"THE MOST IMPORTANT SINGLE MEDICAL WORK EVER PUBLISHED": FINELY PRINTED NONESUCH LIMITED EDITION
HARVEY, William. The Anatomical Exercises of Dr. William Harvey: De Motu Cordis 1628: De Circulatione Sanguinis 1649: The First English Text of 1653, Now Newly Edited by Geoffrey Keynes. London: The Nonesuch Press, [1928]. Octavo, original full reddish brown morocco, raised bands, top edge gilt, uncut.
Limited Nonesuch Press edition of Harvey’s groundbreaking medical studies, in English translation, number 582 of only 1450 copies printed.
Published in commemoration of the 300th anniversary of the De motu cordis, this volume reprints the 1653 English translations of William Harvey's two Latin tracts. The De motu cordis, first published in Latin in 1628, demonstrated the circulation of the blood, and laid the foundation for modern physiology. "Harvey's small book is usually considered the most important single medical work ever published" (Lilly 63). In the De circulatione sanguinis, also reprinted here, Harvey replied to his critics and refined his theory. This volume was edited by the noted bibliographer and biographer of Harvey, Sir Geoffrey Keynes, and finely printed on handmade Van Gelder paper at the Nonesuch Press, founded in 1923 by Francis Meynell, David Garnett and Vera Mendel in the basement premises under the Birrell & Garnett bookshop in London with the express intent to make books "for those among collectors who also use books for reading" (Ransom, Private Presses, 169). With one folding plate after Stephen Gooden, showing the operation of the venous valves. See PMM 127.
Spine gently toned. A fine copy of this handsome fine press production.