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  • March 1, 1882
  • Page 22
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The Masonic Magazine, March 1, 1882: Page 22

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    Article THE SUNDERLAND AND HAMILTON-BECKFORD LIBRARIES. ← Page 3 of 3
Page 22

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Sunderland And Hamilton-Beckford Libraries.

( Sarah ) of Marlborough ' s autograph ; Coryate ' s ' Crudities , ' Daniel ' s ' Works , ' Drake ' s ' Voyages , ' Drayton ' s ' Works , ' Dugdale ' s ' Monasticon , ' large paper copy of the original edition , and other works of the same author . " The sale of the third portion is also announced for July next , and the realities of the sale will be long remembered by book collectors and bibliomaniacs .

The Hamilton-Beckford library , which is also announced for sale b y Messrs . Sotheby , will be also a most interesting fact to the literary world . " Mr . Henry G . Bohn says , in a most interesting letter to the Times , that Beckford was the most enthusiastic book collector he ever knew . He was a great pnrchaser of 'Aldines and other earl y books bearing the insignia of celebrities , such as Francis I ., Henri et Diane , and De Thou , and especially of

choice old morocco bindings by Desseuil , Pasdeloup , and De Rome . ' " Mr . Bohn also tells " that after Beckford ' s death , and while the books were still at Bath , the Duke of Hamilton wished to sell the whole library . Mr . Bohn offered £ 30 , 000 , payable within a week ; but although the Duke would willingly have accepted the offer , the Duchess would not agree to the sale of her father ' s books . Mr . Bohn considers the library to be worth , at present , about £ 50 , 000 . " He also informs us that "the Duke of Hamilton ( then Marquis of Douglas ) collected his own magnificent library at the same time that Beckford was adding to his , and this will be sold when the sale of the

Beckford library is completed . A large portion of it was collected in Italy and various parts of the Continent . The Greek and Latin manuscri pts obtained by the Marquis of Douglas when on his diplomatic mission to Russia are unrivalled specimens of early art . Probably the gem of the whole collection is the manuscript on vellum of Dante ' s " Divina Commedia , " written about the year 1450 . It is ornamented with eighty-eight original designs ,

supposed to be the work of Sandro Botticelli . Dr . Waagen has pronounced these drawings to be the finest and most original illustrations of the kind ever produced . Of other choice MSS . we may mention Alain Chartier , Poesies , fifteenth century ; 'Histoire du Roi Alexandre , ' fourteenth century ; the first translation of the Bible in French ( by Guyard des Moulins ) , 1291 , on vellum , with illuminations ( this was printed in 1490 by order of Charles VIII . ) ; a

superb MS . of the Koran , with brilliant illuminations ; a Missal executed for Cardinal Julius de Medicis , afterwards Pope Clement VII . ; another Missal which formerly belonged to Charles of Lorraine , Duke of Guise ; a MS . of Horace , executed for Ferdinand I ., King of Naples ; and a very beautiful MS . on vellum , in two folio volumes , of S . Augustin , " De la Cite de Dieu , " with miniatures and illuminated initials . There are first editions of the classics , such as Apuleius , 1469 , Sallustius , 1470 , etc . " For this summary we are indebted to the Bibliographer .

If Mr . Bohn ' s anticipations are correct , that the commercial value of the Hamilton-Beckford books will be found to be greater than that of the Sunderland collection , these two sales will certainly become famous landmarks in the dispersion of libraries . A good deal of regret has been expressed at such a dispersion of such remarkable collections , but then lamentations are purely sentimental ; and these treasures of the printer ' s , the illuminator ' s , and the binder ' s skill , are certainly more likely to be useful to art , and study , and science if in the hands of the public than hid up in inaccessible libraries and mildewing closets .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1882-03-01, Page 22” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01031882/page/22/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE CARDINAL VIRTUES. Article 1
MAIDENHOOD. Article 6
DOCUMENTA LATOMICA INEDITA. Article 7
THE ROMAN COLLEGIA. Article 12
MEMOIR OF ELIAS ASHMOLE. Article 14
AN ARCHITECTURAL PUZZLE. Article 19
THE SUNDERLAND AND HAMILTON-BECKFORD LIBRARIES. Article 20
THE WORSHIPFUL MASTER. Article 23
NATIONAL SAXON MASONIC HYMN. Article 29
ECHOES OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 30
LITERARY GOSSIP. Article 34
THE LEGENDS OF THE CRAFT. Article 36
A CURIOUS CORRESPONDENCE. Article 37
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Sunderland And Hamilton-Beckford Libraries.

( Sarah ) of Marlborough ' s autograph ; Coryate ' s ' Crudities , ' Daniel ' s ' Works , ' Drake ' s ' Voyages , ' Drayton ' s ' Works , ' Dugdale ' s ' Monasticon , ' large paper copy of the original edition , and other works of the same author . " The sale of the third portion is also announced for July next , and the realities of the sale will be long remembered by book collectors and bibliomaniacs .

The Hamilton-Beckford library , which is also announced for sale b y Messrs . Sotheby , will be also a most interesting fact to the literary world . " Mr . Henry G . Bohn says , in a most interesting letter to the Times , that Beckford was the most enthusiastic book collector he ever knew . He was a great pnrchaser of 'Aldines and other earl y books bearing the insignia of celebrities , such as Francis I ., Henri et Diane , and De Thou , and especially of

choice old morocco bindings by Desseuil , Pasdeloup , and De Rome . ' " Mr . Bohn also tells " that after Beckford ' s death , and while the books were still at Bath , the Duke of Hamilton wished to sell the whole library . Mr . Bohn offered £ 30 , 000 , payable within a week ; but although the Duke would willingly have accepted the offer , the Duchess would not agree to the sale of her father ' s books . Mr . Bohn considers the library to be worth , at present , about £ 50 , 000 . " He also informs us that "the Duke of Hamilton ( then Marquis of Douglas ) collected his own magnificent library at the same time that Beckford was adding to his , and this will be sold when the sale of the

Beckford library is completed . A large portion of it was collected in Italy and various parts of the Continent . The Greek and Latin manuscri pts obtained by the Marquis of Douglas when on his diplomatic mission to Russia are unrivalled specimens of early art . Probably the gem of the whole collection is the manuscript on vellum of Dante ' s " Divina Commedia , " written about the year 1450 . It is ornamented with eighty-eight original designs ,

supposed to be the work of Sandro Botticelli . Dr . Waagen has pronounced these drawings to be the finest and most original illustrations of the kind ever produced . Of other choice MSS . we may mention Alain Chartier , Poesies , fifteenth century ; 'Histoire du Roi Alexandre , ' fourteenth century ; the first translation of the Bible in French ( by Guyard des Moulins ) , 1291 , on vellum , with illuminations ( this was printed in 1490 by order of Charles VIII . ) ; a

superb MS . of the Koran , with brilliant illuminations ; a Missal executed for Cardinal Julius de Medicis , afterwards Pope Clement VII . ; another Missal which formerly belonged to Charles of Lorraine , Duke of Guise ; a MS . of Horace , executed for Ferdinand I ., King of Naples ; and a very beautiful MS . on vellum , in two folio volumes , of S . Augustin , " De la Cite de Dieu , " with miniatures and illuminated initials . There are first editions of the classics , such as Apuleius , 1469 , Sallustius , 1470 , etc . " For this summary we are indebted to the Bibliographer .

If Mr . Bohn ' s anticipations are correct , that the commercial value of the Hamilton-Beckford books will be found to be greater than that of the Sunderland collection , these two sales will certainly become famous landmarks in the dispersion of libraries . A good deal of regret has been expressed at such a dispersion of such remarkable collections , but then lamentations are purely sentimental ; and these treasures of the printer ' s , the illuminator ' s , and the binder ' s skill , are certainly more likely to be useful to art , and study , and science if in the hands of the public than hid up in inaccessible libraries and mildewing closets .

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