Saturday, 15 February 2014

Elementary Treatise on Determinants 1867

This next book that I would like to showcase is a book that I wanted very much for the collection.
In 1867 Dodgson published his Elementary Treatise on Determinants and 750 copies were printed as
the first and only edition. In the field of mathematics it was an important contribution and a
landmark work subsequently recognised by many experts.

I had owned a copy previously for a year or two but that copy was in a calf prize binding, not in it’s
original brown cloth and endpapers. I sold that copy to Blackwell’s rare book department making a
very good profit when I needed some cash to help buy another important item. It then became a
goal to acquire a copy of the Determinants in original cloth and when the Denis Crutch Sale came
along I bid enthusiastically for the Crutch copy which fell to me for £3,900 (including premium).
Since this sale, there has been another copy auctioned but the Crutch copy is not repaired in any
way and only has some gentle fraying of the cloth at the tips of the spine.

The amusing story that goes around (without any truth) about Queen Victoria asking Mr Dodgson
for his next work after Alice in 1865 is flawed in any case because that would have been his 1866

pamphlet Condensation of Determinants (a copy in original wrappers is in this collection).






Wednesday, 12 February 2014

College Rhymes

Before the web, book collecting was a very physical hobby and searching through hundreds of second hand books on hundreds of shelves was the basic mode of grazing. Scanning spines for titles, the perusal was in itself exciting, holding in one’s mind the hope of a rare find. With the advent of the web and search engines, the search could easily become a quick daily event for new arrivals. In this way I found one day a set of the rare Oxford periodical College Rhymes, containing all of Lewis Carroll’s fourteen contributions and all in original cloth. The last three volumes (without Carroll contributions) were not present but eleven out of fourteen volumes wasn’t bad. He had been editor of the magazine from July 1862 to March 1863. I have never seen a set since which tends to affirm the price (£1,400). When a bookseller lists an item that hasn't cropped up for sale for decades, he has to pitch it without any previous comparatitive figures. There was a partial set sold in the 1950s. The seller was Jeffrey Stern of York, once a Lewis Carroll collector himself, whose collection is now at Seitoku Gakuin College in Tokyo.


Saturday, 8 February 2014

Lewis Carroll's Library - 2

In June 2000 Bloomsbury Auctions sold the Denis Crutch collection of Lewis Carroll. Denis was a founder member of the Lewis Carroll Society and co-editor of the Lewis Carroll Handbook and had a large and important collection of original items. I bought a second book from Carroll’s library, again with a very good provenance. Thomas Hood’s Petsetilla’s Posy / A Fairy Tale for Young and Old, with elaborate green cloth gilt, original grey endpapers and 50 engravings by the Dalziel Brothers had been published in 1870 by Routledge. It appeared for sale in Blackwell’s catalogue 433 in 1938 with a description of the intertwined CLD monogram in purple ink and had eventually found its’ way into the Crutch collection and then into mine. It would have been prized by Carroll for its whimsical tales and illustrations, engraved by the Dalziels , who of course engraved Tenniel’s illustrations for the Alice books.



Sunday, 2 February 2014

1998 The Lewis Carroll Centenary Year


The year 1998 was the centenary of the death of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson and awareness and appreciation ran at high levels.
My experience of a live auction opened the door a little for me to collect further and, this time at provincial auction houses I acquired three scarce items quite cheaply.  These were the first and third editions of Curiosa Mathematica Part II (Pillow Problems) and a copy of the fifth thousand (1867) of Alice. Following the 4,000 copies of the first published edition in 1866, this book was in original cloth in good/very good condition with a repairable separation at the upper hinge of about an inch and fell to me for £140 hammer price, which was a treat as I’d expected to pay up to £450. Later the same year I bought Notes by An Oxford Chiel from James Cummins of New York. This is a collection of six Dodgson pamphlets bound together without a general contents page, all edges gilt, green cloth with a single gilt border (no corner dots) with orig. yellow endpapers and published in 1874. I had wanted a copy since arriving in Oxford in 1993 but had not found one in the local bookshops.

The last picture here shows my copy of The New Belfry of Christ Church, Oxford, and the first of Dodgson’s Oxford pamphlets and also published in the volume already mentioned. This is a fine copy and belonged to Harold Hartley, the famous Carroll collector. It came from Bloomsbury auctions 24 June 1999.