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1815BB2499London: printed for Taylor and Hessey No. 93 Fleet Street 1815. Full Calf. Fine. Second Edition of this classic of meteorology first published in 1814 which revolutionized the understanding of ventilation in public places and for which Wells was awarded the Rumford Medal of the Royal Society. Demy 8vo 212 x 127mm: 4150pp. Beautifully bound in contemporary calf spine richly gilt in six compartments covers framed in blind and gilt red leather lettering piece gilt Prussian blue end papers. Manuscript presentation to title page: "To Dr. James Jackson from the Author" with Jackson's engraved armorial book plate to front paste-down. A gorgeous example tightly bound and generally clean throughout. Lowndes 2871 "A valuable little work". Garrison-Morton 1604. Norman 2199 and Christies 848. Blocker p. 416. Waller 12191. Knight p. 191 "Perhaps more important than any writings on induction by philosophers was the splendid example of inductive reasoning by William Charles Wells. . . . his Essay on Dew was rapidly recognized as a classic.". Wells was born in Charleston South Carolina but left America at the start of the Revolution for London where he became physician to St. Thomas's Hospital. In the autumn of 1811 he began a series of researches in the Surrey garden of his friend James Dunsmore comparing the formation of dew under varying conditions of temperature humidity weather cloud cover season and time of day. He concluded that dew results from the condensation of air in contact with objects cooled by radiating their heat into the cloudless night sky. "His researches . . . were of major importance in the development of the science of ventilation particularly in its relation to relative humidity and the influence of the latter on the comfort of the occupants of factories ships theatres etc." Garrison-Morton Wells's inquiry into the nature of dew was widely cited in the 1830s as an outstanding example of inductive scientific inquiry. Sir John Herschel used it as the primary illustration in his Discourse on the study of Natural Philosophy calling the theory "one of the most beautiful specimens we can call to mind of inductive experimental enquiry lying within a moderate compass." In 1836 the Encyclopedia Metropolitana reported "We know of no work in our day which has been more universally admired than the Treatise of Dr. Wells certainly none that practically exemplifies in a purer and better form the admirable inductive system which it was the object of Bacon to teach." John Tyndall and William Whewell also praised it. N. B. With few exceptions always identified we only stock books in exceptional condition carefully preserved in archival removable mylar sleeves. All orders are packaged with care and posted promptly. Satisfaction guaranteed. Fine Editions Ltd is a member of the Independent Online Booksellers Association and we subscribe to its codes of ethics. printed for Taylor and Hessey, No. 93, Fleet Street unknown
8vo., Eighth Edition, WANTING FRONTISPIECE (original tissue guard present), with engraved title-vignette, 7 plates, very numerous illustrations and 8 maps (a number full-page) in the text, folding coloured map and folding map coloured in outline (maps vey lightly spotted, mainly on blank margins); original green cloth, upper board framed in black and blocked in gilt, gilt back, chocolate endpapers, expertly recased, a remarkably bright, crisp, clean copy. Sold from an institution with its bookplate on front paste-down, small stamp on title, and neat stamp in a few blank margins of text. With 2pp publisher's catalogue at end BUT TRAGICALLY WANTING THE FRONTISPIECE 'ORANG-UTAN ATTACKED BY DYAKS'. The most celebrated work, dedicated appropriately to Darwin, by the co-discoverer of the process of evolution through natural selection. The eighth edition is based on the revised third edition of 1872. His well-known appendix on the crania and the languages of man in the archipelago includes a glossary of one hundred and seventeen words in thirty-three languages of the region. A LOVELY COPY OF A KEY WORK IN THE LITERATURE OF EVOLUTION. SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.
178495New York University Press 1987-1989. Pickering Masters edn. 29 vols. Tall 8vo 9½ x 6¼ ins. Original uniform gilt lettered green cloth faint spotting on top edges - otherwise a VG set. Pp. various illus with facsimile title pages coloured and b&w plates folding maps and in figures in text no inscriptions. Diary of the Beagle Journal of the Beagle Zoology of the Beagle Geology of the Beagle Origin of Species Foundations. Cirripoedia Lepadidae I Ballanidae I & II Fossil Lepadidae and Fossil Balanidae Origin of Species 1859 1876 Fertilization of Orchids Climbing Plants Variation under Domestication Descent of Man Expression of Emotions Insectivorous Plants Cross and Self Fertilization Different Forms of Flowers Power of Movement in Plants Formation of Vegetable Mould by Worms Erasmus Darwin Autobiography Index. New York University Press, 1987-1989 unknown
1882180981London: John Murray 1882. First edition sixth printing following the first of the previous year with a contemporary albumen portrait photograph of Darwin mounted to the front free endpaper verso. The photograph heavily faded was taken by Herbert Rose Barraud 1845-1896 and was the last portrait taken before Darwin's death in 1882. Provenance: Stephen C. Massey. Octavo. Original green cloth spine lettered in gilt brown endpapers. Contemporary inscription to front free endpaper; 20th-century bookplates of Esme Nicoll née Bowker in both her maiden and married names. Slight lean to spine a little toned. A very good copy. Freeman 1362. hardcover
1909A61656Cambridge: Printed at the University Press 1909. xii 53 portrait frontis 1 b/w plate. . HB. 8vo orig. parchment-backed printed boards lightly rubbed edges uncut. Occasional light foxing. The presentation leaf has been neatly removed. Freeman states that this is the case in some copies which were perhaps available outside the presentation issue. Good. Very scarce. First unpublished edition printed for presentation only to delegates to the Cambridge celebration of the centenary of the birth of Charles Darwin and of the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of his <i>Origin of Species</i>. Later the same year this was reprinted and published together with the sketch of 1844. 'When Francis Darwin put together <i>Life and Letters</i> he did not know that the sketch of his father's evolutionary ideas which was written in 1842 had survived. The pencil manuscript was discovered in 1896 after the death of his mother in a cupboard under the stairs at Down House.' Freeman p. 182. Freeman 1555. Printed at the University Press hardcover
117651London Smith Elder & Co. 1874. . Second edition; 8vo; 3 folding maps of which 2 are hand-coloured contemporary ownership signature to the title two short closed tears to the frontispiece map light spotting to the edges of the text block maps part of the title and occasionally the contents; original green cloth titles to spine gilt binding rubbed bumped and a little marked with some loss of size and splits at the ends of the spine hinges cracked a very good copy; 278pp.<br /> Second edition of one of Darwin's earliest books originally published as the first part of The Geology of the Voyage of the Beagle in 1842 and here 'extensively revised and largely rewritten in the light of the findings of Dana and of Jukes' Freeman p. 57. Uncommon in the publisher's cloth.<br /><br />During the course of the voyage of the Beagle 'Darwin's geological achievements mounted up. Using Charles Lyell's radical new Principles of Geology 183033 as a guide he grew bold in interpreting the earth's crust by causes now in operation. The first volume was a gift from FitzRoy the other two reached him during the voyage. He was captivated by Lyell's grand theoretical scheme - "when seeing a thing never seen by Lyell one yet saw it partially through his eyes" Correspondence 3.55 - and confirmed many of Lyell's observations with careful fieldwork. On other points Darwin expanded innovatively especially in understanding the piecemeal formation of the Andes and the origin of coral reefs on sinking mountain rims. There was an immediacy to it all. As he trekked through the Portillo and Uspallata passes of the Andes the coloured rocks seemed almost like a geological diagram and in the Cocos Keeling Islands he waded over the reefs to confirm his theory of the formation of coral atolls. His geology was dynamic with continents slowly rising and sea basins sinking and it formed the basis of all his later views. He endorsed Lyell's belief in an earth gradually shaped over countless ages: time enough - as he later grasped - for evolution by natural selection to occur' Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.<br /> Freeman 275. London, Smith, Elder, & Co., 1874. hardcover
1887AQ28006London: John Murray 1887. In three volumes. ix 1 395 1; 4 393 1; iv 418pp. With a portrait frontispiece to each volume. Original publisher's green cloth ruled and lettered in gilt to spines. A trifle rubbed. Hinges exposed armorial bookplates of Bernard Lord Coleridge to FFEPs scattered spotting. With a 4pp A.L.S. tipped-in to FFEP of Vol. II: 'Dear Mr. Rockstro I have to thank you for two most kind letters. It is very good of to value the book so highly - I am glad to hear of the big book and the flute for which as my first love I still have much affection. I often wish I had been taught other things as well as I was taught by you - there are but few who teach well I find. I have not forgotten that your day is Saturday but I am so seldom in town - I hope I find you at home someday. Yours ever sincerely F. Darwin'. The first edition of Francis Darwin's 1848-1925 monumental memoir of his father naturalist geologist and originator of the theory of natural selection Charles Darwin 1809-1882; with a contemporary letter in Francis's hand addressed to his former music tutor flautist Richard Shepherd Rockstro. Provenance: Bernard John Seymour Coleridge second Baron Coleridge 1851-1927 lawyer and Liberal politician grandson of poet John Taylor Coleridge. . First edition. 8vo. John Murray hardcover
18506543London: Unpublished 1850. Hardcover. Very Good. Manuscript notebook by a committed poultry breeder reader and customer of Darwin's poulterer and dealer in live birds John Baily with a letter from Baily about 'confinement' of birds. In this fascinating work W Stone keeps copious notes of John Baily's published observations on poultry most dated to the early 1850s as well as inserting a letter from Baily and a fine printed broadside advertisement. At the other end of the manuscript is a lengthy fair copy of David Ramsay Hay's study of colour theory. Quarto-sized notebook half calf over brown marbled boards lacking backstrip binding perfectly sound 1834 fleur de lys watermarked paper. Writing from one end of the manuscript Stone begins with brief notes on 'Baileys Reg.d Poultry Fountain' and one of Baily's published works The Dorking Fowl. This is followed by 56 pages of legal 'Articles of Agreement' between 'R.B.' and 'E.B.' apparently pre-Victorian. The meat of the manuscript comes in the 'Miscellaneous' section dated to 1852 which begins with a brief entry on 'Food for silk worms' a series of inserted printed pages on poultry breeding some annotated followed by a fine illustrated broadside advertisement for a 'Poultry House' built by Robert Richardson of London 38x23cm folded across a double spread. In manuscript there follows 'The Poultry-yard by Boswell review of' and lengthy commonplace notes many initialled 'John Baily' and dated on aspects of poultry manure breeding hybrids 'Descriptive Points &c. Dorking' and other ducks 'Incubation Natural and Artificial' the hatching of 6 emus 'at Knowsley in 1851 by Cautelo's hydro incubator. bought by the Antwerp Zoological Soc.y' 'Sale and Produce of Eggs' and a note of the values achieved by ducks in Dorking. There is a manuscript article from 1839 on the 'Eccaliobion' with the comment 'Dr. P of M. told me that in his country Wales they put eggs under ducks in preference.' with around 15 pages of manuscript explanation of Natural Incubation with tipped in steel engravings of incubating chicks which cites various sources including 'Mr William Yarrell' whom Darwin credits in one of his letters for introducing him to Baily and a section on 'Disease prevention and cure'. The letter from Baily to 'W Stone' is written on headed paper 'Baily 113 Mount Street' and explains a misapprehension on the part of Stone about an article published by Baily on the 'confinement' of foul in London 'The atmosphere of London is counted not so good as that of the country.' and is signed 'John Baily' with further notes below. Starting from the other end of the manuscript there is a 46 page fair copy of the introduction and first four chapters of the 1838 edition of David Ramsay Hay's The Laws of Harmonious Colouring with hand drawn renderings of the printed diagrams that are interspersed through the text most showing colour combinations. John Baily is referred to by Darwin in several of his letters; Darwin's accounts reveal that he bought frequently from Baily though he complained about Baily's reluctance to sell Darwin 'dead birds'. Collates: pp66 poultry; pp46 colour theory; pp57 legal Very Good Please contact Christian White Rare Books Ltd for more information or images of this item 1850 Unpublished hardcover
1939feb0143<p>1939. First Persian Iranian Edition of On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life by Charles Darwin. <br /><br />بنیاد انواع بوسیله انتخاب طبیعی<br /><br />Used book For more details and availability please contact me</p> Culture House
1913feb0138<p>Arvi A. Karisto 1913.</p><p>First Finnish Edition of On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life by Charles Darwin</p><p>Lajien synty</p><p>Used book For more details and availability please contact me</p> Arvi A. Karisto hardcover
1873feb02676<p>1873. First Edition in Hungarian - On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life by Charles Darwin<br />A fajok eredete a természeti kiválás útján Volume 12</p><p>Used book For more details and availability please contact me</p> Tarsulat hardcover
1876feb02718<p>1876. First Spainish Edition of The descent of man and selection in relation to sex by Charles Darwin<br /><br />El origen del hombre: La seleccion natural y la sexual</p><p>Used book For more details and availability please contact me</p> Renaixensa hardcover
1872feb02670<p>1872. First Russian Edition of The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals by Charles Darwin.</p><p><br />О выражении ощущений у человека и животных</p><p>Used book For more details and availability please contact me</p> St. Petersburg hardcover
1880feb118241<p>1880: First French Edition of The Power of Movement in Plants by Charles Darwin<br /><br />La faculté motrice dans les plantes<br /><br />Used. For more details please contact me</p> C. Reinwald hardcover
1887145850<p>1887: First Polish Edition of The Voyage of the Beagle and selection in relation to sex by Charles Darwin<br />Podróż naturalisty<br /><br /></p> Wydawnictwo Przeglądu Tygodniowego hardcover
1922feb120289<p>1922. First Croatian Edition of The Voyage of the Beagle by Charles Darwin.<br /><br />Put jednoga prirodoslovca oko zemlje</p><p>Used book For more details and availability please contact me</p> Zagreb
1882feb02685<p>1882. First French Edition of Vegetable Mould and Worms by Charles Darwin<br /><br />Role des vers de terre dans la formation de la terre végétale</p><p>Used book For more details and availability please contact me</p> C. Reinwald hardcover
72375London Nature 1877-1878. Folio 28.2 x 19.6 cm. Five Two; three pp. In: issues 17422 pp. xxxiii-xl 77-96 and 17440 pp. clxxxi-clxxxviii 441-460. = This notice by Darwin includes his introduction approval and comments on the contents of a letter to Darwin by the German-Brazilian botanist and entomologist Johann Friedrich Theodor "Fritz" Müller 1821-1897. Müller's letter is also printed verbatim. The complete issue published on 29 November 1877. ADDED: a lengthy review of Darwin's The different forms of flowers on plants of the same species Freeman 1277. This is a subject touched by the correspondence between Darwin and Müller. This anonymous three page review was published in number 440 of the same volume 4 April 1778. Uncut as issued. Weak vertical fold to both due to the method of dispatching a few light spots on the wrappers Darwin papers clean otherwise two very good clean copies. Freeman 1781. unknown
183944052London: Printed by Richard and John E. Taylor 1839. 4to. 28cm. pp39-81 plus 2 engraved plates "Parallel Road." red outline colour & "View of the Paralled Roads of Glen Roy" pp. fine binding by Pierre Thibaudeau in quarter slightly speckled brown calf blind ruled raised bands crushed crimson morocco label gilt title match marbled boards and endpapers a fine clean attractively bound copy. fine. Freeman 1653. "Darwin's only paper in Philosophical Transactions the snappily titled Observations on the Parallel Roads of Glen Roy and of Other Parts of Lochaber in Scotland with an Attempt to Prove That They Are of Marine Origin 1839 describes parallel lines cut horizontally across the hillsides of Glen Roy and proposes that they had marine origins as had similar features he had seen at Coquimbo in Chile while on the Beagle expedition. In 1840 the lines were explained by French geologist Louis Agassiz as due to a lake formed in an ice age. After many years of argument Darwin conceded in 1862 that his paper was "one long gigantic blunder". In his autobiography Darwin claims "This paper was a great failure and I am ashamed of it." Wiki. Printed by Richard and John E. Taylor unknown
187612090London: Smith Elder & Co 1876. Second Edition. Hardcover. Good. Second Edition. Hardcover. Previously owned by Oliver Sacks. This second edition combines Geological Observations on the Volcanic Islands with Geological Observations on South America. Notes from Eric Korn Oliver's friend and bookseller.<br /> From the library of Dr. Oliver Sacks the renowned neurologist author and educator. He was in his life celebrated for his contributions to the understanding of the human brain and his ability to communicate complex scientific concepts to a broader audience. In doing so he highlighted the profound impact of neurological disorders on human identity and experience. His library is a reflection of this remarkable polymath's questing mind. Moderate shelf/edge wear discoloration/soiling to upper spine toning else tight and unmarred. Red cloth boards. 8vo. xiii 647pp. Illus. b/w color 3 maps 2 plates one coloured at the back 40 text illus. Notes from bookseller. Smith, Elder, & Co hardcover
187116072London: John Murray 1871. First Edition Fourth Issue. Cloth. Very good. The first edition fourth issue of The Descent of Man and Selection In Relation To Sex by Charles Darwin published in 1871. The first appearance of the word "evolution" in works by Darwin. Octavo two volumes viii 423pp 1 16pp ads; viii 2 475pp 1 16pp ads. Publisher's green blind stamped cloth title in gilt on spine. Stated "Seventh Thousand" on title page of both volumes. Wood engraved illustrations throughout. Includes half titles in both volumes advertisement for "Popular Works" dated January 1871 in Volume I and "Standard Works" dated January 1871 in Volume II. Volume I rebacked with green cloth publisher's original binding laid down. Blue coated endpapers solid text blocks hinges of Volume I reinforced with archival repair. Light foxing to endpapers internally clean. Freeman 938 Garrison & Morton 170 Norman 599 A handsome set. The Descent of Man first appeared in February of 1871 and quickly sold out. A second run of 4500 copies was in print by March 1871. Numerous revised editions appeared starting in 1873 with edits by Darwin and his son George. John Murray unknown
16-5690London: John Murray 1872. 8vo 182 x 117 mm. xxi 1 458 pp. Includes half-title and one folding lithographed plate facing p.91. Original publisher's green cloth gilt spine lettering embossed border at covers inner hinges cracked slight fraying of spine ends very light rubbing of extremities.Sixth edition Twelfth thousand with additions and corrections half-title folding diagram at p. 91 worn at fore edge original green cloth rubbed at extremities some loss at head and tail of spine hinges cracked Freeman 392 John Murray 1872 . .OCLC Number / Unique Identifier: 1069385500: "First edition November 24th 1859. Sixth edition Jan 1872"--Page ii"Additions and corrections to the fifth edition."--Page xi-xiiIncludes index. "The sixth edition which is usually rconsidered the last and appeared in February 1872. Murray's accounts show that 3000 copies were printed but this total presumably included both those with eleventh thousand on the title page and those with twelfth the latter being notably less common. It is again extensively revised and contains a new chapter VII. This was inserted to confute the views of the Roman Catholic biologist St George Mivart. The edition was aimed at a wider public and printed in smaller type the volume shorter again and giving the general impression of a cheap edition which at 7s. 6d. it was. The title changes to The origin of species and a glossary compiled by W. S. Dallas appears. It is in this edition that the word 'evolution' occurs for the first time. It had been used in the first edition of The descent of man in the previous year but not before in this work. 'Evolved' had been the last word of the text in all previous editions but 'evolution' had been omitted perhaps to avoid confusion with the use of the word by Herbert Spencer or with its more particular embryological meaning. The word had however been used in its transformist sense by Lyell as early as 1832 Principles of geology Vol. II p. 11. In this edition it occurs twice on page 201 and three times on page 424." John van Wyhe ed. 2002-. The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online London: John Murray, 1872. hardcover
18831353921New York: D. Appleton and Company 1883. Second Edition Revised Fourth Thousand. Hardcover. Octavos Two Volumes. In Very Good condition. Bound in red cloth with black stamping to front boards blind stamping to rear boards and gilt titling to spines. Mild shelf wear and rubbing to binding. Volume 1 with one leaf of undated ads in rear; Volume 2 with four leaves of undated ads in rear. Gift inscription to front free endpapers. Stated "Second Edition Revised Fourth Thousand" but actually a reissue from the plates with only the date changed. Freeman Bibliographical Database: F884; also showing reissues of the 1876 printing in 1884 and 1887. Shelved in Case 10. 1353921. Shelved Dupont Bookstore. D. Appleton and Company hardcover
19045736Cambridge: Privately Printed at the University Press 1904. First Edition. Hardcover. Very good. First Edition. Very good in original green cloth xxvi 484 pp. Scarce. This privately printed edition was one of 250 copies printed for the Darwin family by Cambridge University Press. The later second trade edition omits numerous letters printed in this privately circulated edition. Privately Printed at the University Press hardcover
1978mon0000051481Franklin Library 1978-01-01. Leather Bound. New. in x in x in. Franklin Library hardcover