, Mr. H. H., 301, 302

Gifford, Dr., 139, 140

Gilbert and Field, 186, 187

Gilbert, S. and T., 187

Gilliflower, M., 248

Gladding, R., 187, 188

Gladstone, W. E., 86, 95, 254, 314, 315

Glashier, George, 202

Glasse's 'Art of Cookery,' 150

Gloucester, Humphrey, Duke of, 9, 10

Goldsmid, Sir Julian, 320

Goldsmith, Oliver, 44

Goldsmith's 'The Haunch of Venison,' 308

Goldsmith's 'The Deserted Village,' 308

Goldsmith's 'Traveller,' 308

Goldsmith's 'Vicar of Wakefield,' 94, 146

Gomme, Mr. G. L., 151

Goodhugh, W., 206

Gordon, Sir Robert, 113

Gosford, Earl of, 114

Gosset, Dr. Isaac, 70

Gough, R., 67, 103

Gower, Lord, 61, 62

Grafton, Duke of, 109

Grafton, R., 74

Grangerizing, 165, 316

Gravelot's print of Westminster Hall, 247, 248

Gray, Mr. H., 114

Gray's Inn Gate and Road, 191, 192, 273

Gray's MSS., 81, 146, 308

Gray, T., 84, 85, 319

Green, Mr. J. Arnold, 272

Greenhill, Rev. W., 100

Grenville, Thos., 69, 75, 238

Greville, C. F., 117

Griffith, W., 216

Griffiths, Ralph, 210

Grolier, 65, 309

Grose, Francis, 238

Grub Street Journal, 241 note

Gryphius, S., 304

Guilford, Earl of, 109

Guilford, Francis, Baron, 31

Gulston, Joseph, 113

Guy de Beauchamp, 6

Guy, Thomas, 184

Gwillim's 'Display of Heraldry,' 156

Gyles, Fletcher, 123

Hailstone, Edward, 93

Halifax, Lord, 31

Hall, Virtue, and Co., 116

Halliwell-Phillipps, J. O., 71, 74, 90-92

Hamilton, Dukes of, 48, 50

Hamilton, Sir W., 117

Hammers, auctioneers, 100 and note

Hannay's 'Nightingale,' 70

Hanrott, 71

Harcourt, Lady F. V., 270

Harding and Lepard, 183

Harding's 'Chronicle,' 121

Hardouyn, G., 17

Hardwicke, Lord Chancellor, 89

Hardy, Sir William, 88

Harleian Library, The, 192

Harley, Earl of Oxford, 31, 34, 38

Hartley, L. L., 87, 114

Harvey, Gabriel, 19

Harvey, Mr. F., 165

Harwood, Dr., 128-131

Hatchards, 252-254

Hawkins, Rev. W. B. L., 117

Hawkins, Sir John, 193, 238

Hawtrey, Dr., 71

Hayes, John, 193, 199

Hayes, Samuel, 199

Hazlewood, Joseph, 61, 63, 64

Hazlitt MSS., The, 94

Hazlitt, William, 77

Hearle of Holywell Street, 228

Hearne, Thomas, 27 note, 34, 35, 122, 283

Heath, Benjamin, 122, 123

Heathcote, Robert, 68

Heber, Richard, 45-48, 61, 62, 108, 110, 268

Heber, Thomas C., 61

Heliconia Club, 79

Henderson, the actor, 291

Henry, Prince, 20, 21

Henry IV., 9

Henry V., 9, 260

Henry VI., 9, 10

Henry VII., 12, 13

Henry VIII., 13, 17, 261, 309

Herbert, Isaac, 199

Heriot, George, 264

Herodotus (1502), 129

Heydinger, C., 236

Hibbert-Wade, Dr., 289

Highest price paid for a book, 126

Hill, Mr. H. R., 231

Hill, Thomas, 78-80, 110

Hindley, Mr. C., 106, 231

Hoare, Richard, 28

Hodge, Mr. E. Grose, 105, 106

Hodgson and Co., 116, 146, 162-164

Hogarth, W., 234

Holborn, 191-208

Holford, Captain, 146, 320

Holgate, W., 71

Holinshed's 'Chronicle,' 33

Holland's 'Heroeologia,' 118

Holland House Library, 322

Holland, Lord, 86, 322

Hollingbury Copse, 91

Holywell Street, 153, 154, 215, 227-231

Homer, the editio princeps (1488), 119, 128

Homer, 120, 311

Homer, the Foulis edition, 129

Hone, W., 216

Hood, Tom, 184

Hookham, T., 250

Hopetoun, Earl of, 126

Hopetoun House Library, 90

Horace, editio princeps, 130

Horae, 261

Horne's 'Orion,' 229

Horsfield, R., 214, 215

Hotten, J. C., 115

Houghton, Earl of, 309

Hume, David, 44, 230

Hunter, Mr., 130

Hunt, Leigh, 149

Hutchinson, Joshua H., 94

Huth, Mr. A. H., 301

Huth, H., 254, 300, 301

Hutt, Charles, 225

Hutt, Mr. F. H., 225

Hutton, George, 204

'Imitatio Christi,' the, 96, 97, 302

Ina, King of the West Saxons, 3

Inglis, C. B., 108

Irving (Washington), 'Abbotsford,' 308

Islington, cattle market at, 164

Isocrates (1493), 129

Isted, G., 61

Jackson, Mr. B. Daydon, 297

Jackson, 17

Jackson, Andrew, 232

Jacobean literature, 301

James, Haughton, 68

James I., 20

James II., 20

Jameson, Mrs., 271

Janin, Jules, 286

Jarvis (J. W.) and Son, 194, 245

Jeffrey, Edward, 113

Jerrold, Douglas, 71

Jersey, Earl of, 56, 133

Johnson, Dr., 23, 44, 117, 237

Johnson and Osborne, 192 and note

Johnson, Joseph, 214, 215

John of Boston, 8, 9

Johnston, William, 215, 216

Jolley, Thomas, 143 note

Jones and Co., 180

Jones, Owen, 116

Jones, Richard, 191

Jonson, Ben, 19, 84

Juvenal and Persius (1469), 131

Keats, John, 94, 179, 319

Kempis, Thomas a, 96, 97

Kettlewell, Robert, 199

Kidner, Thomas, 100

King, John, 178

King, Thomas, 111-113, 178

King and Lochee, 56, 112

King of Mansfield Street, 239

Kirton, Joshua, 212

Knaptons, the, 214

Knight, Charles, 116

Knight, J. P., 117

Knight, Mr. Joseph, 313, 314

Knock-outs, 121, 164, 290-292

Lackington, George, 182, 183

Lackington, James, 179-183, 245

Lactantius, 'Opera,' 307

'Ladies' Library,' the, 265-267

Lakelands Library, 93

Lamb, Charles, 76-78, 176, 177, 207, 288-290, 296

Lamb's 'Beauty and the Beast,' 150

Lambeth Library, 5, 6

Landor, Walter Savage, 317

Lang, Mr. Andrew, 310

Lang, R., 61

Langford, auctioneer, 103, 111, 139

Lansdowne, Marquis of, 58, 108, 111

Lant, R., 210

Larking, John W., 94

Larrons, 'L'Histoire des,' 282

Laud, Archbishop, 23

Lauderdale, Duke of, 27, 28, 289

Law books, printers of, 217

Lawler, Mr. John, 99, 100, 102, 119, 258

Lawrence, E. H., 94

Lazarus, Mrs., 231

Leacroft, S., 236

Le Gallienne, Mr. R., 318

'Legenda Aurea' (1503), 291

Leigh, George, 103, 104

Leighton, Mr., 106

Leland, John, 15

Lemoine, Henry, 161

'Leontes,' 66

Lepruik, Robert, 313

Lever, Charles, 83

Lewis, L. A., 223

Libraries and book-thieves, 284, 285

Library, the Sunderland, 36-38

Libri Collection, the, 114, 263, 285

Lilly, John, 18

Lilly, Joseph, 74, 244, 245, 301

Lintot, B., 219

Lisburne, Lord, 129

Little Britain, 33, 99, 167-175

Littleton's 'Tenures,' 217

Liverpool, Earl of, 117

Livy, the Sweynheim and Pannartz, 69

Localities, some book-hunting, 166

Locke, John, 85, 320

Locker-Lampson, F., 106, 311-313

Lodge's 'Rosalynd,' 86

London House, Aldersgate Street, 39

Longman and Co., 80, 210

Longueville, Lord, 31

Lovelace's 'Lucasta,' 145

Lowndes, W., 235

Lowndes's 'Bibliographer's Manual,' 244

Low, Sampson, and Co., 116, 208

Loyalty, the 'repository' of, 250

Ludgate Hill, 215

Lumley, Lord, 16, 21

Luttrell, N., 22

Lydgate's 'Bochas,' 232

Lydgate's 'Hystory, Sege, and Destruccion of Troye,' 9

Lysons, D. and S., 110

Lytton, Lord, 150

Macaulay, Lord, 71, 149, 202, 228, 229

Mackenzie, J. Mansfield, 90

Mackinlay, I., 241

Macpherson, F., 195

Macready, W., 117

Maddison, John, 112

Magdalen College, 29, 30

Maitland, Lord, 27

Malone, E., 41, 43, 67, 108, 238

Manley, Richard, 215

Mann, John, 122

Mansion House, the old, 185, 186

Manson, J. P., 207

Manton, Dr. Thomas, 100

Manuscript, the textual value of a, 128

Markland, J. H., 61

Marlowe's 'Doctor Faustus,' 202 note

Marlowe's 'Tragedie of Richard, Duke of York,' 70

Marriot, Richard, 218

Marsh, Charles, 232

Marshall, Frank, 93

Martial's 'Epigrammata,' 132

Martyr (Peter), 'De Sacramento Eucharistiae,' 307

Mary of Este, 17

Mary, Queen, 261

Mason, George, 53

Mather, Increase, 151

Mathews, J., 234

Mathias, 'Pursuits of Literature,' 238

Matthew of Westminster, 'Flores,' 17

Matthews, Charles, 74

Maty, Dr. M., 220

Mawman, Joseph, 184

Maximilian, Emperor, 115

Mayhew, Henry, 161

Mazarin Bible. See Bible

Mazzoni, G., 201

McCarthy, Count, 108

Mead, Dr. R., 40, 105, 127, 292

Menken, Mr. E., 205, 206, 282, 315

Mews Gate, the, 238-240

Middle Row, Holborn, 194-196

Middleton, Conyers, 223

Millan, J., 235

Millar, Andrew, 235

Millington, E., 100 note, 101 and note, 170

Milton, J., 81, 95

Milton's 'Comus,' 303

Milton's 'Eikonoklastes,' 303

Milton's 'Lycidas,' 303

Milton's 'Paradise Lost,' 41, 120, 145, 170, 232, 286, 287, 303

Milton's 'Paradise Regained,' 303

Mitre Tavern, the, 116, 222

Modern Collectors (Some), 299-322

Molini, Mr., 106, 245

Molini, Peter, 249

Monasteries, the dissolution of, 13, et seq.

Moore, Dr. John, 27 and note, 30, 283

Moore, Tom, 81

Moorfields, 168, 177-179

More, Sir Thos., 15, 96, 97

Morgan, Lady, 270

Morpeth, Lord, 61

Moxon and Co., 116

MSS., the Hamilton, 50

Muggletonian tracts, 228

Murray, J., ambassador, 250

Murray, John of Sacomb, 137, 138

Murray, Mr. C. F., 320

Murray, Mr. John, 307, 308

Musgrave, Dr. S., 250

Musaeus (1494), 130

'My Novel,' extract from, 201

Napoleon I., 107

Napoleon of booksellers, the, 256

Nash, Tom, 19, 20

Neligan, Dr., 106

Nelson, Viscount, 117

Newbery, John, 213

New Cut, the, 157

Newton, Isaac, 85

Newton, W., 174

Nicholas de Lira, 8

Nicol, George, 59, 110, 124, 126, 251, 252

Noble, Francis, 194

Noble, Theophilus, 225, 226

Norgate, Mr. F., 110

Norman, Mr. Hy., 318

Nornaville and Fell, 250

North, Francis, 170

North, Dr. John, 31, 32

North, Roger, 32, 170

Notary, Julian, 211, 291

Notes and Queries, 88

Nourse, John, 236

Novimagus, Society of, 83

Ogilby, David, 196

Oldys, W., 192, 237

Orange Street, Red Lion Square, 202

'Orlando,' 57

Osborne, Tom, 34, 55, 191-193, 241 note

Ossian's 'Poems,' 229, 230

Osterley Park Library, 56

Otridge, W., 236

Ottley, W. Y., 71

Ouvry, Frederick, 86, 87

Ovid (1471), 131

Oxford, Anne Cecil, Countess of, 265

Oxford, Books at, 7, 9

Oxford, Edward, Earl of, 52, 122, 124, 139, 173, 192, 193

Oxford Street, 199-202

Pall Mall, 113, 249, 251

Pamphlets, Dr. Johnson on, 23

Pamphlet shops, 155

Papillon, David, 55, 56

Parker, Archbishop, 'De Antiquitate,' 264

Parker, Archbishop, 17, 19

Parker, Mr. R. J., 205

Parker, John, 249

Parker, Samuel, 251

Parr, Catherine, 261

Parr, Dr., 244

Parsons the Jesuit, 119

Passavant, Speyr, 140

'Pastissier Francois,' Le, 229

Paternoster Row, 209, et seq.

Paterson, S., 23, 55 note, 103, 110, 111

Patmore, Thomas, 16

'Paul Pry,' 78

Payne, James, 241

Payne, John, and Foss, 239

Payne, Thomas, 110, 237-240, 252, 306

Peacham's 'Compleat Gentleman,' 24

Peacham's 'Valley of Varietie,' 46

Pellet, Thomas, 105, 155

Pembroke, Lord, 31, 173

Penn, W., 115

Pepys, Samuel, 25, 29, 120, 212, 248

Perkins, Frederick, 92

Perkins, Henry, 71, 126, 256

Perry, James, 66, 74, 80, 126, 133

Petheram, John, 194

Phelps, J. D., 61

Phillipps, Sir Thomas, 87, 242

Piccadilly, 249, et seq.

Pickering, Basil M., 255

Pickering, W., 253

Pickering and Chatto, 194, 255

'Piers Plowman's Vision,' 120, 191

Piggott, J. H. Smyth, 71

'Pilgrim's Progress.' See Bunyan

Pindar, Elizabeth, 267, 268

Pinelli, M., 111, 249

Pitt, Moses, 100

Plato, 130

Pliny, 'Historia Naturalis,' 131

Poetry, old English, 145

Poet's Gallery, the, 116, 222

Ponder, Nathaniel, 183

'Pontevallo,' 69

Ponton, T., 61

Pope, Alexander, 44, 151, 230, 308, 311

Porson, 238

Pote, J., 236

Poultry, the, 183

Powell, W., 217

Praed, W. M., 250

Prayer Books, 87, 302

Price, the highest paid for a book, 126

Price's 'Historiae Britannicae,' 120, 121

Pridden, John, 215

Prince, J. H., 194

'Prospero,' 67

Psalmorum Codex, 126, 127

Pulteney, Sir James, 117

Purcell, of Red Lion Passage, 165

Purcell's 'Orpheus Britannicus,' 35

Purchas, 'His Pilgrims,' 118, 120, 234

Puritan divines, books of, 119

Puttenham's 'Art of English Poesie,' 145

Puttick and Simpson, 112, 113-115

Pye, John, stationer, 10

Pynson, R., 217, 218, 301

Quakers, the bibliographer of, 189

Quaritch, Mr. B., 106, 253, 255-258, 261, 280

Queensberry, Duke of, 108

Rabelais, Francois, 314

Railton, Mr., 106

Raleigh's 'Prerogative of Parliaments,' 119

Ramirez, Jose F., 115

Rastell's 'Pastyme of the People,' 207

Ratcliffe, John, 132

Rawlinson, T. and R., 39, 40, 122, 136, 213, 283

Reade, Charles, 282

Reader, Mr. A., 202

Redman, R., 217, 218

Reed, Isaac, 42, 112, 145

Reeves and Turner, 226

Reeves, Mr. W., 106, 227

Rewiczki, Count, 51

Reynolds, Sir J., 113

Richard of Peterborough, 4

Richard III., 10

Richardson's 'Remarks on Paradise Lost,' 170

Richmond, Margaret, Countess of, 261

Ridgway, James, 250

Ridler, W., 230

'Rig,' a bookseller's, 101

Rikke, R., 208

Rimbault, E. F., 194

Rimell, Mr. J., 106, 206

Ritson, Joseph, 108

Rivington and Cochrane, 241

Rivington, F. C., 213

Robins, 113

'Robinson Crusoe,' 89

Robinson, George, 216

Robinson's 'Handefull of Pleasant Delites,' 145

Robson, James, 249, 250

Robson, Mr., 106

Roche, Mr. J., 106, 206

Rodd, Thomas, 74, 75, 242

Rogers, Samuel, 80-82, 87

Roper, Abel, 219

Rosebery, Earl of, 304

Rossetti, D. G., 317

Rowfant Library, the, 311

Rowlandson, Thomas, 108

Rowsell, Joel, 245

Roxburghe Club, the, 61-64, 299, et seq.

Roxburghe, John, Duke of, 52, 53, 124, 141

Rubric posts, 176 and note, 237

Ruskin, Mr. John, 279

Rylands, Mrs., 50, 146, 270, 271, 272

Rymer's 'Foedera,' 8

Sacheverell, Dr. Henry, 251

Sala, Mr. G. A., 150, 157

Sainte-Beuve's 'Livre d'Amour,' 315

Salisbury, Mr. J., 211

Salisbury, Marquis of, 264, 306

Salkeld, Mr. John, 202, 203

Salmon, Dr., 31

Salting, Mr. G., 320

Sancho, W., 240

Sandars, Mr. S., 320

Sandell and Smith, 187

Sanderson, Bishop, 171

Saunders, Robert, 116

Savage, 'Author to Let,' 239

Saville, Sir Henry, 25, 283

Scarborough, Sir Charles, 37

Scotland Yard, 113

Scott, Dr. John, 194

Scott, R., 120, 173

Scott's, Sir Walter, MSS., 87, 89, 290, 308

Scott's 'Vision of Don Roderick,' 150

Scotus Erigena, 3

Scriptorium, 2

Seile, Henry, 24

Selden, John, 23, 30

Selsey, Lord, 133

Seneca, 'Tragoediae' (1475), 131

Severne, F. E., 57

Sewell, John, 176 note, 186

Shakespeare, W., 19, 70, 72, 74, 75, 91, 92, 93, 141-143 First Folio (1623), 42, 72, 87, 92, 95, 114, 141, 222, 291, 303, 311, 322 Second Folio (1632), 42, 75, 87, 95, 120, 141-143, 221, 303 Third Folio (1664), 42, 87, 95, 141-143, 303 Fourth Folio (1685), 42, 87, 95, 141-143, 221, 303 Quarto editions, 72, 90, 92, 93, 311 'Hamlet,' 143 '2 Henry IV.,' 92, 143 'Henry V.,' 92, 143, 301 'Henry VI.,' 143 'Lear,' 95, 143, 211 'Love's Labour Lost,' 93, 143 'Merchant of Venice,' 92, 93 (bis), 95, 143, 211, 301 'Merry Wives of Windsor,' 93, 143, 211, 301 'Midsummer Night's Dream,' 70, 95, 143, 308 'Much Ado About Nothing,' 93, 143 'Othello,' 143, 301 'Pericles,' 143, 301 'Poems,' 93, 143 'Rape of Lucrece,' 69, 93, 143, 211 'Richard II.,' 143, 211, 301 'Richard III.,' 143, 211, 301 'Romeo and Juliet,' 92, 143, 217 note, 301 'Sonnets,' 70, 143 and note 'Titus Andronicus,' 301 'Troilus and Cressida,' 143, 211 'Venus and Adonis,' 143 and note, 211

Shandy, Mr., 152

Shattock, Mr. T. F., 320

Shelburne, Earl of, 111

Sheldon, Ralph, 291

Shelley, P. B., 316

Shelley's copy of Ossian's Poems, 229

Shenstone, W., 237

Sheridan, R. B., 85

Sherley's 'Wits New Dyall,' 167

Shoreditch, 155

Shorter, Mr. C. K., 317, 318

Shropshire, Walter, 251

Sidney's 'Arcadia,' 89

Silius Italicus, 131

Simpson, Mr. W., 114

Singer, S. W., 71

Skeat, of King William Street, 287

Slater, Mr. J. H., 150

Slater, Mr. Walter, 316, 317

Sloane, Sir Hans, 30, 31, 172

Smith, Horace, 78, 80

Smith's, Captain John, 'History of Virginia,' 20

Smith, Joseph, English Consul, 41, 250

Smith, Joseph, bookseller, 187

Smith, or Smyth, Richard, 32, 33

Smollett, Tobias, 44

Smyth, Sir Thomas, 119

Snowden, Mr. G. S., 106

'Snuffy Davy,' 135

Soho, 207

Solly, Edward, 46, 88, 202

Somers, Lord, 31, 172

Somerset, Duke of, 284

Sophocles (1502), 129

Sotheby, John, 103, 104

Sotheby, Samuel, 103, 104

Sotheby, S. Leigh, 104, 105

Sotheby, Wilkinson, and Hodge, 103-108, and passim

Sotheran and Co., Messrs., 97, 233, 246, 272, 281

Sotheran, Mr. H., 106

Southampton Row, 314

Southey, Robert, 76, 308

Spectator, the, 175, 265

Spelman, Edward, 250

Spelman, Sir Henry, 21

Spence, Joseph, 220

Spencer, Earl, 50-52, 53, 61, 109, 124, 238, 272

Spencer, W. T., 205

Spenser's 'Faerie Queene,' 87, 145

Spenser, E., 35

Spon, of Cheapside, 184

St. Albans, Abbot of, 7

St. Albans, books printed at, 136, 137, 268, 301

St. Alban's Tavern, 61

St. Augustine, 'De Arte Predicandi,' 302

St. Augustine, 'De Civitate Dei,' 307, 308

St. Bernard's Seal, 43

St. Dunstan, 3

St. Francis, 6

St. Paul's Cathedral, 4

St. Paul's Churchyard, 153, 168, 208-216

Stanley, Colonel, 110, 239

Staple Inn, 42

Stapleton, A. G., 252

Stark, J. M., 245

Steele, Richard, 84, 265

Steevens, George, 42, 112, 220, 238

Stephens, J., 224

Sterne, L., 236

Stevens, Henry, 106, 115

Stewart, Charles J., 245, 268

Stewart, founder of Puttick's, 112, 114

Stibbs, E. W., 106, 200

Stock, Mr. Elliot, 96, 187

Stormont, Lord, 238

Stow's 'Survey,' 8

Strand, the, 153, 223-235

Strange, John, 111

Strickland, Agnes, 270

Suckling and Galloway, 234

Sullivan, Sir E., 92, 93

Sunderland Library sale, 114, 256

Sunderland, Earl of, 31, 36, 52, 124, 173

Sunderlin, Lord, 68

Sussex, Duke of, 109, 126, 264

Sutton, Henry, 210

Swift, Jonathan, 85, 172, 176

Swift, MS. of Scott's 'Life' of, 87

Sydenham Tusculum, Hill's, 79

Sydney, Sir Robert, 142

Sykes, Lady Mark, 270

Sykes, Sir M. M., 58, 61 note, 110, 310

Syston Park Library, 126

Talleyrand, Prince, 108

Taylor, Watson, 133

Taylor, William, 210

Tebbs, Mr. H. V., 320

Tegg, Thomas, 186

Temple Bar, 223

'Temple of the Muses,' the, 182

Tenison, Archbishop, 39

Testament. See Bible

Thackeray, W. M., 83

Theodore, Archbishop of Canterbury, 3

Theocritus (1495), 130

Thompson, Mr. H. Yates, 320

Thoms, W. J., 88, 156, 202, 228

Thoresby, Ralph, 178, 238

Thorpe, Thomas, 64 and note, 241, 242, 250

Thorold, Sir John, 126

Thurlow, Lord, 112

Tilt, Charles, 221, 253

Tisdale, John, 191

Tite, Sir William, 74, 256

Tobin, Sir J., 109

Tomes, H., 191

'Tom Folio,' 39

Tom's Coffee-house, 102

Tonson, Jacob, 35, 192, 219, 234

Tooke, Benjamin, 219

Tooke, John Horne, 54, 112

Toovey, B., 249

Toovey, J., 106, 142, 253-255, 322

Tottell, R., 217 and note

Towneley, J., 57, 61, 110, 239

Townsend, Marquis of, 108

Tradescant, Mrs., 18

Tregaskis, Mr. and Mrs., 204, 205

Triphook, R., 183, 268

Truelove, E., 200

Turberville's 'Epitaphs,' 210

Turnbull, Mr. E., 201, 202

Turner, Dawson, 114

Turner, R. S., 89

Turnstiles, Holborn, 202-204

Tunstall, James, 219

Tusser's 'Good Husbandry,' 232

Tyndale, John, 16

Tyndale's 'Practyse of Prelates,' 119

Tyrill, Sir T., 26

Tyson, Dr. E., 176

Tyssen, Samuel, 108, 111

Udal, Nicholas, 74

Upcott, W., 27, 70

Usher, Archbishop, 26

Usher, Bishop, 212

Utterson, E. V., 61

Uvedale, Robert, 236

Vaillant, Paul, 240

Valdarfer Boccaccio, the, 52, 61, 93, 123-125

Valerius Maximus (1471), 131

Valesius, 25

Van de Weyer, Col. V. W. Bates, 309

Verard, Antoine, 13

Vernor and Hood, 184

Vespucci, 'Mundus Novus,' 94

Vossius, Isaac 25

Wakefield, 238

Walford, Cornelius, 88, 151, 152

Walford, Mr. E., 106

Walker, John, 112, 113

Wallden, a Carmelite Friar, 8

Waller, Mr. John, 281

Walpole, Horace, 284, 292

Walter, John, of the Times, 235

Walton Hall library, 93

Walton, Izaak, 35, 36, 85, 171

Walton's 'Compleat Angler,' 144, 145, 218, 234, 322

Wanley, Humfrey, 34, 38, 122

Ward, Mr. W., 106

Wardour Street, 206

Warde, Roger, 191

Ware, Richard, 215

Warner's 'Syrinx' (1597), 288

Warwick, Earl of, 106

Waterton, E., 96, 97

Watson, Dr. T., 100

Weskett, 'On Insurances,' 152

Wesley, Charles, 35

Wesley and Sons, 234

West, James, 59, 60, 111, 179

Westell, Mr. J., 106, 200, 201

Westminster Hall, 247-249

Westmoreland, Countess of, 9, 260

Wheare's 'Method and Order of Reading Histories,' 85

Wheatley, Benjamin, 69, 114

Wheatley, Mr. H. B., 100 note, 293

Wheldon, John, 211

Whethamstede, 10

Whiston, John, 103, 219

Whitechapel, 155, 187, 188

White, Benjamin (Sr. and Jr.), 219-221

White, Gilbert, 221

White, John, 221

White, Joseph, 194

White Knights Library, 109

Whittington, Sir Richard, 8

Whytforde's 'Lyfe of Perfection,' 309

Wilbraham, R., 61

Wilcox, Thomas, 103

Wilkes, John, 54, 55, 108, 183, 311

Wilkinson, John, 105

Williams, Dr. David, 39

Willis, G., 246

Willoughby, Lord, 31, 193

Willoughby, Sir H., 84

Wills, John, 219

Wilson's 'Art of Logic,' 74

Wimpole Library, the, 89, 90

Winchelsea, Earl of, 173

Wingrave, F., 236

Winstanley's 'Views of Audley End,' 292

Wise, Mr. T. J., 316, 317

Wodhull, Michael, 57, 58, 128

Women as book-collectors, 259-273

Women as book-thieves, 279-280, 285

Wood, Anthony a, 8, 21, 32

Wordsworth, W., 76, 78

Worsley, Dr. B., 100, 213

Wulfseg, Bishop of London, 3

Wyndham, 238

Wynkyn de Worde, 54, 111, 119, 216, 301, 306

Yates's 'Castell of Courtesie,' 222

York, Duke of, 108

Zouche, Lord, 304



Elliot Stock, Paternoster Row, London.



Uniform with 'The Book-Hunter in London.'

THE BOOK-HUNTER IN PARIS.

BEING

Studies Among the Bookstalls of the Quays.

By OCTAVE UZANNE.

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY AUGUSTINE BIRRELL, AUTHOR OF 'OBITER DICTA,' 'RES JUDICATAE,' ETC.

AND 144 CHARACTERISTIC ILLUSTRATIONS INTERSPERSED IN THE TEXT.



EVERY bibliophile who by chance finds himself in Paris, whether on urgent affairs or on pleasure intent, invariably manages to visit that richest of hunting-grounds, the book-lined quays, where, perhaps, more unexpected treasures have been picked up than in any other city of Europe. It is of this happy hunting-ground and those who haunt it—the book-hunters and the bookstall-keepers; the books they buy and the books they sell; whence they come and whither they go; the finds, the losses, the disappointments, and red-letter days—that M. Uzanne writes in this attractive volume, in that felicitous and suggestive manner which has made him so well known in present-day literature.

Opinions of the Press on 'The Book-Hunter in Paris.'

'A very interesting book. Mr. Birrell's introduction is a pleasant and useful explanation of the volume, which is presented in a form fully deserving of its literary merits.'—Times.

'M. Uzanne's chapters are full of curious information, which will have special attraction for those English book-hunters to whom Paris is unknown. The style is agreeably anecdotic, and the numerous woodcuts are quaint and graphic.'—Globe.

'With real regret we lay down so charmingly written a volume, and it is with no small satisfaction that we note the publisher's announcement that a companion volume on "The Book-Hunter in London" will shortly be issued.'—St. James's Budget.

'M. Uzanne's book is delightful, with never a heavy touch, but crammed with quaint traditions, humorous characteristics, charming gossip.'—Graphic.

'M. Uzanne sets forth with a good deal of pathos, happily leavened with humour, the history, past and present, of the stall-keepers and the quays of the Seine, in whose trays many a notable trouvaille has been made in other times.'—Pall Mall Gazette.

'The interest of the book is heightened by the characteristic vignettes which are interwoven with the text on almost every other page.'—The Standard.

'Lightly does he carry his learning and brightly does he sketch the bookmen and their riverside market. Of present interest to all book-lovers are his piquant contrasts of the old order and the new.'—Saturday Review.

'To collectors the book will appeal with special force, but the general reader, if he be gifted with ordinary intelligence, will also enjoy it. It is not dry; in fact, to use the familiar expression, it is "as interesting as a novel."'—Publishers' Circular.

'The book is full of stories of the characteristics of the fraternity, anecdotes, and biographical sketches of past stall-keepers and their most famous patrons.'—Daily Graphic.

'Everybody knows M. Uzanne's pleasant, garrulous style—how he takes his readers into his confidence, how he spins phrases lovingly, and always keeps you in good spirits. He was just the man to write such a book.'—Bookman.

'The work is always learned, and (what is not so easy) always light. Everybody who is the least of a book-hunter ought to read it at once, or rather, ought to hunt for it first; and then, to show that it is a better sort of book than many that are hunted, read it.'—Scotsman.



TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:

Characters superscripted in the original are inclosed in {} brackets.

Variations in spelling have been left as in the original. Examples include the following:

Crede Creede Creside Cressida Faerie Faerie Magliabecchi Magliabechi Polychronicon Policronicon Schoeffer's Schoeffer Schoeffer with an oe ligature Sweynheim Sweynheym Troilus Troylus Zarothum Zarothus

The following words used an oe ligature in the original:

d'oeuvre Foedera Oeconomiques oeuvre Oeuvres Phoebum Phoenix Schoeffer Tragoedie

The following words appear with and without hyphens. They have been left as in the original.

book-buyer bookbuyer book-buying bookbuying book-case bookcase book-plate bookplate book-selling bookselling Coffee-house Coffeehouse sale-room saleroom waste-paper wastepaper

The following corrections have been made to the text:

page xiv: Purcell (p. 165)[original has 164]

page xv: necessarily a learned man.[original is missing period]

page 24: 1 Peers pennylesse supplication[original has supplicatiō to indicate there wasn't room for the final n]

ō is equivalent to o with a macron over it

page 33: the '[opening quote is missing in original]Godfrey of Bulloigne' selling for 18s.

page 40: early age of forty-four[original has fourty-four]

page 74: duplicate of my wooden leg."[original has extraneous single quote]

page 81: the MSS. of Gray, in their perfect calligraphy[original has caligraphy]

page 142: Rowfant[original has Rowfont] Library

page 146: where a sale of books was in progress[original has progess]

page 147: on the Banks of Lake Liman, near Geneva,"[ending quotation mark missing in original]

page 194: For Billingsgate, quit Flexney, and be wise.'[ending quotation mark missing in original]

page 232: like another Magliabecchi,[removed extraneous quotation mark after Magliabecchi]

page 260: Countess of Westmoreland[original has Westmorland]

page 264: We give facsimiles[original has facsimilies]

page 294: '[quotation mark missing in original]Jokely, very interesting

page 295: 'The Rose and the Ring by R. Browing.'[original has comma]

page 303: catalogue raisonne[original has raisonnee]

page 310: 'The Death Wake' (1831),[original has period]

page 322: Princess Marie Liechtenstein[original has Leichtenstein]

page 323: Arch, J. and A.[original has J.]

page 323: Bannatyne[original has Bannantyne] Club, the

page 324: under Bibles and New Testaments—

Fust and Schoeffer (1462) was out of alphabetical order in the original in the Gutenberg sub-entry, the pages numbers were out of order in the original

page 324: Brooke[original has Brook], Lord Warwick, 100

page 325: under Caxton—

'Book of Good Manners,'[comma missing in original] Godfrey of Bulloigne[original has Bulloyne] Higden's 'Polychronicon[original has Polycronicon] History of Blanchardyn[original has Blanchardin] 'Troylus and Creside,'[ending quote missing in original and spelling is Cressid] Virgil's 'AEneid'[original has AEnid]

page 326: Drummond's 'Forth[original has Fourth] Fasting,' 86

page 327: Finsbury Square, 177, 179-183[removed extraneous period]

page 327: Glashier,[comma missing in original] George, 202

page 327: Guilford[original has Guildford], Earl of

page 327: Guilford[original has Guildford], Francis, Baron

page 328: Johnson, Joseph[original has John], 214, 215

page 328: Johnston[original has Johnstone], William

page 328: Kempis, Thomas a[original has a]

page 330: Nornaville[original has Nornanville] and Fell

page 330: Nourse[original has Nowise], John, 236

page 331: Rewiczki[original has Rewicski], Count

page 331: Loyalty[original has Royalty—entry has been moved to maintain alphabetical order], the 'repository' of, 250

page 332: Stibbs[original has Stibbes], E. W.

page 332: Thackeray, W. M., 83[out of alphabetical order in original]

page 332: Tyndale[original has Tyndall], John, 16

page 332: Tyson, Dr. E., 176[out of alphabetical order in original]

page 333: Verard[original has Verard], Antoine

page 333: entries for Walford, Cornelius, Walford, Mr. E., Walker, John, Warde, Roger, and Ward, Mr. W., were out of alphabetical order in the original

page 333: Weskett,[comma missing in original] 'On Insurances,' 151

In the index on page 328, there is an entry for Thomas a Kempis. His name is not mentioned in the book, but he is the author of "Imitatio Christi" which is discussed in the text on the referenced pages.

In the index, many of the page references were incorrect. Corrections have been made as indicated in the following table.

Original Correct Entry Page # Page #

Aldine editions, 128-131 129-131 Aldus, 128 129 Alfred, 2 3 Anacreon, Stephen edition, 128 129 Anthologia Graeca' (1494), 129 130 Archaica Club, 78 79 'Aristophanes' (1498), 128 129 Aristotle (1495-98), 129 130 Askew Sale, the, 127, et seq. 128, et seq.

Bannatyne Club, the, 62 62 note Baptist Library at Bristol, 137 138 Barbican, the, 175, 176 176, 177 Batemans of Little Britain, 170 171 Becket, Thomas, 175 note 176 note Bernard, Dr. Francis, 131 132 Bibles and New Testaments Coverdale's (1535), 113 138 Graeca Septuaginta, 192 192 note St. Jerome's MS., 139, 140 140 Bishopsgate Churchyard, 160 161 Black-letter books, 135 136 Blandford, Marquis of, 61 61 note Bloomfield, R., 153 154 'Boke of St. Albans,' 135, 136 136 Book-ghouls, 159 160 Bookstalls and bookstalling, 148-166 149-167 Brabourne, Lord, 106 107 Britten, Mr. James, 150 151 Britton, Thomas, 171, 172 172, 173 Brown, 'Old,' 156 157 Bruscambille on 'Long Noses,' 151 152 Bunyan's 'Pilgrim's Progress,' 144, 145 145, 146 Burdett-Coutts, Baroness, 140, 141 141, 142 Butterworth, Henry, 217 217 note

Campbell, Mr. Dykes, 106 107 Caxton, W. 131 132 'Arthur, King,' 132 133 'Book called Cathon,' 131, 132 132, 133 'Book of Chivalry,' 135 136 'Chastising of God's Children,' 131 132 Chaucer's 'Canterbury Tales,' 135 136 'Chronicles of England,' 131, 132 132, 133 Cicero ('De Senectute'), 'Of Old Age,' 90, 131, 132 132, 133 'Dictes and Sayings,' 131 132 'Doctrinal of Sapience,' 131, 132 132, 133 'Game and Playe of Chesse,' 131, 132, 134 132, 133, 135 'Godfrey of Bulloigne,' 131 132 'Golden Legend,' 132 133 Gower's 'Confessio Amantis,' 132 133 Higden's 'Description of Britayn' 132 ? Higden's 'Polychronicon,' 80 89 'Historyes of Troy,' 131 132 'History of Blanchardyn and Eglantine,' 132 133 'History of Jason,' 131, 132 132, 133 'Mirrour of the World,' 132 133 Russell's 'Propositio,' 133 134 'Troylus and Creside,' 132 133 Virgil's 'AEneid,' 132 133 Caxton, the highest paid for a, 132 133 Caxtons, the Althorp, 133 134 Chained books at Hereford, 274 ? Chandler, Dr., 287 289 Clarke, W., 134 135

Daniel, G., 140-142 141-143 Daniell, Mr. E., 106 107 Day's circulating library, 207, 208 208 Defoe, Daniel, 155 156 Devonshire, Dukes of, } 61, 132 61 note, 133 } 140, 141, 172 141, 142, 173 Diodorus Siculus (1539), 129 130 Dobell, Mr. B., 106 107 Dorset, Earl of, 169 170 Drayton, M., 157 158 Duck Lane, 174, 175 175, 176 Duke Street, Little Britain, 174, 175 175, 176

East End, book-hunting in, 154, et seq. 155, et seq. Editiones Principes, 127-131 128-131 Ellis, Mr. G. I., 106 107 Elyot's 'Castell of Helth,' 165 166 Euripides (1503), 128 129 Exeter 'Change, 153, 154 154, 155 Extra-illustrating, 164 165

Farringdon Road, 157, 158 158, 159 Finsbury Square, 177 178 Foote, Samuel, 162 163 Franklin, B., 174 175 Fuller's 'David's Hainous Sinne,' 150 151 Funnibus, L., 146 147

Garnett, Dr. R., 165 166 Garth, Samuel, 175 176 George III., 129, 134, 140 130, 135, 141 Gifford, Dr., 138, 139 139, 140 Glasse's 'Art of Cookery,' 149 150 Goldsmith's 'Vicar of Wakefield,' 145 146 Gomme, Mr. G. L., 150 151 Grangerizing, 164 165 Gray's MSS., 145 146 Gwillim's 'Display of Heraldry,' 155 156

Harleian Library, The, 193 192 Harvey, Mr. F., 164 165 Harwood, Dr., 127-130 128-131 Hatchards, 253, 254 252-254 Heliconia Club, 78 79 Herodotus (1502), 128 129 Hindley, Mr. C., 106 107 Hodge, Mr. E. Grose, 106 107 Hodgson and Co., 145, 161-163 146, 162-164 Holford, Captain, 145 146 Holywell Street, 152, 153 153, 154 Homer, the Foulis edition, 128 129 Horace, editio princeps, 129 130 Hunter, Mr., 129 130 Hunt, Leigh, 148 149

Islington, cattle market at, 163 164 Isocrates (1493), 128 129

Jeffrey, Edward, 112 113 Jersey, Earl of, 132 133 Johnson, Dr., 257 237 Jolley, Thomas, 142 note 143 note Juvenal and Persius (1469), 130 131

King, John, 177 178 King, Thomas, 177 178 Knock-outs, 163 164

Lamb, Charles, 175, 176 176, 177 Lamb's 'Beauty and the Beast,' 149 150 Langford, auctioneer, 138 139 Leighton, Mr., 106 107 Lemoine, Henry, 160 161 Lisburne, Lord, 128 129 Locker-Lampson, F., 106 107 London House, Aldersgate Street, 40 39 Longman and Co., 79, 80 80 Lovelace's 'Lucasta,' 144 145 Lytton, Lord, 149 150

Macaulay, Lord, 148 149 Manuscript, the textual value of a, 127 128 Martial's 'Epigrammata,' 131 132 Mather, Increase, 150 151 Mayhew, Henry, 160 161 Millington, E. 169 170 Milton's 'Paradise Lost,' 144, 169 145, 170 Molini, Mr., 106 107 Moorfields, 167, 176-179 168, 177-179 Murray, John of Sacomb, 137, 138 138, 139 Musaeus (1494), 129 130

Neligan, Dr., 106 107 New Cut, the, 156, 157 157 Newton, W., 173 174 Nicol, George, 127 126 North, Francis, 169 170 North, Roger, 169 170 Novimagus, Society of, 82 83

Ovid (1471), 130 131 Oxford, Edward, Earl of, 138, 172 139, 173

Pamphlet shops, 154 155 Passavant, Speyr, 139 140 Pellet, Thomas, 154 155 Pembroke, Lord, 172 173 Pepys, Samuel, 249 248 Perry, James, 132 133 Plato, 129 130 Pliny, 'Historia Naturalis,' 130 131 Poetry, old English, 144 145 Pope, Alexander, 150 151 Purcell, of Red Lion Passage, 164 165 Puttenham's 'Art of English Poesie,' 144 145

Quaritch, Mr. B., 106, 281 107, 280

Railton, Mr., 106 107 Ratcliffe, John, 131 132 Rawlinson, T. and R., 135 136 Reed, Isaac, 144 145 Reeves, Mr. W., 106 107 Richardson's 'Remarks on Paradise Lost,' 169 170 Rimell, Mr. J., 106 107 Robinson's 'Handefull of Pleasant Delites,' 144 145 Robson, Mr., 106 107 Roche, Mr. J., 106 107 Rogers, Samuel, 79-82 80-82 Roxburghe, John, Duke of, 140 141 Rubric posts, 175 176 Rylands, Mrs., 145 146

Sacheverell, Dr. Henry, 257 251 Sala, Mr. G. A., 149, 156 150, 157 Salisbury, Mr. J., 209, 211 211 Sanderson, Bishop, 170 171 Scott, R., 172 173 Scott's 'Vision of Don Roderick,' 149 150 Scriptorium, 1, 2 2 Selsey, Lord, 132 133 Seneca, 'Tragoediae' (1475), 130 131 Sewell, John, 175 176 note Shakespeare, W., 140-142 141-143 First Folio (1623), 140 141 Second Folio (1632), 140-142 141-143 Third Folio (1664), 140-142 141-143 Fourth Folio (1685), 140-142 141-143 Quarto editions 'Hamlet,' 142 143 '2 Henry IV.,' 142 143 'Henry V.,' 142 143 'Henry VI.,' 142 143 'Lear,' 142 143 'Love's Labour Lost,' 142 143 'Merchant of Venice,' 142 143 'Merry Wives of Windsor, 142 143 'Midsummer Night's Dream' 142 143 'Much Ado About Nothing,' 142 143 'Othello,' 142 143 'Pericles,' 142 143 'Poems,' 142 143 'Rape of Lucrece,' 142 143 'Richard II.,' 142 143 'Richard III.,' 142 143 'Romeo and Juliet,' 142 143 'Sonnets,' 142, 143 note 143 and note 'Troilus and Cressida,' 142 143 'Venus and Adonis,' 142, 143 note 143 and note Shandy, Mr., 151 152 Sherley's 'Wits New Dyall,' 166 167 Shoreditch, 154 155 Silius Italicus, 130 131 Slater, Mr. J. H., 149 150 Sloane, Sir Hans, 171 172 'Snuffy Davy,' 134 135 Solly, Edward, 47 46 Somers, Lord, 171 172 Snowden, Mr. G. S., 106 107 Sophocles (1502), 128 129 Sotheran, Mr. H., 106 107 Spectator, the, 174 175 Spenser's 'Faerie Queene,' 144 145 St. Albans, books printed at, 135, 136 136, 137 St. Paul's Churchyard, 152 153 Stevens, Henry, 106 107 Staple Inn, 43 42 Stibbs, E. W., 106 107 Strand, the, 152 153 Sunderland, Earl of, 172 173 Swift, Jonathan, 171, 175 172, 176 Sydenham Tusculum, Hill's, 78 79 Sydney, Sir Robert, 141 142 Sykes, Sir M. M., 61 61 note

Taylor, Watson, 132 133 Theocritus (1495), 129 130 Thoms, W. J., 155, 156 156 Thoresby, Ralph, 177 178 Toovey, J., 106, 141, 145 107, 142 Tyson, Dr. E., 175 176

Valerius Maximus (1471), 130 131 Verard, Antoine, 12 13

Walford, Mr. E., 106 107 Walton, Izaak, 170 171 Walton's 'Compleat Angler,' 143, 144 144, 145 Walford, Cornelius, 150, 151 151, 152 Walker, John, 114 113 Ward, Mr. W., 106 107 Warwick, Earl of, 106 107 Weskett, 'On Insurances,' 151 152 Westell, Mr. J., 106 107 Whitechapel, 154 155 Winchelsea, Earl of, 172 173 Women as book-thieves, 278-280 279-280 Wynkyn de Worde, 118 111

Ellipsis are represented as in the original.

THE END

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