1655 ELZEVIR EDITION OF JOHN BARCLAY’S ARGENIS, COPY BELONGING TO EDWIN WOLF II
BARCLAY, John. Argenis. Amsterdam: Apud Ludivicum Elzevirium, 1655. Thick 12mo, 18th-century full red morocco, elaborately gilt-decorated spine, raised bands, patterned endpapers, all edges gilt.
1655 Amsterdam Elzevir edition of “the most amusing romance ever written,” very finely printed, with engraved allegorical title page.
First published in Paris in 1621, this is Barclay’s principal work—“a political allegory, pronounced by the poet Cowper to be the most amusing romance ever written” (Lowndes, 112). Barclay based his characters on “distinguished personages in history and real life” (the “Tabula Nominum Fictorum” at the rear identifies whom the characters correspond to). Cardinal Richelieu was “very fond of perusing this work, and it is thought from thence he drew many of his political maxims” (Allibone I:117). This is the first of three Amsterdam Elzevir printings (Brunet I:652). In 1629 Bonaventura and Abraham Elzevir expanded the family printing business (begun at the University of Leiden in 1592) by initiating their famed pocket editions of Latin classics to promote wide circulation of accurate texts for everyday use. These books were printed with engraved title pages, narrow margins and a distinctive font of type, designed by Christoffel van Dijck, derivations of which have been employed by subsequent printers for centuries. Willems 1180. Copinger 208. See Rosenbach 33:38. Manuscript note on purchase by 19th-century collector Charles Joseph Barthelemy Giraud. From the library of noted bookman and librarian Edwin Wolf II, with his monogram and bibliographic notations.
Fine condition.