Catalogue of the Collection of Books, Manuscripts, And

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Catalogue of the Collection of Books, Manuscripts, And Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2008 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/catalogueofcolleOOprobrich CATALOGUE OF THE COLLECTION OF BOOKS, aitusOTpts, una Wraths of %xt, BELONGING TO MR. HENRY PROBASCO, CINCINNATI, OHIO, {Oakwood, Clifton.) 1873 .^^qq/ ^^. ^.Z/- ^^aS ^ o ^ J^. Q7&^ M7__ NOTE. SEVERAL catalogues being required for special purposes, it was thought desirable to print a 'limited number, the most of which will be given to public and private libraries' and bibliophile friends. The present collection was accumulated during years which were devoted mainly to the duties of an extensive business. With scant time for needful studies, limited means for buying, and few opportunities in Cincinnati, until recently, for obtaining bibliographical information, its deficiencies are apparent. Without any pretensions, therefore, to consid- eration as a Library, which it is not, it may claim the attention of bib- liophiles as possessing that peculiar interest which attaches to any valuable collection of books as reflecting in some degree the individual- ity and personal tastes of its owner. With a desire to add interest to the collection, important additions were made to it during an eighteen months' tour in 1866-67. These were Biblical Codices, Psalteriums, Breviaries, Missals, Histories ; vol- umes printed on vellum ; specimens of early printing ; rare editions of the Bible, the Fathers, Shakespeare, Dante, the Aldine and Elzevir classics ; illustrated works of permanent value, particularly the Natural Sciences and Travel ; also volumes supposed to be unique ; those formerly owned by distinguished personages ; specimens of bindings of early Italian and French workmanship, in leather-mosaic, niello, bronze, and ivory ; artistic productions, commencing with Grolier, and embra- &76r IV cing the best obtainable specimens of almost all the art-binders since that period. There will be found appended a catalogue of the Paintings and other important objects of interest. These have been added for the gratification of the friends who have expressed a desire to recur to them as reminiscences of helpful, exalted hours spent in the presence of artists who have achieved distinction at home, and whose names are honored in both hemispheres. HENRY PROBASCO. Oakwood, Clifton, ist May, 1873. CATALOGUE. BBOTT, Jacob. The Corner Stone, or a Familiar Illustration of the Principles of Christian Truth ; with a Preface by J. P. A Smith. Boston, 1835. I vol. \21no, half calf. A Summer in Scotland. New York, 1848. I vol. 1 2 mo, half calf. ABRANTES, Duchesse d'. See Junot. ACOLUTHIA lectoris, sive Sylliturgica (graece). Venetiis, apud Fede- ricum Turrisanum, 1549. I vol. Svo, printed in red atid black, with one woodcut, blue morocco. {Niedrk.) From the library of M. Yemeniz, No. 51. ADAMS, H. G. Cyclopaedia of Sacred Poetical Quotations. London, 1854. 1 vol. i6mo, cloth. ADAMS, John. Letters addressed to his Wife. Edited by C. F. Adams. Boston, 1841. 2 vols. i2mo, cloth. ADAMS, John Quincy. Lectures on Rhetoric and Oratory. Cam- bridge, 18 10. 2 vols. Svo, half calf ADAMS, Nehemiah. The Communion Sabbath. Boston, 1856. I vol. x2mo, calf. ADAMS, William. The three Gardens, Eden, Gethsemane, and Para- dise ; or, Man's Ruin, Redemption, and Restoration. New York, 1856. I vol. i2mo, cloth. I . ADDISON, Joseph. Works: a new Edition, with Notes by Richard Hurd. London, Cadell, 1811. 6 vols. roy. %vo, maroon morocco gilt. {Hayday.) With a portrait engraved by Picart, ADUNATIONE de i quattro evangelisti in uno, cioe vita, passione & resurrettione di Jesu Christo nostro Salvatore. Con una breve espositione molto utile e necessaria ad ogni fidel Christiano. Venetia, ne la contrata de S. Maria Formosa^ 1556. I vol. 8vo, brown morocco. The covers of this copy bear the Arms of Louis-Charles de Valois, comte d'Auvergne. yEGIDIUS, S. Franciscus. Aurea verba. See Gerson, J. ^LIANUS, Claudius. Varia historia, ad mss. codices nunc primum recognita et castigata, cum versione Justi Vulteii, sed innumeris in locis ad graecum auctoris contextum emendata, et perpetuo commen- tario Jacobi Perizonii. Lugduni in Bat., 1701. I vol. in 2, d>vo, with an engraved title-page and vigfiettes, brown morocco. {Clarke.) iESCHINES. Due orationi, 1' una di Eschine contra di Tesifonte, r altra di Demosthene k sua difesa, di Greco in volgare nuovamente tradotte per un gentilhuomo Firentino. Vinigia, in casa di figliuoli di Aldo, 1554. I vol. Svo, brown morocco. ^SCHYLUS. ^schyli tragoedije sex (graece). Venetiis, in cedibus Aldi et Andrece soceri, 15 18. I vol. Svo, blue morocco gilt, lined with silk. {Bozerian.) First edition. From the library of M. Yemeniz, No. 1864. Tragedies ; literally translated, with critical and illustrative Notes, and an Introduction, by T. A. Buckley. London, ^^^«, 1849. I vol. Svo, half calf ^SOPUS. .^sopi fabulas cum interpretatione vulgari : et figuris acri cura emendatae. Brixi/E, impendio Ludovici Britdnici : etfratrum, MD. xxij. Die xij. Octobris. (1522.) I vol. 4to, with woodcuts, green lei'ant morocco. {English binding.) From the library of M. Yemeniz, No. 2068. ^SOPUS. ^sop's Fables, with his Life : in English, French, and Latin. Newly translated. Illustrated with 112 sculptures. To this Edition are likewise added 31 new figures representing his life. By Francis Barlow. London, 1687. I vol. folio, large paper, brown morocco. {Bedford.) Fables of .^sop and other Eminent Mythologists. By Sir R. L'Estrange. London, 1738. 1 vol. ZvOy calf extra. {Bedford.) Select Fables of Esop and other Fabulists; in three books. London, Dodsley, 1761. I vol. 8vOf calf extra. Seautiful edition printed by Baskerville, with medallion cuts. .iiEsop's Fables, embellished with in elegant engravings. [Sam- uel Croxall.] 'Lo^no^, printed by Davidson, 1818. I vol. 8vo, calf. iEsop's Fables ; a new Version by Rev. Thomas James. With more than fifty illustrations by J. Tenniel. New York [1848]. I vol. 8vo, cloth. The Fables of ^sop, with a Life of the Author, illustrated with one hundred and eleven engravings frpm original designs by Her- rick. New York, 1865. I vol. i2mo, maroon morocco. AGASSIZ, Louis. Lake Superior ; its Physical Character, Vegetation, and Animals. With a Narrative of the Tour by J. E. Cabot. Boston, 1850. I vol. 8vo, with illustrations, cloth, AGRICOLA, Daniel. Passio domini nostri Jesu Christi. Basile/e, T. Vuolff, 1520. 1 vol. sm. 4to, half red morocco. AGUILAR, Grace. The Women of Israel. New York, 1851. 2 vols. i2mo, morocco. AKENSIDE, Mark. Poetical Works. London, Bell and Daldy, 1866. I vol. xdmo, calf {Matthews^ ALBERTIS, Leo Baptista. Leonis Baptistaj Alberti Floretini viri clarissimi libri de re aedificatoria dece. Parrhisiis, B. Remboldt et L. Hornken, 15 12. I vol. 8vo, vellum. ALBERTUS DE PADUA. Incipit solene opus expositidis Evange- lioru dominicaliu tocius anni reverendi magistri Albert! de Padua fratru ordinis heremitarum sci Augustini. {In fine :) Liber Vene- Tiis impressus per magros Add de Rotuuil et Andrea de Corona finit ano 1476. I vol. folio, 248 leaves, in 2 columns, rubricated capitals, half red levant morocco. {Hardy-Mennil.) ALBERTUS MAGNUS. Incipit liber Alberti magni ordinis predica- torum de adherendo deo. Tractatulus de remediis contra pusillani- mitatem scrupulositatem contra deceptorias inimici per Johannem Gerson. Epistola domini Bonaventure cardinalis de modo profici- endi compendioso. Brevis et utilis doctrina juvenum domini Bona- venture. s. 1. et a. [ULMiE,y". Zai7ier, circa 1473.] I vol. folio, 40 leaves, rubricated capitals, half brown levajtt morocco. {Hardy-Mennil.) ALBIN, Eleazar. Insectorum angliae naturalis historia : accedunt annotationes a Guil. Derham. Londini, 1731. I vol. \to, Hollandpaper, coloredplates, green morocco. A Natural History of Birds. London, 1731-38. 3 vols. 4to, Hollandpaper, coloredplates, green morocco. ALBRITIO, LuiGi. Panegirici sacri del padre Luigi Albritio della Compagnia di Giesu. Roma, / de Lazzcri, 1655. I vol. 8vo, red morocco gilt. ALBUM DU CHASSEUR. Illustrd de 12 photographies d'aprbs les dessins de M. C. F. Deiker j legendes par M. de La Rue. Paris, Rothschild, 1865. I vol. ob. folio, half morocco. ALBUM VON MUNCHEN : verlag von A. Meysel in Dresden. Debit bei H. Manz. I vol. ob. ^0, cloth. ALCIATUS, Andreas. Andreae Alciati emblematum libellus, nuper in lucem editus. Venetiis, Aldifilios, 1546. I vol. Svo, with woodcuts, red levant morocco, gilt and marbled edges. {Hardy-Mennil.) "II est fort rare, et on y trouve 84 fig. en bois." — Brunei. Clarissimi viri D. Andreas Alciati emblematum libri duo. LuG- DUNi,y; Tornasium et G. Gazeium, 1554. I vol. i6mo, with woodcuts, calf extra. {Koehler.) From the library of M. Yemeniz, No. 2101. ALCIATUS, Andreas. Les Emblemes de maistre Andre Alciat, mis en rime frangoyse, et puis nagueres reimprime avec curieuse cor- rection. On les vend a Paris eft la maison de Chrestien Wechel a lescu de Basle, m. d. xl. 1 vol. Svo, 115 woodcuts, green morocco. " Exemplaire AuDENET. Edition en caracteres italiques." From the library of M. Yemeniz, No. 2108. ALCOCK, Sir Rutherford. The Capital of the Tycoon j a Narra- tive of a Three Years' Residence in Japan. London, Longmans, 1863. 2 vols. 8w, half calf ALEXANDER, James W. Consolation : in Discourses on Select Top- ics, addressed to the Suffering People of God. New York, Scrib- ner, 1853. I vol. 8vo, dark morocco. Discourses on Common Topics of Christian Faith and Practice. New York, Scribner, 1858. 1 vol. 8vo, dark morocco. Forty Years' Familiar Letters. Edited by John Hall. New York, Scribner, i860. 2 vols, xzmo, with portrait, cloth. The Man of Business considered in his various Relations. By S. Tyng, I. Ferris, J. W. Alexander, J. Todd, W. B. Sprague, H. and J. F. Stearns. New York, 1857. 1 vol. xzmo, half calf ALEXANDER, Joseph Addison. Sermons. New York, i860. 2 vols. i2mo, cloth. ALEXANDER DE ALES. Summa universae theologise. Pars prima. {In fine:) Finis prime partis. Vex Jodnem antonium de birretis ac Frdciscum gyrardenghum. Papie m. cccc. lxxxix. I vol. 4to, 224 leaves, in 2 columns, half red morocco.
Recommended publications
  • The Journal of New Latin Poetry
    VATES The Journal of New Latin Poetry Issue 4, Autumn/Winter 2011-12 CONTENTS Editorial 2 Carmina Latina After the Raid (Brad Walton) 3 2 First World War Poems (Paul Murgatroyd) 7 Webicus Bacchus (Joseph Tusiani) 9 2 Carmina (J. Turner Brakeley) 10 Eoan Airs (Massimo Scorsone) 12 Uxor Tiresiae (Paul Murgatroyd) 26 Pro Senectute Mea (Joseph Tusiani) 29 Laus Bacchi (Raul Lavalle) 30 3 Carmina ex Hobbito Illo (Mark Walker) 32 Features Toiling Up Parnassus (Barry Baldwin) 37 Verba Inaudita (Mark Walker) 40 Book Review: Musa Pedestris (Barry Baldwin) 46 De gustibus non est disputandum 48 Contributors 50 Edited by Mark Walker email: [email protected] Vates is a Pineapple Publications publication Vates Issue 4 Editorial Welcome to this fourth edition of Vates, the free journal of new Latin poetry. I‟m delighted that we are reaching an ever wider and increasingly international audience. Poetry in this issue comes from Italy, Argentina the USA, Canada and the UK. We have readers in Europe, North America, Jamaica, Australia … and the generous contributions from our poets around the globe shows no sign of slowing down, either – quite the opposite, in fact, which is a gratifying indication that we must be doing something right! One issue that prompted me to set up this journal in the first place was the problem of finding a readership for new Latin verse: „Who reads Latin Poems written in these days!‟ wrote Walter Savage Landor‟s exasperated brother in 1820, scarcely able to believe his brother would waste his talents on such a quixotic endeavour, and the situation can hardly be said to have improved since then.
    [Show full text]
  • RHO Volume 35 Back Matter
    WORKS OF THE CAMDEN SOCIETY AND ORDER OF THEIR PUBLICATION. 1. Restoration of King Edward IV. 2. Kyng Johan, by Bishop Bale For the year 3. Deposition of Richard II. >• 1838-9. 4. Plumpton Correspondence 6. Anecdotes and Traditions 6. Political Songs 7. Hayward's Annals of Elizabeth 8. Ecclesiastical Documents For 1839-40. 9. Norden's Description of Essex 10. Warkworth's Chronicle 11. Kemp's Nine Daies Wonder 12. The Egerton Papers 13. Chronica Jocelini de Brakelonda 14. Irish Narratives, 1641 and 1690 For 1840-41. 15. Rishanger's Chronicle 16. Poems of Walter Mapes 17. Travels of Nicander Nucius 18. Three Metrical Romances For 1841-42. 19. Diary of Dr. John Dee 20. Apology for the Lollards 21. Rutland Papers 22. Diary of Bishop Cartwright For 1842-43. 23. Letters of Eminent Literary Men 24. Proceedings against Dame Alice Kyteler 25. Promptorium Parvulorum: Tom. I. 26. Suppression of the Monasteries For 1843-44. 27. Leycester Correspondence 28. French Chronicle of London 29. Polydore Vergil 30. The Thornton Romances • For 1844-45. 31. Verney's Notes of the Long Parliament 32. Autobiography of Sir John Bramston • 33. Correspondence of James Duke of Perth I For 1845-46. 34. Liber de Antiquis Legibus 35. The Chronicle of Calais J Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 170.106.35.93, on 27 Sep 2021 at 13:24:50, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S2042169900003692 CAMDEN K^AHkJ|f SOCIETY, FOR THE PUBLICATION OF EARLY HISTORICAL AND LITERARY REMAINS.
    [Show full text]
  • Precursory Projects of the Regional Emblems in Italian Geopolitical Area
    Roberto Breschi: Precursory Projects of the Regional Emblems in Italian Geopolitical Area Abstract: In 1927 emblems for all the Regions of the Italian geopolitical area - Kingdom of Italy and some geographically Italian territories across the border - were proposed. Some were quite new hut most of them were inspired by historical symbols. From the end of the Second World War to 1970 the Regions of the new Italian Republic, once simple traditional entities, became more or less autonomous administrative subjects, and they needed local symbols as coats of arms, gonfalons and flags. In some cases the 1927 proposal can be considered a bridge betw’een the earliest times and the today emblems. Caesar Augustus, the first emperor of Rome, had already arranged Italy in regions, and it is surprising how some of them quite exacdy coincide with modern ones 1^1. The boundaries of the various states that over the centuries had divided the peninsula marked even more the shape of the future regions. So in 1861, when the unity of the nation (1861) was going to be completed, the Italian regions had a well defined profile. Nevertheless, from the administrative point of view, they remained for several decades only assemblages of provinces, without any organ of local government. Just after the Second World War, when the republican constitution came into force in Italy (1948), the regions became autonomous bodies with their powers and assignments. A statute of special autonomy, at once effective, was provided for four regions (Sicily, Sardinia, Aosta Valley and Trentino-Alto Adige (in 1963, a fifth, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, was added).
    [Show full text]
  • The Apostolic Succession of the Right Rev. James Michael St. George
    The Apostolic Succession of The Right Rev. James Michael St. George © Copyright 2014-2015, The International Old Catholic Churches, Inc. 1 Table of Contents Certificates ....................................................................................................................................................4 ......................................................................................................................................................................5 Photos ...........................................................................................................................................................6 Lines of Succession........................................................................................................................................7 Succession from the Chaldean Catholic Church .......................................................................................7 Succession from the Syrian-Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch..............................................................10 The Coptic Orthodox Succession ............................................................................................................16 Succession from the Russian Orthodox Church......................................................................................20 Succession from the Melkite-Greek Patriarchate of Antioch and all East..............................................27 Duarte Costa Succession – Roman Catholic Succession .........................................................................34
    [Show full text]
  • {PDF EPUB} the Works of of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 18 by John Nichols the Works of the Rev
    Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} The Works of of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 18 by John Nichols The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, Volume 18 (1739) by Jonathan Swift, edited by Thomas Sheridan, John Nichols, John Boyle, Patrick Delany, John Hawkesworth, Deane Swift, William Bowyer, John Birch, and George Faulkner Letter from Jonathan Swift to John Barber - 8 May 22, 2020 · The works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift .. by Jonathan Swift, 1808, Printed for J. Johnson [etc. edition, in English - A new ed., ... corrected and revised by John Nichols ...Pages: 19The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift - Jonathan Swifthttps://www.bbrarebooks.com/pages/books/JSW002/...Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) was born in Ireland. He studied at Trinity College and was close with Alexander Pope and John Gay, the two other most important writers of his time period. He penned poetry and prose, and is best remembered for writing Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World, or Gulliver’s Travels (1726). Jun 04, 2001 · Letters written by the Late Jonathan Swift, D.D. Dean of St. Patrick's, Dublin and Several of His Friends from the year 1710 to 1740, published from the originals. The following volumes from "The Letters " edited by John Hawkesworth. Printed in London by T. Davies and others. 1769. Volume 18. (volume 1 of 'the letters'.) 396 pages. 1769. Volume 19. Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745: The works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift, (London, Printed for J. Johnson, 1801), also by John Nichols and Thomas Sheridan (page images at HathiTrust) Swift, Jonathan, 1667-1745: The works of the Rev.
    [Show full text]
  • The College and Canons of St Stephen's, Westminster, 1348
    The College and Canons of St Stephen’s, Westminster, 1348 - 1548 Volume I of II Elizabeth Biggs PhD University of York History October 2016 Abstract This thesis is concerned with the college founded by Edward III in his principal palace of Westminster in 1348 and dissolved by Edward VI in 1548 in order to examine issues of royal patronage, the relationships of the Church to the Crown, and institutional networks across the later Middle Ages. As no internal archive survives from St Stephen’s College, this thesis depends on comparison with and reconstruction from royal records and the archives of other institutions, including those of its sister college, St George’s, Windsor. In so doing, it has two main aims: to place St Stephen’s College back into its place at the heart of Westminster’s political, religious and administrative life; and to develop a method for institutional history that is concerned more with connections than solely with the internal workings of a single institution. As there has been no full scholarly study of St Stephen’s College, this thesis provides a complete institutional history of the college from foundation to dissolution before turning to thematic consideration of its place in royal administration, music and worship, and the manor of Westminster. The circumstances and processes surrounding its foundation are compared with other such colleges to understand the multiple agencies that formed St Stephen’s, including that of the canons themselves. Kings and their relatives used St Stephen’s for their private worship and as a site of visible royal piety.
    [Show full text]
  • William Godwin
    WILLIAM GODWIN “NARRATIVE HISTORY” AMOUNTS TO FABULATION, THE REAL STUFF BEING MERE CHRONOLOGY “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project William Godwin HDT WHAT? INDEX WILLIAM GODWIN WILLIAM GODWIN 1756 March 3, Wednesday: William Godwin was born in Wisbech in the Cambridgeshire Fens. The Reverend John Godwin, his father, was the minister of Wisbech Independent Chapel and his mother Ann Hull had originated in a well- to-do family (they had several ships trading on the Baltic Sea). GODWIN’S EARLY LIFE NOBODY COULD GUESS WHAT WOULD HAPPEN NEXT William Godwin “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project HDT WHAT? INDEX WILLIAM GODWIN WILLIAM GODWIN 1758 The family of origin of William Godwin relocated from the Fens of England to Debenham near Suffolk. LIFE IS LIVED FORWARD BUT UNDERSTOOD BACKWARD? — NO, THAT’S GIVING TOO MUCH TO THE HISTORIAN’S STORIES. LIFE ISN’T TO BE UNDERSTOOD EITHER FORWARD OR BACKWARD. “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project William Godwin HDT WHAT? INDEX WILLIAM GODWIN WILLIAM GODWIN 1759 April 27, Friday: Mary Wollstonecraft was born in Spitalfields, London. FEMINISM THE FUTURE IS MOST READILY PREDICTED IN RETROSPECT “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project William Godwin HDT WHAT? INDEX WILLIAM GODWIN WILLIAM GODWIN 1760 The family of origin of William Godwin relocated from Debenham near Suffolk to Guestwich near Norwich, where the Reverend John Godwin would, for a dozen years, until his death, be minister of the Independent Meeting House. THE FUTURE CAN BE EASILY PREDICTED IN RETROSPECT “Stack of the Artist of Kouroo” Project William Godwin HDT WHAT? INDEX WILLIAM GODWIN WILLIAM GODWIN 1767 William Godwin was sent to Norwich where he would be the sole student of the Reverend Samuel Newton.
    [Show full text]
  • The Apostolic Succession of the Right Rev. Gregory Wayne Godsey
    The Apostolic Succession of The Right Rev. Gregory Wayne Godsey © 2012-2016, Old Catholic Churches International, Inc Office of Communications and Media Relations All Rights Reserved 1 Contents Certificates ................................................................................................................................................... 3 Photographic Evidence ............................................................................................................................... 5 Lines of Apostolic Succession..................................................................................................................... 6 Reformed Episcopal – Anglican Succession .......................................................................................... 6 Anglican, Celtic, Hebraic Succession [Line 1]...................................................................................... 12 Anglican, Celtic, Hebraic Succession [Line 2]...................................................................................... 17 Anglican, Roman, Johnanite Succession .............................................................................................. 22 Russian-Orthodox Succession [Line 1]................................................................................................ 26 Russian-Orthodox Succession [Line 2]................................................................................................ 31 Armenian Succession ...........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Suffolk Garland: Or, a Collection of Poems, Songs, Tales, Ballads
    m. THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES THE SUFFOLK GARLAND, OR mt Country iWinsttel: WITH NOTICES, Historical, Biographical, and Descriptive. V THE SUFFOLK GARLAND: OR, A COLLECTION OF POEMS, SONGS, TALES, BALLADS, SONNETS, AND ELEGIES, Legendary and Romantic, Historical and Descriptive, RELATIVE TO THAT COUNTY; And Illustrative of its SCENERY, PLACES, BIOGRAPHY, MANNERS, HABITS AND CUSTOMS. * %])t nettle anD tljc ftotoec, * Cijc tfjorne antj t])t ro^e, ** W Garland compose/ IPSWICH : Printed and Sold by John Baw ; SOLD ALSO BY LONGMAN, HURST, REES, ORME AND BROWN; AND RODD AND SON, LONDON. MDCCCXVIII. fv) Br THE REV. JOHN MITFORD, B. A. VICAR OF BENHALL, AND RECTOR OF WESTON ST. PETER. Deem not inelegant his Mind, who loves 'Mid the rude Chronicles of Elder Time to Awhile sojourn ; and, with fabled rhyme, In these late days, again in fancy roves Through moated Halls, and Fields, and ancient Groves, Beneath whose shade our Fathers, in their prime. sate ^but Have ; now corroding age and crime Have left but what their ancient glory proves. Yet come : and 'mid these mouldering Relics trace of The pensive shadows departed years ; Mark, how again, with renovated grace. Its front the long-forgotten Mansion rears ; And all, upstarting in its wonted place. As touch'd by some enchanter's wand, appears. 804.129 " An ordinary song or ballad, that is the delight " the common cannot fail to all such " of people, please readers as are not unqualifiedfor the etitertainment " their or ; and the reaso7i is " by affectation ignorance because the same nature, which " plain, paintings of recommend it to the most ordinary reader, will ap- " to the most pear" beautiful refined.
    [Show full text]
  • Apostolic Succession
    Apostolic Succession Episcopal Seal of the Most Rev. Richard A. Kalbfleisch, STL, DD, NOSF Through the Catholic Apostolic Church of Brazil (Igreja Catolica Apostolica Brasileira) Old Catholic Church of Utrecht Russian Orthodox Church The Church of England & The Episcopal Church in the USA Catholic Apostolic Church of Brazil Archbishop Carlos Duarte Costa, ordained a priest within The Church of Rome on 1 April 1911, was consecrated to be the Roman Diocesan Bishop of Botucatu, Brazil, on 8 December 1924. His public statements on the treatment of the poor in Brazil (by both the civil government and the Roman Church) resulted in his removal as Diocesan Bishop of Botucatu. Bishop Duarte Costa was subsequently named Titular Bishop of Maura by Pope Pius XII (Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli, Vatican Secretary of State until 1939 under Pope Pius XI). Archbishop Duarte Costa's criticisms of the Vatican, particularly the policy toward Nazi Germany, were not well received. He was formerly separated from the Church of Rome on 6 July 1945 after his strong and repeated public denunciations of the Vatican Secretariat of State for granting Vatican Passports to some very high ranking Nazis. Some of the most notorious Nazi war criminals (e.g., Adolf Eichmann and Dr. Josef Mengele, the "Angel of Death,") escaped trial after World War II using Vatican Passports to flee to South America. The government of Brazil also came under the Bishop's criticism for collaborating with the Vatican on these passports. Bishop Duarte Costa espoused what would be considered today as a rather liberal position on divorce, challenged mandatory celibacy for clergy, and publicly condemned the perceived abuses of papal power (especially the concept of Papal Infallibility, which he considered misguided and false).
    [Show full text]
  • Vesuvius Near Naples
    THE LACRIMA CHRISTI OF MOUNT VESUVIUS NEAR NAPLES This is an attempt to create what Edward L. Ayers refers to, in his piece “Mapping Time,” as “deep contingency”: “layers of events, layers of the consequences of unpredictability.” Precisely as the lava flows accumulate on the flanks of Vesuvius, we will attempt to depict how centuries accumulate. July 7, Monday, 1851: ...Even the facts of science may dust the mind by their dryness –unless they are in a sense effaced each morning or rather rendered fertile by the dews of fresh & living truth. Every thought that passes through the mind helps to wear & tear it & to deepen the ruts which as in the streets of Pompeii evince how much it has been used. How many things there are concerning which we might well deliberate whether we had better know them. Routine –conventionality manners &c &c –how insensibly and undue attention to these dissipates & impoverishes the mind –robs it of its simplicity & strength emasculates it. Knowledge doe[s] not cone [come] to us by details but by lieferungs from the gods. What else is it to wash & purify ourselves? Conventionalities are as bad as impurities. Only thought which is expressed by the mind in repose as it wer[e] lying on its back & contemplating the heaven’s –is adequately & fully expressed– What are side long –transient passing half views? The writer expressing his thought –must be as well seated as the astronomer contemplating the heavens –he must not occupy a constrained position. The facts the experience we are well poised upon –! Which secures our whole attention! HDT WHAT? INDEX VESUVIO NAPLES [Bulfinch’s MYTHOLOGY] The region where Virgil locates the entrance to this abode is perhaps the most strikingly adapted to excite ideas of the terrific and preternatural of any on the face of the earth.
    [Show full text]
  • MARCH 2012 O.XI No
    PQ-COVER 2012B_PQ-COVER MASTER-2007 24/01/2012 17:30 Page 1 P Q PRINT QUARTERLY MARCH 2012 Vol. XXIX No. 1 March 2012 VOLUME XXIX NUMBER 1 mar12PQHill-Stone_Layout 1 26/01/2012 16:23 Page 1 :DVVLO\.DQGLQVN\ .OHLQH:HOWHQFRPSOHWHVHWRIWZHOYHRULJLQDO SULQWV RQHIURPWKHVHWLOOXVWUDWHGDERYH ([KLELWLQJDW7()$)0DDVWULFKW 0DUFK 6WDQG PQ.MAR2012C_Layout 1 25/01/2012 17:12 Page 1 PrInT quarTerly volume XXIX number 1 march 2012 contents a Frontispiece for galileo’s Opere: Pietro anichini and Stefano della bella 3 Jaco ruTgerS engravings by Jacques Fornazeris with the arms of rené gros 13 henrIeTTe PommIer Représentant d’une grande nation: The Politics of an anglo-French aquatint 22 amanda lahIkaInen Shorter notices Some early States by martino rota 33 STePhen a. bergquIST Prints by gabriel huquier after oppenord’s decorated Ripa 37 Jean-FrançoIS bédard notes 44 catalogue and book reviews The Imagery of Proverbs 85 war Posters, Sustainable Posters 100 PeTer van der coelen and Street art Polish collectors of the nineteenth 88 Paul gough and Twentieth centuries Joan Snyder 103 waldemar deluga bIll norTh Samuel Palmer revisited 92 elizabeth Peyton 106 elIzabeTh e. barker wendy weITman Jules chéret 95 william kentridge 110 howard couTTS Paul coldwell modern british Posters 97 contemporary Printed art in Switzerland 112 marTIn hoPkInSon anTonIa neSSI PQ.MAR2012C_Layout 1 26/01/2012 13:49 Page 2 Editor Rhoda Eitel-Porter Administrator Sub-Editor Jocelyne Bancel Virginia Myers Editorial Board Clifford Ackley Pat Gilmour Giorgio Marini David Alexander Antony Griffiths Jean Michel Massing Judith Brodie Craig Hartley Nadine Orenstein Michael Bury Martin Hopkinson Peter Parshall Paul Coldwell Ralph Hyde Maxime Préaud Marzia Faietti David Kiehl Christian Rümelin Richard Field Fritz Koreny Michael Snodin Celina Fox David Landau Ellis Tinios David Freedberg Ger Luijten Henri Zerner Members of Print Quarterly Publications Registered Charity No.
    [Show full text]