London: Tho. Basset, James Adamson, and Tho. Newborough. 1687
Pamphlet. A contemporary account / bibliography of the tracts and pamphlets published by both sides. Most of these were anonymous, and there are marginalia which name the author in most cases in a contemporary hand. Title, text, errata. The errata has been crossed out, and the corrections listed have been made by hand in the text. Clagett was particularly close friends with his eventual successor at Gray's Inn, William Wake, the future archbishop of Canterbury. Clagett saw through the press Wake's "The present state" while Wake was lying low in Dorchester, leading to its sometimes being erroneously credited to Clagett (including by Wing, who referenced it as C4390). The title leaf is detached and a little grubby. The text shows some light staining in places and has some marginal ink notes, the first few leaves are partially detached at the top, everything else is well bound together. Wake, William (16571737), became Archbishop of Canterbury. He was originally from Blandford Forum in Dorset, and became a convinced Anglican after spending time in France. He wrote many tracts opposing Catholicism. William Clagett (16461688) was an English clergyman and pamphleteer, particularly active during the reign of James II, when he was very anti-catholic. 1-40 pp. Wing C4390.
1972 1972 IN-8 DE 98 PAGES, RELIURE DE L’EDITEUR PERCALINE ROUILLE, TITRE IMPRIME EN BLANC SUR DOS LISSE, SOUS JAQUETTE CREME DE L’EDITEUR. ILLUSTRE D’UN FRONTISPICE ET DE 10 PLANCHES HORS-TEXTE.
BEL EXEMPLAIRE.
KUMAR BROTHERS. 1970. In-8. Relié toilé. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement pliée, Dos fané, Intérieur frais. 98 pages - nombreuses illustratiosn en noir et blanc hors texte dont le frontispice.. . . . Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon
TEXTE EXCLISIVEMENT EN ANGLAIS. Classification Dewey : 420-Langue anglaise. Anglo-saxon