Genève.Chouët.1636.In-12 en vélin d'époque.753 p. Seconde édition traduite de l'anglais par Jean Vernueil. Tampon d'appartenance en page de titre sans gène.Bon état.
Frankfurt, Schleich & Klein, 1643. 12mo. In a nice contemporary half calf binding with five raised bands and richly gilt spine. Small paper-label pasted on to top of spine. Vague marginal dampstain affecting first leaves, but overall a nice and clean copy. (22), 650 pp. + 1 engraved plate.
German translation, first published in 1638, of Daniel Dyke’s “Mystery of Self-Deceiving”. “All of Dyke’s treatises were published posthumously by his brother, Jeremiah Dyke, vicar of Epping, mostly from 1614 to 1618. Daniel Dyke’s most frequently reprinted book, The Mystery of Self-Deceiving, based on Jeremiah 17:9, is a detailed anatomy of the “gospel-hypocrite,” i.e., one who claims to know Christ but whose life reveals little self-knowledge and no fruit. Thomas Fuller, a noted historian and a younger contemporary of Dyke, said the book “will be owned for a truth, whilst men have any badness [in them], and will be honored for a treasure, whilst men have any goodness in them.” (Beeke, Meet the Puritans). The work was translated into German by Theodore Haak (1605 – 1690), a German Calvinist scholar, resident in England in later life. In 1625, Haak travelled to England where he visited Oxford and Cambridge Universities. A year later he returned to Germany and he brought back from England a copy of Daniel Dyke's ‘Mystery of Self-Deceiving’, which he shared with his Protestant circle. Haak translated it into German in 1638.
Couverture verte illustrée. Intérieur très propre. Illustrations deJean de la Fontinelle.
Paris G. Durassié et Cie 1929 Non paginé. In-8 Broché. Etat correct. 1 volume. TIRAGE LIMITE. Un des 200 exemplaires numérotés sur vélin pur fil Lafuma.
Henri Lefebvre. 1935. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Tâchée, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. Environ 40 pages - envoi de l'auteur sur la page de garde (photo disponible).. . . . Classification Dewey : 97.2-Dédicace, envoi
Exemplaire n°62/500. Classification Dewey : 97.2-Dédicace, envoi
Paris, Henri Lefebure, s.d. (1935). 1 vol. in-4° br., (21) ff., (1) f. blanc, (1) f.[C41]
Edition originale de ce recueil de poèmes salué par Henri de Régnier. Tirage limité à 500 exemplaires (n°491). Bel envoi autographe signé de l'auteur à Mlle Jacqueline Albert (décembre 1950). On joint une lettre de l'auteur adressée à la même, accompagnée de six poèmes autographes inédits.
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