Ambert d'Auvergne, Éditions du Moulin Richard de Bas, 1977. 1 vol. in-8. Plein chagrin bleu, dos à nerfs, fleuron et titre argenté, tête argentée, couvertures et dos conservés, sous chemise de demi chagrin bleu à rabats et étui bordé. Dos de la chemise passé.
Reference : 11331
Neuvième édition tirée à 500 exemplaires numérotés et signés par l'éditeur. Recueil de vingt-quatre poèmes imprimé sur un papier fabriqué feuille à feuille par le Moulin Richard-de-bas, à Ambert d'Auvergne, et composé de bluets des champs et des jardins, d'œillets mignardises, d'arnica, de reines-marguerites variées, de pointes de fougères des ruisseaux, de soucis et de centaurées sauvages. Tout un bouquet...
Librairie Gaëlle Cambon
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P., La Bibliothèque Française, 1947, in-12, 296 pp, broché, bon état
"Flora Tristan, âpôtre du socialiste et du féminisme, est peu connue du grand public. Le livre que nous présente aujourd'hui Lucien Scheler a été élaboré très soigneusement, et ses lecteurs y trouveront à la suite d'une biographie passionnante, une anthologie de Flora Tristan qui donne une idée très suffisante de cette œuvre peu répandue. Lucien Scheler a choisi fort intelligemment ses morceaux dans les Pérégrinations d'une Paria (1838), dans les Promenades dans Londres (1840) et dans Union ouvrière (1843). Le premier de ces ouvrages est essentiellement autobiographique, mais contient aussi des aperçus pittoresques et instructifs sur la vie au Pérou vers 1830, alors que Flora Tristan y était venue tenter, auprès de l'aristocratique famille de feu son père, une démarche pour récupérer la succession de celui-ci. Les Promenades dans Londres (1840) contiennent d'intelligentes considérations et une grande masse de données sur l'Angleterre politique, économique, sociale, ouvrière, morale, etc... Dès lors la vocation de Flora Tristan s'est affirmée : le spectacle de la misère qu'elle sait observer et méditer lui découvre des vérités premières qu'elle va formuler dans son petit livre Union ouvrière (1843). Déjà les saint-simoniens avaient révélé l'existence des classes sociales, dont la classe ouvrière, la plus nombreuse, la plus utile, est la plus pauvre. Flora Tristan proclame, quatre ans avant Marx, que ces classes sont en lutte et que la classe ouvrière ne s'émancipera que par ses propres efforts. Mais l'apôtre, solidariste, souhaite que les autres classes sociales collaborent à cette émancipation, laquelle ne sera d'ailleurs possible que lorsque les ouvriers seront sortis de l'abjection dans laquelle ils croupissent, la plupart sans s'en douter. Reprenant et révisant les projets des réformateurs du compagnonnage, Flora Tristan entreprend de provoquer dans les milieux ouvrier ce noble désir de progrès laborieusement gagné. Après avoir fréquenté les miteux de l'Atelier et de la Ruche Populaire à Paris, ou telles autres élites ouvrières, elle part à travers la France, suivant l'itinéraire habituel des « Compagnons » ; d'avril à septembre 1844, elle prêche de ville en ville, le « nouvel évangile », signalée, surveillée par la police et parfois même inquiétée. Elle est diversement accueillie, obtenant çà et là des résultats qui l'enthousiasment, notamment à Lyon, à Marseille, à Toulon, à Carcassonne. Chemin faisant, elle cause avec des patrons, avec des bourgeois, avec des curés et des pasteurs ; quatre évêques lui accordent audience. Après quatre mois d'un voyage épuisant, voyage de propagande et aussi voyage d'études, elle vient mourir à Bordeaux en novembre 1844... Lucien Scheler a bien conté cette belle histoire, montrant avec exactitude les influences que notre apôtre avait subies, ou tout au moins les suggestions ; notamment les leçons d'outre-Manche : Robert Owen, les Chartistes, O'Connell. Il a aussi mis en valeur la tendance internationaliste de Flora Tristan. Je ne vois d'ailleurs aucune omission dans ce petit volume qu'il faudrait largement répandre. L'excellente étude donne une idée très exacte de l'apôtre." (Jules-L. Puech, Revue d'Histoire du XIXe siècle - 1848, 1949) — "Curieuse Flora Tristan. Elle meurt en 1844 à 41 ans, après un apostolat social de dix-huit mois qui n'a frappé « l'opinion » – celle qui lisait les journaux – que de façon marginale. Si elle a été l'amie de Victor Considérant, si elle a admiré Robert Owen, elle a brisé, vite, avec le Père Enfantin et le saint-simonisme, et les socialistes de sa génération qui lui survivront l'ignorent ; non seulement Marx, qu'elle aurait pu rencontrer pourtant à Paris, mais Proudhon qui, en elle, méprise d'abord la femme..." (Madeleine Rebérioux, Annales ESC, 1974) — "Ma grand'mère était une drôle de bonne femme. Elle se nommait Flora Tristan." (Paul Gauguin)
Shanghai 1881 American Presbyterian Mission Press Hardcover 1st Edition
Hardcover The original soft covers are bound in. The hard cover has the usual minor signs of wear. The text section is in very good condition. ex library book, 20 x 13 cm, 194 pp., English, 1st Edition, book condition: Very Good. This work was originally published as a paper in the Journal of the North-China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society (New Series, Vol. XV) for the year 1880. The separate book edition followed in 1881.rnEmil Bretschneider was a Baltic German physician attached to the Russian legation in Beijing. Unlike many of his contemporaries who focused on physically collecting plants, Bretschneider was fascinated by sinology (the study of Chinese texts).rnHe noticed that Western botanists had difficulty identifying plants mentioned in ancient Chinese medical and agricultural texts. This 1881 edition was his first large-scale attempt to bridge that gap.rnContents of the 1881 editionrnThe publication is not so much a flora in the modern sense (a list of plants in an area) as a bibliographical and historical overview. It contains:rnAnalyses of the Pên-ts'ao (Materia Medica): Bretschneider discusses the most important Chinese herbal books, in particular Li Shizhen's Bencao Gangmu.rnIdentification: He attempted to link the Chinese names of plants to their scientific Latin names.rnClassical Literature: He examined plant references in the Shijing (Book of Songs) and other ancient Chinese classics.rnThe Publisher: American Presbyterian Mission PressrnThe choice of the American Presbyterian Mission Press in Shanghai was logical for the time. This was the most advanced printing press in China in the 19th century.rnThey had the necessary typefaces for both Latin script and Chinese characters, which was essential for Bretschneider's work.rn
Phone number : +32(0)496 80 81 92
1874 Washington, Government Printing Office,1874-1878 ; 2 parties en 2 volumes in-4, demi-chagrin bleu nuit époque, dos à nerfs, caissons de filets dorés,titres dorés au dos, têtes dorées. Vol.I :2ff.,136pp.;30 Planches H.T;avec texte explicatif sur 1 feuillet imprimé en regard de chaque planche. Vol.II : 4ff.,366pp.;65 planches H.T.en feuillet explicatif en regard.
Très rares rousseurs, reliure très lég. frottée au dos mais bel exemplaire. Ces 2 volumes font partie de l'Etude générale "united States Geological Survey of The Territories" et sont complet de la la flore du Crétacé et du Tertiaire. ( Reu-CH1)
Argentorati (Strassburg), J.G. Bauer, 1767. 8vo. Nice contemporary half calf with five raised bands and gilt lines to spine. Wear to spine and capitaks and slightly split at hinges, but still tight. A bit of brownspotting throughout. Smukt velbevaret samt. hldrbd. med ophøjede bind, rig rygforgyldning og skindtitel. XVIII, 238, (22) pp. + two folded engraved plates (one being the folded map of Furesøen, Lyngby-og Bagsværd Sø).
The very rare first edition of Müller’s floral magnum opus, which according to his own statements contains a description of all known plants in Denmark, of which Müller prides himself with having discovered and described no less than 300. Müller participated in the production of the monumental “flora Danica” with its magnificent plates of all Danish plants, but the present work is the only work of botany that he himself published, namely of the flora of the Schulin Estate. “Otto Friedrich Muller (1730-1784) was born in Copenhagen, the son of the court trumpeter, a German man who had moved to Denmark. With a ready and lively intelligence, he received an excellent education admitted to the University of his hometown at the age of 18, according to the custom of the time he initially studied theology (the Danish university had only three courses of study: theology, law, medicine), then moved to law he had excellent skills in various fields, including music. However, he did not graduate, because for economic reasons in 1753 he abandoned his studies to enter the service of the Schulin family as a tutor to the heir of the house, who was orphaned at an early age. He lived with the Schulin for about twenty years, mostly on their Friedrichsdalin estate, near Copenhagen. Beginning in 1758, using Linnaeus' books, he began to study natural sciences as a self-taught student, both out of passion and to teach his pupil. Starting in 1761, he procured a microscope. His first scientific publication was a catalogue of insects from the Schulin estate, Fauna insectorum Fridrichsdalina (1764). Between 1765 and 1767, during a trip to Europe with his pupil, he visited many countries in central and southern Europe and was able to attend scientific circles, making contacts and lasting friendships. A man of the world, well accustomed to courtiers since childhood, through a strategy of targeted promotion (knowledge of eminent scientists, publication of previous works in support of his candidacy) he managed to be admitted into many European scientific societies. A Strasbourg published his only work of botany, a catalogue of the flora of the Schulin estate, Flora Fridrichsdalina (1767). During the journey, thanks to the various meetings, his interests finally shifted from botany to zoology, in particular to the study of invertebrates, of which he became perhaps the greatest expert of his time. In 1771 - his pupil was then 24 years old - he left the Schulin and thanks to Oeder's recommendation he was hired at the State Archives the office was renovated in 1772 after the fall of Struensee and Müller and, although he retained a small pension, he lost his place. His marriage to the wealthy Norwegian widow Anna Catharina Paludan resolved his economic problems once and for all from that moment on, he was able to devote himself full-time to scientific work. An important piece of his research was the Estate of Drobak, on the Gulf of Oslo, owned by his wife, where the scientist spent the summers from 1774 to 1778, focusing in particular on the study of marine micro-fauna. He was assisted by a team that included draughtsmen and engravers (one of the best painters was his younger brother, Christian Friedrich, who, in addition to illustrating some of his brother's works, years later collaborated with Vahl on the third tranche of Flora Danica) and a number of students, recruited in an ingenious way. Every year, Müller made an advertisement in the newspapers to recruit them and paid them for the journey from Copenhagen to Oslo. Beginning in 1771, publications also multiplied, mainly dedicated to different classes of invertebrates, before then little known. In the meantime, Müller had presented to the court the project of a Fauna Danica, to pair with Flora Danica, of which he was appointed curator after Oeder's departure. The countryside in Norway and, later, when arthritis forced him to give it up, the coasts of Denmark, including the islands, allowed him to collect specimens for both works. In 1776 he anticipated the content of his great zoological work with Zoologiæ Danicae Prodromus, which listed, classified and briefly described all the animal species of the kingdom of Denmark-Norway, a work of epochal importance for the innovative classification of invertebrates. Two folio volumes of Fauna Danica followed in 1777 and 1786, with 40 plates (the other two volumes would be completed and published by various curators many years after his death). Between 1776 and 1784 five files of Flora Danica were also released. However, an important work on infusers (small single-celled organisms that develop in plant infusions, belonging to various classes, especially protozoa) remained unfinished (and was completed by O. Fabricius). In 1784, after a decade of intense work, Müller died at the age of fifty.” (D. D. Damkaer, The Copepodologist's Cabinet, A Biographical and Bibliographical History).
Kjøbenhavn, Carl Lunds Bogtrykkeri, 1883. Folio. 39x27 cm. Contemp. hcalf. Richly gilt back and gilt borders on covers. Light wear to corners and a few scratches to binding. Titlepage. 5,(1) pp. (Index , Corrections and Addenda). With 171(of 175 ) Flora Danica-plates of Scandinavian trees and bushes. All plates engraved and in fine handcolouring, plates in near mint condition.
Scarce re-issue of Flora Danica in exquisite handcolouring, restricted to its trees and bushes. In this work, the last editor of Flora Danica, Joh. Lange selected all the original copper-plates which depicted trees and bushes from the whole work - in fact 9 of the earliest plates were damaged by fire, and as such not useable for a print to be taken - and made this re-issue, done with the original copper-plates as a separate issue of Flora Danica. Under his auspices all the prints were carefully hand-coloured with greatest care and often surpassing the original colouring. The paper used for the re-issue is of the same quality used for the last volumes of the original issue of Flora Danica of which the last volume, vol. 17, came out the same year as this extract, 1883. - Carl Christensen II, p.257 (No 119) - Nissen BBI: 1133 - Not in BMC (NH).