Occasional List 20
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REG & PHILIP REMINGTON THE COBBOLDS CARRON LANE MIDHURST WEST SUSSEX, GU29 9LE TELEPHONE 01730-810308 [email protected] www.remingtonbooks.com OCCASIONAL LIST 20. 1. Allom (Thoma) and G.N. Wright- China, in a Series of Views displaying the Scenery, Architecture and Social Habits of that Ancient Empire, FIRST EDITION, 124 engraved plates, 4 vols bound in 2, 4to, contemporary half maroon morocco, Fisher and Son, London, c.1843 £2800 2. Darien [Ferguson (Robert)] A Just and Modest Vindication of the Scots Design, for the Having Established a Colony at Darien. With a Brief Display, how much it is their Interest, to apply themselves to Trade, and Particularly to that which is Foreign, 30 +214 pages, 8vo, contemporary calf, [no place or printer] 1699 £3000 Wing F. 742. Kress 2116. Previous owner's book plates 'Sir Francis Hopkins pasted on inside front cover. The Scottish Parliament in 1695 passed an Act giving extensive powers to a Company trading to Africa and the Indies. This Company on the advice of the economist William Paterson determined to establish a Colony on the Isthmus of Darien as a general emporium for the commerce of all nations. The pioneer settlers set off in July 1698 and though, at first all seemed well, everything went wrong later and the settlement was abandoned. Few of the pioneers of this remarkable enterprise ever returned to their native land again. Darwin's Voyage of the’Beagle’ 3. King (Captain P.P.) and Captain Fitzroy: Narrative of the Surveying Voyage of H.M.S' Ships ‘Adventure" and “Beagle', 1826-36, describing their Examination of the Southern Shores of South America and the "Beagle's" Circumnavigation of the Globe, 8 maps all laid down on linen, plans, charts and 48 engraved plates depicting Patagonians, Fuegians, New Zealanders, Scenes in Brazil, Chile, Tahiti, etc. FIRST EDITION, 3 vols. and appendix, together 4 vols, 8vo, old style half calf, full gilt panelled spines, red letter pieces(a few library stamps expertly removed), London, 1839 £25,000 First expedition, 1826-30, under the command of Captain King surveyed the Straits of Magellan, the coasts of Patagonia, Tierra del Fuego, Chile, Ramirez and neighbouring islands. The narrative also includes accounts of the inhabitants, attempted European settlements, visits to Montevideo, Rio de Janeiro, etc. Second expedition, 1831-36 under the command of Captain Fitzroy, continued the surveys to the coasts of the Falkland Islands, Galapagos, and South Sea Islands and also visited New Zealand, Hobart, etc. The narrative contains accounts of the people and natural history of South America. Charles Darwin's Journal [vol. 3] 1832-36, helped him to formulate his theory of evolution of the species. Conrad Martins joined Fitzroy as draughtsman at Montevideo in August 1832 to replace Augustus Earl who was in bad health, and remained with the expedition for two years. Among the engravings are seventeen fine examples of Martens early work including one of Tahiti. 4. Denham (Major D.) and Captain H. Clapperton: Narrative of Travels and Discoveries in Northern and Central Africa, 1822-24...Extending Across the Great Desert to the Tenth Degree of Northern Latitude, and from Kouka in Bornou, to Sackatoo, the Capital of the Fellatah Empire, etc. FIRST EDITION, folding map and 43 plates, 4to, London, 1826 and Clapperton (Commander H.) Journal of a Second Expedition into the Interior of Africa, from The Bight of Benin to Soccatoo, to which is added the Journal of Richard Lander from Kano to the Sea-Coast, partly by a More Eastern Route, FIRST EDITION, portrait, folding map and 1 plate, 4to, London, 1829 Together 2 vols. uniformly bound in contemporary calf, London, 1826 and 1829 £4750 An official expedition to discover the course of the Niger from the starting point of Tripoli, rather than West Africa. Clapperton and Oudney were the original members of the party, to which Denham was added, Oudney died during the course of the expedition. The accounts of Denham and Clapperton of their important explorations in Africa; by the time of this publication Clapperton had left on his second (and last) journey into the African interior, but he left his journal to be prepared for the press. Major Dixon Denham and Lieutenant Hugh Clapperton were the first Europeans to travel across the Sahara, return safely and write about it. 5. Duncan (Archibald) The Mariner's Chronicle: being a Collection of the Most Interesting narratives of Shipwrecks, Fires, Fammines, and Other Calamities incident to a Life of Maritime Enterprise; with authentic particulars of the Extraordinary Adventures and Sufferings of the Crews, Their Reception and Treatment on Distant Shores and a Concise Description of the Country, Customs and Manners of the Inhabitants including an Account of the Deliverance of the Survivors, COMPLETE EDITION, 50 engraved plates, 6 vols, sm. 8vo, 19th century half calf, London, 1805-12 £3800 Ferguson 462 records the 6 volume edition. Includes the Narrative of the loss of the "Bounty" commanded by Lieutenant W. Bligh; through a conspiracy and the sufferings of those who were cast adrift in the boat; Narrative of the total loss of H.M.S. "Bounty" including the transactions of the mutineers after they gained possession of the vessel, extracted from the letters of Lieutenant Christian, Relation of the wreck of H.M.S. "Porpoise" and "Cato" on a sand bank off the coast of New Holland communicated by Captain Flinders; Loss of the "Pandora" frigate; Distress of the "Guardian" Sloop bound for Botany Bay; and 174 other shipwreck narratives off the coast of Africa, North and South America, Pacific Ocean, etc. 6. Fawckner: Narrative of Captain James Fawckner's Travels on the Coast of Benin, West Africa, edited by a Friend of the Captain, FIRST EDITION, 8 + 128 Pages, sm. 8vo, contemporary calf, red letter piece, London, 1837 £1500 An interesting and detailed account of the hardships encountered b Fawckner and his crew during their captivity in Benin, and descriptions of various journeys made into the interior with anecdotes of the manners and customs of the people. Narrative commences on the "28th June 1825 I sailed from Badagry, in the schooner 'Henry', of Sierra Leone, with a cargo of various goods, to purchase palm-oil and ivory from the natives of Benin, on the Rio Formosa". Due to a storm the "Henry" was grounded on the shore of Mongyee, a province belonging to the King of Benin. The local chief captured the ship and placed the crew in captivity. Fawckner and some members of the crew were taken to Gatto, via Yarcella. After many months during which John Johnson, mate, died and was buried next to Belzoni "The grave of the traveller is roofed over with a neat shed of bamboo... a board is erected...' All travelers are requested to keep up the grave of so great a man as Belzoni". They eventually obtained passage on a Portuguese schooner to Wydah. When they reached Little PoPo they sighted the "Albert" belonging to Mr. Houtson, a British Merchant who agreed to take them to Cape Coast, but opportunity arose for Fawckner to travel to Badagry on the "Brazen" the ship being used by Captain Clapperton's expedition. 7. Hakluyt (Richard) The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation, Made by Sea or Overland to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth at Any Time Within the Compasse of These 1600 Yeeres, ENLARGED EDITION, 3 vols., small folio (292 x 191 mm.)., early 19th century polished calf, raised bands(slightly soiled, occasional slight worming in corners touching a few page numerals or letters, lower joint of vol.1 split) Imprint at London by George Bishop, Ralph Newberie and Robert Barker, 1599-1600 £25,000 Volume 1.(24), 607-619 pp, Volume 2. (16), 312pp, second part, 204 pp, Volume 3, (16), 868 pp. STC 12626a Church 322; Lowndes II, p. 971; Sabin 29597-98:STC 12626a; JCB I, p.372-373; John Parker, Books to build an empire, p. 161-163; S. Danforth, Gathering a scattered fleet, exhibition catalogue JCB Library, 1986. Previous ownership: engraved bookplate of Sir John Saunders Sebright(1767-1846) pasted on inside front cover. The account of the expedition to Cadiz under the joint command of the Earl of Essex and Lord Howard of Effingham was suppressed by order of Queen Elizabeth. A new title for the 1599 edition was printed without any reference of the important Cadiz expedition and the account of the expedition on pages 607-620 were removed, these are leaves are present in this copy in volume 1, which according to STC was not printed until c.1720. This enlarged second edition "...it is said to contain one million seven hundred thousand words and is the most complete collection of voyages and discoveries by land as well as by sea, and of the nautical achievements of the Elizabethans.. Hakluyt met many of the great navigators, Drake, Raleigh, Gilbert, Frobisher and others he also corresponded with Ortelius and Mercator and collected all the material on voyages he could find, by 1600 he was able to fill the three folio volumes of the definitive edition of the Principal Navigation. The arrangement of the work is both chronological and regional, with personal reports by explorers and navigators, merchants and diplomats, the reproductions of documents, sailing directions, etc. Hakluyt was also very interested in the New World. The voyages to the west were in comparison to the first volume expanded from 279000 words to 812000. Hakluyt brought his readers up to date on recent events as Raleigh's voyage to Guiana, and he also included non-English voyages, such as the expeditions of Verrazano, Ribaut, Laudonnière, and the Zeno brothers, as well as a large number of documents describing the West Indies from Spanish sources.