• Forum Auctions
    A Sixth Selection of 16th and 17th Century English Books from the Fox Pointe Manor Library
    19th June 2025
    Forum, June 19: Euclid. The Elements of Geometrie, first edition in English of the first complete translation, [1570]. £20,000 to £30,000.
    Forum, June 19: Nicolay (Nicolas de). The Navigations, peregrinations and voyages, made into Turkie, first edition in English, 1585. £10,000 to £15,000.
    Forum, June 19: Shakespeare source book.- Montemayor (Jorge de). Diana of George of Montemayor, first edition in English, 1598. £6,000 to £8,000.
    Forum, June 19: Livius (Titus). The Romane Historie, first edition in English, translated by Philemon Holland, Adam Islip, 1600. £6,000 to £8,000.
    Forum Auctions
    A Sixth Selection of 16th and 17th Century English Books from the Fox Pointe Manor Library
    19th June 2025
    Forum, June 19: Robert Molesworth's copy.- Montaigne (Michel de). The Essayes Or Morall, Politike and Millitarie Discourses, first edition in English, 1603. £10,000 to £15,000.
    Forum, June 19: Shakespeare (William). The Tempest [&] The Two Gentlemen of Verona, from the Second Folio, [Printed by Thomas Cotes], 1632. £4,000 to £6,000.
    Forum, June 19: Boyle (Robert). Medicina Hydrostatica: or, Hydrostaticks Applyed to the Materia Medica, first edition, for Samuel Smith, 1690. £2,500 to £3,500.
    Forum, June 19: Locke (John). An Essay Concerning Humane Understanding in Four Books, first edition, second issue, 1690. £8,00 to £12,000.
  • Sotheby’s
    New York Book Week
    12-26 June
    Sotheby’s, June 25: Theocritus. Theocriti Eclogae triginta, Venice, Aldo Manuzio, February 1495/1496. 220,000 - 280,000 USD
    Sotheby’s, June 26: Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby, 1925. 40,000 - 60,000 USD
    Sotheby’s, June 26: Blake, William. Songs of Innocence and of Experience, Printed ca. 1381-1832. 400,000 - 600,000 USD
    Sotheby’s, June 26: Lincoln, Abraham. Thirteenth Amendment, signed by Abraham Lincoln. 8,000,000 - 12,000,000 USD
    Sotheby’s, June 26: Galieli, Galileo. First Edition of the Foundation of Modern Astronomy, 1610. 300,000 - 400,000 USD
  • Finarte
    Books, Autographs & Prints
    June 24 & 25, 2025
    Finarte, June 24-25: ALIGHIERI, DANTE / LANDINO, CRISTOFORO. Comento di Christophoro Landino Fiorentino sopra la Comedia di Danthe Alighieri poeta fiorentino, 1481. €40,000 to €50,000.
    Finarte, June 24-25: ALIGHIERI, DANTE. La Commedia [Commento di Christophorus Landinus]. Aggiunta: Marsilius Ficinus, Ad Dantem gratulatio [in latino e Italiano], 1487. €40,000 to €60,000.
    Finarte, June 24-25: ALIGHIERI, DANTE. Il Convivio, 1490. €20,000 to €25,000.
    Finarte
    Books, Autographs & Prints
    June 24 & 25, 2025
    Finarte, June 24-25: BANDELLO, MATTEO. La prima [-quarta] parte de le nouelle del Bandello, 1554. €7,000 to €9,000.
    Finarte, June 24-25: LEGATURA – PLUTARCO. Le vies des hommes illustres, grecs et romaines translates, 1567. €10,000 to €12,000.
    Finarte, June 24-25: TOLOMEO, CLAUDIO. Ptolemeo La Geografia di Claudio Ptolemeo Alessandrino, Con alcuni comenti…, 1548. €4,000 to €6,000.
    Finarte
    Books, Autographs & Prints
    June 24 & 25, 2025
    Finarte, June 24-25: FESTE - COPPOLA, GIOVANNI CARLO. Le nozze degli Dei, favola [...] rappresentata in musica in Firenze…, 1637. €6,000 to €8,000.
    Finarte, June 24-25: SPINOZA, BARUCH. Opera posthuma, 1677. €8,000 to €12,000.
    Finarte, June 24-25: PUSHKIN, ALEXANDER. Borus Godunov, 1831. €30,000 to €50,000.
    Finarte
    Books, Autographs & Prints
    June 24 & 25, 2025
    Finarte, June 24-25: LIBRO D'ARTISTA - LECUIRE, PIERRE. Ballets-minute, 1954. €35,000 to €40,000.
    Finarte, June 24-25: LIBRO D'ARTISTA - MAJAKOVSKIJ, VLADIMIR / LISSITZKY, LAZAR MARKOVICH. Dlia Golosa, 1923. €7,000 to €10,000.
    Finarte, June 24-25: LIBRO D'ARTISTA - MATISSE, HENRI / MONTHERLANT, HENRY DE. Pasiphaé. Chant de Minos., 1944. €22,000 to €24,000.
  • Bonhams, June 16-25: 15th-CENTURY TREATISE ON SYPHILIS. GRÜNPECK. 1496. $20,000 - $30,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: THE NORMAN COPY OF BENIVIENI'S TREATISE ON PATHOLOGY. 1507. $12,000 - $18,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: FRACASTORO. Syphilis sive Morbus Gallicus. 1530. $8,000 - $12,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: THE FIRST PUBLISHED WORK ON SKIN DISEASES. MERCURIALIS. De morbis cutaneis... 1572. $10,000 - $15,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: BIDLOO. Anatomia humani corporis... 1685. $6,000 - $9,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: THE NORMAN COPY OF DOUGLASS'S EARLY AMERICAN WORK ON INNOCULATION AND SMALLPOX. 1722. $20,000 - $30,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: LIND'S FIRST TREATISE ON SCURVY. 1753. $15,000 - $20,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: RARE JENNER SIGNED CIRCULAR ON VACCINATION. 1821. $4,000 - $6,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: MOST BEAUTIFUL OF MEDICAL ILLUSTRATIONS. BRIGHT. Reports of Medical Cases... 1827-1831. $10,000 - $15,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE PRESENTATION COPY TO HER MOTHER. 1860. $6,000 - $8,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: LORENZO TRAVER'S MANUSCRIPT JOURNAL OF BURNSIDE'S NORTH CAROLINA EXPEDITION. TRAVER, Lorenzo. $2,000 - $3,000
    Bonhams, June 16-25: ONE OF THE EARLIEST PHOTOGRAPHIC BOOKS ON DERMATOLOGY. HARDY. Clinique Photographique... 1868. $3,000 - $5,000

Rare Book Monthly

Articles - May - 2025 Issue

Le Nouveau Paris, Another Tale of Mankind

Le Tableau de Paris (Paris, 1782) is a crazy book written by Louis-Sébastien Mercier (www.rarebookhub.com/articles/2055). It describes Paris at the eve of the Révolution (1789). A few years later, Mercier hits the streets again—and portrayed Le Nouveau Paris, the new Paris! And it is... revolutionary. 

 

Beheading A Capet

 

Reading Le Nouveau Paris (Paris, 1798) is like digging through a garage sale for treasures! It’s dusty, sometimes poorly written, and sometimes tedious—but full of hidden gems that will take your breath away. A member of the Convention, Mercier votes against the execution of Louis XVI (a historical blunder, he says), but he’s here the day “Louis the traitor” loses his head in Paris: “Could this be the same man, who was crowned at Reims as all the great men in his kingdom were kneeling before him? (...) Four knaves are shoving him on the scaffold, they’re stripping him, and his voice is being swallowed by the sound of the drum; tied to the plank of the guillotine, he’s struggling; and he receives the blade so badly that it doesn’t cut his neck, but his occiput and his mandible. His blood runs, (...) and all want to dip a finger, a feather or a piece of paper in it. One man tastes it, and shouts: so salty!” Mercier is hurt by what he sees, but he’s a convinced Republican, and has no regret: “We didn’t kill a man that day,” he says, “we killed a system.” He doesn’t feel sorry for the downgraded nobles or priests either—at one point, he urged the Convention to raze the castle of Versailles. Yet, he is a moderate—a humanist, and as such, a fierce opponent to barbarity.

 

The Man Who Almost Had My Head

 

A few years later, having escaped the guillotine himself, Mercier comes across the executioner Sanson (www.rarebookhub.com/articles/2309) in Paris: “A penny for his thoughts! He sleeps well at night, they say; and his conscience might be at peace. He comes and goes like anyone else, he goes to the show; he laughs, he looks at me; he almost had my head at one point, but he missed it; and he doesn’t care. I can’t help contemplating this man who’s sent so many people into the other world.” From April 1792 to August 1795, Charles-Henry Sanson beheaded 2,498 persons.

 

A Revolutionary Moustache

Princess de Lamballe, a Queen’s relative, is tried in 1792. As she’s about to hear her sentence, “several voices raised in the room, begging for mercy; there was a moment of general silence, and the murderers froze for a while—and suddenly hit her several times! She fell in a pool of her own blood, and they cut off her head, her breasts; her body was opened up, her heart was torn away; they stuck her head on a pike and they took it around Paris, dragging her body behind them. One of those monsters cut her genitals off, and wore them as a moustache.”

 

You’ll find hundreds of stories of that sort in this book: a father is incarcerated with his son by the revolutionary committee; he receives his order of execution and hastily walks to the guillotine without telling anybody—the executioner has mistaken him with his son, and he’s glad to die in his stead. The worst part? Mercier asks. Robespierre is arrested the same day, and everybody is released from prison. To make it short, I’ll quote F. Vanderem (Les Livres négligés): “It is historically impossible to understand certain aspects of the Révolution—characters, excesses, madness, everyday life, atmosphere—without reading Mercier.” I’d go even further, and I’d add that it’s easier to understand what the Révolution really means to a French citizen today if you haven’t read the following lines from Mercier: “It’s been 8 years since the great revolution has started—so many events! What a story! How old have we grown in such a short space of time! We’re about to celebrate July the 14th (when the Bastille was taken, the starting point of the Révolution), and our nephews are even more determined to celebrate such a glorious day. In the future, they shall reap the fruits of our pains. They will forget about our works, the dangers we’ve been through, they may even express unfair critics—just because they’ll never be able to figure out the torments we’ve endured; but whether they honour our memory or not, here’s one thing that will forever console me: I was born a subject, and I will die a Republican.”

 

The Fate of A Book

 

Le Tableau de Paris met with international success. In 2021, Olivier Ritz writes*: “According to Lüsebrink, Nohr and Reichardt’s statistics, Mercier was translated 58 times between 1770 and 1788—the most translated French author after Voltaire.” Le Nouveau Paris, first printed in Paris by Fuchs, Pougen and Cramer in 1798 (no date), was less successful. Germany played a key role in its publication,” Olivier Ritz says. “The first edition was probably printed in Brunswick by Friedrich Vieweg, who put out a German translation almost concomitantly.” The “Brunswick edition” that also came out with no date would then be the true first edition. Although well advertised, it didn’t meet its public, neither in Berlin nor in Paris. The Opposition littéraire, a royalist publication, resented Mercier’s republican propaganda, and said the book wasn’t properly written. In 1801, Fortia de Piles anonymously wrote Six Lettres à S.L. Mercier (Paris, Year IX). The first lines of the introduction say it all: “I’ve read Le Nouveau Paris, and I found it full of ideas, often false, almost always incoherent, sometimes ridiculous or absurd—this is due to the fact that the author tries his best to appear new and original.” De Piles adds: “I didn’t use the first edition that came out a few months before the coup of Brumaire the 18th (November 9, 1799—so Le Nouveau Paris most likely came out in 1799); but the Brunswick edition of 1800, in six in-12° volumes, identical to the in-8° edition of Paris.”

According to the Rare Book Transaction History, a “very nice copy” of the “Paris edition” was sold for €875 by Alde, in Paris last year. A copy of the 1800 reprint mentioned by de Piles was sold for €488 by Alde, in Paris, in 2017. The “Brunswick edition” appears to be less frequent. As a matter of fact, a copy sold for €650 by Pierre Bergé & Associés in 2011, is described as follow: “First edition. Second issue, with a renewed title page.” Some copies of the “Paris edition” vary, though—volume IV of the “Paris edition” starts with: “ON lisait...”, while the Brunswick starts with: “On lisait...” for example.

 

Mercier’s new Paris went totally unnoticed until 1862, when two publishers reprinted it concomitantly. As Ritz puts it: “It stepped out into the light.” The great Baudelaire himself described it as “merveilleux” in a letter to his mother, and Victor Hugo borrowed a lot from it for his novel Quatrevingt-treize (1874). Yet Mercier is forgotten nowadays. The way he treats his subject, with multiple and mingled entries, blending topics, periods of time, and passing political judgements, is probably out of fashion. I think on the contrary that there’s no better way to teach history than turning dusty dates and events into lively scenes of flesh and blood. This book is an adventure—unplanned, unpredictable. Our ancestors were no “NPC” (non player characters)— they laughed, made love, cut each other throats and died under the sun, just like you and me. Do not ask for whom Guillotine’s blade shines, then—it shines for you and me.

 

Thibault Ehrengardt

 

* Un savoir littéraire sur la Révolution: le Nouveau Paris de Mercier. Rivista di Letterature moderne e comparate, 2021, LXXIV (2), pp. 145-155. hal-03872670

Rare Book Monthly

  • Rare Book Hub is now mobile-friendly!
  • Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 567. One of the Earliest & Most Desirable Printed Maps of Arabia - by Holle/Germanus (1482) Est. $55,000 - $65,000
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 681. Zatta's Complete Atlas with 218 Maps in Full Contemporary Color (1779) Est. $27,500 - $35,000
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 347. MacDonald Gill's Landmark "Wonderground Map" of London (1914) Est. $1,800 - $2,100
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 1. Fries' "Modern" World Map with Portraits of Five Kings (1525) Est. $4,000 - $4,750
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 539. Ortelius' Superb, Decorative Map of Cyprus in Full Contemporary Color (1573) Est. $1,100 - $1,400
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 51. Mercator's Foundation Map for the Americas in Full Contemporary Color (1630) Est. $3,250 - $4,000
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 667. Manuscript Bible Leaf with Image of Mary and Baby Jesus (1450) Est. $1,900 - $2,200
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 226. "A Powerful Example of Color Used to Make a Point" (1895) Est. $400 - $600
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 290. One of the Most Decorative Early Maps of South America - from Linschoten's "Itinerario" (1596) Est. $7,000 - $8,500
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 62. Coronelli's Influential Map of North America with the Island of California (1688) Est. $10,000 - $12,000
    Old World Auctions (June 18): Lot 589. The First European-Printed Map of China - by Ortelius (1584) Est. $4,000 - $5,000
  • Dominic Winter Auctioneers
    June 18 & 19
    Printed Books & Maps, Children's & Illustrated Books, Modern First Editions
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: World. Van Geelkercken (N.), Orbis Terrarum Descriptio Duobis..., circa 1618. £4,000-6,000.
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Moll (Herman). A New Exact Map of the Dominions of the King of Great Britain..., circa 1715. £2,000-3,000.
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Churchill (Winston S.). The World Crisis, 5 volumes bound in 6, 1st edition, 1923-31. £1,000-1,500
    Dominic Winter Auctioneers
    June 18 & 19
    Printed Books & Maps, Children's & Illustrated Books, Modern First Editions
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Darwin (Charles). On the Origin of Species, 2nd edition, 2nd issue, 1860. £1,500-2,000.
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Roberts (David). The Holy Land, 6 volumes in 3, 1st quarto ed, 1855-56. £1,500-2,000.
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Saint-Exupéry (Antoine de, 1900-1944). Pilote de guerre (Flight to Arras), 1942. £10,000-15,000.
    Dominic Winter Auctioneers
    June 18 & 19
    Printed Books & Maps, Children's & Illustrated Books, Modern First Editions
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Austen (Jane, 1775-1817). Signature, cut from a letter, no date. £7,000-10,000
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Huxley (Aldous). Brave New World, 1st edition, with wraparound band, 1932. £4,000-6,000
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Tolkien (J. R. R.) The Hobbit, 1st edition, 2nd impression, 1937. £3,000-5,000
    Dominic Winter Auctioneers
    June 18 & 19
    Printed Books & Maps, Children's & Illustrated Books, Modern First Editions
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Rackham (Arthur, 1867-1939). Princess by the Sea (from Irish Fairy Tales), circa 1920. £4,000-6,000
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: Kelmscott Press. The Story of the Glittering Plain, Walter Crane's copy, 1894. £3,000-4,000
    Dominic Winter, June 18-19: King (Jessie Marion, 1875-1949). The Summer House, watercolour. £4,000-6,000
  • Bonhams, June 16-24: KELMSCOTT PRESS. RUSKIN. The Nature of Gothic. 1892. $1,500 - $2,500
    Bonhams, June 16-24: ASHENDENE PRESS. The Wisdom of Jesus. 1932. $2,000 - $3,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: CHARLOTTE BRONTE WRITES AS GOVERNESS. Autograph Letter Signed, 1851. $15,000 - $25,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: FIRST AMERICAN EDITION OF WUTHERING HEIGHTS. BRONTE, Emily. New York, 1848. $3,000 - $5,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: IAN FLEMING ASSOCIATION COPY. You Only Live Twice. London, 1964. $7,000 - $9,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: DELUXE EDITION WITH ORIGINAL PAINTING. BUKOWSKI, Charles. War All the Time. 1984. $3,000 - $5,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: EINSTEIN'S MOST POWERFUL STATEMENT ON THE ATOMIC BOMB. Original Typed Manuscript Signed, "On My Participation in the Atom Bomb Project," 1953. $100,000 - $150,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: EINSTEIN ON SCIENCE, WAR AND MORALITY. Autograph Letter Signed, 1949. $20,000 - $30,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. WASHINGTON, George. Engraved document signed, 1786. $8,000 - $12,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: AN EARLY CHINESE-MADE 34-STAR U.S. CONSULAR FLAG. $8,000 - $12,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: SIGNED PHOTOGRAPH OF LINCOLN WITH HIS SON TAD. 1864. $60,000 - $90,000
    Bonhams, June 16-24: MALCOLM X WRITES FROM KENYA. Postcard signed, 1964. $4,000 - $6,000

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