![]() ![]() ![]() It has not been seen at auction "in many decades," according to Addison & Sarova. Printed in 1728, the disputed play is bound here with other eighteenth-century plays (cropped in the early sheep re-bind). ![]() (For some history on EB, see Britannica's own entry on the first edition.)Īlso of particular interest in the March 19 sale: A copy of " Double Falshood," a play "strongly" believed to have been written by William Shakespeare. According to the auctioneer, "The set is scarcely seen containing all of the plates-particularly the child-birthing plates, present in the third volume, which caused an outcry when the book was first published and thus were not included in many issues." The estimate is $6,000-8,000. Addison & Sarova will offer the three-volume set, bound in later half-calf with a little rubbing, but, more importantly, retaining all 160 plates. (Even my born-digital children have requested a set.) So I find it exciting that a first edition of this most cherished of encyclopedias, published in Edinburgh in 1771, will appear at auction later this month. Since it ceased publication in 2012 after 241 years, our nostalgia for these volumes has only increased. Ah, the beloved Encyclopaedia Britannica. ![]()
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