
IRELAND
IRISH
[IMPRINTS INCLUDED]
A-C
D-G H-N
O-S
T-Z
(“A
Swift” with SUPER!
Provenance). Swift, Jonathan.
The history of the four last years of the queen. London: Pr. for A.
Millar; Dublin: Reprinted for George & Alexander Ewing, 1758. 8vo (22.5 cm,
8.9"). xiv, [3]–249, [1 (blank)] pp.
$525.00
First Dublin edition of this description of the machinations surrounding
Queen Anne prior to the signing of the Treaty of Utrecht. Although Swift is
known to have labored over the work for some time prior to 1714, it did not
appear until years after his death. (Dr. Johnson expressed disappointment that
when it was published, the book did not live up to the expectations he had formed
of it during the author’s lifetime—a fairly typical bit of
passive-aggressive criticism,
actually, as coming from The Doctor to The Dean!)

Provenance:
Front pastedown with the bookplate of journalist, editor, and book
collector Clement K. Shorter; front free endpaper and fly-leaf bearing bookplates
of Geoffrey Ecroyd, Mary Priscilla Smith, Austin Smith, and Walter Hirst;
title-page with inked inscription of Robert Smyth.
ESTC T154477; NCBEL, II, 1065; Teerink 812. Later half
morocco and cloth sides, spine with raised bands and gilt-stamped title; minor
wear only to edges and spine extremities, some slight discoloration to small
patches of leather. Bookplates as described above. Page edges untrimmed. A
scattering of light spots throughout, otherwise clean.
Nice.

MUTINY on the
H.M.S. Bounty — Official Account
Bligh, William. A voyage to the South Sea, undertaken by command of His Majesty, for the purpose of conveying the bread-fruit tree to the West Indies, in His Majesty's ship The Bounty, commanded by Lieutenant William Bligh. Including an account of the mutiny aboard said ship, and the subsequent voyage of part of the crew, in the ship's boat, from Tofoa, one of the friendly islands, to Timor, a Dutch settlement in the East Indies. . . . Published by permission of the Lord Commissioners of the Admiralty. Dublin: Pr. by H. Fitzpatrick, for Messrs. P. Wogan, P. Byrne, W. McKenzie, J. Moore, J. Jones, W. Jones, R. McAllister, and J. Rice, 1792. 8vo (20.3 cm, 8"). Frontis. port., [14], 376 pp.; 2 plts. (including frontis.).
[SOLD]
Click the interior images for enlargements.
This is the Dublin octavo edition of the
very important official account of the Bounty expedition, reprinted from the London quarto edition of the same year but issued without the charts and plans. “It includes a somewhat revised version of the text of Bligh's narrative of the mutiny, previously published at London in 1970 under the title A narrative of the mutiny, on board His Majesty's Ship Bounty. . . . This account was based upon Bligh's journal but was written, edited, and seen through the press by James Burney, under the supervision of Joseph Banks, during
Bligh's absence from London while on his second breadfruit voyage on the Providence (Hill, 48).” The open-boat voyage across the South Pacific to Timor ranks as one of the most remarkable achievements in maritime history.
Illustrated with an engraved frontispiece portrait of Bligh and one other plate showing sections of the bread fruit, this is
scarce. Searches of OCLC and ESTC find
only 10 copies of this edition.
ESTC T209375; Sabin 5910; Hill, Pacific Voyages, 135 (for London edition). Good-quality 20th-century quarter calf and marbled paper-covered sides, spine with gilt lettering and neat blind-stamped devices between gilt-accented raised bands. Title-page with upper outer corner repaired with loss of “e” and partial loss of “g” from the word “voyage”; slight paper loss at bottom edge of one other leaf. Some foxing and browning on early and later leaves, including plates and title-page, and random spotting/staining found elsewhere; light offsetting to p. [1] from facing plate. A copy that clearly saw serious use, yet one complete with the
frontispiece and plate — sound. (23927)

Adapted
from the
French
& Printed in Dublin
Boissy, M. de [Louis]. False appearances; a comedy. Altered from the French, and performed at the Theatre-Royal, Drury-Lane. By the Right. Hon. General Conway.
Dublin: Pr. for Messrs. Chamberlaine, Gilbert, Byrne, etc., 1789. 12mo. viii pp., [2] ff., 63, [1 (blank)] pp.
$220.00


A translation of Les dehors trompeurs. This printing has
an interpolated epilogue leaf signed g on the recto and numbered 74 on the verso
(matching the called-for collation). Electronic ESTC (T35265, checked 27 February
1998) shows that while this Dublin printing is somewhat more widely held in
the U.K., only five copies are to be found in the U.S.
Removed from a nonce volume and now in recent marbled paper
wrappers. One page very faintly stamped by now-defunct library; author’s prologue
(one page) shaved at bottom, losing one line.
For
THEATER/THEATRE,
click here.

Really Printed in
Kilkenny, not Cologne
Burke, Thomas. Hibernia Dominicana. Sive Historia Provinciae Hiberniae Ordinis Praedicatorum. Coloniae Agrippinae [i.e., Kilkenny]: ex typographia Metternichiana sub Signo Gryphi, 1762. 4to (23 cm; 9.125"). xv,, 949, [1] pp.
$2250.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
Burke (ca. 1710–76) was a Dominican who after 1759 served as Bishop of Ossory. Throughout his life he was an important intermediary link between the Catholic Church of Ireland and the Vatican. His chief published work is this history of the Dominican Order in Ireland, which exists in four states: with or without episcopal rank of the author spelled out as opposed to abbreviated with ellipses on the title-page; imprint reading Cologne or Kilkenny. The British Isles origin of the “Cologne” printing is confirmed by lower-case preliminary roman page numbers and page numbers in square brackets, and the first gathering’s sig. “B.”
Those copies with the Kilkenny impirnt (Killkenniae: ex typographi Jacobi Stokes) are far fewer than those with the Cologne imprint, but it is clear that all copies were printed at Kilkenny by Stokes.
Not a common work: NUC Pre-1956 and OCLC combine to locate only eight copies in U.S. libraries.
Provenance: On title-page, ownership inscriptions of the Revs. Thomas Qualy (1829) and Jacob Cleary. Additional Cleary ownership inscriptions on p. 1 (1873) and iii (1891), the latter a gift inscription on the occasion of that owner's giving the volume to a Rev. Thomas Kelly.
Bradshaw Irish Coll., nos. 5222-5223; ESTC t036179. Recent full brown calf with covers panelled in the Cambridge style, author/title/etc. lettering in gilt directly to spine; spine with gilt rules above and below bands and gilt devices in the compartments. Title-page soiled and small portion of lower inside blank margin torn away and repaired; same page has old library call number in ink and the date of publication in ballpoint! Ownership notes as above. Very light waterstain in lower blank margins of preliminary leaves. Generally a very nice, clean copy. (24805)
Burnside, Thomas. Document Signed. Clearfield, PA, 1811. Double folio (39.5
cm, 15.5"). [1] f.
$125.00
Click the image for an enlargement.
Deed from the Hon. Thomas Burnside to Benjamin Patton, transferring
the rights to a 559-acre property in western Pennsylvania previously owned by
David Curry, deceased, which land became the property of the county upon default
of payment of taxes. Two years later Patton sold the same tract to the George
Curry, executor of David Curry’s estate. Patton had paid $14.65 in 1811
and sold in 1813 for $200.00.
The
Irish-born
Burnside, then treasurer of Clearfield, Pennsylvania,
was later a justice of the Pennsylvania state supreme court.
A notary’s seal is affixed to the document, which was signed by both
Burnside and Patton.
Creased and slightly age-toned, with the folios separated and
some offsetting from seal; a few small holes, touching text without notable
loss.

England, Ireland, & Elizabeth R
Camden, William. Annales rerum Anglicarum, et Hibernicarum, regnante Elizabetha ... prima pars emendatior, altera nunc primum in lucem edita. Lugd. Batavorum: Ex officina Elzeviriana, 1625. 8vo (18 cm, 7.1"). Engr. t.-p., [6] ff., xvi, 855, [41 (index)] pp.; 1 plt.
$725.00
Click the interior images for enlargements.
First Elzevir edition of Camden's important Latin history of England and Ireland during the reign of Elizabeth I, originally printed in 1615, as well as the first edition overall of the second part. The complete work was reprinted by the Elzevirs in 1639, and then appeared in 1677 under a false Elzevir imprint, “une contrefaçon médiocre, probablement d'origine allemande” (Willems).
The engraved portrait of Queen Elizabeth was done by C. van Queboren.
Willems 227; Copinger 759. Period-style calf framed and panelled in gilt fillets embellished with blind rolls and gilt-stamped corner fleurons, spine with gilt-stamped title, gilt-decorated raised bands, and blind-tooled patterned bands in compartments; binding signed G.B. (Grace Bindings) in blind at inner area of rear cover, lower turn-in. Pages age-toned. Title-page with inked numeral in upper outer corner; pages with scattered instances of early inked underlining and bracketing. Approximately 50 leaves with light to faint waterstaining in outer portions, extending into text; one leaf with tear from upper margin, extending through first paragraph. (18995)
He
Liked
It
Carr, John. The stranger in Ireland: Or, a tour in the southern and western parts of that country, in the year 1805. Philadelphia: Samuel F. Bradford et al. (pr. by T. & G. Palmer), 1806. 8vo (21.5 cm, 8.5"). xi, [1], 168, *167/68, 169339, [1 (blank)], 8 (adv.) pp.; 1 plt\.
$300.00
First American edition. Sir John Carr enjoyed a great deal of popular
success with a series of accounts of his jaunts in Europe, but found himself
the target of mockery after printing this Irish-themed sequel to the Stranger
in France Dubois's My Pocket Book, or Hints for a Right Merry
and Conceited Tour satirized the Stranger in Ireland keenly enough
that Carr filed suit (unsuccessfully) against the publishers. The U.S. edition
does not include the hand-colored plate found in some British printings, but
does have an oversized, folded chart of the weather in Dublin in 1804.
An Englishman
through and through, Carr seems sincerely to have liked Ireland and the Irish
he met. His book is full of extended and very readable detail some original,
much quoted on (e.g.) language matters and Irish poetry, Irish agriculture
and industry, Irish management of charities, Irish “sights” and ruins, Irish
marriage cust marriage customs and the implications of a potato-based diet.
Provenance: Contemporary
inked inscription reading “Tho.s Wynne.”
Shaw & Shoemaker 10096. On Carr, see: The Dictionary of
National Biography. Contemporary mottled sheep, spine with gilt-stamped
title-label; leather moderately rubbed, joints cracking and spine label dimmed.
Title-page with owner's name as described above; title-page and one other
stamped. Pages, except for central leaves, with waterstaining in lower margins;
two pages with smeared spots of ink. (11960)
For more PRE-1820 AMERICANA, click here.
For more VOYAGES, TRAVELS, & books on
“EXOTIC” PLACES, click here.
[Combe,
William]. The diaboliad...also, the diabo-lady: Or, a match in Hell. London
pr., Dublin repr., 1777. 8vo (18.7 cm, 7.4"). 97, [1 (blank)] pp.
$225.00

Combe’s best-known satires, here in one of the earliest Irish
issues of the pair (being one of two Dublin printings from 1777). The poems
are, respectively, dedicated to the “worst man” and the “worst
woman” in His Majesty’s dominions. These works first appeared in
London in 1776 and 1777, achieved instant notoriety, and went through numerous
editions; another sequel eventually followed, the Anti-Diabo-lady.
ESTC T77101; NCBEL, II, 647. Marbled paper–covered
boards, front cover with printed paper label. Half-title spotted, title-page
and two others stamped by a now-defunct institution, title-page also with
traces of paper affixed to upper margin; pages otherwise clean. One ESTC
listing calls for plates; most holdings, however, do not report any and
OCLC listings do not note any.
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