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Susanne Schulz-Falster Catalogue Ten - Schulz-Falster Rare Books

Susanne Schulz-Falster Catalogue Ten - Schulz-Falster Rare Books

Susanne Schulz-Falster Catalogue Ten - Schulz-Falster Rare Books

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medicine, fashions etc, employing all the standard features of enlightenment<br />

utopian cities – well-ordered, no crime, general happiness.<br />

In a curious chapter he describes artefacts and books lost on earth, but<br />

still present in Sélénopolis.<br />

See Cioranescu 63462, Negley 1141 and Hartig & Soboul p. 57 for Wrst edition;<br />

RLIN lists copies at Chicago and Duke universities.<br />

Hanseatic League<br />

325 VILLERS, Charles de. Constitutions des trois Villes Libres –<br />

Anséatiques, Lubeck, Brêmen, Hambourg. Avec un Mémoire sur le<br />

Rang que doivent occuper ces villes dans l’organisation commerciale<br />

de l’Europe. Avec une carte coloriée. Leipzig, Fr. Arn. Brockhaus,<br />

1814. £450<br />

8vo, pp. [viii], 143, [1], one folding engraved and hand-coloured map<br />

bound at the end; text in French and German; uncut and unopened in<br />

the original glazed printed wrappers; a little dog-eared, else Wne, from<br />

the Starhemberg, Schloss Eferding library, with faint stamp to head of<br />

spine.<br />

First edition of this study of the economic cooperation and power of the<br />

Hanseatic towns and free cities of Hamburg, Lübeck and Bremen, after<br />

their annexation by France in 1810 to provide strategic control of the coast<br />

and tighten Napoleon’s Continental Blockade. Their respective constitutions<br />

are printed in French and German. Villers gives a clear outline of the<br />

economic sphere of inXuence of the Hanseatic towns, which is illustrated<br />

on the hand-coloured map. He deWnes them as a proto-European Union,<br />

with beneWcial free trade agreements.<br />

Charles de Villers (1765–1815) was very inXuential in German-French<br />

relations, both through translations of publications by Reimarus etc, but<br />

also through collaborations with Mme de Stael.<br />

Not in Humpert or Goldsmiths’, OCLC lists copies Stanford, Kansas, Michigan,<br />

New York, and Harvard.<br />

326 VOIGT, Lodovico. Gramatica Tedesca dedicata<br />

all’Illustrissimo, ed Eccellentissimo Signor Principe Marchese Don<br />

Antonio Maria Melzi ... Prima Edizione esatamente corretta.<br />

Milano, Domenico Bellagatta, 1729. £160<br />

8vo, pp. xxxxviii, 655, some spotting, last leaf mounted; paper<br />

occasionally a little spotted and browned; bound in contemporary full<br />

vellum over boards, gilt-lettered spine label, later manuscript note to<br />

foot of spine; eighteenth-century manuscript note to front paste-down;<br />

a good copy.<br />

First edition. After a detailed introduction to German pronunciation, German<br />

vocabulary, syntax and the elements of grammar, the second half of the<br />

susanne schulz-falster rare books catalogue ten<br />

work is taken up with bi-lingual sample dialogues. The Wrst ones deal with<br />

the usual topics: situations in the hotel, shopping, amusements, such as<br />

dancing, and military concerns such as horse riding and fencing. Then the<br />

‘dialoghi’ digress to more general, and philosophical topics. In one dialogue<br />

two women discuss the question of whether women should study, and in<br />

the process of the conversation, the more outspoken ‘feminist’ convinces<br />

the other one of the superiority of women in general.<br />

German idioms followed by proverbs and popular sayings take up the<br />

Wnal sections.<br />

Not found in NUC.<br />

327 [VOLTAIRE, François Marie Arouet de.] Lettres Ecrites de<br />

Londres sur le Anglois et autres Sujets. Par M. D. V.***. Basle, [i.e.<br />

London, Bowyer], 1734.<br />

[bound with:] Lettre sur les Panégiriques. Par Irenée Aléthès. La Haye,<br />

Frederic Staatman, 1767. £850<br />

Two works in one volume, 8vo, pp. [viii], 228, 19; 15; late eighteenthcentury<br />

red boards, spine lettered in manuscript; head and tail of spine<br />

chipped and corners lightly bumped, spine and sides a little faded; a<br />

good copy.<br />

First edition in French of this fascinating volume of great philosophical and<br />

scientiWc interest, which was, in fact partly written in English and Wrst published<br />

in English the previous year. It was written by Voltaire as a kind of<br />

testimony of his love of ‘things English’, and then subsequently partly rewritten<br />

in French for the French editions. Buruma observes that Voltaire<br />

invented a new genre: instead of writing an ordinary travel book, he approached<br />

his subject as an intellectual traveller and wrote a journey of ideas.<br />

He made no eVort to describe what England looked like, but wanted to<br />

show what Englishmen thought. Much of what he admired about England<br />

and the English was, of course, taken as criticism of his own country, and<br />

some attempts were made to suppress this French version.<br />

Bound with it is the third issue of Voltaire’s Lettre sur les Panégiriques,<br />

Wrst printed the same year.<br />

I. Bengesco 1558, Vol II, p. 14–15; ESTC t138264; II. Bengesco 1740, 3.<br />

Micromégas<br />

328 VOLTAIRE, François Marie Arouet de. Le Micromégas de<br />

Mr. de Voltaire. Avec une Histoire des Croisades & un Nouveau<br />

Plan de l’Histoire de l’Esprit Humain. Par le Même. Londres [i.e.<br />

Gotha], 1752. £650<br />

8vo, pp. [ii], 257; some dampstaining to lower inner corner, with slight<br />

paper damage to last few leaves; contempoary sheep backed marbled<br />

boards, spine gilt in compartments, gilt-lettered spine label.

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