FINE FIRST EDITION OF ASHMOLE’S WAY TO BLISS, WITH THE RARE PORTRAIT “MISSING IN MOST COPIES”
ASHMOLE, Elias. The Way to Bliss. London: by John Grismond for Nath. Brook, 1658. Quarto, old full calf rebacked.
First edition of Ashmole’s last major alchemical work, with the extremely scarce portrait of the author “missing in most copies” according to Duveen. A fascinating copy with wide margins and printed explanatory marginalia by Dr. John Everard, and extensive manuscript annotations by previous owners in various contemporary and early hands.
The Way to Bliss, Ashmole’s philosophical defense of the concept of the Philosopher’s Stone, was his last major alchemical and occult work; following its publication, “antiquarian pursuits gradually came to occupy more and more of his time,” most notably his history of the Order of the Garter (Pyle, 28). Ashmole intended for this volume—his publication of an anonymous Elizabethan treatise covering key medical, alchemical, astrological and Rosicrucian concepts—to fill the place of the projected but never-published second part of his Theatrum Chemicum of 1652. With the very rare portrait of Ashmole, according to Duveen “missing in most copies.” Signature Aa mispaginated (between pp. 176 and 185) as issued; text complete. Duveen, 31. Ferguson I, 52. Hall, 26. Osler 1849. From the personal collection of George Winslow Plummer (Khei X) with his ex-libris on front pastedown and a penciled note thereupon that reads, “Rosicrucians—Heydon—MS. notes by Dr. Hoyland (?)” Here follows an inked manuscript note suggesting, then subsequently confirming John Heydon as the author, calling Hedon’s A Wiseman’s Crown “a spurious edition.” The note also identifies Ashmole and his circle as “Rosicrucians rather than Freemasons, their practices predating Masonic emergence in England.” The manuscript note is stylistically signed C Aen (or some such monogram). Careful reading of extensive marginalia in a contemporary hand (possibly more than one) suggests early ownership by an avid practitioner or practitioners of the Rosicrucian medicinal arts.
Title page mounted. Despite heavy annotations text quite clean and legible. An excellent copy, most desirable with frontispiece portrait.