Books and Bookmen [48]
Seigneur de Montaigne. "Pour Francois
le Febvre de Lyon, 1695." With autograph of Gul. Drummond, and
cipresso e palma.
{12} "The little old foxed Moliere," once the property of William
Pott, unknown to fame.
{13} That there ever were such editors is much disputed. The story
may be a fiction of the age of the Ptolemies.
{14} Or, more easily, in Maury's Religions de la Grece.
{15} See Essay on 'Lady Book-Lovers.'
{16} See Essay on 'Lady Book-Lovers.'
{17} For a specimen of Madame Pompadour's binding see overleaf.
She had another Rabelais in calf, lately to be seen in a shop in
Pall Mall.
{18} Mr. Payne does not give the date of the edition from which he
copies the cut. Apparently it is of the fifteenth century.
{19} Reproduced in The Library, p. 94.
{20} Country papers, please copy. Poets at a distance will kindly
accept this intimation.
{21} Bibliotheque d'un Bibliophile. Lille, 1885.
End
le Febvre de Lyon, 1695." With autograph of Gul. Drummond, and
cipresso e palma.
{12} "The little old foxed Moliere," once the property of William
Pott, unknown to fame.
{13} That there ever were such editors is much disputed. The story
may be a fiction of the age of the Ptolemies.
{14} Or, more easily, in Maury's Religions de la Grece.
{15} See Essay on 'Lady Book-Lovers.'
{16} See Essay on 'Lady Book-Lovers.'
{17} For a specimen of Madame Pompadour's binding see overleaf.
She had another Rabelais in calf, lately to be seen in a shop in
Pall Mall.
{18} Mr. Payne does not give the date of the edition from which he
copies the cut. Apparently it is of the fifteenth century.
{19} Reproduced in The Library, p. 94.
{20} Country papers, please copy. Poets at a distance will kindly
accept this intimation.
{21} Bibliotheque d'un Bibliophile. Lille, 1885.
End