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  1. BEVERIDGE, William Henry.

    Full employment in a free society: a report ...

    London, George Allen & Unwin Ltd, [1944].

    First edition of the second report by the social reformer and economist W. H. Beveridge (1879-1963), a sequel to the epoch-making Beveridge report on Social Insurance and Allied Services made to the Government in December 1942. Beveridge had earlier published Unemployment: a Problem of Industry (1909),...

    £50

  2. NORMAN, George Warde.

    Papers on various subjects.

    [London] Printed for private circulation by T. & W. Boone, 1869.

    A nice association copy of this collection of fifty-two essays, letters and petitions by the financial writer and merchant banker George Warde Norman (1793-1882), from the library of Edward Strutt, first Baron Belper (1801-1880). The pieces collected here, many of which originally appeared in The Spectator,...

    £175

  3. BARANTE, Amable-Guillaume-Prosper Brugière, baron de (1782-1866), French statesman and historian.

    Two autograph letters signed...

    Paris, 14 January [no year] and [n.p.] 4 May 1861.

    Two autograph letters from the French peer and historian Barante. The first, addressed to Monsieur Bajot, editor of the Annales Maritimes, asks him to send numbers he is missing for this year. The second, written to an unidentified ‘monsieur et honoré confrère’ on the encouragement of Monsieur...

    £50

  4. GROTE, George (1794-1871), historian and politician.

    Autograph letter signed (‘Geo Grote’) to John Murray.

    12 Savile Row [London], 21 March [no year].

    From the author of one of the political histories which shaped early American political thought, to one of the most important publishers of his age. Grote writes to the publisher John Murray (1808-1892) to say that he and Mrs Grote will be dining with Mr Ord and so cannot accept Murray’s invitation....

    £50

  5. GUIZOT, François Pierre Guillaume (1787-1874), statesman and historian.

    Autograph letter signed (‘Guizot’) to ‘My dear Sir’,...

    Brompton, 21 Pelham Crescent [London], 15 June 1848.

    A short but interesting letter written by Guizot from Pelham Crescent where he lived in exile following the 1848 revolution in France. Guizot, who served Louis Philippe as Foreign Minister and Prime Minister, asks the unnamed recipient to pass some pages to ‘Mistriss Austin’, promising that the remainder...

    £150

  6. MEADE, James Edward (1907-1995), economist.

    Autograph manuscript page and accompanying black and white passport photograph.

    [c. 1977].

    A leaf of autograph manuscript, presumably sent at the request of a collector, giving part of the text of Meade’s Nobel Memorial Lecture, ‘The meaning of “internal balance”’, which he delivered in December 1977. Meade writes: ‘To treat the whole of macro-economic control as a single subject...

    £150

  7. SCHUMACHER, H., Professor.

    Autograph letter signed (‘H. Schumacher’) to a colleague.

    Bonn, den Coblenzerstrasse 83, 10 February 1915.

    Schumacher’s spirited response to a colleague who had asked for Schumacher’s opinion on a letter he intended to publish in an American newspaper. Schumacher charges him with completely misunderstanding both the political situation and public opinion in the USA. He criticises the German attitude towards...

    £150

  8. TAINE, Hippolyte-Adolphe (1828-1893), French critic and historian.

    A collection of eleven autograph letters, signed, regarding...

    Various places, 1860s to 1880s.

    An interesting group of letters by Taine, written following his return to teaching in 1863. Discriminatory treatment from the authorities of the Second Empire led to his withdrawal from teaching from 1852 to 1863, when he was appointed an examiner at Saint-Cyr. The following year he became a lecturer...

    £850

  9. THIERS, Adolphe (1797–1877), French politician and historian.

    Three autograph letters signed (‘A Thiers’) to Nassau Senior.

    Paris, 22 December 1852, 11 July 1854, 18 June 1855.

    A set of interesting letters from Thiers to the English economist Nassau Senior. Thiers was a French politician and historian who served as prime minister under Louis Phillipe. Following the overthrow of the Second Empire he again came to prominence as the French leader who suppressed the revolutionary...

    £200

  10. THORNTON, William Thomas (1813-1880), economist and civil servant.

    Autograph letter signed (‘W. T. Thornton’) in French to...

    8 Marlborough Hill, St John’s Wood, 17 June 1853.

    Thornton here replies to Guillaumin’s request for information about him, giving his place and date of birth, stating that he has worked for the East India Company in London since 1836, and listing his publications as Overpopulation and its remedy (1846) and A plea for peasant proprietors (1848).

    £250

  11. FREEMAN, Arthur.

    Julia Alpinula, Pseudo-Heroine of Helvetia: How a Forged Renaissance Epitaph Fostered a National Myth.

    London, The Author, 2015.

    Julia Alpinula is a legendary Swiss heroine, whose pathetic fate in AD 69 inspired popular historians, dramatists, artists, and poets – including an infatuated Byron – over a period of more than two hundred years. Her very existence, however, was based entirely on a funerary inscription first published...

    £15

  12. [BALLAD.]

    RUSTY DUSTY MILLER (The). A New Song.

    [London, c.1780]

    Another unrecorded ballad, even cruder than the last and so execrably printed as to verge on nonsense: ‘It’s did you never hear of a Rusty Dusty Miller …’ Said miller promises a young maiden that he will ‘grind your grits so free, and welcome your desire’. On her way to the mill,

    £600

  13. DAY, Thomas.

    The History of Sandford and Merton; a Work intended for the Use of Children …

    London: Printed for B. Crosby … Darton and Harvey … and T. Ostell … 1803.

    First edition thus of Thomas Day’s wildly popular story for children, here in ‘a more reduced form’ as ‘the price of the original work may be incommodious to … young readers’. This was was not the same text as the ‘Abridged’ version first published by Wallis and Newbery (and by Darton...

    £150

  14. HOLCROFT, Thomas.

    The Adventures of Hugh Trevor …

    London: Printed for Shepperson and Reynolds 1794 [Vols. 4-6: London: Printed for G. G. and J. Robinson … 1797].

    First edition of one of the cardinal novels of the Godwinian school, by an author equal to Godwin ‘in influencing young intellectuals ...’ (Gary Kelly, The English Jacobin Novel 1780-1805, 1976, p. 167).

    £1000

  15. HUGHES, John.

    Poems on several Occasions. With some select Essays in Prose. In two Volumes …

    London: Printed for J. Tonson and J. Watts. 1735.

    First edition of the principal collection of the author’s works, published posthumously and edited, with a long biographical preface, by his brother-in-law, William Duncombe. John Hughes (1677–1720) was educated at a dissenting academy where Isaac Watts was his contemporary. From an early...

    £850

  16. [KEENE, Marian].

    The History of a tame Robin. Supposed to be written by Himself.

    London: Printed for Darton, Harvey, and Darton … 1817.

    First and only edition. The tame Robin recalls a life of adventure enriched by human and avian friendships. A childhood spent in a school-room helped him attain ‘a sufficient knowledge of literature to relate my adventures’. His life, though happy, is not without its vicissitudes: he loses...

    £325

  17. LAMB, Charles.

    John Woodvil a Tragedy ... to which are added, Fragments of Burton, the Author of the Anatomy of Melancholy.

    London: Printed by T. Plummer ... for G. and J. Robinson ... 1802.

    First edition. John Woodvil was Charles Lamb’s first play (or dramatic poem), regarded by him at one time as his ‘finest effort’, a ‘medley (as I intend it to be a medley) of laughter and tears, prose and verse, and in some places rhyme, songs, wit, pathos, humour, and, if possible, sublimity’...

    £1250

  18. LA ROCHEFOUCAULD, François, Duc de.

    The Memoirs of the Duke de La Rochefoucault. Containing the private Intrigues for obtaining...

    London, Printed for James Partridge … 1683.

    First edition in English, translated from Mémoires de M. D.L.R. sur les brigues à la mort de Louys XIII (1662). At court in his earlier years La Rochefoucauld (1613-1680) took an active part in the cabals and rivalries that surrounded Richelieu and Louis XIII, and subsequently in the Fronde...

    £650

  19. LLOYD, Mary.

    Brighton a Poem. Descriptive of the Place and Parts adjacent. And other Poems …

    London: Printed for the Author. Sold by J. Harding … and by all the Booksellers at Brighton, Worthing, and Eastborne. 1809.

    First and only edition of Mary Lloyd’s paean to the attractions of ‘Beauty, and fashion’s ever favourite seat’. The poem vividly portrays Brighton’s dazzling social round: the races, dances at the Assembly Rooms, plays at the theatre, and acrobatic shows at the circus. Particular attention...

    £350

  20. MARIVAUX, Pierre Carlet de Chamblain de.

    Le Paysan parvenu: or, the fortunate Peasant. Being Memoirs of the Life of Mr. ––––....

    London: Printed for John Brindley … Charles Corbett … and Richard Wellington … 1735

    First edition in English, originally published in French in the Hague in 1734-5. This is the second of the two important novels by Marivaux, which broke new ground in the art of writing fiction. ‘Where La Vie de Marianne belongs to the moralizing and sentimental romance tradition, Le Paysan...

    £650