Published by John Bowyer Nichols and Sons, 1860
Seller: Kerr & Sons Booksellers ABA, Cartmel, CMA, United Kingdom
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. 1860, 1st - printed for private circulation. Thick Quarto. ix, [1] 480pp. Engraved vignette to title page, Six engraved plates, and numerous text-illustrations. Modern re-bind of quarter morocco, over cloth boards. Gilt ruled with leather title labels to spine. Slight fading. Marbled end papers, bookplate presenting this volume to Professor Arnold W. Wolfendale [the 14th Astronomer Royal] by the Newcastle upon Tyne Astronomical Society. Some spotting/foxing to prelims and sporadic marginal spotting throughout. Overall a 'Very Good' copy. Uncommon. Heavy - shipping to be advised.
Published by Printed for Private Circulation by John Bowyer Nichols and Sons, London, 1860
Seller: Antiquates Ltd - ABA, ILAB, Wareham, Dorset, United Kingdom
First Edition Signed
First edition. ix, [1], 480pp. With six engraved plates (one in colour depicting Enckeās comet), and numerous engraved illustrations in the text. Original publisher's burgundy cloth, stamped in gilt and blind. Rubbed and sunned, surface loss to spine and joints, corners bumped. Hinges exposed, bookseller's ticket of Edward Baker of Birmingham to FEP, scattered spotting. Presentation copy, inked inscription to FEP: 'Presented to The Reverend W. Selwyn. F.R.A.S. with the respects of Admiral Smyth & Dr. Lee. Hartwell. 9. August: 1861', with armorial bookplates of Smyth and Lee pasted below. The sole edition, printed for private circulation, of naval officer and surveyor William Henry Smyth's (1788-1865) detailed account of the discoveries of the astronomical observatory at Hartwell House, built between 1830 and 1839 by polymath John Lee (1783-1866) (who also funded the printing of this volume) to Smyth's specifications. Smyth, one of the founders of the Royal Geographical Society, was the author of a plethora of books, including an earlier astronomical work The Cycle of Celestial Objects for the Use of Naval, Military, and Private Astronomers (1844), for which he was awarded the gold medal of the Royal Astronomical Society. William Selwyn (1806-1875), Church of England clergyman, sometime Ramsden preacher at Cambridge and chaplain-in-ordinary to Victoria. The Birmingham based second-hand bookseller Edward Baker issued numerous catalogues on several subjects (topography, theology, poetry, etc.), and advertised 'out-of-print books', maintaining that he was (according to his ticket) 'the most expert bookfinder extant', and on occasion claimed that his firm was 'patronised by the nobility'. Size: Quarto.