Verlag: The Robinson, Luce Co., Boston, 1903
Erstausgabe
hardcover. Zustand: Good +. Kulz, Fred (illustrator). First Edition. Being the Replies to Letters from a Self-Made Merchant to His Son. Illustrated by Fred Kulz. Octavo, green cloth covers, 289 pages plus 4 pages of ads. Browned spine with small abrasion. Former owner name inscription on front free endpaper. 021210B.
Verlag: London Printed for R. Clavel C. Harper J. Amery J. Robinson A. and J. Churchil; and sold by Cha. Harper at the Floer-de-Luce in Fleetstreet and A. and J. Churchil at the Black Swan in Pater-noster-Row, 1695
Anbieter: Shapero Rare Books, London, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 3.573,25
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbThird edition, reissue; Folio (33.5 x 21 cm); woodcut initials, head, and tailpieces, ff 'c3' [i.e. C1] and c2 supplied for shorter copy, small hole with slight loss to Z1, MS pen trials to verso 2B2 and 3O4-5, 3K2 ('The Translator to the Reader') bound before ff 3k3-4 in line with foliation, but incorrectly with regards to textual continuity, occasional spotting, the odd marginal tear and small hole; contemporary blind-panelled sprinkled calf, rebacked, contrasting red morocco lettering-piece to spine, alter endpapers, corners neatly repaired, very good; [40], 177, 188-189, [5], 199-262, 265-267, [5], 267-314, 317-430, [4], '431', [1], 433-528pp. The collected works of the Niccolà Machiavelli (1469-1527) in English, following the translation of the republican politician Henry Neville (1620-1694). Including his major titles The Prince, History of Florence, Discourses on Livy, and The Art of War, together with his lesser known Life of Castruccio Castricani of Lucca, novella Marriage of Belphegor, and the spurious letter to Zenobius Buondelmontius dated a decade after Machiavelli's death in which he defends himself from the worst imputations against him. From 'an early date Neville was thought to be the author of this letter, although it may have been an earlier forgery brought back, as the preface claims, from his visit to Italy in the 1640s' (ODNB).