1 984 résultats
Three volumes, complete. FIRST EDITION of this scholarly, encyclopedic, and highly entertaining history of French gastronomy. XIII, (3), 373, (1); (4), 383, (1); (4), 363, (1). Half-titles present (they are often missing). SIGNED (in pencil) ON THE HALF-TITLE OF VOLUME I BY JORDI, JOSEP, AND JOAN ROCA OF EL CELLER DE CAN ROCA IN GIRONA, SPAIN, CURRENTLY THE BEST RESTAURANT IN THE WORLD (according to the highly prestigious San Pellegrino survey). And SIGNED (in pencil) ON THE HALF-TITLE OF VOLUME II BY FERRAN ADRIA, OF EL BULLI, winner of the San Pellegrino survey a record five times. The author originally set out to write an extensive work covering all facets of private life in France, but only this first part--which covers everything related to cooking, wine, eating, and hunting--was published. Discusses the origins of cooking tools and techniques, the provenance of all kinds of foods (including, of course, foodstuffs that came from the New World), and much more, including an extensive section on hunting. A classic. PRINTED ON FINE LAID PAPER. 8vo. ELEGANTLY BOUND IN FULL CONTEMPORARY HALF RUSSIA AND MARBLED BOARDS, SPINE IN SIX COMPARTMENTS WITH RAISED BANDS. Minimal traces of wear to bindings, upper joint of volume I cracked but firm, else a fine and bright copy with very large margins and very white paper. Vicaire 510 ("Ouvrage tres interessant et tres utile...."); Bitting 280 ("This is one of the finest works upon the social life of the French people...."); Thiebaud 576. AN OUTSTANDING SET OF A RARE AND IMPORTANT WORK.
Paris, Armand Robin, Editeur, 1838. 2 volumes grand In-8 (26 x 18 cm), demi-basane marron à petits coins, dos à décor romantique et filets dorés. Tome 1 : 2 ff. n. ch., VIII p., 224 pages, 36 planches lithographies et aquarellée (gibier plume & gibier poil) ; Tom 2 : 2 ff. n. ch., 227 pages. 36 planches lithographiées et aquarellées oiseaux d'eau, oiseaux de rivage) ; avec un Supplément de XVI pp. (à la suite de la p. 124). Deux ex-libris sur les gardes. Erreur de pagination en tome 1 : p.97 à 104 numérotées deux fois ; la p. 137 devient 157 et p. suivantes poursuivant l'erreur jusqu'à la p. 224. s Parmi les gibiers représentés on trouve : le coq de bruyère, l’alouette, l’ortolan, la bécasse, le loup, le sanglier, le chamois, le courlis, le pluvier, la bécassine, la macreuse, le canard, la sarcelle, la poule d’eau, etc. Ce bel ouvrage devient de plus en plus rare, indique Thiébaud, 6.
A Paris chez Antoine de Sommaville et André Soubron, 1655. In/4 reliure (19è) demi-chagrin noir, dos lisse à caissons ornés, 14 ff. (beau frontispice gravé sur cuivre, préface, tables), 437 p., 4 f. n. p. Erreur de pagination en fin de volume où les numérotations sont reprises ; également 2 pages sont doublées en milieu d'ouvrage : 168/169 (intercallée entre les pages 189/190) ; rousseurs éparses et auréoles claires en bordure de certains feuillets. Edition originale. Traité, destiné, dans l’esprit de l’auteur à remplacer celui de Du Fouilloux, que l’auteur trouvait écrit dans un langage trop libre. Doué d’un prodigieux esprit d’observation, il avait appris à connaître les animaux de nos forêts. Il nous a laissé des détails, non seulement sur la manière de les chasser, mais aussi sur leurs habitudes, leurs ruses et leurs instincts. Il contient les chasses du cerf, du lièvre, du chevreuil, du sanglier, du loup et du renard. Avec la manière d’élever les chiens et un traité des remèdes pour leurs maladies. Brunet T.5, Thiebaud col. 823/824.
A Paris André de Sommaville et chez André Soubron, 1655. In/4 reliure plein veau du temps, dos à caissons aveugles, 12 f.(épitre, préface, tables), 437 p., bandeaux, lettrines historiées et culs de lampes. Reliure forttée et usure marquée sur un coin. Erreur de pagination en fin de volume où les numérotations sont reprises ; également 2 pages sont doublées en milieu d'ouvrage : 168/169 (intercallée entre les pages 189/190) comme toujours ; rousseurs éparses. traité célèbre, destiné, dans l’esprit de l’auteur, à remplacer celui de Du Fouilloux, que l’auteur trouvait écrit dans un langage trop libre. Doué d’un prodigieux esprit d’observation, il avait appris à connaître les animaux de nos forêts. Il nous a laissé des détails, non seulement sur la manière de les chasser, mais aussi sur leurs habitudes, leurs ruses et leurs instincts. Il contient les chasses du cerf, du lièvre, du chevreuil, du sanglier, du loup et du renard. Avec la manière d’élever les chiens et un traité des remèdes pour leurs maladies. Brunet T.5, Thiebaud col. 823/824.
Paris Rothschild, Editeur 1886 - 1887. 5 vol. In/4, reliure en demi-chagrin vert à coins, dos à nerfs, tête dorée (Reliure de l'époque). 200, 176, 200, 315, 214 pages. Edition originale ornée de 345 planches en couleurs montrant l'oiseau le plus souvent avec ses oeufs. Tome I : Les Oiseaux d'eau ou nageurs - Tome II : Les Oiseaux de rivage et de terre et des coureurs -Tome III 1ér et 2ém partie : Les Oiseaux des champs et des bois - Tome IV : Les Oiseaux de proie. Bel exemplaire. Nissen
3 vols., 8vo., First Edition, on laid paper; handsomely bound in uniform burgundy full crushed morocco, sides with gilt frame borders, backs with raised bands, second and fourth compartments lettered and ruled in gilt, all other compartments tooled in gilt, gilt tops, hand-made endpapers, ribbon markers, a most attractive set ideal as a gift or for presentation. Elegant set of first editions of Sassoon's 'fictitious' autobiography in which his story is told by 'George Sherston'.
O.L. Aubert, éditeur, Saint Brieuc, 1932. In/4 relié, 22 planches hors-texte dont 11 de Léon Danchin sous serpente légendées, 176 pages, reliure en basane marron, dos à nerfs, planches de Lajarrige, Danchin, photographies signée de Bailly à St Brieuc. Bel ouvrage numéroté sur simili-japon Dujardin, tiré à 325 ex. seulement. Exemplaire en bon état. Souvenirs de plus de trente années de chasse en Bretagne. Thiebaud col. 120.
8vo [21.5 x 14 cm]; includes 9 original papers by Spruce, folding partly colored map, plate of Utricularia Peltata, Spruce, from Linn. Society Journal Botany Vol. IV, 1845. contemporary half calf, with gilt title lettering 'Opuscula; R. S.' on leather spine label, marbled boards rubbed, contents of papers listed hand-written on endpaper, initials RS in ink on margin of first paper, marginal notes & corrections, very good. A The papers by Richard Spruce included here are: The Musci and Hepaticae of Teesdale, Trans. Bot. Society of Edinburgh, 1844 (pp 65-89); On Several Mosses new to the British Flora, London Journal of Botany, 1845 (pp1-27); On Five New Plants from Eastern Peru, Linnaean Society, 1859 (pp191-204); On the Mode of Branching of Some Amazon Trees, Linn. Soc., 1861, (pp 3-51); Notes of a Visit to the Cinchona Forests on the Western slope of the Quiteian Andes, Linn Journal, 1859, (176-192); On the Mountains of Llanganati in the Eastern Cordillera of the Quitonian Andes, offprint (?, or possibly earlier printing, has a few hand corrections) from Royal Geographical Society of London, 1861 (1-21, with folding engraved map, partly colored showing his routes); On the River Purus, a Tributary of the Amazon, no publisher stated, June 13, 1864 (1-13); Notes on the Valleys of Piura and Chira in Northern Peru and on the Cultivation of Cotton Therein, London, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1864 (pp 1-81). In addition there is only part of his paper, Report on the Expedition to Procure Seeds and Plants of the Cinchona Succirubra, or Red Bark Tree, London 1861, pages 85-112 only, the rest being removed but pages 104-111 being a note by Spruce on Cinchona Succirubra, Pavon and allied species, dated 1861 and pages 111-112 being a note by Clements R. Markham , respected author who wrote two books on obtaining Cinchona seeds and plants for planting in India to develop a cure for malaria. There is also a paper by Daniel Oliver, 'Descriptions of New Species of Utricularia from South America, 1859 (pp 169-176). Mark Honigsbaum in his book Valverde's Gold, 2004, on the exploration in eastern Ecuador for Incan gold, refers extensively to Spruce's work, especially that on Llanganati Mountains and he reproduced Spruce's map described above in his book but in much reduced size. The manuscript notes in parts of this work may be in Spruce's hand but this is not verified. Spruce was one of the great plant hunters of the Amazon region, collecting over seven thousand botanical specimens, many of which were previously unknown. Spruce was in the Amazon region at the same time as Bates and Wallace, and all three lived on the earnings from specimens sent back to England. In 1860, Spruce collected some 600 cinchona plants and thousands of seeds in Ecuador for raising in India for the production of quinine as a cure for malaria. The Royal Geographical Society elected him an honorary fellow in 1866 for his fine work. The Linnaean Society also made him an associate. Spruce was a great influence on the work of Darwin, Wallace, Richard Schultes and others. The author's 'Notes of a Botanist on the Amazon & Andes; being records of travel on the Amazon and its Tributaries, the Trombeta, Rio Negro, Uapes, etc. . to the Orinoco, the eastern side of the Andes of Peru and Ecuador and the shores of the Pacific during 1849-1864' was published in 1908 after his death, by Alfred Russell Wallace, and remains a classic work of travels in South America and especially Amazonia.
8vo [23 x 15 cm]; xxiv, 424 pp, frontis, 61 illustrations including many full-page, mostly from photos, 3 folding maps, some drawings, index. original pictorial cloth, gilt spine title lettering and gilt picture on front cover, top edge gilted, endpaper bookplate, no tears of maps, near fine and clean. A picture of this book is available upon request by email. An important book by one of the great botanical explorers and naturalists of the nineteenth century, the Italian botanist, spent time at Kew, where he met Charles Darwin, William Joseph Hooker and James Brooke, the Rajah of Sarawak. The latter lead him to spending 3 years from 1865 to 1868 undertaking research in Sarawak, Brunei and other islands off present-day Malaysia and New Guinea, where he discovered many new species of palms, and many other plants such as a phosphorescent fungus that was bright enough to read a newspaper placed by it. Beccari was in Sarawak during 1865-67 where he collected over 800 bird skins including 40 not previously discovered of unrecorded species. He describes nature, the people, Dyaks and their customs in some detail, prior to the major impacts of the twentieth century, and describes his return to Sarawak some 20 years later, where he formed a botanical garden. He discovered the titan arum, the plant with the largest unbranched inflorescence in the world, in Sumatra in 1878. This edition also contains the valuable and detailed appendix on the forests of Borneo, which are currently being logged to extinction. The preface is by naturalist F. H. H. Guillemard who also wrote a book of his travels in the area. The later reprint does not include the maps of the original.
Roy. 8vo., Second Edition, with coloured aquatint frontispiece, elaborately engraved and printed titles, and 17 fine coloured aquatint plates (some plates with original tissue guards present, a few lightly age-soiled at fore-margins only), ALL AQUATINT PLATES FINELY COLOURED BY HAND, printed title and fore-margins lightly age-soiled, C6 frayed at outer margin (not affecting text), lateral tear in J7 repaired with slight misalignment of text; handsomely bound in mid-nineteenth century green half morocco, marbled boards ruled in blind, back gilt with five raised bands tooled in gilt, second compartment lettered and ruled in gilt, all other compartments elaborately framed and tooled in gilt to a floral design, all edges marbled, marbled endpapers, joints lightly rubbed else a very good, bright, clean copy. With the large nineteenth-century engraved armorial bookplate of Frederick W. Disney on front paste-down. The plate 'Stand and Deliver' is placed opposite p.50 rather than p.26 as called for. Apperley's classic account was first published in 1835 with only twelve plates; here three of the original plates are replaced by new ones, and six new plates added. This copy has all the earlier state points: plate 1 aquatinted by H. Alken, the spelling 'filly' in plate 9 and correct page numbers on plates 17-18. This copy is bound without the final printer's leaf and publisher's advertisements at end. Abbey, Life, 385; Hardie, pp.185-6 & 320; Prideaux, p.326; Tooley 67.+
P., Limoges, Société des Publications du centre, 1919. Broché, 158 pp avec un frontispice - 2 planches hors texte ( p.76 et pp.135.) quelques vignettes dans le texte - 8 feuillets n.c (dont 4 ff de fanfares et 1 ff de vignettes de boutons de vénerie). Envoi de l'auteur. Thiébaud, 262. Unique édition tirée à petit nombre.
Three volumes, complete. SECOND EDITION (first edition 1782, with some copies re-issued with a new title-page in 1783) of this scholarly, encyclopedic, and highly entertaining history of French gastronomy. This edition has been carefully corrected--and much documentation has been added--by Jean-Baptiste-Bonaventure de Roquefort, one of the outstanding scholars of his generation, who specialized in medieval literature and culture. [2] leaves; VI, 448 pp.; [2] leaves; 431 pp.; [2] leaves; 482 pp. The author originally set out to write an extensive work covering all facets of private life in France, but only this first part--which covers everything related to cooking, wine, eating, and hunting--was published. Discusses the origins of cooking tools and techniques, the provenance of all kinds of foods (including, of course, foodstuffs that came from the New World), and much more, including an extensive section on hunting. A classic. PRINTED ON FINE LAID PAPER. 8vo. Attractively bound in contemporary quarter calf and marbled boards. Spines dry and faded, else a fine and bright copy with very large margins and very white paper. Vicaire Gastronomique 510 (Not knowing of this specific edition, but calling the work "Ouvrage tres interessant et tres utile...."); Bitting 280 ("This is one of the finest works upon the social life of the French people...."); Thiebaud 576. A RARE AND IMPORTANT WORK.
Paris, Durel éditeur 1948. In-4 carré relié demi-basane prune, dos à nerfs, titre doré. Couverture illustrée conservée. 185 pages. Illustrations de Xavier de Poret dans et hors-texte + planches en fin réunissant 41 figures avec explications en regard. Tirage limité numéroté. Celui-ci sur Alfa. Exemplaire comportant un très bel envoi autographe signé, daté, de Germaien Tillion à Georges Segrette. Parfait état.
Generously illustrated with black and white photos and illustrations. Features: Bill Carlisle, Train Robber - An account of the amazing exploits of a man described as "the last of the train-robbers", who would notify officials when he was about to rob a train!; In Quest of the Dragon Lizards - Part I - A thrilling account of adventures on a remote Dutch East Indies island in pursuit of prehistoric flesh-eating lizards (the Komodo dragon) - with photos; The City of Golden Geese - A lively photo-illustrated account of the foie gras industry in the old city of Strasburg in Alsace; Mungoro Meets His Match - A Rhodesian tale; The End of the Chase - A hunt for a monstrous elephant near Lake Nyasa; Photo of a Kentish stilt-walker in field of hops; The Man in No. 35 - How a British officer discovered, in a Russian prison, Julius Weinberg, a Jewish banker who had actually handed Lenin and his accomplices ten million marks from the German Government in order to finance the Bolshevik revolution that destroyed Russia as a fighting force - the little man knew too much, and paid with his life for his refusal to surrender the incriminating receipts; Cycling Round the World - Part II - Kai Thorenfeldt spent over two years riding over 20,00 miles! - with photos; The bachelor Homesteaders of British Columbia - A breezy photo-illustrated account of the adventures and hardships of this cheery, happy-go-lucky class of men; The Girl Stowaway of the Cecilie - Part II - Jeanne Day snuck aboard the Herzogin Cecilie before it departed Australia for Falmouth - with photos; A Ride in the Night - An officer of the King's African Rifles falls ill on the Abyssinian frontier of Kenya Colony; The Chief's Gift - A tale from a New Zealand sheep farmer; Teddy Murphy's Close Call - A child disappears into a well in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. 84 pages plus 12 pages of nice vintage ads. Unmarked with average wear. A sound copy of this nice vintage issue. Book
Paris, Rothschild éditeur, 1870. In/4 reliure demi-maroquin rouge à coins, dos à nerfs à titre doré, doré sur tête, reliure de E. Pouget successeur de Dumergue, rue de Hanovre à Paris. 50 planches en chromo-typographie sous serpentes, 168 pages. Rare rousseurs sur les feuillets de texte et sur les planches. Thiebaud col. 191.
Editions Vialetay, 1954. Fort volume grand in/4 reliure signée Blaizot en plein maroquin havane, dos lisse à titre doré sous étui, doré sur tête, tranches non massicotées, illustrations : 30 pointes sèches originales de Gaston Barret, 331 p. de texte. Tirage à seulement 249 exemplaires, celui-ci sur Auvergne à la main comprenant une suite en bistre avec remarques sur Lana et deux planches refusées. Un très bel exemplaire hormis des taches Monod 5262. Cet ouvrage paru en 1925, est tout à la fois un hymne à la nature solognote, terre d’élection de l’auteur, et l’émouvante et âpre aventure d’un homme que son instinct de chasse pousse hors des lois et qui suscite les haines, où sont parfaitement mis à profit ses dons poétiques de conteur et son humanisme.
Abundant black and white illustrations and reproductions of photos. Features: Volcanic Eruption on Ambrim Island in the New Hebrides in 1913 - article with spectacular photos; The Mad Mule - a mine mule turns murderer at the Blue Mountain Mine in Butte, Montana; The Mystery of Crowhurst Aylmer - a remarkable romance from 1890 is narrated by a life insurance manager; Whale-Hunting With A Camera - A fascinating account of the work of scientific naturalist-photographer H.J. Shepstone - the first man to secure a complete set of striking photographs of the various species of whales 'at home' in the water, and being harpooned, at a time when they were already facing extinction; An Accessory After the Fact - An English mining engineer's queer experience in Mexico; Down the Amazon From Source to Mouth - Part I - J. Campbell Besley and his expedition discover the source of the mighty Amazon high in the mountains of Peru and follow it down to the Atlantic, time and again fighting for their lives against savages and forces of nature; The Buried Treasure - the extraordinary experience of travelling salesman R.D. Morrison in North Carolina; The Hermits of the Alps - The lonely life of herdsmen who take their herds and flocks to high mountain pastures each summer - article with great photos; In Search of Adventure - Part III - The Story of a Chequered Cruise; Fighting a Giant Saw-Fish - James Willoughby describes a monster catch and the battle he put up - article with great photo of the fish, 14.5 feet long; A Capture of Dacoits - an account of an exciting day's work in the Punjab; and more. pp. 6 [ads], 482-576, 7-24 [ads]. Clean and unmarked with moderate wear. A sound vintage copy. Book
Signed, without inscription, by Jack O'Connor and Jim Rikhoff. Hand-numbered copy #43 of 950 issued for the National Sporting Fraternity Limited, of which Rikhoff was President. "A reissue of the scarce classic Game in the Desert, first published in 1939, with two additional chapters." - Biscotti p. 320, Wegner p. 199. pp. [iv], v-xxix, [3], 306. 9.8" x 7.5". Selected Bibliography. Book clean and unmarked with very light wear to publisher's forest green faux leather brightly adorned with gilt. Moderate wear to slipcase. No dust jacket, presumably as issued. A quality example of this excellent Jack O'Connor collectible. Book
In 8°; 288, (2) pp. Brossura editoriale con tiolo, autore, editore e fregio a tema venatorio, impresso in rosso e nero entro cornice al piatto anteriore. Rinforzo in carta marmorizzata al dorso. Dedica autografa dell'autore alla prima carta bianca. Qualche macchiolina, qualche lieve fioritura, non significativa e nel complesso in buone condizioni di conservazione. Prima rarissima edizione, una seconda edizione assai più comune uscì nel 1905, di quello che è considerato il primo libro italiano di memorie sulla caccia scritto da quello che è considerato l'iniziatore della moderna letteratura venatoria italiana Arturo Renault. L'autore, di origine francese, era figlio del capo-guardiacaccia delle Reali Tenute della Veneria chiamato direttamente da Vittorio Emanule II. Arturo Renault, da autodidatta, imparò la lingua italiana. A lui si devono numerose opere e diversi articoli venatori su vari quotidiani e periodici che a partire dal 1870 erano apparsi in Italia. Celebri sono i suoi articoli sulla rivista Diana (della quale fu anche direttore). La sua opera letteraria gli diede notevole fama nel mondo venatorio italiano ed europeo. Questi articoli erano di solito formati con lo pseudonimo di "Rusticus". Renault, nel 1873, pubblicò il suo primo opuscolo "Ai Cacciatori", quasi sconosciuto oggi ma che dava, formalmente inizio alla letteratura venatoria italiana. Seguì nel 1877 il volume "La caccia e i cacciatori" che però era una raccolta degli articoli di Renault apparsi sulla Gazzetta d'Italia. Il libro ebbe enorme successo. Ma è proprio il volume qui presentato ad essere, generalmente, considerato il primo volume italiano di racconti venatori. L'opera è composta da 16 capitoli di ricordi venatori ed aneddoti illustrati in un linguaggio vivace e piacevole. Un capitolo è dedicato anche al vino. Questa primissima edizione è arricchita anche dalla firma autografo dell'autore. Rarità bibliografica. Rif. Bibl.: IT\ICCU\SBL\0058598.
Abundant black and white illustrations and reproductions of photos. Features: Behind the Scenes in Russia - Part VI - Robert Wilton, a British War Correspondent on the Eastern Front, recounts his experiences, tells the true story of the tragic end of Rasputin, and discusses claims that the Czar is alive - article with photos of the Czar, his family, and Rasputin; The Most Savage of Beasts - John A. Jordan describes the strange tactics and danger of hunting the African Buffalo; A Hero of the Soudan - How the first Civilian's Victoria Cross was won by Sergeant J.J. Farmer - article with photo; My Niggers - humorous account of the writer's experiences of Gyppies at a camp along the Suez Canal; My Wanderings in Little-Known Angola - interesting article with many excellent photos; The Mechanically-Minded Skipper - Tobias Meddling of the 8-thousand ton ship Peerless; Capturing Seventy-Nine Germans Single-Handed - Canadian officer Captain MacDowell tricked Germans into surrendering at Vimy Ridge; The Battle for the Lake - German warships are ousted from the great inland sea in Central Africa, Tanganyika; Our Grizzly Bear Record - Francis Dickie and his companion set a new world's record for killing Grizzly bears in the Canadian Rockies - article with photos; Pipe Town - where Brier pipes are made for the "Tommies" and the "Poilus" - article with excellent photos; A "Rice Wedding" in Java - fascinating photo-illustrated article; Some Strange Escapes From Germany - Part I - how prisoners of war escaped from the Germans in WWI; My Escape From Russia - Madame Semenoff describes her escape from Petrograd after the Bolsheviks took over; Canada's Water Miracle - The Bassano Dam, the world's longest, built in Alberta, Canada - article with excellent photos; The Zulu Love Medicine - Part I - a member of the Natal Mounted Police describes how an Englishman was murdered by a Zulu medicine-man and accomplices so a portion of the body could be used to make an effective love medicine; and more. pp. 8 [ads], [3], 268-352, 9-16 [ads]. Clean and unmarked with moderate wear. A quality vintage copy of this wonderful issue. Book
large 8vo [25 x 16 cm]; 2 volumes, in 10 parts by genera, hundreds of illustrations including 97 full-page plates and folding, 13 colored maps mostly folding showing geographical distributions, indices, with title & half title pages issued later. later (1953) cloth with gilt spine title lettering, the original heavy paper wraps of each of the 10 parts are bound in (one wrap chipped & repaired), the parts are not bound in order, small stain on outer edge of part VII, fine, clean and unmarked. A pi In this copy, part X, General Review of the Orchideae is bound first in volume I Originally published in 10 parts, usually bound in 2 volumes, in 1887-1894, it is a milestone and a famous and still useful reference in orchid literature, with descriptions and culture of about 1,700 species and hybrids, together with the history of their discovery and collection, about 1300 pages. Besides the detailed descriptions, the work includes details on the discovery and development of the various species and varieties. Veitch was a leading English nursery, which sent plant hunters to many parts of the world, and introduced numerous new varieties and species. BMNH 2199. Massachusetts Horticultural Library Catalogue 323. Burrage p. 90. Glikbarg (supplement 1982). "Many of the instructions contained in the Manual relative to the care of different orchids are still valuable. Good scientific descriptions in English are given for each species; these descriptions are accompanied by the appropriate references to earlier authorities together with detailed information on habitat, discovery and culture. A substantial amount of interesting detail concerning contemporary and past orchid hunters, collectors and growers is given, much of which would be difficult to find elsewhere. The numerous maps indicating the habitat of various species are valuable and the work is enriched by many well-drawn black and white engraved plates and illustrations in the text.. . . a veritable encyclopedia. . . the 1963 reprint has maps that can be read only with difficulty". [Duveen, Classics of Orchid Literature, American Orchid Society, 1972].
Roy. 8vo., First Edition thus, LARGE PAPER, with fine coloured frontispiece (original tissue guard captioned in red present), illustrated and printed titles, 12 fine coloured plates (all original tissue guards captioned in red present), and numerous monochrome illustrations in the text; most handsomely bound in red half morocco BY HENRY YOUNG OF LIVERPOOL, watered red silk boards ruled in gilt, back with five raised bands ruled in gilt, second compartment lettered in gilt, all other compartments tooled in gilt with sporting images, gilt top, marbled endpapers, fore-edge very faintly spotted else a splendid copy ideal as a gift or for presentation. EDITION LIMITED TO 500 COPIES. The binding is signed on front free endpaper verso. Sumptuous edition of a sporting classic in elegantly themed contemporary binding.
First edition, folio (360 x 270 mm), xiv, 195, [1]pp., de-luxe edition printed on thick paper, one of 100 numbered copies (this being no. 61) signed by both the author and illustrator, coloured frontispiece and a further 15 coloured plates, illustrs., within the text, marbled endpapers, orig. full vellum, decorated in gilt, a blemish to head of upper board otherwise a very good copy, uncut, t.e.g.
A Paris, chez Théophile Barrois, 1788. Fort volume in/8 reliure de l'époque, pleine reliure dos orné, dos lisse à pièce de titre, 582 pages, 5 ff, 9 planches dont 8 planches in-fine, supplément : 111 pages - In fine la chasse au loup de Clamorgan plaquette 1598, 19 pages, 5 bois, (incomplet manque de la page 11 à 16). Des recherches sur les armes de trait usitées pour la chasse avant l’invention des armes à feu (arc et arbalète), fabrication des canons de fusil, marques des cannotiers de Paris, les connaissances pour chasser utilement les espèces de gibier, la manière de dresser les chiens de plaine, les ruses pour approcher certains oiseaux. Le nom de l’auteur se lit dans l’approbation et le privilège. Ce livre est non seulement le premier ouvrage français consacré exclusivement au fusil de chasse et à la chasse à tir, mais c’est aussi le premier traité de chasse qui consacre une étude importante à la “Sauvagine”. Thiebaud col. 621.
8vo [23 x 16 cm]; xxxi, 658, [xxxxii, ads] pp, frontis, 25 plates + many other illus mainly by Captain Grant, 2 colored maps (including one large folding in rear pocket showing route in red), 2 portraits (Speke and Grant) including frontis, tables. original brown pictorial gilt cloth, gilt spine title lettering, spine ends frayed, small repair, internal hinge cracked but firm, short tear at upper joint, frontis margin lightly foxed, interior clean and very good,. A picture of this book is available Speke, together with Richard Burton, attempted to discover the source of the Nile. Speke was the first European to see Lake Victoria Nyanza and the first to enter what is now Uganda. He attempted to take full credit for discovering the Nile source, resulting in a conflict with Burton. A well-illustrated account with a list of plants collected by Captain Grant. Hess & Coger 417. Ibrahim-Hilmy 255. The plates are especially good showing wildlife, scenery, their camp, pombre brewing, magician, handicrafts, weapons, etc.