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).