HOMÈRE\ltrparVAN LEEWEN (J.) et MENDES DA COSTA (B.).Grammaire de la langue d'Homère, avec un appendice contenant le premier livre de l'Iliade et de l'Odyssée.Trad. du néerlandais avec des additions et des corrections des auteurs, par J. Keelhoff.Mons, 1887, in-8°, br., couv. détachée, dos cassé. 350 gr.
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In den WarenkorbLondon, for the Author, 1778. Large 4to (29.8 x 23.3 cm). xii, 254, viii pp. 17 finely engraved plates in excellent original hand-colouring. 19th-century French red half morocco over marbled boards. Spine with five raised bands; compartments with gilt floral vignette and title. Marbled endpapers. All edges gilt. = The first great British work entirely devoted to molluscs following the Linnaean binominal classification. Many species described and named here for the first time are still valid today. The work is useful for the British seas and islands, and the adjacent continent and coastal waters. The title page and text, therefore, is bilingual, in English, and in French. The short title on the spine is in French, proving that the work was appreciated outside Great Britain. Unusual for the time is the author's attention to even the smallest species. It was written by the British malacologist Emanuel Mendes da Costa, (1717-1791), whose unfortunate business endeavours have been described widely in malacolo-historical papers. One may say that he was ahead of his time and this work deserved far more appreciation by a much wider audience than it actually achieved. Among the list of subscribers, however, we find well-known naturalists such as John Adams, Dru Drury, George Humphrey, Thomas Martyn, Thomas Pennant, and the Dowager Duchess of Portland. Some, rather light, age-wear to the boards; some quite light, scattered, mostly marginal foxing, mainly to some text leaves; paper remnant on the front pastedown, otherwise a very good, clean copy. Nissen ZBI, 2785 [under Mendes da Costa].
London, Benjamin White, 1776. 8vo (21.9 x 13.5 cm). viii, iii-vi, 319 pp.; seven large, folded, finely hand-coloured engraved plates, two large, folded charts. 20th-century red buckram with gilt title on the spine. Speckled edges. = A rare, originally hand-coloured copy of the first work on shells by the British malacologist Emanuel Mendes da Costa, (1717-1791). The colouring is realistic, accurate. Two years later his Historia Naturalis Testacearum Britanniae was published, but this earlier work deals with worldwide shells. Provenance: the name Clench (the American malacologist William James 'Bill' Clench [1897-1984]) written in the top margin of the title page verso, and the stamp of the American malacologist Richard Irwin Johnson (1925-2020) in the top margin of the title page. Some offsetting from the plates to the opposite text leaves, but otherwise a very good, clean copy. Nissen ZBI, 2784.