Londres : printed for the Company, s. d. (ca 1750 ) Petit in-8, 83-(5) pages. Broché, couverture muette d'origine.
A la fin, le catalogue des livres Anglais "neatly printed in pocket volumes, and sold by T. Johnson bookseller in the Hague" (une page) puis le "Catalogue of English plays" chez le même libraire (deux pages)."Nicholas Rowe's Tamerlane of 1701 marks an important step in the development of literary representations of military heroes. Rowe draws on and adapts seventeenth-century accounts of Timur and other soldiers to create a conqueror more virtuous and peace-loving than those portrayed by earlier playwrights. Yet in spite of his pacific temper, Rowe's hero must go to war, and such necessity becomes an argument for William III's contemporary war with France. In fashioning a warrior who both hates and wages war, Rowe anticipated a number of eighteenth-century heroic figures. Tamerlane's lasting popularity suggests that he provided the century with one of its best-known and most resonant versions of the martial ideal." (John Richardson).
Edinburg, at the Apollo Press, [for John Bell], 1781. In-16 (13 x 8,5 cm) de [4]-XLVIII-142-[4] pages (la numérotation en arabe suit celle en romain et débute donc à 50). Plein veau glacé, dos lisse orné de filets dorés, étiquette de titre bordeaux, roulette dorée sur les coupes. Gardes marquées en bords par la reliure, petite tache à l'étiquette, autrement belle condition.
Avec un titre gravé et un portrait de l'auteur en frontispice. Ravissante et délicate petite collection. Bell's Edition, coll. The Poets of Great Britain, complete from Chaucer to Churchill.