Está disponível o último catálogo desta conhecida livraria portuense.
História da Madeira e dos Açores; Livros Antigos e Novos;Alfarrabistas; Literatura Portuguesa; Camilo Castelo Branco; Ex-libris; História da Medicina Portuguesa; Guerra Peninsular (Recolha de artigos e informações dispersas pela net)
quinta-feira, julho 15, 2010
terça-feira, junho 16, 2009
«An Introduction to the History of Maggs Bros»
He ran a general stationer’s, newsagent’s and bookseller’s business in the style of the day, lending and selling books and newspapers, and built the business into a flourishing concern. Although it is unlikely that he had a bindery himself, he did offer bookbinding as a service, and we have one rare “Maggs Binding”, in heavy brown morocco, signed at the foot of the front free endpaper. The transformation into a specialist bookdealer took place over the next fifteen years, and by 1870 the main thrust of his business was “Second-Hand Books, Ancient and Modern, in all Classes of Literature.”
All four of Uriah’s sons eventually joined the business, taking over on his retirement in 1894. The initial Maggs Brothers of the firm’s title were Benjamin and Henry, later joined by Charles and Ernest. This was a period of rapid expansion for the rare book trade as the gradual relative decline in prosperity of the European aristocracy brought increasing quantities of rare books
on to the market. At the same time the great tycoons of the United States were beginning to form their incomparable collections and the collecting of rare books was becoming an important part of a fashionable life on both sides of the Atlantic. The firm prospered in this climate, and in 1901 moved to the Strand, then the centre of the London antiquarian book-trade. A further move in 1918 led them to 34/35 Conduit Street, (off New Bond Street, on the site now occupied by the Westbury Hotel) where the architect John A. Campbell designed them a bookshop of some style, partly as a replica of a monastic library with beautiful custom made furniture, much of it re-used at their next premises. The year 1938 saw the firm moving again, this time to 50 Berkeley Square, where it still remains. It was to be a lucky move, for the Conduit Street premises were completely destroyed in the Blitz: in the brochure announcing the move the firm
had unwittingly announced “The demolition of our premises at 34 & 35 Conduit Street, W1, scheduled to take place in 1940.” 50 Berkeley Square, although initially criticised as being too far from Bond Street (all of 300 yards!), has turned out to be almost perfect. To quote the same brochure “The 18th Century house is ideal in many ways. Its rooms are many and spacious . . . It retains its 18th century character with fine decorated ceilings, Adam fireplaces of singular beauty, and torch extinguishers outside the front door. It is situated in the heart of Mayfair, easily accessible, in one of the most beautiful squares in London.” Antiquarian booksellers are typically good tenants of interesting buildings (they have more important things to spend their money on than building works), and the house is for the most part unaltered since its last modernisation over 100 years ago. The pantries are still lined with large white ceramic tiles, there is a massive cast-iron cooking range in the old kitchen, and the chief cataloguer in the military department works between the iron railings of a stall in the former stables.
The house has had two distinguished tenants since its completion in 1740: the British Prime Minister George Canning in the early 19th. century, and the famous ghost – or should it be ghosts, for there are several different and apparently contradictory tales of the manifestations encountered here. You can take your pick from a pair of legs coming down a chimney, a “feathered thing”, and the present writer’s favourite, the “nameless horror”. By 1907 the ghost was so famous that Charles Harper, in his Haunted Houses could write that “the famous ‘haunted house’ in Berkeley Square’ was long one of those things that no country cousin come up from the provinces to London on sight-seeing bent, ever willingly missed.” Despite many all-night sessions, on fire-watch during the Second World War and more recently (oh, the joys of computers), there have been no strange reports during the present tenancy, but we still feature in the guide books of haunted houses and are used to dealing with a steady flow of inquiries. A “virtual tour” of the building can be seen at www.maggs.com/virtualtour.
At the same time as maintaining the London offices the firm also had a branch in Paris from around 1933 until the 1950’s (interrupted by the removal of much of the stock to Germany in 1940), first at 140 Boulevard Haussman and later at the Rue de la Boëtie, overseen by Dr. Maurice Ettinghausen, one of the great bookseller/ scholars of his age. It was Ettinghausen and Ernest Maggs who pulled off the greatest bookselling coup of the era, when in 1932 they successfully negotiated with the government of Russia to acquire not only a Gutenberg Bible, the first printed book of circa 1455, but also the celebrated Codex Sinaiticus. This is one of the earliest Bible manuscripts known (c. AD 350), containing the whole of the New Testament and part of the Old in Greek. It had been unearthed in the mid-nineteenth century at St. Katherine’s Monastery in the Sinai desert by the German scholar Friedrich von Tischendorf, who “persuaded” the monks to present it to his patron and the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, the Emperor of Russia. In the 1930’s the Russian government, desperately short of hard currency was selling off components of the great Russian libraries and art galleries, now nationalised. In 1931 Ernest and Dr. Ettinghausen travelled to Leningrad (the food situation was so bad that Ettinghausen later claimed to have survived on a diet of canned sardines he had brought with him) and there bought the Gutenberg Bible (pre-sold to Martin Bodmer) and began the negotiations which were to lead to their purchase of the Codex on behalf of the British Museum in 1933. Maggs have thus handled two Gutenberg Bibles in their history, the one described above and the Dyson Perrins copy bought at auction in 1947 for a record price for a printed book of £22,000, on behalf of Sir Philip Frere, and a few years later resold it to Mrs. Doheny of California, this latter copy now the only one in Japan.
The negotiations for the Codex began with an asking price of two hundred thousand pounds and an offer of forty thousand, before the final price of one hundred thousand was settled on, by a long way the most expensive book in the world at the time. The British government was to put up half of the purchase price, and the balance was raised in a public appeal orchestrated by Sir Frederic Kenyon, retired director of the British Museum and President of the Friends of the
National Libraries. When predictable objections were raised to spending public money on a book, Kenyon made the fine rallying call “Where millions are spent on the material needs and amusements of the people, may not £100,000 be properly spent on their minds and souls?”
The 1920’s and 1930’s were a golden era for book-collecting and during these Josephine (to the French Government), dispersed the library of the Comte de Chambord (King Henri V of France), helped King Manuel II of Portugal form one of the greatest libraries of Portuguese and Latin American books and manuscripts, sold the papers of the Earls of Huntingdon en bloc to the Huntington Library of California and issued a catalogue containing six block-books bought by R.E. Hart of Blackburn, Lancashire for cash, and now at Cambridge University Library. The collection of Napoleonica formed by his doctor, Vignali, and sold by Maggs in the early 1920’s,
famously included Napoleon’s mummified membranum virilis.
Ben died in 1935, having been allowed the rare pleasure (shared with Mark Twain and Sabine Baring-Gould) of reading an exaggerated account of his own death earlier in the year, and Ernest continued in the business right up to his death in 1955.
The members of the next generation of the Maggs family were to be Clifford, Frank & Kenneth, now cousins as well as brothers. Clifford was the firm’s incunabulist and medieval manuscript expert, a bookseller of the highest integrity, who was proud to boast in 1969 of a predecessor’s “superb disregard of commercial value” in doing “as long a note, amounting often to an essay, for a book worth two or three guineas as for one valued at several hundred.” This is a temptation the firm still falls into from time to time today, and indeed we are proud of the fact that although we regularly handle books and manuscripts of the very highest quality (in 1998 we set a new record for the most expensive printed book when buying for £4,200,000 a copy of the first book printed in England, Caxton’s Chaucer), we also handle books at more affordable price levels, hoping to be able to offer something for the enthusiasts of all means. The present writer remains moved by the description given by Dr. Christopher de Hamel, now one of the world’s leading
experts on medieval manuscripts, of the encouragement given him by Clifford when only a young man, with no money to speak of, and many thousands of miles away in New Zealand.
Kenneth specialised in English literature, and was responsible for several series of catalogues as well as the Mercurius Britannicus series of bulletins, initially and optimistically promoted as a monthly, between 1933 and 1968. Frank Maggs was one of the great specialists in travel books, producing several great series of catalogues, and was actively involved in the formation of the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich. Three members of the family still work in the firm, its
chairman John, who like his father Frank is a specialist in travel books, with a authorities on the history and technique of bookbinding; and Edward, managing director and specialist in modern literature and illustrated books.
One of the great assets of the firm has always been its extraordinary loyal staff, among whom have been and still are, many of the greatest experts in their areas.
Dr. Ettinghausen has been mentioned above, who worked closely with Sarah Laredo, largely responsible for the great Americana catalogues mentioned below; many customers today will remember with affection Bill Lent, who was with the firm over fifty years, but not all realised that his father had spent thirty years working for Maggs before that, making over eighty years between them. Indeed staff turnover is so low that in the year 2000 the 21 employees and directors of the firm have between some 340 years of service, making an average of over sixteen years a head. Brief resumés of current specialists can be found at www.maggs.com/departments.
The most lasting legacy of the firm is probably the extraordinary series of catalogues, now approaching 1,300 in number, many in series such as Bibliotheca Americana and Voyages and Travels. Although the bulk are relatively routine reflections of what was in stock at the time, many are considerable works of scholarship and are now valuable reference works in their own right. Among the more significant are The first three Books printed in South America, (1932, one of a series of astonishing specialist Americana catalogues, 30 copies printed at the Curwen Press); Food and Drink Through the Ages, 2500 B.C. to 1937 A.D. (1937, 767 items) Bibliotheca Aëronautica (1920, 1494 items and believed to be the first specialist rare book catalogue on aviation); Colonel Lawrence of Arabia; his original manuscript Autobiography (1936); Curiouser and Curiouser, a Catalogue of strange Books and Curious Titles (1932), the fulsomely titled The Art of Writing, 2800 B.C. to 1930 A.D. Illustrated in a Collection of original Documents written on Vellum, paper, Papyrus, Silk, Linen, Bamboo, or inscribed on Clay, Marble, Steatite, Jasper, Haematite, Matrix of Emerald, and Chalcedony (1930) and the pioneering Les debuts de la Photographie (1939).
In modern times we have had a series of scholarly catalogues on British bookbindings by Bryan Maggs, specialist catalogues on The English Theatre from the Restoration to 1800 (1980), Dr. Samuel Johnson (1983) and T.E. Lawrence (1985), and in 2000 an autograph catalogue including an item from every year of the nineteenth century. For information on current catalogues, please see www.maggs.com/catalogues.
Maggs Bros. Ltd. have been antiquarian booksellers by appointment to H.M. King George V, H.R.H. The Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII), H.M. King Alfonso XIII of Spain, H.M. King Manuel II of Portugal, and are currently favoured with the Royal Warrant to H.M. Queen Elizabeth II.
terça-feira, abril 07, 2009
«Narrative of a Voyage to Madeira, Teneriffe (...)» - William Robert Wills Wilde
Dublin: John S. Folds for William Curry, Jun. and Company, 1844.
£950

8vo. Modern speckled half calf over marbled boards, spine gilt in compartments, gilt morocco lettering-piece in one, top edge gilt, retaining original free endpaper; pp. xv, [1 (illustrations)], 648, [2 (publisher's advertisement)]; 2 engraved city plans of Jerusalem and Tyre ('Ancient and Modern') by W.H. Lizars hand-coloured in outline, one after C.B. Cradock after Wilde, wood-engraved illustrations and letterpress tables in the text; some variable spotting, upper margin of one map stained, otherwise very good; provenance: Gustavus Lambart (1772-1850, inscription on retained endpaper with later explanatory note beneath).
«Madeira Spectroscopic (...)» - C. Piazzi Smyth
Edinburgh: W. & A. K. Johnston, 1882.

«Insecta Maderensia» - Thomas Vernon Wollaston
WOLLASTON, Thomas Vernon. Insecta Maderensia; Being an Account of the Insects of the Islands of the Madeiran Group.
London: Taylor and Francis for John van Voorst, 1854.

4to. Contemporary half morocco gilt, spine in compartments and titled in one, top edge gilt; pp. xliii, 634, 13 engraved plates of specimens by Frederick Smith after J.O. Westwood, suite of 8 hand-coloured plates (nos II, IV, V, VI, IX, XI, XII, XIII) inserted in sequence; rubbed, slight spotting to plates, else very good; a one-page letterpress prospectus for the book, a manuscript leaf listing 22 subscribers titled "Names already received", and a one-page letterpress list of "Subscribers' Names" bound in before the title; provenance: Thomas Vernon Wollaston (bookplate on upper pastedown); occasional, later marginalia.
First edition. Wollaston (1822-1878) was a prominent entomologist and malacologist, who became best known for his studies on variation in species (especially Coleoptera) inhabiting several North Atlantic archipelagoes. Wollaston spent the winter of 1847-1848 on Madeira, and returned twice before publishing his Insecta Maderensia; in 1855 he visited the Madeiran archipelago again and on his return sold his collection of Madeiran Coleoptera to the British Museum. Insecta Maderensia was published in a very small print run -- as Wollaston's prospectus states, the "great expense attendant on the publications of a work like the present, renders it desirable that names should be obtained beforehand, in order to ascertain the number of copies which it will be necessary to print". The printed subscribers' list in this copy lists only 50 names (one subscribing to two copies), suggesting that circa 51 copies were printed; certainly the work is rare on the market. Although Nissen and BM(NH) call for 13 coloured plates, it is probable that this copy was bound up using a full set of 13 uncoloured plates and 8 coloured "overs", to avoid the expense of having another set of the plates coloured.
Darwin read Insecta Maderensia in early 1855 and was given a copy of it by the author on 10 March 1855, and wrote to J.D. Hooker on 7 March 1855: "I have just finished working well at Wollaston's Insecta Mad[erensia]: it is an admirable work. There is a very curious point in the astounding proportion of Coleoptera that are apterous; & I think I have grasped the reason, viz that powers of flight w[oul]d be injurious to insects inhabiting a confined locality & expose them to be blown to the sea; to test this, I find that the insects inhabiting the Dezerta Grande, a quite small islet, would be still more exposed to this danger, & here the proportion of apterous insects is even considerably greater than on Madeira proper"; however, whilst "Wollaston speaks of Madeira & the other archipelagoes as being `sure & certain witnesses of Forbes old continent,'", Darwin dismisses Wollaston's conclusion as erroneous, ending "I hope I have not wearied you, but I thought you w[oul]d. like to hear about this Book, which strikes me as excellent in its facts; & the Author a most nice & modest man" (Correspondence V, pp. 279-280). Wollaston's next publication, On the Variation of Species, with Especial Reference to the Insecta (1856) was dedicated to Darwin, and on 22 April 1856 Wollaston joined Huxley and Hooker at Down House, where Darwin's nascent theory was discussed, as Lyell reported: "they (all four of them) ran a tilt against [immutable] species farther I believe than they are deliberately prepared to go. Wollaston least unorthodox" (quoted by Desmond and Moore, p. 435). Darwin believed that Wollaston was sympathetic to his views, and Wollaston was sent a copy of On the Origin of Species in 1859, inscribed on Darwin's behalf "From the author"; however, in his review of it for the Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Wollaston stated "that Darwin did not understand the definition of species, complained about the personification of selection, and dwelled, like Huxley, on the difficulties: `Would not one step more plunge us headlong into the Nebular Hypothesis and the whole theory of spontaneous Generation?' Wollaston could see no reason to abandon the idea of divine creation and plenty of dangers in any alternative" (J. Browne Darwin II, p. 107). BM(NH) V, p. 2350; Nissen, ZBI 4440.
In: http://www.sotherans.co.uk/Search.php?stk=319454&sText=madeira&type%5B%5D=books
Nota do Blogue: Um dos mais raros livros sobre a Madeira, o único senão é o preço. Trata-se do exemplar que pertenceu ao próprio autor, com a lista dos subscritores da mesma. Uma obra da qual só devem ter sido impressos 50 ou 51 exemplares. De bom grado gostaria de a ter na minha colecção!
«Henry Sotheran Limited»


Founded in York in 1761, established in London in 1815, Henry Sotheran Limited has a long and distinguished history.
For over 200 years we have been offering unsurpassed opportunities to collectors and enthusiasts, from the purchase of the libraries of Laurence Sterne in 1768, and Charles Dickens in 1870; the complete stock and copyright of the ornithologist and publisher John Gould; to the successful bid in 1980 for the final draft manuscript of Gilbert White's Natural History of Selbourne, bought on behalf of the Gilbert White Museum.
The great American collector of Shakespeare, H.C. Folger, acquired much of his collection, including the Halliwell-Phillipps library, through Sotheran's, and we were agents in the purchase of the world-famous Althorp Library from Earl Spencer for the John Rylands Library in 1892.
Throughout our history we have prided ourselves on the quality and condition of our books, and our friendly service.
Our premises just off Piccadilly in the heart of London's West End are spacious and elegantly appointed, and we welcome regular clients and passers-by alike to wander in and browse our stock in a relaxing and convivial atmosphere.
In: http://www.sotherans.co.uk/AboutUs.php
Nota do Blogue: Este alfarrabista foi-me indicado por um grande bibliófilo madeirense. Este nosso ilustre advogado possui uma magnífica colecção de livros e gravuras sobre a Madeira, livros de arte,(...). Tive a oportunidade de manusear algumas das suas preciosidades, algumas das quais eu desconhecia por completo.
Historie del S.D. Fernando Colombo - Fernando Colón
Colón , Fernando; Ulloa , Alfonso de; Pané , Ramón - Historie del S.D. Fernando Colombo; : nelle quali s'ha particolare, & v...