9 268 résultats
190429984Boston: Club House 1904. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. 12mo. 63 pages 1. Tan cloth hardcover with title on front board. Light soil and darkening to the cloth. List of members from pages 19-63 include names of Charles Francis Adams George Cabot Charles A. Coffin George Cushing Dana Estes and dozens of other prominent Boston citizens. Club House hardcover
18997503Boston: F.M. Porter Co 1899. Quarto stapled in wrappers 24 x 17.5 cm. 80 pages; 1 plate. Illustrated black & white and chromolithograph plate. Advertising. FIRST EDITION. The "Official catalog musical program list of exhibitors" for this fourth congress of members of the Boston Retail Grocers Association. The association was founded in 1881 and held its first food fair that year. Photographic portraits of the senior members of the Association are included as is a description of Miss Nellie Dot Ranche of Chicago who was brought in for the occasion to run the Domestic Science Programs. It's interesting that the committee reached out to the Midwest at this moment when Cooking Schools in Boston were on the rise and very visible. The copious advertising displays a range of categories of goods one would find in a grocery of the turn of the 19th century: coffee cocoa mustard Havana cigars root beer Ceylon tea French Coca Wine virgin olive oil nut meats and salt as well as household goods including: thread collars washing liquids bluing ink. Also represented are goods and services aimed at the grocers and retailers: boxes and bags promotional printing specialized contracting refrigeration etc. Tiny bit of spotting to green and gold-printed gray wrappers otherwise fine. OCLC locates just one copy Winterthur. F.M. Porter Co unknown
190555262Boston: Suffrage League of Boston and Vicinity 1905. Souvenir Program. Quarto 27cm; staple-bound coated paper wrappers; 16pp; illus. Printed photographic portrait of Garrison inside front cover. Moderate external wear and soil; scattered spotting to contents; center 4-pp gathering pulled loose from staples but otherwise undamaged; complete and Good. <br /> <br /> The two-day festival included remarks by Clement Morgan Francis J. Garrison W.H. Scott William Stanley Braithwaite composer of the Centennial Ode Gov. William Lewis Douglas Julia Ward Howe and others with a Centennial Oration delivered by Rev. Reverdy C. Ransom. Musical interludes were provided by John Hutchinson of the Hutchinson Family Nellie Brown Mitchell Genevieve Lee and numerous others. Includes several halftone illustrations including a full-page reproduction of Garrison's 1851 broadside warning Black citizens of Boston against the "Watchmen and Police Officers of Boston.as they are empowered to act as Kidnappers and Slave Catchers." <br /> <br /> An expanded and much more common work with similar title was issued in 1906; the original program is scarce a half-dozen physical locations noted in OCLC not traced in commerce as of September 2021. Suffrage League of Boston and Vicinity unknown
189034156Boston MA: Rockwell and Churchill City Printers 1890. Hardcover. Good. Octavo. xxvii 537 pages 2. Dark cloth hardcover with gilt seal and title on the front cover. Gilt title and number 22 on the spine. Ex-institutional copy with two book plates and a deaccession stamp on the front paste down. Shelf wear to the cloth binding.Corners worn and frayed. Interior contents clean. Rockwell and Churchill, City Printers hardcover
190534151Boston MA: Municipal Printing Office 1905. Hardcover. Good. Octavo. 4 288 pages. Dark cloth hardcover with gilt seal and title on the front cover. Gilt title and number 36 on the spine. Ex-institutional copy with book plate and deaccession stamp on the front paste down. Toning to the title page. Interior contents clean. Municipal Printing Office hardcover
188542031Philadelphia: W.H. Butler n.d. ca 1885. 1885. TRADE CATALOG. 5 11/16" x 12 3/4" color sheet folded to 6 panels. Illustrations. Among the successful shoe-machines invented by the Globe Buffer company was the “Globe Buffer” a machine for “buffing” or sandpapering the bottoms of boots and shoes. The first “ Globe Buffer" was set up in November 1881. The company also manufactured the “Globe Heel Scourer” for smoothing or scouring the edges of heels of boots and shoes. The company also introduced the "Globe Insole" an invention the promised to replace the flexible leather that was currently in vogue for insoles to shoes. It was invented and patented by Mr. George A. Fullerton and consists of a substance very similar to leather but which is stronger and much more flexible. To test the merits the shoes thousands of pairs were produced and worn and in not a single pair of them did a stitch give out. The material for the insoles is stronger than any leather of the same thickness. It is preserved while leather is destroyed by perspiration. The edges are smooth which prevents them from cutting the stitches. Shoes made of it will not squeak. The brochure offers one cover panel showing 2 cherubs one holding a woman's boot and the other the "Globe Flexible Insole; one panel offering the company's guarantee; and one panel offering information about their insoles. "Remember that the INSOLE is the foundation of the shoe and that Glove Flexible Insole" is superior in every particular to leather or any other known substance. That the stitches and tacks are all beneath the surface thus contributing a smooth soft cushion." Opposite 3 panels offers a beautiful color sailing scene showing a yacht race and with "Compliments of the Globe Buffer co. only Manufacturers of Globe Flexible Insoles at the bottom of one panel. One panel has been separated and neatly reattached using cellophane tape. W.H. Butler, n.d. [ca 1885]. hardcover
194128176New York:: Reynal and Hitchcock 1941. First edition. publisher's cloth in dust jacket. A near fine copy in a very sharp jacket with just a little of the usual rubbing and some light soiling to the back panel. 8vo. Reynal and Hitchcock, hardcover
184657019Boston:: Pulbished by all the Booksellers 1846. First edition. original printed wrappers. Very light foxing; wrappers unchipped and unworn; overall very nice. 8vo. Pulbished by all the Booksellers, unknown
Very Good Turkish, Ottoman (1500-1928) Original cloth bdg. 4to. (26 x 19 cm). In Ottoman script (Old Turkish with Arabic letters). [4], 1422, [2] p. Text block separated in two columns. Fading title gilt lettering on spine, otherwise a very good copy. Scarce bible in Ottoman Turkish, printed by one of the most famous Armenian printers and published by the English & American Bible Societies in Turkey during the second half of the 19th century. Arshag Hagop Boyajian, (1837-1914), was an Ottoman Armenian printer and a leader of the Armenian Protestant community in the Ottoman Empire. He was born in Diyarbakir and educated at Robert College in Istanbul. During the Crimean War (1853-1856), he served as a translator at the headquarters of the British army in Üsküdar (Scutari), on Istanbul's Asian shore. After a short stay in the United States to perfect his knowledge of modern printing techniques, he established a... (Source: Brill).
196150152Boston: Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Boston 1961. Broadside 17" x 11". Printed in blue ink on white wove stock recto only. Original vertical and horizontal folds; a few inconspicuous nicks to extremities; Very Good or better. The observance included performances by Cantor Gregor Shelkan and the Children's Chorus of the Y.L. Peretz School. Signed in type by the event's sponsors which included the Bessarabian Society of Boston the Jewish Labor Committee the United Shepetovker of Boston and the Workmen's Circle Arbeiter Ring. Jewish Community Council of Metropolitan Boston unknown
188735265Boston: Presswork by Rockwell and Churchill City Printers 1887. First Edition. Hardcover. Good. Tall quarto. 2 x 161 pages 1 page blank pages 162-170 1 page blank pages 171-395 2. Green cloth covered boards with dark brown leather corners and spine. Reddish marbled end sheets. All edges shaded red. Leather scuffed on the edges of the front cover. A few spots on the green cloth covers. Contents are printed facsimiles of the Colonial laws. Interior contents in very good condition. Presswork by Rockwell and Churchill City Printers hardcover
182636379Boston: n/a 1826. Ledger. Fair. Folio. 94 leaves 188 pages. Brown suede leather binding with Cambridge style designs on the covers. Marbled end papers. Chipped leather label on the spine. Lean to the binding in part due to removed pages. Hinges cracked and cords visible in the front hinge. No loose pages. Interior contents mostly clean. The first 21 pages used for pasted down serial clippings of the story titled "Only A Shop-Girl; or A Pearl in Pledge. A Story Founded on Actual Events that Occurred in Boston by Nathan D. Urner" no date. This serialized version ends on Chapter 25 with no more clippings to finish the story. Several of the ledger leaves are neatly removed in the gutters. <br /> <br /> Dozens of accounts records remain from November 1826 to July 15 1830. A few clippings and paper left inside. Exact location and owner of the ledger unknown. Location is in Massachusetts and Boston areas with several places identified. A sampling of account names include Livery Stable; Wm White printers; Tim M. Baker; Geo. Phipps butcher; Peter Mackintosh; Genl John P. Boyd officer in the Army and 1812 War Veteran; Gibson and Lewis; Charles Colburn masons; Smith & Clapp; Sewell Fiske; Lombast & Whitmore; Eben Gay; Little & Eads; Wm Johnson painters; Henry Leeds; Moses Fletcher; Benj F. Munroe; Capt. Mitchell; Commonwealth of Massachusetts; Rev. Henry Ware Unitarian; James Bartlett; Tho Winslow; Charles Sterns; Charles Morse; Martin Burr; North Bank; S. P. Heywood; Jonas Hale; Capt. Goodridge; Capt. Henry Fowle and dozens others. n/a unknown
17843834<p>This extremely scarce map of Boston appeared as part of the <em>Geographical Gazetteer of the Towns in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts</em> a work issued in parts as a supplement to <em>The Boston Magazine</em> from October 1784 through December 1785. The map appeared with the October 1784 issue of <em>The Boston Magazine</em>.</p><p>Wheat & Brun note that this map is based largely on Norman's <strong>Plan of the Town of Boston with the Attack on Bunkers-Hill.</strong> published in the Boston edition of <em>An Impartial History of the War in America</em> in 1781. The present map covers a somewhat smaller geographic area and on a modestly larger scale than the map that appeared in <em>An Impartial History</em>. It also adds/eliminates/changes some street names and landmarks making it more than a direct re-engraving and suggesting the involvement of a cartographer -- perhaps Osgood Carleton with whom Norman collaborated on several maps and charts in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Norman's 1781 <strong>Plan</strong> was itself sourced directly from the map appearing in the English edition of <em>An Impartial History </em>1778.</p><p>Although the present map is not listed in the Boston Engineering Department's <em>List of Maps of Boston Published Subsequent to 1600</em> 1904 it is referenced in the listing for a 1789 version of the map that had apparently been re-engraved for Norman's <em>Boston Directory</em> 1789. Very scarce. No examples listed for sale in the <em>Antique Map Price Record </em>1983-2011 and we not aware of any other examples being offered in the past twenty years.</p><p>A lovely example of one of the most uncommon 18th century maps of Boston.</p><p><strong>References:</strong> Wheat & Brun <em>Maps and Charts Published in America before 1800</em>: 242. Jolly<em> Maps of America in Periodicals before 1800</em>: 402. Lewis: <em>A Guide to Engravings in American Magazines 1741-1810</em>: p. 3. Stauffer <em>American Engravers Upon Copper and Steel</em>: 2361.</p><p><strong>Condition: </strong>A strong image. Soiling and some darkening to plate area apparently as printed. Blank area of upper right corner skillfully replaced and three short fold separations repaired on the reverse.</p><p>ICN 7760.</p> [Greenleaf and Freeman].
184456150Boston 1844-45. 1. MANN Horace Seventh Annual Report of the Board of Education; Together with the Seventh Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board. Boston: Dutton and Wentworth 1844. First edition. Octavo 25cm. Original brown paper wrappers with printed title on front untrimmed; 1991pp. Inscribed "J. F. Bumstead Esq. / with best regards from / Horace Mann" on front wrapper. With a few contemporary pencil annotations. A fresh copy edges gently rubbed one or two small stains to wraps: Very Good or better. <br /> <br /> This copy presented by Mann to J. F. Bumstead-plausibly Josiah Freeman Bumstead 1797-1868 who authored primary school primers readers and spellers published by Ticknor and other Boston firms in the 1840s.<br /> <br /> 2. MANN Horace. The Common School Journal vol. VI no. 5; March 1 1844. Containing the "Seventh Annual Report of the Secretary of the Board of Education to the Board of Education." PRESENTATION COPY FROM SAMUEL MAY TO ADIN BALLOU. Octavo 26cm. Original paper wrappers printed on front; 64-200pp. Inscribed to "Rev. Adin Ballou / with the best regards of / Sam J. May - / Let all that have eyes read / or all that have ears hear this / admirable document -" With one or two minor marginal pencil marks. Ex libris and discard stamp of Swarthmore College to final leaf. Textblock sound though rubbed but front cover detached rear cover lacking; some staining to outer leaves minor foxing: Good.<br /> <br /> Presentation copy from Samuel Joseph May 1797-1871 to Adin Ballou 1803-1890 founder of the Hopedale Community. May was one of Mann's allies in establishing the Massachusetts state school system and both he and Ballou were members of the New England Non-Resistance Society a peace organization founded by William Lloyd Garrison. <br /> <br /> 3. Association of Masters of the Boston Public Schools. Remarks on the Seventh Annual Report of the Hon. Horace Mann Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education. Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown 1844. Octavo 23cm. In original brown paper wrappers printed in black on front; 144pp. Inscribed "B. A. Gould" to front upper cover--possibly pioneering Boston astronomer Benjamin Apthorp Gould 1824-1896. With occasional marginal pencil marks. A fresh copy with one or two tiny chips to spine: Very Good or better. <br /> <br /> 4. MANN Horace. Reply to the "Remarks" of Thirty-One Boston Schoolmasters on the Seventh Annual Report of the Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education. Boston: Wm B. Fowle and Nahum Capen 1844. Octavo 23cm. <br /> In original dark beige paper wrappers printed in black on front; 176pp. A sound copy with losses at head and tail of spine joints partly split but holding internally clean: Very Good. <br /> <br /> 5. ASSOCIATION OF THE MASTERS OF THE BOSTON PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Barnum Field; Wm A. Shepard; S. S. Greene; Joseph Hale. Rejoinder to the "Reply" of the Hon. Horace Mann Secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Education to the "Remarks" of the Association of Boston Masters Upon His Seventh Annual Report. Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown 1845. First edition. Octavo 22cm. Original beige wrappers printed in black on front; 55 1 56 40 64pp. Inscribed "The Misses Adams / 1 May 1922" on verso of title page. A sound fresh copy with split at front upper joint chip at tail minor dirt to wraps but internally clean: Very Good. <br /> <br /> Five pamphlets on Horace Mann's 1844 annual report to the Board of Education including two presentation copies of different editions of the report itself and three responses. Mann had toured Europe with his new wife Mary Peabody and friend Samuel Gridley Howe and studied schools in eight countries with special interest in the Prussian school system. His 1844 annual report comparing American and European school systems was received with great offense by Boston schoolteachers. "A group of thirty-one schoolmasters. . . published a sharply worded critique of his seventh Annual Report" targeting "Mann's recommendations for teacher training as well as his opposition to corporal punishment." However this group "soon faced Mann's wrath in the form of written rejoinders" and were ultimately vanquished when "Mann's allies were elected to the Boston School Committee." <br /> <br /> Despite the controversy Mann's efforts to "merge the best that he found in European educational systems with the principles of the growing American common school movement" saw remarkable success. Under his direction the Board of Education spent over $2 million on improved school buildings increased teacher salaries by over 50% opened fifty new high schools commissioned uniform school textbooks from Boston publishers and alotted time for student exercise-shaping the public school system as we know it ANB. All the titles in this collection are uncommon in the book trade. unknown
186510246Boston: the hotel 1865. Menu printed on silk 30 x 10.5 cm. one leaf printed verso only. Illustrated with an engraving of vignettes of freight transport via ship and train. WITH: Printed envelope 8 x 13 cm. with an engraving. A handsome menu printed on silk for a banquet celebrating the Boards of Trade of the Western Cities given by the City of Boston at the Revere Hotel. Revere House was one of the city's leading hotels hosting guests that included Charles Dickens Jenny Lind and Walt Whitman. Daniel Webster addressed audience from the steps of the portico. The engraving on the envelope depicts the hotel from across Boston's Bowdoin Square. The hotel has had an additional structure added to the previously flat roof. The bill of fare for the Western Boards of Trade included Green Turtle Soup Baked Shad in a Wine Sauce Leg of Southshore Mutton in Caper Sauce Duffield's Ham Pate de Foie and much more. In remarkably fine condition with only the slightest fraying to the edges of the silk. The envelope with an engraving of the Boston's City Hall has some light soil but is near fine. the hotel hardcover
185010254Boston Mass: Propeller Press 142 Washington St 1850. Bi-fold menu 21 x 13.5 cm. 4 pages. Illustrated. The Boston Young Men's Total Abstinence Society was formed in 1846. This "Seventh Anniversary" banquet offered an alcohol free menu with Baked Trout in Anchovy Sauce Mutton Cutlet in Gardner's Sauce Eels with Tartar Sauce Mongrel Ducks seven types of pie or cake AND then dessert. The final page contains an engraving of Quincy House. The menu is stained and has some dark fold marks mostly visible on the final page. Otherwise very good. Propeller Press, 142 Washington St unknown
18478890Boston 1847. Broadsheet menu 31 x 13.6 cm. 2 pages. Illustrated with an engraving of the hotel from across Boston's Bowdoin Square. A menu and wine list for the hotel restaurant of Revere House issued in the hotel's inaugural year. Built on the site of home of Boston's Kirk Boote Revere House became one of the city's leading hotels hosting guests that included Charles Dickens Jenny Lind and Walt Whitman and Daniel Webster addressed audience from the steps of the portico. Paran Stevens 1802-1872 at times the general manager and later a co-owner of the hotel was to become proprietor of additional luxury hotels in Claremont N.H. Philadelphia and New York. He had a considerable reputation as connoisseur of wines and liquors and was said to have the finest nose in the country. The "Stevens Sherry" was tailor-made to suit his palette and it was said that his cellars were "never equaled in America". The Wine List includes the usual categories: Madeira Sherry Champagne Hock Sauterne Port Burgundy and Claret along with a short selection of Porter and Ale. What is unusual is the detail in the descriptions of some of the Madeira and Sherry including Dornelios Vasconcellos Sercial Rapid East India Madeira imported by J. W. Boott Esq. in 1819 – bottled in 1822 and Governor Phillip's imported in 1820 from Page Phelps & Co. ~ Paper is age-toned and has a water stain along the bottom edge. Still bright and legible. Very good. No records of other copies of this menu have been located. Menus from any location in the United States prior to 1850 are very scarce. Rare. unknown
191349327Boston: Privately printed 1913. 1913. TRADE CATALOG. First edition. 8" x 4" printed tan wrappers. 32pp. Numerous black and white illustrations. Moore-Smith Company says the following ".and in our illustrations we have tried to convey to the inexperienced buyer more than is usual in such cuts. There is no attempt to idealize the form or texture but to show actual garments on real people." Describes several different furs their prices and on the facing page of each one is a picture of a person wearing that particular fur coat. The many furs shown include Brown Russian Marmot Raccoon Black Russian Pony Dogskin Coats Chauffeur's Coats which has a "divided skirt" in order to be buttoned around each leg and keep the chauffeur warm etc. Also offered are Fur Robes Special Automobile Robes in different sizes Fur Floor Rugs for the Limousine Baby Robes and Muffs. "Our storage business is not large and our service is of the best. We do no advertising outside our regular customers. From the time you're through with your furs in the spring you're freed from all care and responsibility. They are returned when wanted clean whole and fresh and at an expense which is trifling considering the service and safety enjoyed." A very interesting pamphlet. Very small chip to top fore-edge of pages five and six else fine copy. Privately printed, 1913. unknown
1904574Boston: Boston Architectural Club 1904. First printing. Half-Leather illustrated. Good. Octavo pp. 145 numerous b/w photographs and drawings of buildings including one foldout plate lots of ads for building trades and others representing current architectural and related projects primarily by Boston area architects and designers. Wonderful early Boston architectural and trade catalog of 271 exhibits including a substantial contribution by Clarke & Howe with list of members. Introductory essay by Robert D. Andrews on "The Future of American Architecture". Rare. Boston Architectural Club hardcover
19367886Boston Mass: North Bennet Street Industrial School 1936. Wire-O metal coil binding 26 x 18.5 cm. 57 7 pages. Index is table of contents. Advertisements. Title author and publication data from cover. Date from information in second edition of 1937. FIRST EDITION. A community fundraising cookbook for the benefit of North Bennett Street Industrial School. There is no front matter title page intro etc. and the recipes are not attributed but are drawn from members of the surrounding community Boston's North End. Other fundraising efforts for the school are featured in the advertising section including The Perfection Bottle Rack "made by the unemployed" and an unnamed Spanish olive oil "sold exclusively by the North Bennet Street Industrial School". There is also a full page illustrated ad for Prince Superfine Macaroni. ~ Card stock boards printed in blue and silver; edge wear and pulls at a few wire coils. Ownership inscription "Martha Taylor 98 Chestnut Street". OCLC locates five copies and four copies of the 1937 second edition. North Bennet Street Industrial School hardcover
19347508Boston: B.B. Inc.; Ben-Burk Distillers 1934. Small folded pamphlet 11 x 6.5 cm. 16 pages when folded. Printed in red black and blue. FIRST EDITION. One of the very rare precursors to the famous Old Mr. Boston Bartender's Guide 1935. Following Repeal Ben-Burk Distillers published the Guide which was to become one of the iconic cocktail recipe books. Originally published as a promotional item for the Ben-Burk line of spirits distilled in Boston the Guide became a staple of professional and home bars around the country. But prior to the first work titled Old Mr. Boston Guide Ben-Burk published One Hundred Cocktails Some Old -- Some New 1932 and One Hundred and Twenty Cocktails Fizzes Punches Highballs Toddies and Long Drinks 1934 both of which are very rare. We can add this small work – previously unrecorded – to this short list of precursors. A bit of soiling to edges and one corner dog-eared; otherwise very good. All early printings of the Mr. Boston Guide are scarce. Unrecorded. OCLC records no copies; not in Noling or EUVS. B.B. Inc.; [Ben-Burk Distillers] unknown
17742301200034xbvkErfurt, H. R. Nonne, 1774. 1.022 (1) Seiten, jeder Aufzug mit eigenem Titelblatt und Frontispiz-Kupferstich; insgesamt also 16 Kupfertafeln ('Kayserl.-Russische General Graf Tottleben', 'Karl Friedrich Kaltschmied, Arzt', 'Das Serail in Bachschiesaray', 'Casimir Pulawski, Confoederations Marschall', 'Lord Clive, 'Merkwürdiges Nordlicht', 'Miss Fanny Ch-n, Geliebte von Lord Clive', 'Ein büßender indianischer Bra[h]m[an]e', 'Graf Krasinsky, Confoed. Marschall', 'William Robertson', 'Joh. Friedr. Wilh. Jerusalem . . . Herzogl. Oberhofprediger', 'Das Hochfürstl. Sachs. Weimarische Residenz Schloß Wilhelmsburg vor dem unglückligen Brand. . .', '- nach dem unglückligen Brand. . .', 'Wappen der Herren von Wessenberg . . . Ampringen', 'S. Ignatius Fundator Soc. Jesu', 'Eine Morduanerinn'). - Braun-schwarz gesprenkelter Pappeinband der Zeit mit rundum grüngesprenkeltem Papierschnitt; 8vo.(ca. 17 x 11 x 6 cm).
4497New York: Reynal and Hitchcock 1947. 8vo pp. 284. Original blue boards lettered in black to spine. Leading edge uncut. Illustrated dust jacket. Light offsetting to endpapers but a near fine copy in a very good dust jacket with a small closed tear at spine some inevitable discoloration to the white rear panel and an area of abrasion to the front. First edition. An Otis Beagle title. Yes. Otis Beagle. 'Everything was grist every avenue of publication was explored. Every type of writing that offered a buck was attempted. Nothing was too low nothing too cheap. I wrote Sunday School stories I wrote spicy sex stories I tried detective stories sport stories love stories. I wrote short-shorts and I even wrote a novel.' Frank Gruber Brass Knuckles Sherbourne Press 1966. The superhumanly prolific Frank Gruber one of the kings of pulp fiction was being modest: he wrote more than fifty novels -- as well as sixty-five screenplays dozens of TV scripts and many hundreds of stories for a legion of pulp magazines. And he was only sixty-five when he died. HUBIN p. 42 New York: Reynal and Hitchcock, 1947 hardcover
2577Boston: The Company Rand Avery Supply Co. Printers 1891. . Self wrappers front printed in black and pink [Boston: The Company] Rand Avery Supply Co. [Printers], 1891. unknown
178322278A Philadelphie (Paris), s.é., 1783. Un vol. au format in-12 (172 x 108 mm) de 192 pp. et 1 f. bl. Reliure de l'époque de plein veau glacé et moucheté fauve, double filet à froid porté sur les plats, dos lisse orné de doubles filets dorés, double caisson d'encadrement doré, pièces de titre de maroquin acajou, titre doré, jeu de petits filets obliques gras et maigres dorés sur les coupes, tranches mouchetées.